Conflict between Palestine and Israel escalates

Recommended Videos

Satinavian

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 30, 2016
2,095
874
118
The only meaningful thing Trump did with Israel/Hamas was his "beach ressort" attempt at ethnic cleansing.

However, as usual he wanted all the profits (the land of Gaza) for himself and have others (Arab nations) pay all the costs (land and housing and citizenship for all the Gazans). And when those unsurprisingly said no, even under pressure, he lost interest.

Otherwise full support for right wing Israel gouvernment, the usual rethoric against dangerous brown people, and crackdown on protesters. Including ending visas and deportation for disagreeing with the US support for Israel.

So ... worse than Biden.


And no, Trump doesn't get credit for "not having a war with Iran". Biden didn't either.
 

Gergar12

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 24, 2020
4,331
925
118
Country
United States
How? In what way? The attacks have only intensified and the Israeli government has drastically expanded its stated aims. Attacks on Yemen have also increased. What's better?
Well, they ended.


Also, Trump made his deal with Hamas.


He didn't bomb Iran and made a peace deal with Syria.
 

Silvanus

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 15, 2013
12,976
6,717
118
Country
United Kingdom
Well, they ended.
What ended? The US strikes on Yemen began in March and ran until May. You're giving him credit for stopping doing something that he started in the first place?

The release of the final American hostage, you mean? I mean, yes that's good, but it hasn't dampened the war. The war only intensifies.

He didn't bomb Iran
Neither did anyone else. We're discussing what makes him better. Continuing to not do something insane that his predecessor also didn't do is meaningless.
 

Thaluikhain

Elite Member
Legacy
Jan 16, 2010
19,505
4,109
118
I suspect support for Israel from the international community was in very large part to keep on the US's good side, and with the current lot in charge there's no way to guarantee that, so little reason to continue support, and so that quietly fades away in a way that genocide alone wouldn't have caused.
 

XsjadoBlayde

~ just another dread messenger ~
Apr 29, 2020
3,660
3,800
118
1000013781.jpg

link to the clip in site: https://bsky.app/profile/premthakker.bsky.social/post/3lp5ucihtdk2w



comrade ice cream
Ben & Jerry’s co-founder arrested after confronting Robert F. Kennedy Jr over Gaza


May 14, 2025 at 10:09 pm

Ben Cohen, Co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s, speaks during an event on police reform and ending qualified immunity outside of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on Thursday, May 20, 2021. [Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call]

Ben Cohen, Co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s, speaks during an event on police reform and ending qualified immunity outside of the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington on Thursday, May 20, 2021. [Caroline Brehman/CQ Roll Call]

Ben Cohen, the co-founder of the ice cream brand Ben & Jerry’s, was arrested Wednesday after confronting US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for the lack of humanitarian aid to the Gaza Strip, according to a video of the arrest on social media by the women-led peace group, CODEPINK, Anadolu reports.

Cohen, a longtime activist and philanthropist, interrupted a hearing on Capitol Hill as Kennedy faced questions from the lawmakers.

“Congress sent the bombs that kill children in Gaza and pays it with cuts to Medicaid,” Cohen shouted at the hearing before he was arrested by Capitol Police.
 
  • Like
Reactions: crimson5pheonix

Gergar12

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 24, 2020
4,331
925
118
Country
United States
What ended? The US strikes on Yemen began in March and ran until May. You're giving him credit for stopping doing something that he started in the first place?



The release of the final American hostage, you mean? I mean, yes that's good, but it hasn't dampened the war. The war only intensifies.



Neither did anyone else. We're discussing what makes him better. Continuing to not do something insane that his predecessor also didn't do is meaningless.
Biden and Co. lied about applying pressure on Israel. I think he is a great president, but he let Israel run roughshod over US Middle East policy over outdated ideas of putting and maintaining a US colony in the Middle East for everyone to shoot at vs. questioning or acting against US interests in other places in a very religiously sensitive area. Now Iran is increasing the range of their missiles, and US Aegis warships are having trouble engaging combined swarms of Iranian and likely Russian and Chinese munitions, let alone European warships, which have less missile/magazine depth and possibly worse radars. In the not-so-distant future, we could see Iranian, Russian, and Chinese longer-range missiles hit the US and/or the EU from countries in the Middle East over past foreign policy mistakes like this, and are we going to set up another 3-4 Israels nearby, or worse, invade and do another Iraq or Afghanistan?

