Cease-fire calls mount as Israel ramps up military operations in Gaza – POLITICO

The United Nations has warned against a full-scale ground attack on Rafah, saying it would lead to an “epic humanitarian disaster” and would undermine attempts to support refugees amid a looming famine. U.S. President Joe Biden has called an Israeli ground offensive against Rafah a “red line,” warning that the U.S. would withhold weapons shipments if Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu goes ahead with the prospective attack.

On Sunday, U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres used a video address to a Kuwait humanitarian conference to urge, again, for “an immediate humanitarian cease-fire, the unconditional release of all hostages, and an immediate surge in humanitarian aid.”

A cease-fire “will only be the start. It will be a long road back from the devastation and trauma of this war,” Guterres said.

An Israeli offensive in Rafah doesn’t have the support of the U.K. government either, Foreign Secretary David Cameron said on Sunday.

“We don’t believe they should go in for a major operation in Rafah unless they have a plan to move people out of the way and to make sure they have shelter and food and medicine,” Cameron told the BBC. “We haven’t seen that plan, so we don’t support a major operation in Rafah,” he added.

But Cameron pushed back against calls to halt arms deliveries to Israel. “Just to simply announce today: We’re going to change our whole approach to arms exports rather than go through our careful process — it would strengthen Hamas, it would make a hostage deal less likely, I don’t think it would be the right approach,” he said.

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