World
UN, Israel at odds over cause of decline in aid deliveries: 'False narratives by international community'
Aid entering Gaza declined during the month of October, particularly in the northern Gaza Strip where a military offensive against Hamas is underway. The United Nations and Israel are increasingly blaming one another over the reasons for and extent of the problem.
Stéphane Dujarric, spokesperson for U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres, stated on Oct. 27 that “repeated efforts to deliver humanitarian supplies” were being “denied by the Israeli authorities.”
Brig. Gen. Elad Goren, head of the Coordination of Government Activities in the Territories (COGAT) that oversees the humanitarian-civil effort in Gaza, told Fox News Digital that the accusation is “100 percent pure, complete lie.” Goren said that “there will be a time that people will write books about what has happened during this war. Not just in the battlefield, but also the fight over narratives, the false narratives by the international community.”
Goren emphasized the lack of “logistical capacity, lack of trucks, lack of manpower, lack of resources,” and overall lack of commitment in the U.N. effort. “If this is the most important humanitarian logistical operation,” Goren asked why the U.N. only brought 69 personnel and 40 trucks to distribute aid. “We feel that the U.N. does not want to be excellent in their job, because they believe that if they do their job, it will ease pressure on Israel,” Goren said.
BIDEN ADMIN ISSUES WARNING TO NETANYAHU AS ISRAEL HOLDS EMERGENCY MEETING ON GAZA AID
Israel opened up the Kisufim on Tuesday for the transfer of humanitarian aid trucks. The aid includes the delivery of food, water, medical supplies and shelter equipment to central and southern Gaza.
Seeming to reinforce Goren’s observation is data from COGAT showing that the number of aid trucks awaiting collection at the Kerem Shalom crossing rose from 450 on Oct. 1 to 700 on Oct. 30. COGAT shared exclusive footage of the overstocked Kerem Shalom loading area with Fox News Digital.
Goren said that COGAT “sat down with the U.N. several times in order to find solutions” to issues impeding aid deliveries, like looters continuing to attack humanitarian convoys. According to Goren, COGAT offered “alternative roads in order to bypass” looters, proposed “allowing the Palestinian trucks to move on defense roads from the Israeli side of the security fence,” and escorted trucks along their routes.
Dujarric refuted COGAT’s claims of offering alternative routes for trucks. He said that with pre-approved supplies only able to transit through three border crossings – Kerem Shalom, Gate 96 and Erez West – as of November, “our humanitarian colleagues…access these border areas by highly dangerous routes, exposed to hostilities, with many alternative roads being banned by the Israeli authorities. The routes available are often in poor condition and prone to armed looting resulting,” Dujarric continued. “Commercial supplies are virtually banned.”
Displaced Palestinians ordered by the Israeli military to evacuate the northern part of Gaza flee amid an Israeli military operation in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on Oct. 22, 2024. (REUTERS/Dawoud Abu Alkas)
In response to questions about aid backing up at Kerem Shalom, Dujarric said that “letting supplies be placed at barely accessible entry points cannot be considered as facilitating humanitarian efforts.” Only when “supplies and services have reached the people who need them, in sufficient quantities” are they considered facilitated, Dujarric added.
According to Dujarric, “there are 80 international staff, 13,000 national staff employed with UNRWA, and 208 national staff employed by other U.N. agencies,” who are “working in the most dangerous conditions to provide life-saving assistance for the over two million people of Gaza.” He said that “to accuse them, and their national colleagues, of lacking motivation is insulting to say the very least.”
Looters take aid from trucks loaded with aid. (Majdi Fathi/TPS-IL)
Dujarric also noted additional concerns, including humanitarian workers being “held at Israeli checkpoints for hours, shot at, harassed and put in danger,” with one World Food Programme convoy “struck 10 times by IDF gunfire.” Dujarric said that only 35 of the 351 truck drivers WFP has submitted for clearance to COGAT were cleared.
ISRAELI PRIME MINISTER BENJAMIN NETANYAHU FIRES DEFENSE MINISTER YOAV GALLANT
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres speaks during a press conference in front of the Rafah border crossing on March 23, 2024 in Rafah, Egypt. (Photo by Ali Moustafa/Getty Images)
An Israel Defense Forces (IDF) spokesperson responded to Dujarric’s claims by telling Fox News Digital that the IDF “takes all operationally feasible measures to mitigate harm to civilians, including aid convoys and workers,” and “has never, and will never, deliberately target aid convoys and workers.” The spokesperson also explained that the IDF is “working proactively with international aid organizations to update driver lists, subject to strict security checks due to the drivers’ proximity to the Israeli border,” and wants to “expedite driver approvals.”
