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The international press continued to give extensive space to the repercussions of the Israeli war on the Gaza Strip, the latest of which was the massacre on Al-Rashid Street in Gaza City, which targeted civilians waiting for aid, as well as the acceleration of events on the northern front with the Lebanese Hezbollah.

The American Wall Street Journal reported that the occupation forces' shooting at crowds gathered around aid trucks in Gaza "threatens to torpedo the fragile negotiations regarding a ceasefire and the liberation of the hostages."

She pointed out that the incident comes amid international pressure on Israel to stop the war that has killed more than 30,000 Palestinians and threatens to kill more if it launches an attack on Rafah.

Regarding the same incident that led to the death of more than 100 Palestinians, the Media Part website recalled United Nations warnings of a famine threatening the majority of the population of the Gaza Strip, and explained how access to aid to civilians has become more complicated due to the massive destruction and ongoing fighting.

In turn, the Hebrew newspaper "Haaretz" touched on, in a report, "a profound impact that will not be erased by time due to the staggering number of deaths in future generations in Gaza."

She pointed out that the residents of the Gaza Strip are aware of the fact that the Israeli army is using hunger as a weapon against them, pointing to the severe criticism that Israel faces in this area and also for targeting health institutions on the grounds that they have lost the right to protection granted by international law.

For its part, the American newspaper "The Washington Post" collected testimonies of doctors from Gaza documenting tragic stories whose heroes were children arriving at hospitals alone, and reviewed some shocking numbers of orphans in Gaza that humanitarian organizations constantly update.

The American magazine Foreign Policy published an article talking about an inevitable war between Israel and Hezbollah within 6 to 8 months, and called on the most optimistic analysts to carefully consider the rapid developments that herald the imminent collapse of the rules that have governed this conflict until now.

The article points out that the proposition that Israel and Hezbollah do not want war is far from reality.

Source: Al Jazeera