12 US Officials Quit Over Gaza Policy

Twelve officials in the US government resigned in protest over President Joe Biden’s Gaza policy. They are accusing his administration of complicity in the killing and starvation of Palestinians as Israel’s war on Gaza approaches it ninth month Anadolu reports.

“America’s diplomatic cover for, and continuous flow of arms to, Israel has ensured our undeniable complicity in the killings and forced starvation of a besieged Palestinian population in Gaza,” they said in a joint statement released Tuesday.

But the unprecedented wave of resignations since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war on Oct. 7 last year has yet to lead to a significant shift in the US policy on Gaza as the flow of US-made weapons to Israel continues despite massive civilian deaths, the risk of regional escalation and damage to America’s global standing, pointed out the Ankara-based news agency.

The names of the 12 US officials who quit over Gaza since 7 October, 2023 are as follows:

Maryam Hassanein

Maryam Hassanein, who was a special assistant at the Interior Department, resigned from her position on Tuesday, accusing the administration of dehumanizing Arabs and Muslims.

“As a Muslim American, I cannot continue working for an administration that ignores the voices of its diverse staff by continuing to fund and enable Israel’s genocide of Palestinians,” she said in a statement.

Hassanein, 24, became the youngest of the appointees who have resigned.

Mohammed Abu Hashem

Mohammed Abu Hashem, 41, a Palestinian-American US airman who lost his aunt in an Israeli airstrike with many relatives injured, resigned on March 25 after a career of 22 years.

In an interview with the Washington Post, he said it was “extremely emotional” for him to know that “the amount of bombs that are being supplied to Israel was the cause of her death.”

“I knew right then that I can’t be part of the system that enabled this,” he added.

– Riley Livermore

Riley Livermore, a former Air Force officer, announced his resignation on June 18, saying he did not want to be working on “something that can turn around and be used to slaughter innocent people.”

“I think the dissonance just kind of continued to get louder and louder. It’s like ‘I can’t really do this anymore,’” he told the Intercept.

Alexander Smith

Alexander Smith, a contractor with the US Agency for International Development (USAID), resigned in late May after he was offered an ultimatum after preparing a paper on Palestinian child and maternal mortality — resign or be dismissed.

“I cannot do my job in an environment in which specific people cannot be acknowledged as fully human, or where gender and human rights principles apply to some, but not to others, depending on their race,” he wrote in his resignation letter, according to the Guardian.

Stacy Gilbert

Stacy Gilbert, a senior official from the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees and Migration, publicly announced her departure from the US government in late May in protest over National Security Memorandum 20 (NSM-20), which she said was wrong to conclude that Israel had not obstructed the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza.

“I know the difference between right and wrong. What happened in this report is wrong, and this report is being used to justify continuing to do what we’ve been doing,” Gilbert told HuffPost in an interview.

Harrison Mann

Harrison Mann, an army major recently assigned to the Defense Intelligence Agency, resigned on May 15 and said in his resignation letter published on LinkedIn that the US’s “nearly unqualified support” for Israel “enabled and empowered the killing and starvation of tens of thousands of innocent Palestinians.”

Stressing that his work “unquestionably contributed to that support,” Mann, who comes from a Jewish family of European origin, said: “This has caused me incredible shame and guilt.”

Lily Greenberg Call

Lily Greenberg Call, a special assistant to the chief of staff at the US Department of the Interior, announced on May 16 that she resigned because of the administration’s support for Israel’s attacks on Gaza.

The Jewish American, who was appointed by Biden, said she joined the administration for “a better America,” adding: “I can no longer in good conscience continue to represent this administration.”

Call said she has spent her entire life in the Jewish community in the US and Israel and people in her community lost loved ones during the attack by the Palestinian group Hamas on Oct. 7 last year, which killed around 1,200 people while hundreds were taken to Gaza as hostages.

Anna Del Castillo

Anna Del Castillo, who was a deputy director at the White House’s Office of Management and Budget, left her post in April in protest over Biden’s unconditional support for Israel.

Hala Rharrit

Hala Rharrit, the State Department’s spokeswoman for the Middle East and North Africa, resigned on April 25.

“I resigned in April 2024 after 18 years of distinguished service in opposition to the United States’ Gaza policy. Diplomacy, not arms. Be a force for peace and unity,” she wrote in a LinkedIn post.

Rharrit has worked in various roles at the State Department and was a spokesperson since August 2022, according to her LinkedIn page.

Annelle Sheline

Annelle Sheline, 38, a foreign affairs officer in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, resigned on March 27, accusing the administration of enabling atrocities in Gaza.

She wrote in an article for CNN that she was “unable to serve an administration that enables such atrocities” and resigned before the conclusion of a two-year contract.

“As a representative of a government that is directly enabling what the International Court of Justice has said could plausibly be a genocide in Gaza, such work has become almost impossible,” she said. “Whatever credibility the United States had as an advocate for human rights has almost entirely vanished since the war began.”