Trump is doing deals with Sunni states, and Iran is a good thing even if he didn't do them in his first term because he listened to the neocons like Bolton, and now Rubio.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
6,100
3,685
118
Country
United States of America
I suspect support for Israel from the international community was in very large part to keep on the US's good side, and with the current lot in charge there's no way to guarantee that, so little reason to continue support, and so that quietly fades away in a way that genocide alone wouldn't have caused.
there may be something to that, though I question how eroded the USA's standing really is. A lot of yapping about it, for sure. Global capitalism is still global, however.
 

XsjadoBlayde

~ just another dread messenger ~
Apr 29, 2020
3,660
3,800
118
well fuck they're doing it all out I guess, the rest of the world cannot allow this to continue
1000013788.jpg


Trump’s sanctions on ICC prosecutor have halted tribunal’s work
Karim Khan, Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court looks up prior to a press conference in The Hague, Netherlands, July 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

Karim Khan, Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court looks up prior to a press conference in The Hague, Netherlands, July 3, 2023. (AP Photo/Peter Dejong, File)

Karim Ahmed Khan, International Criminal Court chief prosecutor, speaks during a news conference in Khartoum, Sudan, Aug. 12, 2021. (AP Photo/Marwan Ali, File)

Karim Ahmed Khan, International Criminal Court chief prosecutor, speaks during a news conference in Khartoum, Sudan, Aug. 12, 2021. (AP Photo/Marwan Ali, File)

A tent camp for displaced Palestinians is set up amid destroyed buildings in the Khan Younis refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip, Jan. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File)

A tent camp for displaced Palestinians is set up amid destroyed buildings in the Khan Younis refugee camp, southern Gaza Strip, Jan. 4, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana, File)

Fire and smoke rise following an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, Oct. 7, 2023. (AP Photo/Fatima Shbair, File)

Fire and smoke rise following an Israeli airstrike in Gaza City, Oct. 7, 2023. (AP Photo/Fatima Shbair, File)

By MOLLY QUELL
Updated 10:26 AM BST, May 15, 2025

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) — The International Criminal Court ’s chief prosecutor has lost access to his email, and his bank accounts have been frozen.

The Hague-based court’s American staffers have been told that if they travel to the U.S. they risk arrest.

Some nongovernmental organizations have stopped working with the ICC and the leaders of one won’t even reply to emails from court officials.

Those are just some of the hurdles facing court staff since U.S. President Donald Trump in February slapped sanctions on its chief prosecutor, Karim Khan, according to interviews with current and former ICC officials, international lawyers and human rights advocates.

The sanctions will “prevent victims from getting access to justice,” said Liz Evenson, international justice director at Human Rights Watch.

Trump sanctioned the court after a panel of ICC judges in November issued arrest warrants for Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and his former defense minister, Yoav Gallant.

Judges found there was reason to believe that the pair may have committed war crimes by restricting humanitarian aid and intentionally targeting civilians in Israel’s campaign against Hamas in Gaza — charges Israeli officials deny.

International court appeals panel orders judges to reconsider Israel's jurisdiction challenge
International court appeals panel orders judges to reconsider Israel's jurisdiction challenge


ICC opens inquiry into Hungary for failing to arrest Netanyahu
ICC opens inquiry into Hungary for failing to arrest Netanyahu


Staffers and allies of the ICC said the sanctions have made it increasingly difficult for the tribunal to conduct basic tasks, let alone seek justice for victims of war crimes or genocide.

A spokesperson for the ICC and for Khan declined to comment. In February, ICC President Judge Tomoko Akane said that the sanctions “constitute serious attacks against the Court’s States Parties, the rule of law based international order and millions of victims.”