The IDF directly refuted Dujarric’s assertions about Kerem Shalom, saying that Israel “has taken proactive steps to improve accessibility at the crossings,” including carrying out road expansions, adding “dozens of empty trucks, forklifts, and additional logistical equipment,” and allowing “daily tactical pauses to enable and ease the transfer of aid.”
The IDF spokesperson said that Israel has been sending “humanitarian aid, blood supplies, food boxes, fuel, and medical equipment” and medical teams into northern Gaza through Erez and two additional locations. Israeli officials did announce last week that they will soon add a new humanitarian aid crossing in Kissufim in order to facilitate more deliveries to the southern portion of the Gaza Strip.
Israeli soldiers stand at the entrance to a tunnel leading to Egypt amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the Palestinian Islamist group Hamas in the Gaza Strip in the Philadelphi Corridor area in southern Gaza on Sept. 13, 2024. (REUTERS/Amir Cohen)
On Nov. 1, Reuters alleged that the situation in northern Gaza was “apocalyptic,” with all Gazans “at imminent risk of dying from disease, famine and violence.” On Nov. 8, the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) Famine Review Committee issued a similar warning, explaining that there was “a strong likelihood that famine is imminent” in parts of northern Gaza.
David Adesnik, a senior fellow and director of research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, has tracked dire warnings of famine in Gaza during the conflict there. He talked with Fox News Digital about prior predictions of doom which did not come to pass, largely because of COGAT’s efforts to allay hunger.
Adesnik explained that the IPC has “downplayed the good news aggressively” of the “long term trend” of lowering the number of Gazans in the worst phases of hunger. The IPC found in December 2023 that 17% of Gazans faced catastrophic phase-five hunger conditions. By March, 30% of the population had reached phase five, with onlookers predicting famine was imminent. The next report, however, found that just 15% of Gazans were in phase five. The most recent IPC snapshot from October shows that just 6% of Gazans are in phase five, though the IPC warns that this number is “expected to nearly triple in the coming months”. The IPC proclaimed that the “risk of famine persists.”
Palestinian terrorists of the al-Qassam Brigades, the armed wing of the Hamas movement, take part in a military parade to mark the anniversary of the 2014 war with Israel, near the border in the central Gaza Strip on July 19, 2023. (MAHMUD HAMS/AFP via Getty Images)
With a new U.N. FAO-WFP report that likewise raises alarms about possible famine, Adesnik said that “the U.N. is doing its best to obscure the improvements in food security made possible by a surge of aid into Gaza this past spring and summer.” He added that the report fails to mention how, according to U.N. data, there was an 80% decline in “the number of Gaza residents facing the most severe deprivation” between March and October.
ISRAELI FORCES SEIZE DOCUMENTS THAT REVEAL HAMAS PLAN FOR MORE ELABORATE ATTACKS: REPORT
Professor Aron Troen, of the Faculty of Agriculture, Food and Environment at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, performed an analysis of the quantity of calories reaching Gazan civilians through humanitarian aid efforts. In May, Troen’s report found that the “quantity and nutritional composition of the food that has been delivered over the past four months complied, and even exceeded” an “internationally-recognized benchmark for humanitarian response.”
Troen told Fox News Digital that his team recently updated its figures and found that aid entering Gaza was “enough up until September.” Troen added that COGAT is “doing a heroic job in very tough times” but that “there really is immense suffering in Gaza.”
COGAT’s online portal shows that since the war began in October, more than 1,115,000 tons of aid have entered Gaza.
A man walks past the rubble after Israeli forces withdrew from the area around Kamal Adwan hospital, amid the ongoing Israel-Hamas conflict in Jabalia in the northern Gaza Strip on Oct. 26, 2024. (REUTERS/Stringer)
Goren admitted that aid quantities were low in October due to the High Holidays, memorials for the Oct. 7 anniversary, and the closing of the two Erez aid crossings for two weeks while troops moved into northern Gaza to battle “the heart of Hamas.” While many in the media supposed that the so-called “General’s plan” to evacuate northern Gaza and cut off aid was the culprit for diminished aid, Goren said that General’s plan has never “even been discussed in the army.” He also emphasized that “we are not in a war against civilians, but against Hamas.”
