Yara Asi: Israeli policies are creating catastrophic starvation risk
After 18 months of punishing raids, airstrikes and increasingly restrictive siege in Gaza, the United Nations issued an urgent warning in late May about the ongoing humanitarian crisis. It estimated 14,000 babies were at risk of starvation without an immediate influx of substantial aid, especially food.
The assessment came one day after Israel allowed the first trickle of aid back into Gaza following a nearly three-month total blockade imposed March 2.
On that first day, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs reported that only nine trucks were allowed in, when around 500 are required daily. The U.N. called it “a drop in the ocean of what is urgently needed.”
As an expert in Palestinian public health, I and others have long warned about the potentially devastating humanitarian consequences of Israel’s military response to the Hamas attacks of Oct. 7, 2023, given the preexisting fragility of the Gaza Strip and Israel’s history of controlling humanitarian aid into the territory. Many of those worst-case predictions have now become reality.
Israel’s control of food and aid into Gaza has been a consistent theme throughout. Indeed, just two weeks after Israel’s massive military campaign in the Gaza Strip began in late 2023, Oxfam International reported that only around 2% of the usual amount of food was being delivered. It warned against “using starvation as a weapon of war.”
Yet aid delivery continues to be inconsistent, and well below what is necessary for the population. That triggered a dire U.N. warning that “the annihilation of the Palestinian population in Gaza” was possible.
Already, an estimated near 53,000 Palestinians have been killed and 120,000 injured. Starvation could claim many more, as there is now barely a food system to speak of in Gaza.
Since October 2023, Israeli bombs have destroyed homes, bakeries, food processing plants and grocery stores, making it harder for people in Gaza to offset the impact of the reduced food imports.
Though the situation has worsened greatly since, food insecurity in Gaza and the mechanisms that enable it did not start with Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas. They came into play much earlier.
A U.N. report from 2022 found that 65% of people in Gaza were food insecure, defined as lacking regular access to enough safe and nutritious fare.
Multiple factors contributed to this preexisting food insecurity, not least the blockade of Gaza imposed by Israel and enabled by Egypt since 2007.
All items entering the Gaza Strip, including food, became subject to Israeli inspection, delay or denial. Basic foodstuffs were allowed, but because of delays at the border, it could spoil before it entered Gaza.
A 2009 investigation by Israeli newspaper Ha’aretz found that foods as varied as cherries, kiwi, almonds, pomegranates and chocolate were prohibited entirely.
At certain points, the blockade, which Israel claimed was an unavoidable security measure, has been loosened to allow import of more foods. In 2010, for example, Israel started to permit potato chips, fruit juice, Coca-Cola and cookies.
By placing restrictions on food imports, Israel has claimed to be trying to put pressure on Hamas by making life difficult for the people. “The idea is to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger,” said one Israeli government adviser in 2006.
To enable this, the Israeli government commissioned a 2008 study to work out exactly how many calories Palestinians would need to avoid malnutrition. The report was released to the public only following a 2012 legal battle.
Echoes of this sentiment can be seen in the Israeli decision in May 2025 to allow only “the basic amount of food” to reach Gaza to purportedly ensure “no starvation crisis develops.”
The long-running blockade also increased food insecurity by preventing meaningful development of an economy in Gaza.
The U.N. cites the Israeli imposition of “excessive production and transaction costs and barriers to trade with the rest of the world” as the primary cause of severe underdevelopment in the occupied territories.
As a result, in late 2022 the unemployment rate in Gaza stood at around 50%. Coupled with a steady increase in the cost of food, this made affording food difficult for many Gazan households, rendering them dependent on aid, which fluctuates frequently.
More generally, the blockade and the multiple rounds of destruction of parts of the Gaza Strip have made food sovereignty in the territory nearly impossible.
Even prior to the latest war, Gaza’s fishermen were regularly shot at by Israeli gunboats if they ventured farther in the Mediterranean Sea than Israel permits. Because the fish closer to the shore are smaller and less plentiful, the average income of a fisherman in Gaza has declined more than half since 2017.
Much of Gaza’s farmland has been rendered inaccessible to Palestinians as a result of post-October 2023 actions by Israel. And the infrastructure needed for adequate food production — greenhouses, arable lands, orchards, livestock and food production facilities — has been destroyed or heavily damaged.
International donors hesitate to rebuild facilities, knowing they cannot guarantee their investment will last more than a few years before being bombed again.
The latest ongoing siege has further crippled the ability of Gaza to be food self-sufficient.
By May of this year, nearly 75% of croplands had been destroyed, along with significant amounts of livestock. Less than one-third of agricultural wells used for irrigation remain functional.
The use of starvation as a weapon is strictly forbidden under the Geneva Conventions, a set of statutes that govern the laws of warfare. Starvation has been condemned by U.N. Resolution 2417, which decried the use of deprivation of food and basic needs of the civilian population and compelled parties in conflict to ensure full humanitarian access.
Human Rights Watch has already accused Israel of using starvation as a weapon of war, and Amnesty International called the most recent siege evidence of genocidal intent. The Israeli government in turn continues to blame Hamas for any loss of life in Gaza and has increasingly made clear its aim for Palestinians to leave Gaza entirely.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said publicly that Israel was permitting aid now only because allies were pressuring him over “images of mass famine.” This stance suggests that Israel will not soon increase aid beyond what his government deems politically acceptable.
While there is more evidence than ever before that Israel is using food as a weapon of war, there is also, I believe, ample evidence that this was the reality long before Oct. 7, 2023.
In the meantime, the implications for Palestinians in Gaza have never been more dire.
The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, a global system created to track food insecurity, released an alarming report on projections of food insecurity in Gaza earlier this year. It warned that by September, half a million people in Gaza, or 1 in 5, could be facing starvation, and the entire population could be experiencing acute food insecurity, at crisis level or worse.
From The Conversation, an online repository of lay versions of academic research findings found at theconversation.com/us. Used with permission.
Comments