Order targets chief prosecutor

The February order bans Khan and other non-Americans among the ICC’s 900 staff members from entering the U.S., which is not a member of the court. It also threatens any person, institution or company with fines and prison time if they provide Khan with “financial, material, or technological support.”

The sanctions are hampering work on a broad array of investigations, not just the one into Israel’s leaders.

The ICC had been investigating atrocities in Sudan and had issued arrest warrants for former Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir on charges that include genocide. That probe has ground to a halt even as reports mount of new atrocities in Sudan, according to an attorney representing ICC prosecutor Eric Iverson, who is fighting the sanctions in U.S. courts. Iverson filed a federal lawsuit against the Trump administration seeking protection from the sanctions.

Iverson “cannot do, what I would describe as, basic lawyer functions,” said Allison Miller, who is representing Iverson in the suit.



American staffers at the organization, like Iverson, have been warned by its attorneys that they risk arrest if they return home to visit family, according to ICC officials. Six senior officials have left the court over concerns about sanctions.

A general view of the exterior of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, March 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana, File)


A general view of the exterior of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, Netherlands, March 12, 2025. (AP Photo/Omar Havana, File)



One reason the the court has been hamstrung is that it relies heavily on contractors and non-governmental organizations. Those businesses and groups have curtailed work on behalf of the court because they were concerned about being targeted by U.S. authorities, according to current and former ICC staffers.

Microsoft, for example, cancelled Khan’s email address, forcing the prosecutor to move to Proton Mail, a Swiss email provider, ICC staffers said. His bank accounts in his home country of the U.K. have been blocked.

Microsoft did not respond to a request for comment.

Staffers at an NGO that plays an integral role in the court’s efforts to gather evidence and find witnesses said the group has transferred money out of U.S. bank accounts because they fear it might be seized by the Trump administration.

Senior leadership at two other U.S.-based human rights organizations told the AP that their groups have stopped working with the ICC. A senior staffer at one told the AP that employees have stopped replying to emails from court officials out of fear of triggering a response from the Trump administration.


The cumulative effect of such actions has led ICC staffers to openly wonder whether the organization can survive the Trump administration, according to ICC officials who spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisal.

One questioned whether the court would make it through the next four years.

Trump alleged ICC’s actions were baseless

Trump, a staunch supporter of Netanyahu, issued his sanctions order shortly after re-taking office, accusing the ICC of “illegitimate and baseless actions targeting America and our close ally Israel.” Washington says the court has no jurisdiction over Israel.

Trump’s order said the ICC’s “actions against Israel and the United States set a dangerous precedent, directly endangering current and former United States personnel, including active service members of the Armed Forces.” He said the court’s “malign conduct” threatens “the sovereignty of the United States and undermines the critical national security and foreign policy work of the United States Government.”


The White House did not respond to a request for comment.

Netanyahu has dismissed the ICC’s allegations as “absurd,” and Israel’s Knesset is considering legislation that would make providing evidence to the court a crime.

Israel launched its offensive after Hamas-led militants stormed into southern Israel in October 2023, killing about 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and abducting scores of others. Hamas is believed to be holding about two dozen hostages.

Coping with dark humor

Inside the court, staffers have been coping with dark humor, joking about how they cannot even loan Khan a pen or risk appearing on the U.S. radar.

This is not the first time the ICC has drawn Trump’s ire. In 2020, the former Trump administration sanctioned Khan’s predecessor, Fatou Bensouda, and one of her deputies over the court’s investigation into alleged crimes committed in Afghanistan while the U.S. military was operating in the country.

President Joe Biden rescinded the sanctions when he took office several months later.

Three lawsuits are now pending from U.S. court staff and consultants against the Trump administration arguing that the sanctions infringe on their freedom of expression. Earlier this week Iverson, the lawyer investigating genocide in Sudan, won temporary protection from prosecution. But if other U.S. citizens at the court want a similar assurance, they would have to bring their own complaint.

Meanwhile, the court is facing a lack of cooperation from countries normally considered to be its staunchest supporters.

