WASHINGTON — Senior U.N. officials have warned Israel that they will suspend the world body's aid operations across Gaza unless Israel acts urgently to better protect humanitarian workers, two U.N. officials said Tuesday. The ultimatum is the latest in a series of U.N. steps demanding Israel do more to safeguard aid operations from strikes by its forces and to curb growing lawlessness hindering humanitarian workers.
A U.N. letter sent to Israeli officials this month said Israel must provide U.N. workers with a way to communicate directly with Israeli forces on the ground in Gaza, among other steps, the officials said. They spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing negotiations with Israeli officials.
The U.N. officials said there has been no final decision on suspending operations across Gaza and that talks with the Israelis were ongoing.
U.N. spokesman Stéphane Dujarric told reporters in New York that U.N. humanitarian coordinator Muhannad Hadi had written to the Israeli military on June 17 and the U.N.'s undersecretary for security, Gilles Michaud, spoke with Israeli military officials Monday.
Dujarric called conditions for aid workers in the territory ''increasingly intolerable.'' But he said the U.N. was ''pushing all its contacts'' with the Israelis to resolve the problems and noted that ''the U.N. will not turn its back on the people of Gaza.''
U.S. officials are talking with the U.N. and Israeli military to try to help resolve U.N. concerns, State Department spokesman Matthew Miller told reporters Tuesday. Asked if the U.S. had received any commitments from Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who is visiting this week to speak with Biden administration officials, Miller said, ''we went through a number of specific things that we want to see resolved when it comes to the humanitarian situation and got an assurance to continue to work on those."
The Israeli army declined to comment on the U.N. warning, and the Israeli defense ministry did not respond to requests for comment. The army claims it is trying to facilitate aid shipments and accuses Hamas of disrupting them, noting Tuesday that the militant group fired a projectile at the humanitarian route near a UNICEF aid convoy.
Israel has previously acknowledged some military strikes on humanitarian workers, including an April attack that killed seven workers with the World Central Kitchen, and has denied allegations of others.