Gaza, Hamas and Israel
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The US pulls back from ceasefire talks, blames Hamas, and backs a controversial food aid system amid mounting global criticism.
The answer to Gaza’s humanitarian crisis will never be found in a comment thread, but perhaps it begins by naming things clearly: Hamas is not a liberation movement. It is a regime of cruelty. And truth, not slogans, must be our starting point.
An internal U.S. government analysis found no evidence of systematic theft by the Palestinian militant group Hamas of U.S.-funded humanitarian supplies, challenging the main rationale that Israel and the U.
The study's acknowledgment of severe limitations, combined with extensive documentation of Hamas aid diversion from multiple sources, raises serious questions about the reliability of its findings. A deeply flawed US government analysis,
President Trump’s special envoy said that “we will now consider alternative options to bring the hostages home,” though it was not clear that negotiations had halted.
While the international community criticizes the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, a middle east expert says the U.S.- and Israel-backed organization is taking the power away from Hamas.
Israel is permitting supplies to enter the territory in quantities catastrophically insufficient for its approximately 2 million residents.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says the situation in Gaza has gone beyond the world’s worst fears as hopes of a truce between Israel and Hamas have been dashed.
While the officer quoted in the report claimed that Hamas has lost control over some 80% of Gaza, the IDF said last week that it controls around 65% of the Strip, and is nearing its stated goal of ...
17hon MSN
Hamas is reportedly campaigning on the issue of food insecurity to try to get rid of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation as part of the hostage negotiations. The IDF acknowledged on Friday that while there is no starvation in Gaza,