The ICC has no enforcement apparatus of its own and relies on member states. In the last year, three countries – including two in the European Union – have refused to execute warrants issued by the court.

Also in recent months, judges have banned Khan from publicizing his requests for warrants in several investigations. The first such ban, imposed in February and obtained by AP, targeted warrants in the court’s investigation into war crimes in Afghanistan. Subsequent orders, also seen by AP, include a ban on the publication of warrant requests in the investigation into crimes in the Palestinian territories.

The court was already facing internal challenges. Last year, just weeks before Khan announced he was requesting arrest warrants for the Israeli officials, two court staff reported the British barrister had harassed a female aide, according to reporting by the AP.


Khan has categorically denied the accusations that he groped and tried to coerce a female aide into a sexual relationship. A United Nations investigation is underway, and Khan has since been accused of retaliating against staff who supported the woman, including demoting several people he felt were critical of him.​
of fucking course Microsoft doing the dirty work of fascists yet again fuck them, how many Epstein tapes of blackmail they got on the CEOs there I wonder now
 
Last edited:

Gergar12

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 24, 2020
4,331
925
118
Country
United States
there may be something to that, though I question how eroded the USA's standing really is. A lot of yapping about it, for sure. Global capitalism is still global, however.
Even Lindsey Graham has admitted it's all over the TV in the Middle East. Every ordinary family in the Middle East with a television, radio, computer, and or smartphone knows about this. Tiktokers worldwide get this blasted to their phones, and even many Youtuber viewers are starting to notice. Unlike the elderly in power, it's the middle-aged, and young plus their children who will have to deal with the consequences of backing Israel with the world's biggest supply chain. The US already cut USAID to many countries that will soon have growing economies, that's our loss. Yet the idiots in Congress who don't even care about their own children's futures are running our country's soft power in the ground now, and anyone below age 60 will have to deal with it in the future.
 
Last edited:

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
6,100
3,685
118
Country
United States of America
Even Lindsey Graham has admitted it's all over the TV in the Middle East. Every ordinary family in the Middle East with a television, radio, computer, and or smartphone knows about this. Tiktokers worldwide get this blasted to their phones, and even many Youtuber viewers are starting to notice. Unlike the elderly in power, it's the middle-aged, and young plus their children who will have to deal with the consequences of backing Israel with the world's biggest supply chain. The US already cut USAID to many countries that will soon have growing economies, that's our loss. Yet the idiots in Congress who don't even care about their own children's futures are running our country's soft power in the ground now, and anyone below age 60 will have to deal with it in the future.
Public diplomacy and soft power are not quite the same thing; the United States has plenty of soft power despite being reviled around the world, wretched though that detail may be. The US hegemony is a structure, and US meddling in foreign countries has been effective in marrying various interests to those of the US ruling elite and the broader Western ruling class. That is why dissension has been largely performative so far; leaders are allowed to make noise so long as they obey.
 

XsjadoBlaydette

~s•o√r∆rπy°`Inc hope GrIfts etUrnaL
May 26, 2022
1,261
1,545
118
Clear 'n Present Danger
Country
Must
Gender
Disappear

Donation collected by UNRWA USA

YouTube covers all transaction fees • Nonprofit website

Vision: Until there is a just solution to their plight, UNRWA USA envisions a world where Palestine refugees thrive. Mission: UNRWA USA lifts up the voices, experiences, and humanity of Palestine refugees to secure American support for resources essential to every human being, for the promise of a better life.

DONATE: https://getinvolved.unrwausa.org/fund...

GUEST SCHEDULE (all times PST)
SATURDAY 5/17
6pm - Tirrrb
10pm - Gokanaru
12am- Ahmed Sarsour

SUNDAY 5/18
9am - Chris Kunzler
11am - Overzealots
3pm - Ayyrabs podcast
8pm - Hasan Piker
10:30pm - Indie Nile

MONDAY 5/19
10am - elle literacy
1pm - Denims
3pm - Ro Ramdin
6pm- FD Signifier

PENDING SURPRISE GUESTS!
 

