US airs frustration with Israel's military about strikes in Gaza
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[September 17, 2024]
By EDITH M. LEDERER
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations on
Monday accused Israel’s military of striking schools, humanitarian
workers and civilians in Gaza in a sign of growing American frustration
with its close ally as the war approaches its first anniversary.
Israel has repeatedly said it targets Hamas militants, who often hide
with civilians and use them as human shields, in retaliation for the
Oct. 7 attacks in southern Israel that killed about 1,200 people and
launched the war in Gaza.
U.S. Ambassador Linda Thomas-Greenfield was unusually outspoken against
the Israeli military at a U.N. Security Council meeting, saying many of
the strikes in recent weeks that injured or killed U.N. personnel and
humanitarian workers “were preventable.”
Many council members cited last week’s Israeli strike on a former school
turned civilian shelter run by the U.N. agency helping Palestinian
refugees, known as UNRWA, in which six UNRWA staffers were among at
least 18 people killed, including women and children.
Israel said it targeted a Hamas command-and-control center in the
compound, and Israel’s U.N. ambassador, Danny Danon, asserted Monday
that Hamas militants were killed in the strike. He named four, claiming
to the council that they worked for UNRWA during the day and Hamas at
night.
U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has called for an independent
investigation.
Thomas-Greenfield told council members that the U.S. will keep raising
the need for Israel to facilitate humanitarian operations in the
Palestinian territory and protect humanitarian workers and facilities
like the UNRWA shelter.
She also reiterated U.S. “outrage” at the death of Turkish American
activist Aysenur Eygi, who was shot and killed during a protest in the
West Bank last week. Israeli Defense Forces said it likely killed Eygi
by mistake, and the government has begun a criminal investigation.
“The IDF is a professional military and knows well how to ensure that
incidents such as these do not happen,” the U.S. envoy said.
Thomas-Greenfield said the United States expects Israeli military
leaders to implement “fundamental changes” in their operations —
including to their rules of engagement and procedures to ensure that
military operations do not conflict with humanitarian activities and do
not target schools and other civilian facilities.
“We have also been unequivocal in communicating to Israel that there is
no basis — absolutely none — for its forces to be opening fire on
clearly marked U.N. vehicles as recently occurred on numerous
occasions,” Thomas-Greenfield said.
At the same time, she said Hamas is also hiding in — and in some cases,
taking over or using — civilian sites, which poses “an ongoing threat.”
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Israeli soldiers take up position next to buildings destroyed by the
Israeli military in the Gaza Strip on Friday, Sept. 13, 2024. (AP
Photo/Leo Correa)
She said it underscores the urgency of reaching a cease-fire and hostage
release deal in Gaza. While the United States works with fellow
mediators Egypt and Qatar to try to get both sides “to agree that enough
is enough,” she said, “this is ultimately a question of political will"
and difficult compromises.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken heads to Egypt this week for talks
partly about refining a proposal to present to Israel and Hamas.
The United States urges “all council members with influence over Hamas
to join others in pressing its leaders to stop stalling, make these
compromises, and accept the deal without delay,” Thomas-Greenfield.
She spoke after the top U.N. humanitarian official in Gaza said the
territory is “hell on Earth” for its more than 2 million people, calling
the lack of effective protection for civilians “unconscionable.”
Sigrid Kaag, the U.N. senior humanitarian and reconstruction coordinator
for Gaza, told council members and reporters that the war has turned the
territory "into the abyss.”
Over 41,000 Palestinians have been killed during Israel’s offensive,
according to Gaza’s Health Ministry, which doesn’t distinguish between
civilians and combatants.
Humanitarian operations are being impeded by lawlessness, Israeli
evacuation orders, fighting and difficult conditions for aid workers
that include Israeli denials of access, delays, a lack of safety and
security, and “poor logistical infrastructure,” Kaag said.
Danon insisted that Israel's humanitarian efforts “are unparalleled” for
a country forced to go to war and urged the Security Council and the
U.N. “to speak to the facts.”
Over 1 million tons of aid have been delivered via more than 50,000
trucks and nearly 1 million land crossings, he said, adding that hardly
a fraction have been stopped.
When asked about Danon’s statement, Kaag pointed to recent strikes on
humanitarian convoys and schools and health facilities where Israel had
received prior notification.
“It’s not about trucks. It’s about what people need,” she said. “We’re
way, way off what people need, not only daily, but also what we would
all consider a dignified human life.”
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