Opinion
David
French
Israel
Must Open Its Eyes
Aug. 3,
2025, 1:00 a.m. ET
David
French
By David
French
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/03/opinion/israel-famine-hamas-netanyahu-trump.html
I think
it’s fair to describe me as a Christian Zionist. I believe in the necessity of
the Jewish people to have their own safe, secure homeland. And while I have
never thought Israel was perfect (far from it), I have seen the antisemitism
and genocidal intent animating its enemies in the Middle East, including Hamas,
Hezbollah and Iran.
I can see
the extraordinary antisemitism and bias in the larger international community.
When a United Nations that includes North Korea, Syria, Russia and China
condemns Israel more than any other nation in the world (by far), you know that
the Jewish state is being singled out.
I’m also
a veteran of the Iraq war who served as judge advocate for an armored cavalry
regiment during the surge in Iraq in 2007 and 2008. Before I became a
journalist, I was part of a legal team that defended Israel from war crime
accusations after Operation Cast Lead, the Gaza war of 2008 and 2009.
I know
that Israel had the right under international law to destroy Hamas’s military
and to remove Hamas from power after the massacre in southern Israel on Oct. 7.
In other words, Israel had the right to respond to a terrorist force like Hamas
the way the United States and its allies responded to a terrorist force like
ISIS after ISIS launched its terrorist campaign across the Middle East and
across Europe.
So, yes,
I consider myself a friend of Israel. But now its friends need to stage an
intervention. The Israeli government has gone too far. It has engineered a
staggering humanitarian crisis, and that crisis is both a moral atrocity and a
long-term threat to Israel itself.
Civilian
casualties were inevitable when Israel responded to Hamas, but the suffering of
Palestinian civilians is far beyond the bounds of military necessity. The
people of Gaza, already grieving the loss of thousands of children, now face a
famine — and children once again will bear the brunt of the pain.
If you’re
skeptical of this claim (and I know many supporters of Israel are), consider
two factors — the numbers and the timing. As The Times documented in an article
on Friday, the amount of aid flowing into Gaza has sharply diminished.
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Before
Israel ended its cease-fire with Hamas and blocked aid shipments in March, the
amount of aid entering Gaza had soared to well over 200,000 tons per month.
Then it dropped to virtually nothing, and even after Israel lifted its blockade
in May, the amount of aid flowing into Gaza was a small fraction of what it had
been.
Compounding
the problem, the method of distributing what little aid is available requires
thousands of Palestinians to travel long distances, which imposes an extreme
hardship on the most vulnerable people — the very old, the very sick and the
very young. Palestinians also have to cross military lines, which creates its
own risk of violence as thousands upon thousands of hungry civilians encounter
heavily armed soldiers who are on high alert.
In Iraq,
I participated in humanitarian missions that involved far fewer people, and I
can tell you that these missions can be remarkably tense. It takes extreme
discipline to keep the peace. Consequently, even as the amount of aid has
diminished, the number of violent incidents during aid distribution has
skyrocketed. Hundreds of Palestinians in search of food have been killed, many
of them by Israeli soldiers.
So there
is less aid, and it’s harder and more dangerous to obtain.
The
decrease in aid would be dreadful on its own, but what makes it incalculably
worse is the timing. Israel’s aid blockade came after a year and a half of war,
when Hamas is decimated, Gaza’s government is largely dismantled and chaos
reigns.
The
dominant power in Gaza is Israel, not Hamas, and Israel, not Hamas, is the only
entity with both the power to control aid distribution and the ability to
obtain and distribute aid in the Gaza Strip. There is no way for Gazans to feed
themselves. They are utterly dependent on Israel, and Israel removed the United
Nations from the aid distribution network without replacing it with an
effective alternative.