Gergar12

Elite Member
Legacy
Apr 24, 2020
4,331
925
118
Country
United States
Public diplomacy and soft power are not quite the same thing; the United States has plenty of soft power despite being reviled around the world, wretched though that detail may be. The US hegemony is a structure, and US meddling in foreign countries has been effective in marrying various interests to those of the US ruling elite and the broader Western ruling class. That is why dissension has been largely performative so far; leaders are allowed to make noise so long as they obey.
Yes, Public diplomacy is under the umbrella of hard power and soft power. Hard power is coercive. I could threaten you in this way for this political reason. Or if you do this, I could offer you this foreign direct investment(Soft Power). But we have been losing soft power more than hard power. The US still has all of its land, resources, companies, military, etc. What it doesn't have as many of as previously was, for example, spies in China, where many died due to counterintelligence a while ago, or USAID or Radio Free Asia, for example. Its share of GDP vs the world is stable, but history often happens very slowly than all at once.
 

Seanchaidh

Elite Member
Legacy
Mar 21, 2009
6,100
3,685
118
Country
United States of America
Yes, Public diplomacy is under the umbrella of hard power and soft power. Hard power is coercive. I could threaten you in this way for this political reason. Or if you do this, I could offer you this foreign direct investment(Soft Power). But we have been losing soft power more than hard power. The US still has all of its land, resources, companies, military, etc. What it doesn't have as many of as previously was, for example, spies in China, where many died due to counterintelligence a while ago, or USAID or Radio Free Asia, for example. Its share of GDP vs the world is stable, but history often happens very slowly than all at once.
I share some of your optimism. But European politicians are still basically pro-US despite it not making much sense at first glance. Or second.
 

XsjadoBlaydette

~s•o√r∆rπy°`Inc hope GrIfts etUrnaL
May 26, 2022
1,261
1,545
118
Clear 'n Present Danger
Country
Must
Gender
Disappear
elaboration article by same person


Netanyahu: Gaza Aid Scheme Offers Israel Symbolic Cover to Finish the Genocide

In order to conquer and seize Gaza, “We need to do it in a way” where the world “won’t stop us," Netanyahu says.

Jeremy Scahill
May 19, 2025

Israel is making a push to complete the genocide in Gaza: escalating its aerial bombardment, announcing “extensive” new ground operations, and issuing sweeping displacement orders, from the north to the south. This comes amid a full spectrum siege Israel has imposed for the past two and a half months in a policy of forced starvation.

In the story below, I explain the genocidal intent behind Israel's decision to begin allowing symbolic amounts of aid into the Gaza Strip. Benjamin Netanyahu and his extremist ally Bezalel Smotrich are not making any secret about their intent to use the veneer of humanitarianism as a mechanism to advance their war of annihilation.

We also just published a dispatch by my colleague Rash Abou Jalal in Gaza City where she describes trying to donate blood to help the wounded, only to collapse during the process and later find out she was too anemic and malnourished for her blood to be fit to donate.

Our work is funded by our paid subscribers. If you are a free subscriber and you support our work, please consider upgrading to a paid subscription or gifting one to a friend or family member. You can also make a 501(c)(3) tax-deductible donation to support our work.



President Donald Trump meets with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in the Oval Office on April 7, 2025. (Photo by Kevin Dietsch/Getty Images)

Benjamin Netanyahu has made it clear: His decision to allow a minuscule amount of aid to enter Gaza is a tactical one aimed at quieting international condemnation of Israel’s forced starvation of Gaza and to clear the path of a final solution imposed on the Palestinians of Gaza.

"We're going to take control of all the Gaza Strip,” Netanyahu vowed Monday in a video released by his office announcing that Israel would begin delivering “minimal humanitarian aid: food and medicine only.” Netanyahu claimed that international pressure, including from pro-Israel Republican senators and the White House, required the appearance of humanitarian intervention. "Our best friends in the world—senators I know as strong supporters of Israel—have warned that they cannot support us if images of mass starvation emerge," he said. “They come to me and say, ‘We’ll give you all the help you need to win the war… but we can’t be receiving pictures of famine,’” Netanyahu added. To continue the war of annihilation, he asserted, “We need to do it in a way that they won't stop us.”

