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![OmarHamadD Avatar](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:24/cr:twitter::3034218992.png) Omar Hamad | عُـمَـرْ 𓂆 [@OmarHamadD](/creator/twitter/OmarHamadD) on x 45.1K followers
Created: 2025-07-20 20:56:32 UTC

In 1948, the Soviet Union cut off all land and air routes leading to West Berlin, placing over two million people under siege.

The Allies responded with the Berlin Airlift—a massive air supply operation for the besieged population of West Berlin. They delivered food, medicine, coal, fuel, and everything else needed. The aid reached up to XXXXXX tons per day, and this supply effort continued until the blockade ended—a full year later. They didn’t wait for permits, protocols, or conditional coordination.

On the other hand, between us and Egypt stands a fence of iron. I used to stand by it often when I was displaced in Rafah. Once, an Egyptian soldier mocked me and asked, “Who betrayed Younis?” I replied, “No one betrayed him but those who turn their backs and lower their weapons when Israeli tanks pass right next to this very fence.” He fell silent and didn’t know how to respond. He thought we didn’t know how to respond, and that we were just ignorant and starving. But we are not hungry—we have been starved by those who think they are protecting their country.

Between us and Egypt is a fence through which not even a loaf of bread can be passed to quiet our children’s cries. Does it really require coordination, international protocols, and permits to bring flour into Gaza?

What kind of political wisdom or strategic brilliance justifies your refusal to break this siege? Two million starving people—this is the reality. Does that really require deep analysis?

But the West didn’t wait a single hour for the Germans in West Berlin to go hungry. Immediately, fleets of planes were dispatched to help them.

What is the worst-case scenario if one country decided to break the blockade on Gaza?


XXXXXXX engagements

![Engagements Line Chart](https://lunarcrush.com/gi/w:600/p:tweet::1947037935909429331/c:line.svg)

[Post Link](https://x.com/OmarHamadD/status/1947037935909429331)

[GUEST ACCESS MODE: Data is scrambled or limited to provide examples. Make requests using your API key to unlock full data. Check https://lunarcrush.ai/auth for authentication information.]

OmarHamadD Avatar Omar Hamad | عُـمَـرْ 𓂆 @OmarHamadD on x 45.1K followers Created: 2025-07-20 20:56:32 UTC

In 1948, the Soviet Union cut off all land and air routes leading to West Berlin, placing over two million people under siege.

The Allies responded with the Berlin Airlift—a massive air supply operation for the besieged population of West Berlin. They delivered food, medicine, coal, fuel, and everything else needed. The aid reached up to XXXXXX tons per day, and this supply effort continued until the blockade ended—a full year later. They didn’t wait for permits, protocols, or conditional coordination.

On the other hand, between us and Egypt stands a fence of iron. I used to stand by it often when I was displaced in Rafah. Once, an Egyptian soldier mocked me and asked, “Who betrayed Younis?” I replied, “No one betrayed him but those who turn their backs and lower their weapons when Israeli tanks pass right next to this very fence.” He fell silent and didn’t know how to respond. He thought we didn’t know how to respond, and that we were just ignorant and starving. But we are not hungry—we have been starved by those who think they are protecting their country.

Between us and Egypt is a fence through which not even a loaf of bread can be passed to quiet our children’s cries. Does it really require coordination, international protocols, and permits to bring flour into Gaza?

What kind of political wisdom or strategic brilliance justifies your refusal to break this siege? Two million starving people—this is the reality. Does that really require deep analysis?

But the West didn’t wait a single hour for the Germans in West Berlin to go hungry. Immediately, fleets of planes were dispatched to help them.

What is the worst-case scenario if one country decided to break the blockade on Gaza?

XXXXXXX engagements

Engagements Line Chart

Post Link

post/tweet::1947037935909429331
/post/tweet::1947037935909429331