It’s now quite clear that there are simply no facts at all—none—that
will alter the fixed narrative of lies, distortions and blood libels
with which the liberal internationalist order is demonizing and
delegitimizing Israel.
The claim that Israel is starving the
civilians of Gaza and causing an imminent famine has been pumped out
incessantly since soon after the beginning of the Israel-Hamas war.
In February, the United Nations said that
more than a quarter of Gaza’s 2.3 million people were “estimated to be
facing catastrophic levels of deprivation and starvation” and that,
without action, widespread famine was “almost inevitable.”
In March, Biden administration officials told
Benny Gantz—then a member of Israel’s war cabinet who was visiting
Washington, D.C.—that the “food shortage crisis” impacting Palestinians
in Gaza was “intolerable.”
At the end of that month, Janti Soeripto, president and chief executive of Save the Children US, declared that famine and starvation in Gaza were already happening.
In May, Director of the World Food Program Cindy McCain said that parts of Gaza were experiencing a “full-blown famine” that was rapidly spreading throughout the territory.
Also last month, the prosecutor of the
International Criminal Court sought arrest warrants for Israel’s Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Defense Minister Yoav Gallant on the
grounds that Israel was “causing starvation as a method of war including
the denial of humanitarian relief supplies [and] deliberately targeting
civilians in conflict.”
The world has brushed aside Israel’s
repeated protests that there has been no shortage of food trucks
arriving with aid for Gaza and that the problem lay instead with
distribution because Hamas was stealing the supplies.
Instead, the liberal international
establishment has repeatedly demanded that Israel immediately stop the
war, thus inescapably surrendering to Hamas and forfeiting the military
leverage required to free the remaining hostages.
Yet now, the famine claims have been debunked.
The Famine Review Committee (FRC) conducts
investigations into world hunger on behalf of a partnership formed
between governments, international organizations and NGOs.
In March, the committee reported
that “famine is now projected and imminent” in northern Gaza and was
expected to take hold before the end of May. Preventing such a famine,
it stated, required “an immediate political decision for a ceasefire
together with a significant and immediate increase in humanitarian and
commercial access to the entire population of Gaza.”
In April, the Famine Early Warning Systems
Network (FEWS NET), a food security monitoring initiative founded in
1985 by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID)
went even further by stating there was “reasonable evidence” that, since
April, northern Gaza had been experiencing a famine and this would
persist at least until the end of July.
But on June 4, the Famine Review Committee published a report in which it rejected the FEWS NET analysis as not “plausible” and said it could not endorse its famine projection.
The committee said there was a lack of
reliable evidence about the number of trucks entering Gaza and the level
of humanitarian assistance that was arriving and being distributed
around its various areas.
In order to compensate for these gaps in
the data, it said, FEWS NET had relied on “multiple layers of
assumptions and inference” about food availability and access as well as
nutritional status and mortality, and had made “deliberate choices over
assumptions, without the necessary supporting evidence.”
Such assumptions, said the committee, had
ignored or underestimated the value of both commercial sources of food
and certain forms of humanitarian aid.
Although this didn’t alter the fact that
Gaza was experiencing “extreme human suffering” and that urgent measures
were needed to boost humanitarian supplies, the committee concluded
that flows of aid and the availability of food had increased
significantly in March and April and “that nearly 100 percent of daily
kilocalorie requirements were available for the estimated population of
300,000 people in April, even using conservative calculations.”
In other words, the committee reversed its
own dire predictions and damned the famine early warning network for
excluding evidence that gave the lie to its anti-Israel narrative. The
categorical declarations of imminent famine being caused by wicked,
heartless, war-criminal Israel just weren’t true.
It’s worth remembering that USAID, the
parent body of FEWS NET, is run by Samantha Power, who served as U.S.
ambassador to the United Nations during the Obama administration.
In 2002, Power suggested in a “thought
experiment” that America might have to invade Israel to prevent an
Israeli genocide against the Palestinians. She also suggested that the
only people who might be alienated by this would be American Jews, who
she said exercised tremendous political and financial power over
America.
Other research has also exploded the “Gaza
famine” claims. At Columbia University, two professors have said the
evidence shows that sufficient amounts of food are being supplied to
Gaza.
They told The Jerusalem Post
that it was “a myth that Israel is responsible for famine in Gaza” and
suggested that the International Criminal Court and U.N. had joined
Hamas in blaming Israel for a “famine that never was, hoping to stop the
war.”
Yet there are no signs that these
rebuttals of the “Gaza famine” claim are having any effect on the
Israel-bashing crowd. A few days ago, The New York Times was still referring to “starving civilians” and blaming deaths from malnutrition on “restrictions on aid and commercial goods entering Gaza.”
BBC News reported this week that
“warnings of famine are looming once again in northern Gaza,”
broadcasting distressing footage of infants said to be suffering from
dehydration and malnutrition caused by restrictions on aid at the Rafah
and Kerem Shalom border crossings.
Other than Fox News, it seems
that no mainstream media outlet has reported the Famine Review
Committee’s findings that the claim of famine in Gaza cannot be
justified. Nor have the anti-Israel humanitarian organizations, although
the World Health Organization’s Director-General Tedros Adhanom
Ghebreyesus has now subtly adjusted his rhetoric by talking about
“famine-like conditions.”
Famine is not the only anti-Israel
falsehood whose debunking has been ignored. The mainstream media and
humanitarian crowd are still using the Hamas figure of 37,000-plus
civilians killed in Gaza, despite the fact that the U.N. itself revised
its own casualty totals sharply downwards after it emerged that some of
the claimed deaths had been drawn from media sources and were
fabricated.
Some outlets such as The New York Times, the Australian Broadcasting Corporation and Time magazine
are still claiming that the International Court of Justice said the
Palestinians in Gaza faced a “plausible risk of genocide” even though
the court said no such thing. As the ICJ President Joan Donoghue herself
said, the court decided “that the Palestinians had a plausible right to
be protected from genocide. … It didn’t decide that the claim of
genocide was plausible.”
While Israel continues to be defamed by
blood libels about famine and its war of self-defense in Gaza, some five
million are facing actual famine in Sudan where up to 150,000 have been
killed and up to 10 million displaced. Some 25 million are estimated to
need humanitarian assistance as a result of a 14-month-long civil war.
Yet this vast and catastrophic scale of human suffering is being almost totally ignored. On Fox News, Hadeel Oueis, editor-in-chief of the pan-Arab media outlet Jusoor, said:
“Sudanese [people] are asking why the world turns a blind eye as the
third-largest country in Africa is laid to waste while at the same time
fixating on the smaller conflict in Gaza.”
Good question. The answer is as obvious as
it is brutal: The world only cares about suffering humanity when it can
blame the Jews. That malevolent prism shapes a fixed and murderous
narrative about Israel and the Jewish people that no actual facts can be
allowed to disturb.
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