As a part of that war, COGAT ended private sector aid during the month of October. Goren said that Hamas was “trying to take advantage and use the private sector” as a way to collect taxes and steal aid. “So we closed it,” he explained. “There is no way that we will allow Hamas to empower itself from humanitarian assistance.”
TRUMP NAMES STEFANIK UN AMBASSADOR
Palestinians, who left their homes and took refuge in Rafah city under hard conditions, carry the flour they received in the area where the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees distributes flour to families as Israeli attacks continue in Rafah of Gaza on Jan. 28, 2024. (Abed Zagout/Anadolu via Getty Images)
Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated on Oct. 16, 2023 that “if Hamas in any way blocks humanitarian assistance from reaching civilians, including by seizing the aid itself, we’ll be the first to condemn it, and we will work to prevent it from happening again.” President Biden emphasized two days later that “if Hamas diverts or steals the assistance, they will have demonstrated once again that they have no concern for the welfare of the Palestinian people and it will end.”
Fox News Digital asked the State Department whether Blinken would condemn Hamas’ aid theft and aid taxation, but received no response.
Adesnik told Fox News Digital that “from early on, at least last November or December, the administration has ramped up criticism of Israel, but with a couple of exceptions, continues to provide the weapons that Israel needs.” As Adesnik explained, “neither side thinks the U.S. is pursuing a principled middle ground.”
American officials’ frustration with Israel peaked last month, evidenced by a leaked letter from Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin to Israeli officials on Oct. 13. In it, U.S. officials warned that they will need to reassess whether to allocate foreign military funds to Israel. They provided a list of improvements they expect to see before Nov. 13. This included enabling the delivery of 350 truckloads of aid each day, a benchmark not yet achieved.
On Tuesday, State Department spokesman Vedant Patel noted that Israel was currently not “in violation of U.S. law,” adding that, “We are watching these circumstances closely and we will, make appropriate changes, within our own policy, should we need to if we assess that their compliance with US law has changed.”
Following the State Department’s announcement, Israel’s Ambassador to the United Nations, Danny Danon, told Fox News Digital that he welcomed the news, noting that “We worked very hard in order to assist humanitarian needs in Gaza.” Danon said the environment in Gaza is challenging given how Hamas terrorists operate which includes hijacking aid trucks, he said.
World
Trump hosts crypto contest winners at Mar-a-Lago as his coin languishes
World
Latin American leftists met in Spain, signaling push against US influence on continent
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
MEXICO CITY: The recent high-profile gathering of leftist leaders in Barcelona, convened by Spain’s socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, is drawing increasing attention for what analysts describe as a broader geopolitical positioning that could challenge U.S. influence across Latin America and beyond.
The summit brought together Brazil president Lula da Silva, Colombia’s Gustavo Petro, and Mexico’s Claudia Sheinbaum. Framed as a platform for addressing inequality, climate change and the rise of right-wing political movements, yet the rhetoric coming from it has raised questions in Washington and across the region about whether a more coordinated political counterweight to the United States is taking shape.
Without naming the Trump administration, Sánchez warned of the “normalization of the use of force” and “attempts to undermine international law”, as criticism of U.S. foreign policy. He also pushed for reforms to global institutions, arguing that the current system no longer reflects today’s geopolitical realities, a position that implicitly challenges long-standing U.S. leadership in those bodies.
WALZ RIPS TRUMP AND VANCE IN EUROPE, SAYS ‘FEEBLE-MINDED, TRIGGER-HAPPY PRESIDENT’ HAS NO EXIT PLAN FOR IRAN
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez take part in the 4th Meeting in Defense of Democracy, held at Fira Barcelona Gran Via in LâHospitalet de Llobregat, where he welcomed the attending delegations and underscored the need to strengthen international cooperation in defense of democratic values in Barcelona, Spain on April 18, 2026. The event included the greeting of heads of delegation and the traditional family photo, ahead of the start of the leadersâ meeting. Among those attending were South African President Cyril Ramaphosa; Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum; Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva; former Chilean President Michelle Bachelet; and Colombian President Gustavo Petro. (Lorena Sopena Lopez/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“The Barcelona summit reflects a deliberate effort by Pedro Sánchez to position himself as a leading figure within an emerging progressive bloc that is increasingly critical of U.S. foreign policy under President Trump,” Juan Angel Soto, founder and CEO of Fortius Consulting told Fox News Digital.
