The ‘chaos’ of aid distribution in Gaza is not a system failure. The system is designed to fail.
By Abdaljawad Omar May
30, 2025
Israel is using the so-called Gaza Humanitarian
Foundation to condense Palestinians into increasingly narrow enclaves, forcing
displacement through need. We are witnessing the rise of a new humanitarianism
where aid sites double as kill zones.
We are not witnessing a rupture with how things used
to be.
What is unfolding today in Gaza, where food aid falls
from the sky like ordinance and “humanitarian corridors” double as kill zones, is not the collapse of humanitarianism, but its
logical consummation under conditions of settler-colonial necropolitics.
It is tempting to read these scenes — the parachute that failed, the sacks of flour soaked in blood — as tragic malfunctions. They are not.
They are the grammar of a system that has long sutured
humanitarian concern to military logistics, relief to surveillance, and aid to
domination.
But something has shifted — not in
content, but in form.
For decades, Israel maintained an uneasy but
instrumental alliance with the architecture of humanitarianism. In the long
expanse between the years following the Nakba and the siege and destruction of
Gaza, this alliance operated as a double gesture: securing international
legitimacy through the performance of restraint, while choreographing violence
within the idiom of “security” and “self-defense.” The Red Cross, UNRWA, and a
chorus of NGOs served as both witnesses and enablers, simultaneously limiting
and legitimizing the occupation’s machinery.
In this war, humanitarianism is no longer simply
absorbed and weaponized. It is being bypassed, discarded, and
cannibalized.
The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF), Israel’s new model for aid delivery,
signals this shift with brutal clarity: aid is no longer mediated through
international law or the optics of neutrality, but flows through private
American contractors under military command.
The new aid plan is being used by Israel as part of
its demographic war in Gaza: by orchestrating aid flows into selected zones,
primarily in the south, Israel is working to condense the population into
increasingly narrow and governable enclaves. This forced concentration is not a
consequence of war — it is the war’s strategic aim.
In other words, aid is a tool for soft transfer,
pushing Palestinians into regions that can be more easily monitored,
controlled, and eventually severed from any claim to the land. Starvation and
desperation are not side effects, but intended effects, forcing displacement
through need.
Israel simply cannot do this with the existing
humanitarian infrastructure of UNRWA and the WFP. It has tried to do so over 19
months of genocide and fallen short. This is why the removal of international
aid organizations signals a shift toward the unilateral management of the Strip
under a new apparatus of military-humanitarian control. By sidelining these
bodies, Israel makes room for a more compliant infrastructure: private
contractors, militarized aid programs, and internally cultivated Palestinian
collaborators who can administer local populations without challenging the
broader regime of occupation and erasure.
These aid distribution sites, under the guise of
relief, are also choreographed spaces of entrapment, where the architecture of
chaos, desperation, and humiliation is meticulously staged. People wait for
hours in the scorching sun, under drones, under guns, under the gaze of an
occupying army that controls what enters, who lives, and who dies. The crowd
surges, the fences collapse, shots are fired, and Palestinians are
killed.
The Palestinian is made visible only in hunger and at
the edge of riot. In these moments, dignity is not just deferred, but is
systematically stripped, replaced with the performance of disorder that
justifies further killings and further control. The aid site becomes the
set-piece where Israel can lure the starving into kill zones and use a loaf of
bread as a pretext for a bullet.
The new humanitarianism
This inaugurates a new paradigm in which
humanitarianism is no longer mediated through international law or multilateral
consensus, but is now militarized, privatized, and securitized. It is disaster
capitalism taken to the extreme, eroding liberal humanitarian institutions in
favor of militarized neoliberal corporations.
The time is ripe for this because Israel has grown
weary of performance. It no longer needs the restraint rituals, with the
carefully measured body counts, the proportional language of conflict
resolution, and the legal architectures erected after World War II. In their
place, we find a new modality of power that openly transgresses, dares the
world to respond, and thrives not on legitimacy, but impunity.
What happened in Tal al-Sultan on May 27 offered the world yet another glimpse into this
emerging logic. At the launch of the GHF’s first aid distribution center,
thousands of Palestinians gathered, driven by the extremity of hunger. As
fences broke under the weight of the crowd, Israeli forces responded with what
they called “warning shots.” By the end of the day, three Palestinians lay dead, 48 were
injured, and seven others were missing. This was not the failure of humanitarian logistics;
it was the logic fulfilled. The aid site became the set-piece where Israel can
lure the starving into kill zones and use a loaf of bread as a pretext for a
bullet.
This is not merely a new war on Gaza. It is a war on
the very category of the “human” as it applies to Palestinians, and eventually
a remaking that will impact the whole world. Where once humanitarian discourse
functioned as the frame through which violence could be rendered legible,
disciplined by legalese, and tempered by press releases, humanitarianism itself
is being disposed of as a limiting condition.