Tariq Habash

Tariq Habash, a Department of Education political appointee, resigned on Jan. 4 in protest over the administration’s failure to halt Israel’s “ongoing collective punishment tactics” against Palestinians in Gaza.

“I cannot stay silent as this administration turns a blind eye to the atrocities committed against innocent Palestinian lives, in what leading human rights experts have called a genocidal campaign by the Israeli government,” he wrote.

Habash, who served three years as a special assistant in the Office of Planning, Evaluation and Policy Development, was the sole Palestinian-American appointee at the agency.

Josh Paul

Josh Paul, who worked for more than 11 years as the director of congressional and public affairs at the State Department’s Bureau of Political-Military Affairs, which oversees arms transfers to foreign nations, publicly announced his resignation in a two-page letter in late October, becoming the first publicly announced resignation after Oct. 7.

He expressed his desire for the protection of innocent people — Israeli and Palestinian.

“I am leaving today because I believe that in our current course with regards to the continued — indeed, expanded and expedited — provision of lethal arms to Israel, I have reached the end of that bargain,” he said, citing the Biden administration’s support for Israel in its response to the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas.

Andrew Miller

Andrew Miller, the deputy assistant secretary of state for Israeli-Palestinian affairs, resigned last month, citing family issues. But the Washington Post reported that he was a critic of Biden’s “bear hug” approach to Israel during the war, and is described by people who know him as a stalwart supporter of Palestinian rights and statehood.

CrossFireArabia

CrossFireArabia

Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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Silent Death Sweeps Gaza’s Elderly

Alongside the relentless toll of fatalities from continuous Israeli bombardment, a silent death is sweeping through Gaza’s elderly and children—largely unrecorded and undocumented. This is the result of deadly living conditions deliberately imposed by Israel to exhaust the population. At the forefront of these crimes are starvation, the infliction of extreme suffering, deprivation of medical care, and the imposition of a total blockade—all constituting acts of ongoing genocide for over 19 months.

Now entering its third consecutive month, the intensified siege has had devastating and long-term effects—disproportionately harming Gaza’s most vulnerable. Israel’s systematic policy seeks to destroy all means of survival and eliminate any path to staying alive. This deepens the humanitarian catastrophe, making it a central instrument in the execution of genocidal policy.

Over the past week, 14 elderly Palestinians were documented to have died across Gaza from complications related to hunger, malnutrition, and lack of medical care. These deaths are directly linked to Israel’s complete closure of border crossings and its prevention of humanitarian aid and essential goods from entering the Strip since 2 March.

[My father] recently suffered a severe health setback. Hunger and malnutrition had left his body extremely weak and frail, so we transferred him to Nasser Hospital. After examination, doctors found he was suffering from acute anaemia and a severe deficiency in proteins and minerals   

Jalal, son of Talib Al-Arja who died due to lack of food

The victims died in various areas of Gaza, where residents face acute shortages of food, clean water, and medicine. Famine is spreading, the health system has collapsed, and even the most basic medical care is unavailable—leaving vulnerable people, especially the elderly and those with chronic illnesses, to die in total isolation from the outside world.

The death of Musbah Abdul Raouf Abdul Ghafhour, 84, was documented in Khan Younis on Saturday. His family told Euro-Med Monitor that his condition deteriorated sharply after he was diagnosed with stomach cancer. He could not be referred for treatment outside Gaza due to the total Israeli blockade. With no treatment available inside Gaza and his health further deteriorating due to malnutrition and lack of suitable food, he eventually succumbed.

The death of Talib Sabbah Suleiman Al-Arja, 80, was recorded on Tuesday, 7 May. His son, Jalal, told Euro-Med Monitor: “After the war on Gaza began and the suffocating siege was imposed, my father suffered repeated health setbacks due to a lack of food. We lived in miserable conditions in Rafah, and when we were displaced to Khan Younis, the suffering worsened. We lacked even the most basic necessities. My father complained about the intense heat inside the tent during the day and the biting insects at night. As an elderly man, he could not endure the hunger or thirst. He would ask for cold drinking water during the day, but we couldn’t provide it. He would long for foods like chicken, fish, eggs, and fruit—but none were available.”

He added, “He recently suffered a severe health setback. Hunger and malnutrition had left his body extremely weak and frail, so we transferred him to Nasser Hospital. After examination, doctors found he was suffering from acute anaemia and a severe deficiency in proteins and minerals. He remained in the hospital for less than 30 hours. His body did not respond to the medications, supplements, or IV fluids administered—and, in the end, he passed away.”

The Euro-Med Monitor team reported that dozens of elderly patients have been arriving at hospitals, the vast majority diagnosed with acute malnutrition and anaemia. With no access to treatment for their chronic illnesses, many have been forced to rely on canned food as their main source of nutrition—causing their health to deteriorate dramatically, in some cases leading to death.

