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Celerity

(54,892 posts)
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 09:20 AM Jul 2025

Israel airdrops food into Gaza as starvation deaths rise

Airdrops of food have resumed in Gaza, Israel said, as deaths from starvation in the besieged enclave spread.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2025/07/26/gaza-airdrops-resume-starvation-israel/

https://archive.ph/lvESr



JERUSALEM — Israel has begun to airdrop food into Gaza, Israel said on Saturday, as deaths from starvation in the besieged enclave spread this week and international criticism of Israel’s restrictions on aid reached a crescendo. The Israeli military said seven pallets of flour, sugar and canned goods — which appeared to be less than a truckload of food — was dropped Saturday night after a meeting led by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and senior aides. Israeli troops will pause fighting on Sunday to allow for food distribution and assist U.N. agencies in their aid delivery effort, the military said, and Israel will also turn on electricity to Gaza’s only functioning water desalination plant.

Israel shut the plant in March, depriving Gaza of the ability to make its own potable water. Aid agencies described the airdrops Saturday as an inadequate response and an Israeli attempt to whitewash a policy of deliberate starvation. The Israel Defense Forces said Saturday that the airdrops and other measures were “aimed at improving the humanitarian response in the Gaza Strip, and to refute the false claim of deliberate starvation in the Gaza Strip.” An Israeli military official acknowledged this week to reporters that Gaza was facing a “lack of food security” but denied there was famine.

Still, Israel’s moves amounted to a turnaround in its policy under intense international pressure and underscored the severe humanitarian crisis unfolding inside the strip. Netanyahu’s government began to block food and medicine from entering Gaza in March on the grounds that the previous aid distribution mechanism led by the United Nations was benefiting Hamas — a claim that has been rejected by Western and U.N. officials. An Israeli official said Saturday’s airdrop operation was conducted by Israeli Air Force planes carrying food from neighboring Jordan — marking the first time since the start of the Israel-Gaza War that Israel has directly delivered aid to Palestinians.



Israel has been under blistering international criticism for its blockade of Gaza as images of dead and malnourished Palestinian children circulate around the world. In recent days, a growing group of international governments has volunteered to join airdrop missions immediately to relieve the deepening crisis. “Jordan is ready to help the people in Gaza by any means, whether it’s land convoys or airdrops or anything,” said a Jordanian official, who, like others in this report, spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter. “People are hungry.”

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Israel airdrops food into Gaza as starvation deaths rise (Original Post) Celerity Jul 2025 OP
There will be a media pressence to document it. Whitewash for IDF crimes. marble falls Jul 2025 #1
A completely human-caused famine is a bad look, I guess Prairie Gates Jul 2025 #2
"seven pallets of flour, sugar and canned goods -- which appeared to be less than a truckload of food " vanessa_ca Jul 2025 #3
Performative gesture. Celerity Jul 2025 #8
Is it poisoned? Ferrets are Cool Jul 2025 #4
+1 dalton99a Jul 2025 #5
I was going to ask the same question mike_c Jul 2025 #10
Netanyahu: "Okay, keep them alive so I can kill them" dalton99a Jul 2025 #6
A standard 53' truck can hold 52 pallets KentuckyWoman Jul 2025 #7
Airdrops aren't going to do it... Hugin Jul 2025 #9

vanessa_ca

(947 posts)
3. "seven pallets of flour, sugar and canned goods -- which appeared to be less than a truckload of food "
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 10:04 AM
Jul 2025

No one will ever forget.

Open the bloody gates!

KentuckyWoman

(7,417 posts)
7. A standard 53' truck can hold 52 pallets
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 10:30 AM
Jul 2025

26 if they aren't stacked. 7 pallets is not even filling a 16' box truck.

Hugin

(38,001 posts)
9. Airdrops aren't going to do it...
Sun Jul 27, 2025, 10:36 AM
Jul 2025

What to do, what to do?

Maybe something like this...


"As of late June 2024, the U.S. Army’s floating pier—part of the Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore (JLOTS) system—enabled the delivery of approximately 20 million pounds of humanitarian aid to Gaza. This included food and other essential supplies brought ashore despite repeated weather and security challenges that limited the pier’s operational days.



Yet this effort was mocked, even right here on DU. The president at the time? Why none other than Joe Biden.

It's no wonder the Retrumplicans hate PBS: https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/u-s-militarys-gaza-pier-built-to-carry-humanitarian-aid-will-be-dismantled-after-weather-and-security-problems

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