Top Senate Dem Says Gaza Famine is a 'Shameful Black Mark on Humanity,' Admits Party Failed to Act
"We should have done more," said Jeanne
Shaheen, the top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
"Everybody should have said more sooner."
Aug 25, 2025
https://www.commondreams.org/news/shaheen-gaza-starvation
The top Democrat on the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee said Sunday that Congress had failed to act to prevent starvation
in Gaza,
which she acknowledged was the fault of Israel's blockade on aid entering the
strip.
On Friday, the UN-backed Integrated Food Security
Phase Classification (IPC) declared that an "entirely man-made" famine is
taking place in Gaza—marking just the fifth time the notoriously cautious
organization has declared a famine since it was established in 2004.
In reaction to this news, Sen. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.)
issued her most forceful condemnation of Israel's actions in an interview on
CBS's Face the Nation, describing it as "a shameful black
mark on humanity that the world has allowed this to happen and that Israel is allowing this to happen."
Shaheen, who was calling in from Amman, Jordan, after
visiting the country's Humanitarian Assistance Program, said, "They are
trying to get 150 trucks a day into Israel."
"Israel," the senator said, "has
prevented those trucks from going in in a way that would provide the nutrition
that Gazans need to prevent starvation."
According to the IPC report, a quarter of all
Palestinians in Gaza–more than 500,000 people–are starving, with that number
expected to rise to more than 640,000 by the end of September.
Rebuking claims from Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's office that famine designation was an antisemitic "blood
libel," Shaheen said, "The reality is that we have people dying
because they are systematically being starved to death because Israel is
refusing to allow in the humanitarian aid that people need to keep alive."
"Not only that," she said, "they've
already started planning another incursion into Gaza in ways that are going to
kill more people."
"This is not acceptable," she said.
"The world needs to speak out."
The world, notably, has been speaking out against
Israel's conduct in Gaza for well over a year as evidence mounted of its
leaders' genocidal intent.
South Africa accused Israel of genocide in January 2024, citing
statements by numerous top Israeli officials who expressed the goal of wiping
out or displacing the people of Gaza entirely, often through the policy of
intentional starvation.
The IPC, meanwhile, warned as early as December 2023 that Gaza faced a
"very high risk of famine" unless access to humanitarian aid was
improved immediately.
Shaheen, who has since said she will not seek reelection in 2026, was among
the first wave of Democrats to publicly break with the mainstream party line on Gaza, saying
that then-President Joe Biden was "too slow in pushing Netanyahu to come
to a ceasefire," and voting to block weapons shipments to Israel. However,
she did not voice these criticisms until December 2024, after Donald Trump had already been reelected.
It took until late last month—when starvation had
become so widespread that one in five children in Gaza City faced
malnutrition—for the majority of Senate Democrats to finally back a resolution to block more arms to Israel.
"We should be doing more, and we should have done
more. Absolutely," Shaheen said Sunday. "Everybody should have said
more sooner."
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