Medicine for Gaza Hostages En Route

Facts

  • A shipment of medicine expected to be delivered to Hamas-held Israeli hostages in the Gaza Strip was reportedly en route from Egypt on Wednesday after a French and Qatari-mediated deal — the first since a weeklong truce agreed to in November. According to a senior Hamas official, the deal stipulates that for every box of medicine provided for the hostages, 1K boxes would be sent in for Palestinians, and includes the delivery of additional humanitarian aid for Palestinians in Gaza.1
  • This plan was announced last week but was allegedly held up by logistical problems. It remains unclear how the medicine will be delivered to hostages, with Israel saying that Qatari representatives in Gaza would be involved. Though the US said that Qatar has also been overseeing 'very serious, extensive discussions' about a possible new hostage release deal, intense fighting was reported in Khan Younis, southern Gaza, on Wednesday.2
  • Aid delivery into Gaza has faced several obstacles since the war began, with the World Food Program estimating that 93% of the local population faces crisis levels of hunger while disease spreads. Aid agencies have blamed Israel for the complications, claiming that its inspection process is lengthy and inefficient, that trucks or fuel inside Gaza aren't enough to distribute the aid, that processes to protect humanitarian workers are unreliable, and that commercial items have slowly entered into the enclave. Israel has insisted that it's doing everything it can to alleviate suffering.3
  • Iranian Foreign Minister Hossein Amirabdollahian said on Wednesday while in Davos, Switzerland, that attacks against Israel and its interests by the 'Axis of Resistance' — a term often used to refer to militant groups aligned with Iran — will cease attacks the Gaza conflict concludes. He linked attacks on shipping lanes in the Red Sea by the Houthis in Yemen and attacks on the US presence in Iraq by Iranian-backed groups to the war, warning over 'strong and effective response' to the recent US and British strikes against the Houthis.4
  • Meanwhile, the US Senate on Tuesday rejected a bill authored by Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) requiring the State Department to produce a human rights report on Israel’s policies, including its campaign in Gaza. The bill was voted down by a large bipartisan majority of 72-11. Nine Democrats and one Republican voted in favor of the bill.5
  • Gaza's health ministry reports that the conflict has killed over 24K people in the Gaza Strip, the majority of whom were women and children. The official Israeli death toll on Oct. 7 stands at around 1.2K people (and there are still over 100 hostages being held in the Gaza Strip).6

Sources: 1Associated Press, 2BBC News, 3Washington Post, 4Reuters, 5Huffington Post and 6VOA.

Narratives

  • Pro-establishment narrative, as provided by POLITICO. The US is doing everything it can to both ensure that Israel can eliminate Hamas's military capabilities and prevent regional escalation. Israel must be able to defend itself from terrorist attacks, whether from Gaza or elsewhere and is taking the right steps to wind down its military operations in Gaza, as it is not in the US or Israel's best interest to see the conflict escalate. Nevertheless, the US is prepared to defend its allies in the region and deter threats to regional and global security.
  • Pro-Israel narrative, as provided by The Jerusalem Post. Though this has been a tragic war, Israel must eliminate Hamas and restore deterrence with Iran and its proxies. Hezbollah in Lebanon is a terrorist army with far greater military capabilities than Hamas, and Israel cannot allow its citizens residing in the north to live under the constant threat of terrorist attacks. The UN resolution that ended the 2006 war with Hezbollah has failed to ensure Israel's security, and if some sort of new arrangement is not made, Israel will be forced to intervene. Likewise, in Gaza, Hamas's military capabilities must be eliminated to ensure Israel's security.
  • Pro-Palestine narrative, as provided by Middle East Eye. Israel continues to demonstrate that its war is not against Hamas but against the Palestinian people as a whole. Nowhere in Gaza is safe, and Israel has effectively rendered the north of the strip unlivable. Israel is killing Palestinians at an unprecedented rate and clearly wants to make the Gaza Strip unlivable. Though the US, Israel's biggest ally, wants to minimize the war's intensity, it must instead exert more pressure to end the war completely.
  • Pro-Iran narrative, as provided by PressTV. Israel, with the full backing of the US, is committing genocide in Gaza, something Iran and its allies cannot tolerate. As resistance groups like the Houthis show their solidarity with Palestinians by enforcing a blockade on Israel, Joe Biden must understand that supporting Israel's crimes will only lead to more escalation in the region. The resistance's primary goal is to end the war in Gaza, not start a far larger regional conflict. However, if the US and Israel continue to flagrantly disregard international law, the resistance may be forced to expand its operations.

Predictions