When intelligence from U.S. agencies showed that Israeli military lawyers had warned about possible war crimes in Gaza, Washington didn’t sound the alarm, it shut the blinds. The discovery, buried deep within the Biden administration and later inherited by Trump’s team, revealed how the U.S. quietly protected Israel in Gaza, even when its own findings suggested clear violations of international law.
Warnings That Were Never Meant to Be Heard
According to multiple former U.S. officials, Israel’s own military lawyers had raised internal red flags, warning that certain operations in Gaza could qualify as war crimes. The U.S. intelligence community picked up on these warnings and briefed top policymakers. But instead of sparking outrage, the revelations led to a cautious silence the kind that shields allies, not civilians.

Officials feared that acknowledging those reports would force Washington to cut military aid and suspend arms transfers to Israel, something no administration wanted to be remembered for.
The Biden team debated the legal and moral implications behind closed doors, but the decision was ultimately political: keep the support flowing, even if it meant complicity.
State Department Lawyers Sounded the Alarm
Inside the State Department, several lawyers reportedly warned Secretary Antony Blinken that Israel’s military actions in Gaza likely breached humanitarian law. They argued that attacks on civilian areas, hospitals, and aid convoys couldn’t be justified as self-defense. But those internal warnings never shaped policy.
A senior legal adviser’s report suggested that the use of American-made weapons in those bombings might expose the U.S. to international scrutiny. Still, the memo was quietly shelved, and Washington continued to supply Israel with weapons, justifying it as “strategic necessity.”
The decision reflects a pattern: whenever accountability clashes with alliance, the latter wins.
A War That Outlived Presidents
By the time Donald Trump took office, the intelligence about Israeli conduct had already reached his transition team. Sources said his administration showed “little interest” in following up. The new foreign policy stance was simpler and blunter — full support for Israel, no questions asked.
The continuity across two administration, one liberal, one populist, shows that protecting Israel transcends political lines in Washington. It’s not about party loyalty, it’s about preserving an image of control and partnership in the Middle East, even when it comes at a moral cost.
How America Looked Away
Throughout the Gaza war, human rights organizations reported the same thing: hospitals hit, neighborhoods flattened, children buried in rubble. Yet Washington’s public statements stayed predictable, expressing “concern” while vetoing resolutions that called for accountability.
Inside the U.S. government, officials knew the numbers. Intelligence briefings showed tens of thousands of civilian deaths and deliberate restrictions on aid. But these facts were repackaged as “collateral damage” to preserve diplomatic convenience.
For an administration that once promised a foreign policy rooted in human rights, the contradiction was glaring.
The Power Politics Behind Silence
At the heart of this cover-up lies a simple truth: America cannot admit that its closest ally in the region may have crossed the line into war crimes. To do so would not only damage Israel’s legitimacy but also expose Washington’s own role in supplying the weapons, intelligence, and political protection that made those attacks possible.
This is why the debate inside Washington was never about truth, it was about timing and control. Every government lawyer knew that admitting Israel’s violations would trigger laws requiring the suspension of arms deals. So instead of a moral stance, America chose a legal loophole.
What happened behind closed doors in Washington wasn’t just policy, it was complicity disguised as caution. By choosing silence, U.S. leaders allowed the Gaza war to continue unchecked, enabling one of the world’s most lopsided conflicts while pretending to pursue peace.
As Gaza’s civilian death toll mounted, Washington’s credibility as a human rights champion crumbled. Still, the official line stayed the same: “Israel has the right to defend itself.”
History will remember this not as a diplomatic moment, but as a moral collapse. Inside the cover-up, everyone played their part and the world watched as Washington protected Israel in Gaza, not out of ignorance, but by design.















