The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation was registered in February 2025 in
Delaware with a contingency filing in Geneva that was being wound down. Former CEO of
World Central Kitchen Nate Mook was described as a board member on early GHF documents, but has stated that he is not on the board. The plan would use a small number of distribution hubs, mostly in southern Gaza, secured by the Israeli military and private US-based contractors, The plan was similar to earlier plans by the Israeli military, and contrasted with models by the UN and other international agencies which involved hundreds of smaller distribution points throughout the Gaza strip. The stations were designed to distribute aid only once or twice a month at specific locations, with aid being described as pre-packaged rations, hygiene kits, and medical supplies. The proposal indicated that each meal was budgeted around $1.30 which would include procurement and distribution costs. In June 2025,
Boston Consulting Group (BCG) terminated its contract with the GHF. BCG helped create the GHF in coordination with Israel and was responsible for setting prices for contractors. BCG said that the work was done
pro bono but
The Washington Post reported that BCG submitted invoices of over $1 million per month. BCG fired two senior partners, calling the work they oversaw for GHF "unauthorized". In early July 2025, Swiss authorities ordered the GHF office in Geneva to be closed for noncompliance with legal requirements to continue its operations.
Executive director transition Jake Wood, the initial executive director, is a former US marine and co-founder of disaster relief agency
Team Rubicon. On 25 May 2025, Wood announced that he was stepping down because it was impossible to meet the foundation's objectives while "strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence, which I will not abandon." Wood said that he "unequivocally ... will not be part of anything that forcibly
dislocates or displaces the Palestinian population." He also called on Israel to allow significantly more aid to enter Gaza through all pathways and for such aid to be allowed in without diversion or discrimination, while also calling on Hamas to release the hostages. The GHF said its operations would begin without Wood, and that it would be feeding more than one million Palestinians within a week.
Program characteristics The program – known as the "Humanitarian Aid Distribution Program in the Gaza Strip" – was a joint
American-
Israeli program by the GHF
Operations Three GHF distribution sites were in Rafah, in areas where the IDF had issued evacuation warnings, and one is in
Gaza City. As of 29 May 2025, no distribution sites had been built north of the
Netzarim Corridor. In July 2025, GHF said that it had created separate lanes for women and children and was increasing programs for direct aid delivery to communities. On 6 August 2025, U.S. ambassador to Israel
Mike Huckabee announced plans to "scale up" the number of distribution sites from four to sixteen and begin to operate them 24 hours a day. The facilities were secured by American contractors and monitored by the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) from a distance. Palestinians interviewed by
Middle East Eye described the boxes provided by the GHF as inadequate, saying that the boxes did not contain supplies such as bottled water, cooking fuel, medicines, blankets, baby formula, or baby food. The
BBC reported that GHF boxes primarily contained dry foods that required fuel and water to cook, despite Gaza undergoing a water crisis, and some ready-to-eat foods. The GHF said that each box contained 42,500 calories, and would feed 5.5 people for 3.5 days. Sources interviewed by the BBC said that the boxes lacked nutrients such as calcium, zinc, and iron, and could lead to an increased risk of anemia and scurvy. By the end of its first day of operations, GHF reported that it had distributed 8,000 food boxes, estimated to feed 44,000 people for half a week — covering about 2% of Gaza's population. On 12 June, it reported a daily distribution of 2.6 million meals, the highest daily output since the start of its operations.
Alex de Waal estimates that the GHF's distribution work covers less than half of Gaza's nutrition needs. On 6 June 2025, Reuters reported that the U.S. State Department was considering sending $500 million from the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to the GHF. On 11 June,
Mike Huckabee said that at the time, GHF was not being mostly funded by the US. Huckabee stated that the organization's funding sources included other countries, NGOs, humanitarian funds, and private individuals, all of which retained anonymity by request. On 26 June, the
U.S. State Department announced that it had approved $30 million in funding for the GHF, calling it "the latest iteration of President Trump's and
Secretary Rubio's pursuit of peace in the region". At the time of the announcement, $7 million had already been disbursed to GHF by the State Department, according to
The Guardian. At the time of the GHF’s suspension on operations following the October 10 Gaza ceasefire deal, the GHF had funding until November 2025. == History ==