TEL AVIV, Dec 18, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - The United States vowed Monday it would
continue to arm Israel in its campaign against Hamas, even as it called for
more humanitarian aid to Palestinians in the devastated Gaza Strip.
Fighting raged on in the third month of the bloodiest ever Gaza war, with
the Hamas-run health ministry reporting another 110 people killed in strikes on
the Jabalia camp near Gaza City.
The UN Security Council in New York was set to vote later Monday on another
call for a ceasefire in the besieged territory, after previous bids were vetoed
by Israel's key ally the US.
Visiting Israel, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said: "We must get more
humanitarian assistance in to the nearly two million displaced people in Gaza
and we must distribute that aid better."
But he confirmed Washington was "Israel's greatest friend" and would
continue to provide "critical munitions, tactical vehicles and air defence
systems".
He added that his visit did not aim to "dictate timelines or terms" for the
war.
Austin is touring the Middle East as concerns grow over the war's spread
around the region, with Iran-backed Huthi rebels in Yemen attacking
international shipping in the Red Sea in solidarity with Hamas.
The attacks have disrupted global trade, driving up oil prices, with energy
giant BP among the latest major firms to stop using the vital route that leads
to the Suez Canal.
"In the Red Sea, we're leading a multinational maritime taskforce to uphold
the bedrock principle of freedom of navigation," Austin said, warning Iran to
stop supporting the Huthi attacks.
The war in Gaza began when its Islamist rulers Hamas launched an
unprecedented attack on October 7, killing around 1,140 people in Israel,
mostly civilians, and abducting 250, according to an AFP tally based on
official Israeli figures.
Gaza's health ministry says Israel's military response has killed more than
19,400 people, mostly women and children, while reducing vast areas to rubble.
- 'Starvation as method' -
International alarm has mounted over the plight of 2.4 million Gazans
enduring daily bombardment, food and water shortages and mass displacement.
Human Rights Watch charged that Israel "is using starvation of civilians as
a method of warfare".
"Israeli forces are deliberately blocking the delivery of water, food and
fuel, while wilfully impeding humanitarian assistance, apparently razing
agricultural areas," the New York-based NGO said.
Israel responded that HRW was an "anti-Semitic and anti-Israeli
organisation".
"Human Rights Watch... did not condemn the attack on Israeli citizens and
the massacre of October 7 and has no moral basis to talk about what's going on
in Gaza," a foreign ministry spokesman told AFP.
The head of the UN agency for Palestinian refugees, Philippe Lazzarini,
earlier said he "would not be surprised if people start dying of hunger, or a
combination of hunger, disease, weak immunity".
Israel has approved aid deliveries into Gaza via its Kerem Shalom crossing,
aside from the Rafah crossing with Egypt, and dozens of trucks entered through
Kerem Shalom on Monday, an AFP journalist said.
At the Rafah crossing, many families gathered in the hopes of finally being
allowed across to safety.
"We've been here for about a month," said Safa Fathi Hamad. "We are going
to die, food is very limited and we have no protection."
- 'Fight until the end' -
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Sunday again vowed Israel would
destroy Hamas, free the hostages and ensure Gaza will never again become "a
centre for terrorism".
The army has reported 129 deaths in Gaza since it launched ground
operations in late October.
Israel has accused Hamas of hiding among civilians and in tunnels
underneath hospitals, schools, mosques and other civilian infrastructure.
The army released a report Sunday of part of a vast Hamas tunnel network,
big enough to drive vehicles through, featuring rails, power lines, drainage
systems and a communications network.
Israel has faced mounting global pressure to either slow, suspend or stop
hostilities.
That includes families of the remaining 129 hostages believed held in Gaza,
whose anger and fear intensified after Israeli forces mistakenly shot dead
three hostages who had escaped their captors.
The trio waved white flags and used food leftovers to write a
Hebrew-language message on a white sheet before they were shot, reports said.
Army chief of staff Herzi Halevi, in a message to troops, stressed that if
enemy fighters "lay down their arms and raise their hands, we capture them, we
don't shoot them".
Qatar, which helped mediate a week-long truce and hostage-prisoner exchange
last month, has said there are "ongoing diplomatic efforts to renew the
humanitarian pause".
US news platform Axios on Monday reported that Mossad chief David Barnea,
CIA director Bill Burns and Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Mohammed bin
Abdulrahman Al Thani met in Warsaw.
As the war rages on, special concern has focused on hospitals, most of
which no longer function, and several of which have been the scenes of major
fighting.
World Health Organization chief Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said the UN
agency was "appalled by the effective destruction" of northern Gaza's Kamal
Adwan hospital.
Outside the hospital, the muddy ground scarred by tank and bulldozer
tracks, Abu Mohammed stood crying as he searched for his son.
"I don't know how I will find him," he said, pointing to the debris.