In a long-awaited report, the State Department lays out numerous suspected international humanitarian violations by Israel in its war on Gaza, yet suggests no changes in policy or consequences.
The Biden administration concludes it is likely that Israel used U.S.-supplied weapons in āincidents that raise concernsā about the countryās legal compliance, while crediting Israel for investigating them.
The report also concludes Israel is not currently blocking humanitarian aid, despite ādeep concernsā about āaction and inactionā by the government resulting in aid delivery to Gaza that āremains insufficient.ā
This is the best summary I could come up with:
In a long-awaited report, the State Department lays out numerous suspected international humanitarian violations by Israel in its war on Gaza, yet suggests no changes in policy or consequences.
The memorandum ā known as āNSM-20ā ā required the State and Defense departments to obtain ācredible and reliable written assurancesā that Israel was not using any U.S.-supplied weapons in violation of international law.
In recent weeks, Oxfam, Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and a coalition of humanitarian organizations flagged numerous incidents to Secretary of State Antony Blinken.
As the deadline for the administrationās report approached, officials at the U.S. Agency for International Development, or USAID, joined by parts of the State Department, urged Blinken to find Israelās commitments were not credible or reliable when it comes to allowing humanitarian aid into Gaza.
āThe killing of nearly 32,000 people, of which the GOI (Government of Israel) itself assesses roughly two-thirds are civilian, may well amount to a violation of the international humanitarian law requirement,ā USAID wrote in a submission to Blinken, according to reporting from Reuters.
āI guess there was a little hope for me that Blinken would rule that the assurances from Israel werenāt credible,ā said an official at USAID who spoke with The Intercept on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal.
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