Israel's War on Gaza: A Campaign of Starvation and Desperation
The conflict in Gaza has been escalating for years, but a disturbing trend has emerged: the use of food and aid as a weapon of war. The numbers are staggering - from just four deaths attributed to starvation in 2023 to 422 deaths in 2025, a 760% increase in just one year.
According to UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Michael Fakhri, the global standard for famine analysis was "conservative" when it came to Gaza. The reality on the ground was "unequivocal," with children dying and entire communities under attack. Fakhri notes that the crisis met the strict technical criteria for famine, but was delayed by political bureaucracy.
The Health Ministry in Gaza reported that 40.63% of victims were elderly, while 34.74% were children. In August 2025 alone, cases among children under five spiked from 2,754 to 14,383. This is a devastating trend that highlights the dire situation in Gaza.
But how did Israel manage to create this crisis? According to Suleiman Basharat, a Palestinian commentator and researcher on Israeli affairs, it all started with the blockade of Gaza imposed by Israel in 2007. The goal was "to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger." This doctrine was summarized by Dov Weisglass, an adviser to the Israeli prime minister, who said that the war marked a shift from "management" to "elimination."
Senior Israeli ministers made their intentions clear at the start of the genocidal war on Gaza. Former Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant declared a complete siege against "human animals," while Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich argued that blocking aid was "justified and moral." These statements were quickly reinforced by Israel's actions, which included ramping up this policy.
The result was a "calorie collapse" - an average of just 19 trucks carrying aid and food were allowed into Gaza each day, a 96% reduction from the 500 trucks needed to sustain the population. Water availability plummeted from 84 liters per person to just 3 liters during the siege. Israel also systematically destroyed infrastructure for agricultural production, including 2,500 chicken farms that killed 36 million birds.
Analysts say that this campaign was not just about military leverage, but also about creating an "anti-resistance" sentiment in Gaza. According to Basharat, the goal is to break the Palestinian resistance by affecting the social base that embraces it. Israeli officials have cloaked their policies in misleading terms, such as encouraging "voluntary migration." However, this is a cynical euphemism for forced displacement.
The result is a generation of Palestinians facing decades of physical and political scars, with the destruction of Gaza's agricultural backbone leaving the Strip entirely dependent on external aid. The numbers are staggering - 475 officially recorded deaths, but many more who have not been documented.
As Alice Rothchild, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace, notes, "It's all part of this attempt to destroy Gaza." The future of Gaza is defined by hunger and desperation, with Israel maintaining permanent control over the Strip.
The conflict in Gaza has been escalating for years, but a disturbing trend has emerged: the use of food and aid as a weapon of war. The numbers are staggering - from just four deaths attributed to starvation in 2023 to 422 deaths in 2025, a 760% increase in just one year.
According to UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Food Michael Fakhri, the global standard for famine analysis was "conservative" when it came to Gaza. The reality on the ground was "unequivocal," with children dying and entire communities under attack. Fakhri notes that the crisis met the strict technical criteria for famine, but was delayed by political bureaucracy.
The Health Ministry in Gaza reported that 40.63% of victims were elderly, while 34.74% were children. In August 2025 alone, cases among children under five spiked from 2,754 to 14,383. This is a devastating trend that highlights the dire situation in Gaza.
But how did Israel manage to create this crisis? According to Suleiman Basharat, a Palestinian commentator and researcher on Israeli affairs, it all started with the blockade of Gaza imposed by Israel in 2007. The goal was "to put the Palestinians on a diet, but not to make them die of hunger." This doctrine was summarized by Dov Weisglass, an adviser to the Israeli prime minister, who said that the war marked a shift from "management" to "elimination."
Senior Israeli ministers made their intentions clear at the start of the genocidal war on Gaza. Former Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant declared a complete siege against "human animals," while Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich argued that blocking aid was "justified and moral." These statements were quickly reinforced by Israel's actions, which included ramping up this policy.
The result was a "calorie collapse" - an average of just 19 trucks carrying aid and food were allowed into Gaza each day, a 96% reduction from the 500 trucks needed to sustain the population. Water availability plummeted from 84 liters per person to just 3 liters during the siege. Israel also systematically destroyed infrastructure for agricultural production, including 2,500 chicken farms that killed 36 million birds.
Analysts say that this campaign was not just about military leverage, but also about creating an "anti-resistance" sentiment in Gaza. According to Basharat, the goal is to break the Palestinian resistance by affecting the social base that embraces it. Israeli officials have cloaked their policies in misleading terms, such as encouraging "voluntary migration." However, this is a cynical euphemism for forced displacement.
The result is a generation of Palestinians facing decades of physical and political scars, with the destruction of Gaza's agricultural backbone leaving the Strip entirely dependent on external aid. The numbers are staggering - 475 officially recorded deaths, but many more who have not been documented.
As Alice Rothchild, a member of Jewish Voice for Peace, notes, "It's all part of this attempt to destroy Gaza." The future of Gaza is defined by hunger and desperation, with Israel maintaining permanent control over the Strip.