The phrase “starvation engineering” has been circulating in media discourse lately—but what does it actually mean? Can the starvation of an entire population be planned, calculated, and managed like a military campaign?
The answer, tragically, is yes—and Israel is doing exactly that in Gaza. What we are witnessing—through a total blockade, sealed border crossings, and the denial or manipulation of humanitarian aid—is not the result of random chaos or battlefield confusion. It is the deliberate implementation of a strategy designed to break the Palestinian people through hunger.
Starvation as a Military Image Strategy
Israel is intentionally tightening its siege to the point that even basic food items, like a loaf of bread or a grain of wheat, are blocked. Israeli officials have publicly acknowledged this, without fear of accountability, backed by international impunity that grants them a green light to kill, starve, and annihilate.
When food supplies dwindle, hunger begins to consume children, women, and the elderly. Their frail bodies cannot endure. They die silently. Then—just as international pressure begins to simmer—Israel allows in a token number of aid trucks, not enough to sustain life, but enough to stage a photo op showing that “humanitarian aid” is being allowed in.
A Propaganda Machine in Motion
Every aid truck becomes a PR stunt. Media outlets, especially Western ones barred from entering Gaza, rush to report Israel’s version of events, while Palestinian journalists—many of whom are starving themselves—are silenced, ignored, or killed. Footage of starving children waiting to die is dismissed because it disrupts the narrative.
Israel’s policy is not to allow enough to meet need, but to keep Palestinians on the edge of famine, without crossing the legal threshold that would trigger international intervention.
The Second Phase of Starvation Engineering
The crime does not end when trucks cross the border.
Once aid enters, there is no protection—not from police, not from humanitarian agencies, not even from tribal communities. Trucks are forced to travel through Israeli-controlled corridors, under military threats, and are often stopped at specific points near occupation zones. There, the drivers are forbidden from continuing, and left to abandon their cargo.
Then the real battle begins.
Armed gangs—spawned and empowered by the chaos of war—descend on the aid convoys, loot the supplies, and violently repel civilians. Those who try to approach are attacked, robbed, or killed. Aid is stolen in full view of the starving, while international organisations are unable to reach distribution points or ensure safe delivery.
Stolen food is then sold in local markets at astronomical prices. A kilogram of flour is now more expensive than an entire 50 kg sack was before the war. Starvation is no longer just about the absence of food—it is about systematic humiliation and economic blackmail.
Selective Access: A Profitable Siege
In contrast, trucks belonging to select merchants are allowed entry—after paying exorbitant fees and coordinating directly with the Israeli army. These trucks are protected, escorted by armed factions that operate with full Israeli awareness and complicity.
But these trucks do not carry medicine or bread. Instead, they deliver small quantities of fruit, snacks, and luxury items. Carefully staged photographs of strawberries in Gaza are then distributed through Israeli media and foreign outlets to dismiss reports of famine:
“How can there be starvation in Gaza if strawberries are being sold?”
This Is Not Trade—This Is Policy
Starvation is being used as a weapon of war—to break the social fabric, dismantle the community’s will, and coerce political concessions at the cost of dignity, sovereignty, and survival.
This is not an accident. It is a calculated crime, orchestrated through a cold mix of military policy, bureaucratic red tape, and media manipulation. It is a silent but deadly weapon being deployed to crush Gaza and extinguish what remains of its human and social resistance.
Under international law, these policies qualify as war crimes and acts of genocide, as they deliberately target civilians by denying access to food—an inalienable human right.
What Must Be Done
Immediate and sustained humanitarian aid must be sent to Gaza through ethical, secure, and dignified channels that preserve the integrity of the Palestinian people. Simultaneously, local, Arab, Islamic, and global public pressure must intensify to end this blockade and stop the engineered starvation enforced by the Israeli military.
The Arab and Islamic media must rise to their moral and professional responsibilities—exposing Israeli disinformation, debunking propaganda, and amplifying Palestinian voices being silenced by siege and starvation.
Inside Gaza, despite the devastation, it remains essential to raise awareness, protect public safety, and ensure fair and secure aid distribution, so that whatever reaches the people is done with justice and unity—not desperation and exploitation.