“This positioning is particularly complex given Spain’s structural anchoring in both the European Union and NATO, which traditionally align it closely with Washington. However, Sánchez has simultaneously deepened ties with the Global South, evident in his growing proximity to China, as well as to leaders such as Lula, Sheinbaum, and Petro, suggesting a dual-track foreign policy that seeks greater autonomy from U.S. influence,” Soto said.
The Colombian leader tied global tensions directly to economic and energy systems, arguing that fossil fuel dependence has fueled conflict and inequality, an argument that aligns with broader criticism of Western-led economic models.
Roberto Salinas León, Director of International Affairs at Universidad de la Libertad in Mexico City, told Fox News Digital: “The ill-named summit “In Defense of Democracy” held in Barcelona brought together notable “progressives” with an aim to bring together a global contingent opposed to, well, Trump 2.0. How convenient.”
TRUMP CRITICIZES SPAIN AMID IRAN, NATO RIFT AS PM SANCHEZ FACES QUESTIONS OVER POLITICAL MOTIVES
Chinese President Xi Jinping and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez shake hands before their meeting in Beijing, China September 9, 2024 (China Daily via Reuters)
“Petro stated that ‘Latin American progressivism is a ray of hope for a humanity in crisis.’ Yet these would-be spokespersons for democracy have supported such inhumane brutal dictatorships like Cuba, Nicaragua, Maduro’s Venezuela, Iran, and others. This gathering is more aptly characterized as a political mascara of electoral autocracies, each leader undermining the institutional checks and balances of open liberal democracies,” he said.
Brazil’s Lula criticized what he described as interventionist policies by major powers and called for a rebalancing of global governance, including changes to the U.N. Security Council. At one point, he characterized recent U.S. leadership as contributing to global instability, reinforcing a central theme of the summit: that the current international order needs to be redefined.
President Donald Trump, center, Dominican Republic President Luis Abinader, second from left, Argentina’s President Javier Milei, El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele, Guyana’s President Mohamed Irfaan Ali, Costa Rica’s President Rodrigo Chaves Robles, Bolivia’s President Rodrigo Paz and Chile’s President-elect Jose Antonio Kast pose for a family photo during the Shield of the Americas” Summit in Doral, Fla., on Saturday, March 7, 2026. (Kevin Lamarque/Reuters)
“The new Cold War is being waged between China and the United States; it is this very rivalry that is at stake in every country participating in the summit. Lula’s concern regarding the resurgence of the right has become patently obvious, particularly when observing Argentina and Chile, where the victories of Milei and Kast have ushered in ‘winds of change.’ We are, quite literally, living through times reminiscent of the fall of the Berlin Wall, specifically, the collapse of ‘21st-century socialism’ across Hispanic America, and this is precisely what has them so worried,” Brazilian political analyst Sandra Bronzina told Fox News Digital
“When the global progressive left rails against the United States, talking about sovereignty and peace, or speaking out against war, they are not doing so out of mere altruism or good intentions. Rather, they are driven by a shadowy self-interest: ensuring that China continues to colonize our nations, a process that is, evidently, already well underway.”
‘AMERICAS COUNTER CARTEL COALITION’: INSIDE THE US STRATEGY TO COMBAT NARCO TERROR, CONFRONT CHINA, OTHER FOES
Mexico’s Sheinbaum underscored the principle of national sovereignty, reiterating Latin America’s longstanding emphasis on non-intervention. She joined other leaders in opposing sanctions on countries such as Cuba, signaling a willingness to coordinate positions that diverge sharply from U.S. policy in the region.
Taken together, analysts say the messaging out of Barcelona suggests the early stages of a loosely aligned bloc, one that is increasingly willing to challenge U.S. positions on global governance, regional policy and economic strategy.
Chile elected right wing leader Jose Kast as president. (Juan Gonzalez/Reuters)
Yet even as leaders in Barcelona warn of a rising right-wing threat, political realities across the Americas tell a different story, one that may resonate more directly with U.S. audiences.
In Argentina, sweeping economic reforms focused on deregulation and fiscal discipline have captured global attention as an alternative to state-led models. In El Salvador, aggressive security policies have dramatically reduced violence. And in Ecuador, a renewed focus on law-and-order and institutional control is emerging as a response to escalating cartel violence.
CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD THE FOX NEWS APP
Analysts say these examples highlight a counter to the Barcelona narrative in that a significant portion of the region is moving toward policies centered on security, market reforms and stronger state authority — priorities that often align more closely with U.S. strategic interests.
Experts say the contrast is striking. On one side, a group of leaders in Barcelona is calling for a rethinking of global systems long associated with U.S. leadership. On the other, governments across the hemisphere are experimenting with approaches that emphasize economic liberalization and strong security measures.
World
EU and US sign plan for strategic partnership for critical minerals
The European Union and United States signed an agreement Friday to coordinate on the supply of critical minerals needed for key industries including defence.
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and EU Trade Commissioner Maroš Šefčovič signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) on a Strategic Partnership for Critical Minerals in the Treaty Room of the State Department in Washington.
Rubio stated ahead of the signing that the awareness and commitment to the European Union shows “the importance of supply chains and critical minerals to the success of our economies, and to our national security.”
Rubio highlighted that the over-concentration of these resources, and the fact that one or two places dominate them, is an unacceptable risk.
“We need diversity in our supply chains. Diversity in the places where they’re critical in the world,” Rubio added.
Šefčovič echoed the importance of the agreement, saying, “I believe that we will be even more strategic together. We will be delivering on our goals much faster than before. And we, of course, will be growing stronger together in this very important area.”
Countering China’s dominance
The pact marks a rare embrace by President Donald Trump’s administration of the role of the EU, which it often berates as it instead champions right-wing populists within Europe.
Flexing its muscle at times of tension, Beijing has restricted exports of critical minerals needed for products including semiconductors, electric vehicle batteries and weapons systems.
“We have to make sure that these supplies and these minerals are available for our futures and in ways that are not monopolised in one place or concentrated heavily in one place,” he said.
They will also look at coordinating any subsidies and stockpiles of critical minerals, coordinate joint standards to ease trade across the Western world, and together invest in research.
The Trump administration has previously called for a preferential trade zone among allies on critical minerals.
Washington has also unveiled critical minerals action plans with Mexico and Japan, alongside a supply framework with Australia and others.
‘Positive traction’ needed on US steel tariffs
The EU is also seeking more progress in easing the effects of US steel tariffs, Šefčovič said, adding that talks are “going in a positive direction.”
The bloc wants to align approaches with the United States towards third countries when it comes to steel trade, he added.
With US Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, “we agreed to accelerate this work at a technical level,” Šefčovič told reporters.
But key issues remain in the transatlantic trade relationship.
Since Trump returned to the White House last year, European manufacturers have been hit by his sharp 50-percent tariff on steel and aluminum imports.
While Brussels and Washington clinched a deal last summer setting US tariffs at 15 percent for most EU goods, steel and aluminum products were not covered.
While Trump’s administration recently simplified how its import tariffs on steel are applied, Šefčovič said: “We still have some issues with the remaining products which are listed.”
“It would be very important to have positive traction on this,” he added.
Šefčovič stressed that the United States and European Union both face an issue of overcapacity in the market, recounting the EU’s recent decision to double tariffs on foreign steel to shield its industry from cheap Chinese exports.
“As a next step, we want to launch work with the US on steel ring-fencing, aligning our approaches towards third countries,” Šefčovič said.
This would help to build a “defensive mechanism against subsidised steel, against global overcapacities,” he added.
Additional sources • AP, AFP
-
New York1 hour agoWith Homicides and Other Violent Crimes at Record Lows, Funding for Prevention Falls
-
Detroit, MI2 hours agoLions draft grades Reacts survey: Grade the full 2026 class
-
San Francisco, CA2 hours agoThe final Jordan Mason trade results are in
-
Dallas, TX2 hours agoDallas Severe Weather: Tornado watch until 11 p.m.
-
Miami, FL2 hours agoCowboys Must Call Dolphins For All-Pro LB Trade After Miami’s 2026 Draft Haul
-
Boston, MA2 hours ago
PICK IS IN: WR Lewis Bond from Boston College drafted at No. 204 overall
-
Denver, CO2 hours agoNew Broncos TE Justin Joly posts welcome message
-
Seattle, WA2 hours agoSeattle Mariners Win a Home Run Derby vs St. Louis Cardinals 11-9