Netanyahu’s coalitional ally Bezalel Smotrich—an extreme right-wing government minister and longtime advocate of starving, mass killing, and depopulating Gaza—endorsed Netanyahu’s move. Smotrich said the aid scheme would allow “our friends in the world to continue to provide us with an international umbrella of protection against the Security Council and the Hague Tribunal, and for us to continue to fight, God willing, until victory.”

In what he described as an emergency press conference to address criticism from his own base, Smotrich laid out the Netanyahu government’s genocidal agenda and explained why the appearance of allowing aid is necessary on a strategic level. “The [aid] that will enter Gaza in the coming days is the tiniest amount. A handful of bakeries that will hand out pita bread to people in public kitchens. People in Gaza will get a pita and a food plate, and that's it. Exactly what we are seeing in the videos: people standing in line and waiting to have someone serve them, with some soup plate,” Smotrich said.

“Truth be told, until the last of the hostages returns, we should also not let water into the Gaza Strip. But the reality is that if we do that, the world will force us to halt the war immediately, and to lose. It would be winning the battle, and losing the war. I'm committed to winning the war,” Smotrich declared. “We are disassembling Gaza, and leaving it as piles of rubble, with total destruction [which has] no precedent globally. And the world isn't stopping us. There are pressures. There are those who attack [us]; they are trying to [make us] stop; they are not succeeding. You know why they aren't succeeding? Because we are navigating [the campaign] responsibly and wisely, and that's how we'll continue to do [it]."

Smotrich said that the Israeli forces are initiating a campaign to force Palestinians into the south of Gaza “and from there, God willing, to third countries, as part of President Trump's plan. This is a change of the course of history—nothing less.”

In recent days, Trump has resumed promoting the threat he first floated on February 4 when Netanyahu visited him at the White House: that the U.S. would seize Gaza and create a Middle East Riviera. “I think I’d be proud to have the United States have it, take it, make it a freedom zone,” Trump said Thursday, an assertion he repeated over the weekend in an interview with FOX News. “Gaza is a nasty place. It's been that way for years. I think it should become a free zone, you know, freedom, I call it a freedom zone,” Trump told host Bret Baier.

On Sunday, Netanyahu said that allowing “a basic amount of food” to enter Gaza was pursued out of “the operational need to enable the expansion of the intense fighting to defeat Hamas.” He said that Israel would resume limited aid deliveries on an interim basis starting approximately a week ahead of a longer term aid plan that would circumvent the UN and other international agencies. The emerging Israeli policy offers enough food to Palestinians in Gaza to ward off international condemnation that could impact its war, while preparing to ethnically cleanse Palestinians from Gaza.


Netanyahu’s announcement comes amid renewed talks over a possible Gaza ceasefire and exchange of captives deal. Netanyahu has insisted he will not make any agreement that ends the war without the total elimination of Hamas and the demilitarization of the entire Gaza Strip. Hamas has said it will not release any more Israeli captives held in Gaza unless an internationally certified deal is reached that includes the total withdrawal of Israeli forces and a long-term truce.

“We are ready to release the prisoners in one batch, provided the occupation commits to an internationally guaranteed ceasefire,” said Sami Abu Zuhri, head of Hamas’s Political Bureau Abroad, on Sunday. He told Al Jazeera Mubashar, “We will not hand over our prisoners to the occupation as long as it continues to insist on continuing its aggression against Gaza indefinitely.”


Strategies of Conquest

The Trump administration has publicly continued to fully back Netanyahu as the Israeli army intensifies its campaign of terror bombings and forced displacement across Gaza. The White House has offered no public criticism of Netanyahu’s operation, called “Gideon’s Chariot,” aimed at seizing control of all of Gaza in what officials have described as a “conquest.”

