By Noah Rothman
Thursday, June 12, 2025
From the outset of the joint U.S.-Israeli initiative that
has distributed millions of meals to Gaza’s civilian population, the usual suspects — the United Nations, European
socialists, and the international press, among others — have trafficked the
implication that this humanitarian operation is a ruse: that the Israel Defense
Forces use the aid sites operated by the U.S.-based charity Gaza Humanitarian
Foundation as kill boxes into which the IDF lures civilians so they can be
massacred.
At times, journalistic outlets are careless enough when
laundering this allegation of cartoonish malevolence that they are compelled to retract their reporting. The reality on the
ground in Gaza is that these aid disbursement sites, which GHF’s private
contractors secure, are situated in a war zone. Outside those sites, combat
operations are still underway, and Hamas conducts hostile operations near them because it has
a vested interest in disrupting this charity’s activities and preserving its
monopoly on the distribution of foreign aid.
That fact might dampen the activist left’s enthusiasm for
its anti-Israel agitation, which is why it rarely finds its way into the copy
accusing Israel of monomaniacal cruelty. Such is the hunger in the press for
claims that cast Jerusalem and its American partners in a wicked light that
elementary discretion must be dispensed with.
The breathless and voluminous reporting on Israel’s
alleged atrocities stands in stark contrast with the news that GHF has been
attacked by Hamas.
According
to the group, a bus carrying a team of aid workers to a distribution site
near Khan Younis was “brutally attacked by Hamas” on Wednesday. At least five
GHF team members were initially confirmed to have been killed, and multiple
more were seriously wounded. “This attack did not happen in a vacuum,” a
statement from the group added. “For days, Hamas has openly threatened our
team, our aid workers, and the civilians who receive aid from us. These threats
were met with silence.” GHF “holds Hamas fully responsible” for what they
described as an “attack on humanity.”
The death toll rose to eight overnight as some of the aid
workers who were attacked succumbed to their wounds. In addition, GHF subsequently revealed that they “fear that some of our team
members have been taken hostage.” The charity remains, however, undeterred. “We
decided that the best response to Hamas’ cowardly murderers was to keep
delivering food for the people of Gaza who are counting on us,” the
organization insisted.
It’s not that the international press is ignoring the
assault on the philanthropists spearheading this charitable initiative. Rather,
the bloodshed serves as a platform from which to launch into familiar diatribes
about how desperate the situation in Gaza is and why the United Nations, which
has allowed Hamas to requisition and ration aid to Gaza’s civilians
so as to extort them into pliancy, must have a monopoly on humanitarian aid.
As CNN observed after some throat-clearing about GHF’s
slaughtered aid workers, “the organization has been controversial from the
get-go and criticized by multiple international aid agencies,” specifically the
U.N.
The GHF “did not offer evidence” to substantiate its
claim that its workers were, in fact, killed by Hamas, the Washington Post observed in paragraph three. “Many
humanitarian organizations have refused to participate in the GHF operations,”
the report continued, “which they charge violate their principles of neutrality
and further Israeli war aims by limiting the places where food is available to
Gazans and exposing them to increased danger.”
The French outlet i24 quoted “Hamas-affiliated media outlets,” which alleged
that the terrorist outfit merely “executed five fighters of the Popular Forces,
a rival militia led by tribal leader Yasser Abu Shabab,” while twelve more were
only “shot in the legs.”
The BBC cast
similar doubt on the veracity of the GHF’s claims. “Meanwhile,” read the
outfit’s rapid pivot in a story ostensibly dedicated to the violence against
charity workers, “Gaza’s Hamas-run health ministry said 103 Palestinians were
killed and more than 400 wounded across Gaza in the past 24 hours. This
included 21 people who the ministry said were killed near areas designated for
aid distribution on Tuesday morning.”
It may be difficult to establish beyond a shadow of a
doubt that Hamas was behind the attack. But a Sunday statement from the terrorist organization in which
it claimed that any “entity or individual collaborating with the enemy’s plans”
are “considered legitimate targets” that they have “full authority” to strike
does suggest at least a willingness to conduct an operation like this one.
The international news media’s disinterest in the
killings, save the extent to which they serve to rehash stale indictments of
Israel’s conduct, is revealing. Over 2.5 million meals were handed out by GHF
at its various distribution sites on the day that its workers were murdered –
over 16 million meals in total, all gratis and entirely absent the political
pressures that accompany Hamas’s reluctant humanitarian concessions. Severing
Hamas’s control over aid is one critical component of a larger strategy to
decouple the Gaza Strip’s populace from the terrorists that reign over them.
If the so-called international community were genuinely
concerned for the safety and security of the Gazan people, it might welcome
this endeavor. But it isn’t, so it doesn’t.
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