An increasing number of elderly people, children, and patients are now dying as a direct result of the collapsing healthcare, severe malnutrition, and hunger, amidst the systematic breakdown of Gaza’s healthcare system caused by the Israeli blockade. The lack of an effective mechanism within Gaza’s Ministry of Health to monitor such cases means they are often recorded as natural deaths, though in reality, they result directly from deliberate starvation policies and the destruction of the health system. These practices constitute a pattern of intentional killing, which is prohibited under international humanitarian law and international criminal law.

Such actions amount to some of the gravest crimes under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, which classifies wilful killing — including causing death through starvation or denial of medical care — as a war crime and a crime against humanity, particularly when committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack targeting civilians. This is consistent with the pattern of assault being carried out by Israel against civilians in the Gaza Strip.

These actions also meet the legal criteria for the crime of genocide, whether through acts of killing, inflicting serious bodily or mental harm, or imposing living conditions intended to bring about the physical destruction of a protected group, in whole or in part. This crime has been ongoing for over 19 months, perpetrated by Israel against the civilian population of Gaza.

The humanitarian crisis in Gaza has reached catastrophic levels. Hunger is no longer confined to vulnerable or marginalised groups—it now affects all segments of society. There has been an almost total collapse of essential public services and basic requirements for survival, including access to food, healthcare, and shelter.

The unlawful Israeli blockade imposed on the Gaza Strip since the start of the genocide in October 2023—accompanied by systematic and arbitrary restrictions on humanitarian aid and the deliberate destruction of the healthcare system, particularly over the past seventy days—has caused catastrophic deterioration and led to irreversible conditions affecting the health and wellbeing of more than two million people in the territory.

The proposed Israeli-American mechanism for humanitarian aid in Gaza is nothing more than a new manoeuvre aimed at prolonging the illegal and comprehensive blockade. It repackages the crime of starvation in a misleading humanitarian guise, falsely legitimising its continued use as a weapon in the ongoing crime of genocide.

The Euro-Mediterranean Human Rights Monitor has called on all states, individually and collectively, to fulfil their legal obligations and take urgent action to halt the genocide and lift the illegal blockade on Gaza. Immediate and concrete measures must be taken to protect Palestinian civilians—especially the elderly and children.

The international community must act swiftly to lift the unlawful Israeli blockade, as it remains the only viable path to halting the accelerating humanitarian collapse and ensuring the flow of aid into Gaza. Any delay in lifting the blockade will only exacerbate the already uncontainable catastrophe, leaving more than two million people hostage to hunger, disease, and thirst—deprived of the most basic conditions for a dignified life.

The international community must also impose economic, diplomatic, and military sanctions on Israel in response to its systematic and grave violations of international law. This includes banning weapons exports to Israel and halting arms purchases from it; suspending all forms of political, financial, and military support and cooperation; freezing the assets of officials involved in crimes against Palestinians or inciting such acts; and imposing travel bans on them. Moreover, trade privileges and bilateral agreements that grant Israel economic advantages, enabling it to commit crimes, must be suspended.

All states must also be held accountable for their complicity or involvement in supporting Israel’s crimes—chief among them the United States—and any nations providing Israel with any form of assistance linked to the perpetration of these crimes. This includes aid or contractual ties in the military, intelligence, political, legal, financial, media, or economic sectors, or any other domain contributing to the continuation of these violations.

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Trump Slams Door on Netanyahu

Israeli Army Radio has reported that personalities close to US President Donald Trump informed the Israeli Strategic Affairs Minister, Ron Dermer, that the US president had decided to cut off contact with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

The Army Radio explained that these acquaintances close to Trump informed Dermer that Netanyahu was manipulating the US president, stressing that what Trump hates most is being perceived as being manipulated.

The radio quoted an Israeli official as saying that Minister Dermer’s conversation with senior Republican officials, did not work because of his displayed arrogance.

This came hours after a report in the Israel Hayom newspaper asserting that the US president is “disappointed” with Netanyahu and intends to take “steps” in the Middle East “without waiting for him.”

Since the start of his new presidential term on January 20, 2025, Trump has offered diverse and unlimited support to the Netanyahu government, which has been waging a genocidal war against the Palestinians in the Gaza Strip since October 7, 2023.

However, the Israel Hayom daily quoted an unnamed sources as saying that “there is a decline in the personal relations and mutual disappointment between Netanyahu and Trump.”

The newspaper added that two senior sources close to Trump said, in closed conversations in recent days, that he has decided not to wait for Israel any longer and is moving forward with steps in the Middle East without “waiting for Netanyahu.”

The sources did not elaborate on the nature of the steps Trump intends to take unilaterally, but there is a complaint in Tel Aviv that Trump sometimes acts without coordination with Israel.

The most recent example is the ceasefire agreement reached by the United States and the Yemeni Houthi group, which does not include Israel and which Israel was unaware of before its announcement according to Al Jazeera.

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