Before Trump set off on his Middle East tour, during which he notably did not stop in Israel, Netanyahu announced this new phase to his war of annihilation in Gaza. If Hamas did not surrender and agree to release all Israeli captives by the time Trump returned to Washington, D.C., Israel would initiate a large-scale ground invasion and occupation of the entire Gaza Strip.

Over the weekend, Israeli forces began intensifying ground operations and expanded its relentless campaign of bombings and air strikes. Israeli forces attacked several hospitals and camps for displaced people in operations that killed more than 500 Palestinians in just a few days. Missile strikes rained down on the southern city of Khan Younis accompanied by helicopter gunship attacks and artillery shelling. On Monday, Israel issued sweeping forced evacuation orders in the south, including the entire governorate of Khan Younis, that forced panicked residents to grab what they could and flee to sites Israel has previously designated as safe zones, including Al-Mawasi, which the Israeli military then later attacked.

Trump has pursued an increasingly close alliance with Arab Gulf leaders, who represent massive business opportunities for both his political and personal agenda. Trump’s deal-making has created some technical hurdles for Netanyahu’s murderous agenda. While the rulers of these states did not publicly demand that Trump impose a ceasefire or intervene to halt Netanyahu’s genocidal march, reports indicate that they did privately urge him to act swiftly to resume aid shipments to Gaza and to utilize U.S. influence to compel Netanyahu to halt the genocide.


During his recent tour of Saudi Arabia, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates, Trump said little about Gaza, but he did pledge to confront the humanitarian crisis and said that aid delivery would resume. “Look, people are starving,” Trump said Saturday in an interview on FOX News. “I’ve already started working on that.” Israeli officials have said that the White House had begun pressuring Netanyahu to allow a partial lifting of the blockade.

“I don’t think there’s any daylight between President Trump’s position and Prime Minister Netanyahu's position,” said Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special envoy, on Sunday in an interview with ABC News. “Everyone is concerned about the humanitarian conditions in Gaza,” he added. “We do not want to see a humanitarian crisis, and we will not allow it to occur on President Trump’s watch.”


As Drop Site reported on Friday, Hamas said its decision to release U.S. citizen and Israeli soldier Edan Alexander last Monday was the result of a direct commitment from Witkoff. According to Basem Naim, a member of Hamas’s political bureau, Witkoff made a direct commitment that, two days after Alexander’s release, the Trump administration would compel Israel to lift the Gaza blockade and allow humanitarian aid to immediately enter the territory. Witkoff, Naim said, also promised that Trump would make a public call for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza and for negotiations aimed at achieving a “permanent ceasefire.” Naim said the U.S. “threw [the deal] in the trash.”

Both Israel and the U.S. have been promoting plans to deliver aid to Gaza that would circumvent a ceasefire deal, which the United Nations and all aid groups operating in Gaza have said would be necessary in order to address the acute humanitarian crisis. Instead, the U.S. and Israel have concocted a scheme involving a newly established “non-governmental” foundation run by a former U.S. marine to take official charge of establishing zones, mostly in southern Gaza, to distribute a limited number of rations.

Palestinians wishing to receive aid would have to go through an Israeli security vetting process and subject themselves to checkpoints and facial recognition technology as a condition for receiving food. On Monday, Netanyahu said the sites would be located in “a sterile area controlled entirely by the IDF.”

The UN and over 200 non-governmental aid organizations have denounced the plan, saying it is unworkable and weaponizes aid as a tool of war. The main UN humanitarian organization operating in the Occupied Palestinian Territories said the plan was aimed at dismantling the international infrastructure built over several decades and further enforcing Israeli dominance over access to basic life sustaining food and supplies for Palestinians in Gaza.

“It contravenes fundamental humanitarian principles and appears designed to reinforce control over life-sustaining items as a pressure tactic – as part of a military strategy,” asserted the country team of the UN Humanitarian Coordinator for the Occupied Palestinian Territory on May 5. “It is dangerous, driving civilians into militarized zones to collect rations, threatening lives, including those of humanitarian workers, while further entrenching forced displacement.”​