Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

US to watch aid to Gaza ‘very carefully,’ working on delivery mechanisms

“The people with guns inside Gaza are Hamas, and so Hamas may try to divert this assistance and keep it from getting to the civilians who it is intended for,” a U.S. State Department spokesman said. “We think that’s a legitimate concern.”

Rafah border crossing
The Rafah border crossing between Egypt and Gaza in January 2019. Credit: Abed Rahim Khatib/Shutterstock.

Amid Israeli concerns, which Washington shares, that Hamas will seize aid intended for civilians in the Gaza Strip, the U.S. State Department said Thursday that it will monitor the 20 trucks with supplies that enter Gaza from Egypt.

“We’ve made clear that this aid needs to go to innocent civilians and not Hamas,” said State Department spokesman Matthew Miller. “We’re going to be watching very carefully how it’s delivered because we want to be sensitive to those concerns, which we share.”

He said that the Israeli government’s concern “is that any assistance that goes in will be diverted once it’s inside Gaza, that there’s not an Israeli military force in Gaza, there’s not a U.N. peacekeeping force in Gaza.”

“The people with guns inside Gaza are Hamas, and so Hamas may try to divert this assistance and keep it from getting to the civilians who it is intended for,” he said. “We think that’s a legitimate concern.”

Miller was asked how the United States will ensure that Hamas doesn’t seize the supplies for itself. “You don’t have any way of making sure that that happens, right?” a reporter asked.

“We are working on the mechanisms for the delivery of this assistance,” Miller replied.

“Public funds aren’t props,” said Mark Goldfeder, of the National Jewish Advocacy Center.
“We’re not going to solve the world’s problems with this hearing,” the judge said, after interrupting the plaintiff, who praised the Hamas terror organization.
The man posted an expletive-laden Instagram video saying that the U.S. president “should be executed.”
Shira Goodman, of the Anti-Defamation League, told JNS that the votes are non-binding to the public universities but “risk fueling division on campus.”
“The committee is troubled by recent reports and allegations raising questions about Columbia University’s willingness to uphold its commitments to protect Jewish students, faculty and staff,” the House Committee on Energy and Commerce chair told the university.
“This is our country, sweet land of liberty, and of thee we do not sing enough,” Wisse said.