Starvation in Gaza: What is behind Israel’s food aid policy?

With experts warning of “worst-case scenario” famine in the Gaza Strip, and images spreading of malnourished children and chaotic scenes at food distribution hubs, international condemnation of Israel’s handling of the hunger crisis is mounting.

Under pressure, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did an about-face, pausing Israel’s bombing campaign in parts of the beleaguered strip, ordering the air force to conduct airdrops of food aid, and allowing other countries to do the same.

Neighboring Jordan has taken point on facilitating the airdrops from other countries, even as experts note that each cargo-plane load provides a tiny fraction of what is needed, and such deliveries are insufficient to avert a catastrophe.

Why We Wrote This

Growing global outrage over the hunger crisis in Gaza has many asking if Israel had a deliberate policy of starving civilians. Israelis say that was never the case, but an ignorance of Palestinian suffering allowed an inconsistent government policy to lead to a calamity.

Yet as the Israeli government pivots on what has been an inconsistent and minimally communicated food-supply policy, Israeli public opinion has lagged behind the growing worldwide alarm about starving Palestinian civilians. There are signs that is starting to change.

“The public is [still] mostly focused on hostages and soldiers’ lives being lost,” says Amos Harel, military analyst for Haaretz, a left-wing Israeli newspaper. “But things are moving quickly with the whole issue becoming so massive that [attention to hunger] could grow exponentially.”

Guy Hochman, a psychology professor at Reichman University outside Tel Aviv, says Israeli lack of empathy for Gaza civilians mirrors others the world over who care first and foremost for their own population. Factor in trauma and almost two years of a war with no end in sight, he says, and mental exhaustion compounds the compassion deficit.

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