The World Food Program executive director posted a video from Gaza where she said the enclave is ‘at a breaking point’
Hani Alshaer/Anadolu via Getty Images
Palestinians receive aid from the World Food Programme (WFP) in Khan Yunis, Gaza on July 23, 2025.
Humanitarian aid to Gaza must only go to civilians, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and World Food Program Executive Director Cindy McCain said in a joint statement following their meeting on Thursday.
“It was agreed that every effort must be made to ensure that humanitarian aid reaches the most vulnerable people where they are, and that humanitarian aid is provided exclusively to civilians,” they stated.
The statement comes as Israel and U.N. agencies have been at odds over humanitarian aid distribution in Gaza, where there have been widespread reports of food shortages. Israel has pointed to looting and hoarding of food by Hamas as a major source of the problem, and has supported the efforts of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation since May to distribute food without the terrorist group interdicting it.
U.N. aid agencies, like the WFP, have refused to accept Israeli security for their food deliveries or to work with the GHF or any other alternatives to UNRWA, the U.N. refugee agency for Palestinians, which Israel has outlawed. Some UNRWA employees took part in the Oct. 7, 2023 attacks on Israel and were Hamas fighters, and Hamas has used UNRWA facilities and resources in the war.
The joint statement from Netanyahu and McCain said that they “discussed the importance of protecting civilians from hunger and malnutrition and ensuring that their basic essential needs are met.”
“They noted the increase in humanitarian aid into Gaza over the last month and agreed to redouble efforts to expedite and sustain the entry of humanitarian goods into Gaza given the dire needs on the ground,” the statement reads.
McCain warned in an earlier post on X that “Gaza is at a breaking point.”
She recorded a video from the city of Deir el Balah in central Gaza, where she said that “famine is expected in the coming weeks if food doesn’t reach the thousands of starving families here fast enough.”
“The desperation here is overwhelming. We can reach them. We need safe routes and sustained access. We must deliver at the scale this crisis demands,” McCain stated.
McCain met with IDF Chief of Staff (Lt.-Gen.) Eyal Zamir and Maj.-Gen. Ghassan Alian, the head of COGAT, the IDF unit responsible for overseeing humanitarian aid, on Wednesday, who “emphasized the IDF’s commitment to preventing famine and doing everything in its power to continue enabling humanitarian aid to reach the civilian population directly, rather than Hamas,” the IDF stated.
She also met with Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa in Ramallah.
X/Charles Kushner
U.S. Ambassador to France Charles Kushner and French President Emmanuel Macron
Good Monday morning.
In today’s Daily Kickoff, we have the scoop on World Food Program head Cindy McCain’s trip to Israel this week, and cover the clash between U.S. Ambassador to France Charles Kushner and Paris over rising antisemitism in the country. We talk to Rep. John McGuire about his recent trip to Israel with a Republican delegation, and spotlight Jewish communal concerns over increasingly anti-Israel rhetoric from the head of the American Association of University Professors. Also in today’s Daily Kickoff: Kevin Youkilis, John Bolton and Rabbi Pesach Wolicki.
What We’re Watching
- Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar is in Washington this week for meetings with senior U.S. officials. Sa’ar will meet with Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and other officials, as well as Jewish communal leaders from the Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations.
- World Food Program Executive Director Cindy McCain is in Israel this week. More below.
- We’re keeping an eye on diplomatic tensions between the U.S. and France following a Wall Street Journal op-ed by U.S. Ambassador to France Charles Kushner in which Kushner wrote that, “not a day passes without Jews assaulted in the street, synagogues or schools defaced, or Jewish-owned businesses vandalized” in the country. France’s Foreign Ministry summoned Kushner following the op-ed’s publication yesterday. More below.
- The U.N. Security Council is set to vote today on a French proposal to extend the mandate of the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, which has operated for decades in the border region between Israel and Lebanon and long faced criticism over its inability to prevent Hezbollah from amassing significant weapons stockpiles in the area. At his confirmation hearing last month, Michel Issa, the Trump administration’s nominee to be ambassador to Lebanon, dodged a question on whether the mandate should be extended, saying that the force’s role was likely to change as Beirut pushes Hezbollah to disarm.
- Nuclear talks between Iran and the U.K., Germany and France are expected to take place this week, ahead of next week’s deadline for the imposition of snapback sanctions on Iran.
- Meanwhile, International Atomic Energy Agency officials are in Washington this week for talks regarding Iran’s nuclear program.
- In Minneapolis, the Democratic National Committee’s summer meeting kicks off today. The DNC delegates will be considering two Israel-related resolutions — an anti-Israel measure that calls for an arms embargo and a suspension of U.S. military aid to Israel and a more balanced resolution calling for a ceasefire and the immediate return of hostages, which has the backing of DNC Chair Ken Martin.
- The Zionist Rabbinic Coalition is hosting a seminar today for rabbis navigating topics around Israel and antisemitism in High Holiday sermons.
What You Should Know
A QUICK WORD WITH JI’S MELISSA WEISS
After a tumultuous decade in American politics, both major parties are undergoing ideological and generational shifts that are likely to redefine America’s standing in the world — and its relationship with Israel.
On the left, a new generation of lawmakers from the progressive wing of the Democratic Party, many with more critical views of Israel than those who came before them, is making gains in major cities, state capitals and on Capitol Hill. On the right, the ascendance of the isolationist MAGA movement and the decline in support for Israel among younger evangelical Christians, traditionally a bastion of support for the Jewish state, is challenging what has long been traditional, strident GOP support for Israel.
Longtime observers of the U.S.-Israel relationship with whom JI spoke over the weekend expressed concern that Jerusalem has not developed a strategic long-term approach to deal with the emerging political realities in the U.S.
When asked if he believed there’s a serious effort in Jerusalem to address the longterm political challenges in the U.S., former Israeli Ambassador to the U.S. Michael Oren was succinct: “I do not.”
The U.S.-Israel relationship, Yossi Klein Halevi, a senior fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute, told JI on Sunday, “has never been in bigger trouble.” What’s so significant about this moment, he said, is that “the erosion is happening in both parties.”
In the past, Halevi explained, “we could always rely on one party or the other to bail us out. And of course, in the past, it was usually the Democrats, and the fact that the erosion is now beginning in the Republican Party should be sending major, major alarms in Jerusalem, but I don’t see any indication of that.”
Former Knesset member Einat Wilf told JI that the warning signs had been evident for years, and that she had pushed for conversations on the future of the U.S.-Israel relationship when Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-MN) began to criticize Israel. “I remember at the time I started talking with people,” Wilf recalled, “And I told them, ‘Look, if I’m Israel, then I’m putting a team now. Doesn’t have to be overt, but I’m putting a team now that begins to plan for a world where we don’t have such strong support.’”
scoop
Cindy McCain makes first Israel trip since start of Israel-Hamas war

World Food Program head Cindy McCain is in Israel this week on her first trip to the country since the start of the Israel-Hamas war nearly two years ago, three sources in the U.S. and Israel confirmed to Jewish Insider’s Melissa Weiss.
On the agenda: McCain’s trip comes amid a scaled-up effort to deliver aid to Gaza, following widespread reports of malnutrition, food shortages and distribution challenges. She will meet on Monday with families of some of the remaining 50 hostages in Gaza, and is expected to travel to the enclave on Tuesday. On Wednesday, McCain is expected to meet with Israeli and U.S. officials, including Strategic Affairs Minister Ron Dermer and U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee. She may also meet with Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC), who is in Lebanon this week and expected to travel on to Israel after leaving Beirut.






































