Anyone
who has spent time fighting Al Qaeda or ISIS or Hamas knows that those groups
think civilian suffering advances their cause. They don’t burrow into cities
and wear civilian clothes and hide behind hospitals and mosques simply to
conceal themselves; they do so knowing that any military response will also
kill civilians. They want the world to see images of civilian death and
suffering.
So why is
Israel giving Hamas what it wants?
Hamas
should lay down its arms. It should release every hostage. But Hamas’s war
crimes — including its murders, its hostage taking and its concealment among
civilians and civilian buildings — do not relieve Israel of its own moral and
legal obligations.
There has
always been a better way to defeat Hamas, and no one knows this better than
veterans of the Iraq war. We’ve watched Israel make the same mistakes we made
early in the war, when we repeatedly attacked and destroyed terrorist cells but
the terrorists always came back.
We played
a deadly and destructive version of Whac-a-Mole, reducing neighborhoods and
streets to ruin, only to bomb the rubble weeks and months later when Al Qaeda
returned. The only way to stop the cycle was to seize ground, hold it and
protect and secure the civilian population until we could hand control over to
local authorities.
That
approach has a double virtue. It’s not just kinder to civilians; it’s far more
effective militarily. I’m not just saying this. Gen. David Petraeus, the
commander of American forces in Iraq during the surge — when we turned the tide
of the Iraq war in part by protecting the Iraqi population — has made this
argument over and over and over again since Oct. 7.
This is a
moment of short-term strength and long-term vulnerability for Israel. Its
triumphs in its fights with Hamas, Hezbollah and Iran mean that its foes are
militarily the weakest they’ve been in more than a generation. At the same
time, however, European and American public support for Israel is in a state of
collapse.
A May
YouGov poll found that public support for Israel in Western Europe was the
lowest it had ever recorded. A July Gallup poll found that only 32 percent of
Americans approved of Israel’s military actions in Gaza.
But don’t
take collapsing support for Israel as proof that nations support Hamas. On
Tuesday all 22 members of the Arab League and all 27 members of the European
Union called on Hamas to disarm, release all remaining hostages and surrender
control of Gaza. This was a vitally important step — a clear indication that
key nations in the world utterly reject Hamas.
It
matters when President Trump — the man who ordered U.S. strikes on Iran’s
nuclear facilities — describes what’s happening in Gaza as “real starvation”
and says, “I told Israel maybe they have to do it a different way.”
Israel’s
defenders can rightfully complain that nations with far worse human rights
violations receive far less scrutiny. Where are the protests, they ask, against
North Korean gulags? Or against the Chinese oppression of the Uyghurs? But
again, Israel has moral responsibilities, regardless of Western hypocrisy, and
it still needs those Western friends.
No nation
— not even the United States — can thrive without allies, and Israel (despite
its nuclear weapons) is far more vulnerable and dependent on international
friendship than the United States or Britain or France. If Israel creates a
lasting rift with its European allies and shatters the longstanding bipartisan
American consensus on aiding Israel, then the long-term consequences could be
grave.
It’s easy
to forget that it was President Barack Obama, a Democrat, who signed the
largest-ever American military aid package with Israel — a $38 billion, 10-year
deal that helped supply Israel with many of the weapons it has used in this
war. It’s easy to forget that President Joe Biden, a Democrat, twice deployed
American forces to help defend Israel from Iranian drone and missile attacks.
Is Israel
better off if its alliance with America depends on whether a Republican is in
the White House? Can it even count on Republican support in the long run?
Putting aside for the moment the rise of antisemitism in the online right,
“America First” has never been a concept hospitable to foreign aid or
alliances.
One of
the most frustrating aspects of our political discourse is the expectation that
once you’re identified on a side, you are somehow betraying your side if you
speak up when it goes terribly wrong. Partisans are used to ignoring their
opponents, but there might be a chance they will listen to their friends.
Israel’s
friends must speak with one voice: End the famine in Gaza. Drop any talk of
annexation. Protect the civilian population.
Defeating
Hamas does not require starving a single child.


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