Consider This from NPR - Gazans are starving. How did it get this bad?
Episode Date: August 28, 2025The war in Gaza is approaching the 2 year mark. As it does, Israel continues to launch new attacks on a territory that is already in ruins. And the humanitarian situation for Gaza’s Palestinian resi...dents continues to worsen.A team of NPR reporters has been focusing on one question: how did we get here? For sponsor-free episodes of Consider This, sign up for Consider This+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org.Email us at considerthis@npr.org.This episode was produced by Mia Venkat and Daniel Ofman.It was edited by Andrew Sussman, Courtney Dorning and William Troop.Our executive producer is Sami Yenigun.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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Famine has reached Gaza, nearly two years into this humanitarian crisis, a crisis that has gotten significantly worse in the past few months.
There has been one recurring problem above all others, a failure to deliver the necessary humanitarian aid to the Palestinians.
The Biden administration tried to address the problem by building a military peer.
The president announced the effort in his 2024 State of the Union address.
Tonight, I'm directing the U.S. military to lead an emergency mission.
to establish a temporary pier in the Mediterranean on the coast of Gaza that can receive large
shipments carrying food, water, medicine, and temporary shelters.
That pier only operated for a few weeks, delivering a fraction of the aid needed.
It cost some $230 million and led to one U.S. soldier's death.
Critics said by the end of that mission, it achieved next to nothing.
The U.S., along with other countries, also tried airdrops using cargo planes to drop.
crates with parachutes.
Palestinians have drowned trying to reach aid that landed in the sea, and several have been killed
when the parachute on pallets failed to open and crush them below.
The most efficient and effective way to get aid into Gaza is by truck over land, but that
has also been a complicated negotiation.
Nearly two years after October 7th, after countless pleas from world leaders, humanitarian
groups, none of the efforts to get meaningful aid into Gaza.
have worked. But it wasn't just the logistics that have prevented food from reaching Gaza.
It's been Israel's unwillingness to let aid in. David Satterfield, special envoy for Middle East
humanitarian efforts under the Biden administration, recalled early negotiations with Israel while
speaking to NPR. It was up against a brick wall. The prime minister in one remark I remember
said, if I were to allow, even for trucks in, there would be IDF tanks in Jerusalem pointed
at my office. The Israeli people would react. That, of course, is hyperbole. But I'm giving you a sense
of how difficult the conversation was. Not one drop. Not even for trucks. We can't do this.
That was the message.
Consider this. Ghazans are starving. How did it get this bad?
From NPR, I'm Juana Summers.
It's Consider This from NPR. The war in Gaza is approaching the two-year mark.
As it does, Israel continues to launch new attacks on a territory that's already in
ruins and the humanitarian situation for Gaza's Palestinian residents continues to worsen. A team of
NPR reporters has been focusing on one question. How did we get here? They've been talking to
several former senior officials in the Biden administration, all directly involved in shaping
U.S. policy on Israel's war in Gaza when the conflict began. And I'm joined now by two of our
reporters on this story, NPR's Tom Bowman and Kat Lansdorfe, hi, to both of you.
Hello.
Hey.
If you could, just start by telling us why you wanted to talk to former officials from the previous administration.
Well, Wana, we started out with a simple question.
How do we get to this point in Gaza?
Famine has been declared.
And, of course, this all started in the Biden administration, the war in Gaza.
Now, at this point, Palestinians are now dying from malnutrition, according to health officials there.
And we wanted to learn more about what role the U.S. as Israel's strongest ally had in trying to get
aid into Gaza to alleviate their crisis. Yeah, so we, along with our colleague Fatmatanis,
talk to people who were senior officials across the Biden administration and ask them to take us
into the rooms where the decisions around U.S. policy toward Israel's war in Gaza were being made
from the beginning. And they described strong, sometimes bitter arguments within the
administration with some officials saying not enough was being done to pressure Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu to allow more aid into Gaza. Most of these people agreed to only speak
with us without their names being used. You know, these were sensitive conversations. And these people
were really grappling with the decisions that were made, wondering if they did enough or if they could
have done more. What were you hearing from them specifically? Well, again, they were very tough and
intense discussions. One person we spoke with was David Satterfield. Now, he was a Biden administration's
special envoy for Middle East humanitarian efforts, appointed just days into the war. And he said
that he and other senior officials were asked constantly if they were doing enough. And it's something
they still asked themselves. Our answer was we're not doing enough, but we have prevented famine and
starvation. And while that may be a low bar, that is not an insignificant achievement. This is
something we heard from a lot of the people we spoke with, basically saying, by definition,
we didn't do enough, but we made a difference. And it could have been worse. And of course,
it is. But, you know, there were others who said that that's just not the standard by which to measure
success in a humanitarian catastrophe. Like Democratic Senator Chris Van Hollen from Maryland, who was
putting pressure on the Biden administration from the early days of the war to do more. Here's what
he told us. The Biden administration was totally feckless when it came to holding the Netanyahu
government to the standard of American law and the standards that we claim to apply to every other
country in the world.