This reconfiguration also entails a war against
memory. International organizations, however limited, often function as
record-keepers of hunger, of attacks, of displacement, and of death. With their
expulsion comes the erasure of witnesses and the silencing of documentation.
The absence of institutional observers allows Israel to proceed with its
campaign of annihilation without the burdens of image, number, or name. This is
because the presence of the UN and other aid organizations, even if partly complicit,
implied that the world was still watching and that aid was still being
distributed in a manner not conducive to ethnic cleansing.
Inequality of hunger
Beyond achieving its demographic aims, Israel is also
utilizing the GHF as part of its policy of what could effectively be termed
“inequality of hunger”: the aid provided by the GHF is woefully insufficient to
meet the vast and urgent needs of Gaza’s besieged population, with the UN
estimating that a minimum of 500 aid trucks per day are required to sustain
basic life, while fewer than 100 are permitted entry. The deliberate reduction
of aid so far below the minimum threshold of survival isn’t just arbitrary
cruelty; it is meant to create the conditions for social collapse.
It’s already been pointed out that this is the use of
manufactured scarcity as a bargaining chip to extract political concessions
from the Palestinian resistance. But it should also be stressed that the
deprivation is an instrument of social disintegration: by distributing just
enough food to kindle desperation, but never enough to sustain dignity, the
system manufactures moral collapse. The social fabric fractures, resulting in
the slow erosion of solidarity — the final battlefield of any collective struggle.
It is one thing to have a famine, which at least means
equality in hunger. It’s quite another to trickle in just enough resources to
create an internal struggle that results in the cannibalization of social
relations, hitting harder than any massacre.
The criminality of aid
There are, one might say, two criminalities at work in
Gaza’s hunger corridors. The first is sanitized, institutional, and entirely
rational, what we might call the criminality of logistics perpetrated by the
colonizer. Deliberate starvation is achieved through border control, using aid
as spectacle, the sealing of exits, and then the airdropping of salvation in
neatly packaged boxes. This is not merely a failure of ethics but a success of
policy. It is the criminality of biometric scans, of the humanitarian mask
concealing the military boot, made possible by both Netanyahu’s cabinet and the
likes of Trump Inc., that curious synthesis of gangster capitalism and state
violence performing massacres in the name of order.
But this is not all. The organized internal
collaborators, the micro-warlords who “tax” the aid and divert it before it
reaches the starved, form a local apparatus of distribution grounded in
theft-as-policy. This is the internalized supplement to the occupation — the
colonized enforcer recruited in the midst of war to serve further social
disintegration.
In this setting, the crime is everywhere: in the
massacre itself, in the very architecture of aid that creates the need for it.
Israel is not the sole criminal; the entire configuration is criminal,
including the aid agencies, the paperwork, the silence, the drone overhead, and
the collaborator on the ground.
The other “criminality” unfolds when the crowd surges,
breaching the fence and reaching for what was always theirs — bread, oil, rice,
the right to live. This is not looting, but the repossession of stolen
sustenance. It is the planning of those without a plan, the logistics of a
community erupting through the fractures of engineered despair. It is the
refusal to die standing in line beneath the drones, dignity deferred.
The people aren’t a mob, but a flood — a living force
breaching the containment zone of famine, liberating food from its branded
prison. What Israel frames as chaos is, in truth, collective clarity.
This second criminality — the crime of survival — is
incomprehensible to the humanitarian and liberal gaze. It remains illegible to
institutions conditioned only to distinguish the compliant needy from the
dangerous deviant. But this collective act of taking is not a cry for help, but
a disruption of the very logic that made help necessary. After 600 days of
massacres and destruction, the fences fell, sacks were passed between hands,
and colonial time stuttered.
This, too, is what unfolded last week — Palestinians
in Gaza surged through the tightly scripted scene of domination, disrupting
Israel’s illusion of total control even as it outsourced its sovereignty to
American private contractors. The scene itself was torn apart twice: first,
when most Palestinians in Gaza did not show up, refusing even the choreography
itself, and second, when the crowd surged through the fence.
This, then, is the moment we are left with: one in
which Israel no longer bothers to veil its actions behind humanitarian fig
leaves, but openly scorns the very language that once masked its violence. And
the world is being dared — to intervene, yes, but more precisely, to confront
the fact that its interventions and discourses were always part of the problem,
always hollow and devoid of substance.
One could ask the liberals what remains of this
language, not only in Gaza, but in the futures yet to come?
And amid all this, what remains central is that,
despite everything, Palestinians still find a way — whether through deliberate
planning or spontaneous rupture — to flood the infrastructure of annihilation.
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