Biden Condemns Hamas Attacks as Aid Begins Pouring into Gaza – Insightful Coverage by NPR


A woman reacts as people gather at the site of Al Ahli Arab hospital in central Gaza on Wednesday in the aftermath of an overnight explosion there. AFP via Getty Images

For updates on President Biden’s visit, follow NPR’s live blog.

JERUSALEM – President Biden reaffirmed unwavering U.S. commitment to Israel’s security during his visit to the country on Wednesday but cautioned Israelis not to be consumed by rage, as protests spread across the Middle East against Israel’s bombardment and siege of the Gaza Strip.

Biden’s visit appeared to yield some gains for besieged Palestinians who say they are slowly dying of thirst and are without medicine, electricity or enough food following a complete Israeli siege of Gaza. Israel said Wednesday that in light of American support for Israel’s war effort, and Biden’s request for basic humanitarian assistance, Israel would allow only food, water and medicine to reach the civilian population in southern Gaza.

But the government did not say that fuel would be allowed in to power hospital generators and Gaza’s main power plant, which shut down last week. Israel says aid would only be allowed to reach southern Gaza — and not northern Gaza or Gaza City, areas Israel has ordered Palestinians to evacuate from. If any aid reaches Hamas, the flow of aid into Gaza will be stopped, Israel’s government said.

Israel has called up hundreds of thousands of reservists, who are now massed at its border with Gaza for a likely ground offensive. The escalation follows a deadly attack by Hamas militants from the Gaza Strip on Israel nearly two weeks ago.

Biden slams Hamas, backs Israel

Biden slammed Hamas, saying its attack on Israelis on Oct. 7 was similar to past terrorist attacks on the U.S., but he also said that “the vast majority of Palestinians are not Hamas.” His comments came amid concerns across the region that the volatility could spread to other Mideast countries. A planned summit after his visit to Israel between Biden and leaders from Egypt, Jordan and the Palestinian Authority was canceled after a deadly explosion at a hospital in Gaza Tuesday evening killed hundreds of people, many of them displaced families and children in the hospital’s courtyard where they had sought shelter from Israeli airstrikes.

Israel and the Palestinians have traded blame for it. Biden acknowledged the shock, pain and rage Israelis felt after seeing their loved ones killed by militants. “We’ve seen it described as Israel’s 9/11,” Biden said. “But for a nation the size of Israel,” he added, the losses equate to 15 attacks on the scale of Sept. 11 in the U.S. “Justice must be done,” Biden said. “But I caution this: while you feel that rage, don’t be consumed by it.”

“After 9/11, we were enraged in the United States while we sought justice and got justice. We also made mistakes,” he said while in Tel Aviv. He reiterated U.S. support for a two-state solution.

Tragedy at hospital precedes Biden’s visit

Biden’s visit to Israel comes the morning after a catastrophic explosion at a hospital in the Gaza Strip killed hundreds of people. The hospital in Gaza City, where Israel’s military had ordered a complete evacuation of its residents, was being used as a shelter by families with nowhere else to go.

Grim images depicting children’s bodies and bloodied, limbless women and men spread across social media and Arabic satellite TV channels, sparking protests across the Middle East from Morocco to Iran.

The blast and the protests mark a dramatic turn in the 12-daylong war that began when Hamas fighters from the Gaza Strip broke through its barrier with Israel and killed 1,400 people in Israel and took some 200 people hostage. Entire Israeli communities in the south were destroyed in the assault. Since those attacks, some 3,500 people, a third of them children, have been killed by Israeli bombardment, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry. More than 12,000 people have been wounded. Those casualty figures do not include the victims of the Al Ahli hospital blast. Another 1,300 people across Gaza are missing, presumed dead or still alive under the rubble of thousands of homes that have been destroyed.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres is calling for an immediate humanitarian cease-fire, warning the fate of the entire region hangs in the balance. Still, Israel continues to launch airstrikes on Gaza, including in the wake of the hospital blast and as Biden met with grieving Israeli families in Tel Aviv. Hamas, meanwhile, continues to launch rockets at Israeli cities. Israel’s Iron Dome defense system intercepts most. Air raid sirens are frequently heard in cities like Tel Aviv and Jerusalem.

Israel and Palestinians trade blame over hospital blast

Israel vehemently denied any involvement in Tuesday night’s blast at the Christian Al Ahli Arab hospital. Israeli army spokesman Daniel Hagari told reporters late Tuesday that an initial internal review showed it was a misfired rocket from Gaza based on footage from Israeli drones and chatter among militants calling it a PIJ misfire.

Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group in Gaza say the attack was carried out by an Israeli warplane. Arab governments, including Egypt, Saudi Arabia and the UAE also blame Israel.

Biden told Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in Tel Aviv that it appears as though the strike against the hospital “was done by the other team, not by you.” “But there’s a lot of people out there who aren’t sure,” Biden added. He was asked by reporters what made him confident in accepting Israel’s explanation that it was not behind the hospital explosion. He replied: “The data I was shown by my defense department.”

Regional tensions flare

The Biden administration has been attempting to prevent the violence from spreading to the other parts of the region, but a meeting that was scheduled in Jordan with Biden and the leaders of Jordan, Egypt and the Palestinian Authority was cancelled by Arab leaders almost immediately after the hospital blast. The White House said the president looks “forward to consulting in person with these leaders soon, and agreed to remain regularly and directly engaged with each of them over the coming days.”

Hamas described the explosion at the hospital as a massacre that “also exposes the American and Western support for this criminal occupation.” Hamas called on Muslims and Arabs across the world to protest and rally against Israel. Protests erupted after the hospital disaster in Egypt, Jordan, Iraq and Lebanon. There were also large protests in Turkey and Iran, to name a few. Protesters took the streets of Palestinian cities in the occupied West Bank. Protesters in Ramallah chanted slogans against Israel and the Palestinian Authority leadership as police.

Scenes of carnage at Gaza hospital

Footage online and carried on Arabic satellite news channels like Al-Jazeera showed the carnage of dead bodies strewn on the grass outside the hospital as grieving and wounded parents wailed in grief over the bodies of their dead kids. Children were shown taking their last breaths or being treated…


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