One former Biden-era official told me, quote, none of us were ever, ever satisfied.
It was the most heartbreaking work ever, and we never got aid in in any amounts that was
sufficient. Interesting. Okay, I want to back up if we can a bit. Let's talk about the early days
of the conflict when Israel was reeling from the Hamas-led October 7th attacks back in
2023, which started this war. Israel imposed a complete seizure blockade on Gaza in the days
after there was no food, no water, no fuel. What was happening behind the scenes in those weeks and
months? Yeah, I mean, remember October 7th was the deadliest attack in Israel's history. And Biden
made his support for Israel very clear afterwards, saying it had the right to defend itself.
And at the same time, Israel imposed that siege on Gaza. You know, that's an enclave that is
completely walled off, totally dependent on Israel to allow goods in and out. So this was a really
difficult situation from a humanitarian aid perspective from day one. And also,
we heard from former senior officials who traveled to Israel around the time, and they told us that
the humanitarian assistance component of the war was not well thought out. Some told us there was
essentially no humanitarian plan, and the military mission was always paramount. And looking back,
some officials told us the U.S. didn't push Israel hard enough on that. And many of the people
we talked to spoke about how the U.S. was reluctant to pressure Israel. Biden was very focused,
on the rightness of Israel's war. And there was a real sense at the time that Israel was being
attacked from multiple fronts. It sounds like you really got an understanding of what it was like
behind the scenes in the Biden administration for some really dramatic and difficult months.
Can you just describe that a bit for us? Yeah, everyone we talked to stressed just how hard
everyone was working on this issue. I mean, this was round the clock up to the highest level.
Even often the president himself making phone calls see Israelis constantly. Essentially, everyone
became desk officers focusing on real specific details, spending hours getting the Israelis to
open a specific crossing or turn back on one specific water pipe. And officials told us that this
meant that the U.S. was often bogged down in these details and phone calls, sometimes losing the
bigger picture of the humanitarian catastrophe. This all led to a lot of frustration with Israel
within the administration. Heeded arguments between senior U.S. officials and their Israeli
counterparts trying to get movement of aid.
I remember a time when the humanitarian situation in Gaza was addressed very publicly here in the U.S.
And that was during Biden's State of the Union speech back in March of 2024.
And in the speech, he announced that the U.S. would be building a military peer to deliver aid off the coast of Gaza.
Tell us about the conversations around that.
Yeah, right.
You know, at this point, aid groups in Gaza were sounding the alarm bells about an impending catastrophe there.
And Israel was still not letting in nearly enough aid through the land crossings.
So the U.S. first started air drops and then proposed that.
peer, which had all sorts of problems and only ended up operating for about 20 days total. One former
official told us, quote, we were in Hail Mary mode. You know, many of the officials we talked to
defended those decisions. Others argued that they ignored the strongest tool the U.S. had in its
toolbox, which is withholding U.S. military assistance from Israel. Right. I mean, the kind of
elephant in the room behind all of this and all U.S. policy toward Israel is the large amount
of military aid that the U.S. provides to Israel. No, that's right. And looking back, some
officials are still wondering, should we have halted all military assistance? Would that have
pressured Israel to open more aid routes? Now, the Biden administration did withhold, remember,
2,000-pound bombs for a time. So could a larger arms halt have changed anything? But the Israelis
were pretty blunt in the meetings with U.S. officials when humanitarian concerns were raised,
basically saying, if you withhold arms, we'll just go it alone. I want to end by bringing this back to now
when famine has been declared in Gaza, the situation has just gotten so much worse in recent months.
How has the Trump administration handled the humanitarian crisis there?
Well, now the U.S. under the Trump administration, largely seems to be allowing Israel to do what it wants.
Aid groups on the ground told us that the U.S. is no longer exerting the same kind of consistent round-the-clock
pressure on Israel to allow more aid into Gaza as it did under the Biden administration.
We reached out to the White House for this story, a spokesperson replied, saying in part that Trump, quote, wants to ensure the people of Gaza a Fed.
But, you know, regardless of the administration, one former senior U.S. official told us that they thought the tragedy of Gaza with a humanitarian crisis that has played out for almost two years now has fundamentally compromised American global standing.
They said, quote, it's a stain which everyone in the world sees, even if we don't.
That was NPR's Kat Lonsdorf and Tom Bowman, talking about reporting they did, along with NPR's Spotmatanis. Thanks to both of you.
Thank you.
You're welcome.
And there is so much more to their reporting that we could not get into here.
If you want to read their story in full, go to NPR.org.
This episode was produced by Mia Venkatt and Daniel Offman.
It was edited by Andrew Sussman, Courtney Dorney, and William Troop.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Juana Summers.