Stacy Gilbert, a U.S. State Department official who resigned this week over Gaza,
said Thursday that part of a key report on humanitarian assistance
issued earlier this month was "patently false" and that it contradicted
the consensus of the department's own experts, according toThe Guardian.
Humanitarian groups had widely condemned the department's NSM-20 report, released May 10, which, among other contentious findings, determined that Israel
wasn't restricting the transport or delivery of U.S. humanitarian
assistance—an assessment that allowed the Biden administration to
continue providing arms to Israel. Countries that have blocked U.S. aid
are ineligible for arms and security assistance under U.S. law.
Gilbert's
comments on Thursday revealed that department officials, and not just
outside humanitarian groups, disagreed with the official assessment,
which she said was taken out of expert hands within the department
during the final weeks and "edited at a higher level." She told The Guardian that it was clear that Israel was limiting the amount of food and medical supplies coming into Gaza.
"There
is consensus among the humanitarian community on that," Gilbert said.
"It is absolutely the opinion of the humanitarian subject matter experts
in the state department, and not just in my bureau—people who look at
this from the intelligence community and from other bureaus."
"I
would be very hard pressed to think of anyone who has said [Israeli
obstruction of aid] is not an issue," she added. "That’s why I object to
that report saying that Israel is not blocking humanitarian assistance.
That is patently false."
The Washington Post, which broke the story of Gilbert's resignation on Tuesday, reported
that her view that "Israel was impeding the aid from reaching civilians
in Gaza" was "echoed by the vast majority of aid and humanitarian
organizations."
It was not clear from the reporting in The Guardian or the Post whether Gilbert also disagreed with the other major assessment in the NSM-20 report—that U.S.-supplied weapons couldn't be definitively linked to violations of international law in Gaza. Oxfam called
the report a "slap in the face," citing a memorandum it had jointly
written with Human Rights Watch on international law violations and
Israeli restrictions on aid. Other humanitarian and watchdog groups had
similar responses to the report.
Gilbert,
a 20-year department veteran who worked in the Bureau of Population,
Refugees, and Migration, described reading the final NSM-20 report in
shock when it was released. She sent an email explaining her intention
to resign just two hours later. This week, she sent another email to
department staff explaining her views about the errors in the report,
according to the Post.
Gilbert is one of two Biden
administration officials to resign this week, bringing the overall total
to at least nine. Alexander Smith, a contractor and senior adviser at
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), resigned Monday
after a presentation that he prepared on maternal and child health in
Gaza was canceled. He sent a letter to USAID Administrator Samantha
Power critiquing inconsistencies in the agency's approach to different
humanitarian crises, The Guardian reported. Smith had been with USAID for four years.
"I
cannot do my job in an environment in which specific people cannot be
acknowledged as fully human, or where gender and human rights principles
apply to some, but not to others, depending on their race," Smith
wrote.