War Biden’s plan for Gaza pier endangers U.S. troops, experts warn - Skeptics fear the humanitarian operation will be an enticing target for Hamas or other militants

Biden’s plan for Gaza pier endangers U.S. troops, experts warn
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Dan Lamothe
2024-03-31 10:07:57GMT

The Biden administration’s plan to install a floating pier off the Gaza coast as part of a broad international initiative to feed starving Palestinians will endanger the U.S. service members who must build, operate and defend the structure from attack, military experts say, a risk with enormous political consequences for the president should calamity strike.

The effort, U.S. officials say, could deliver up to 2 million meals per day into the war-ravaged territory, where a famine is feared amid Israel’s sustained bombardment and what critics say are its extreme restrictions on the flow of food, medicine and other humanitarian aid.

While the Pentagon maintains that no U.S. troops will deploy into Gaza, it has disclosed little about how long the operation could last and how it intends to ensure the safety of those involved, alarming some in Congress and other critics of the president’s plan. Military officials declined to answer questions from The Washington Post about where the pier will be located and what security measures will be taken, citing a desire not to telegraph its plans.

The Americans’ fixed proximity to the fighting and the intense anger at the United States for its support of Israel will render the pier an enticing target for Hamas or another of the region’s militant groups — many of whom receive arms and military guidance from adversary Iran, skeptics of the operation warn. Rocket fire, attack drones and divers or speedboats hauling explosives all will pose a threat, they said.

Paul Kennedy, a retired Marine Corps general who led major humanitarian operations after natural disasters in Nepal and the Philippines, called it a “worthy goal” for the United States to reduce civilian suffering in Gaza. But he questioned whether the U.S. military is the proper entity to be involved.

“If a bomb went off in that location,” he said, “the American public will ask, ‘What the hell were they doing there in the first place?’”

John Kirby, a spokesman for the White House National Security Council, said that the assembly and operation of the pier will bring relief to thousands of Gazans, and is an important mission that will make a difference.

“But we know that such missions are never risk-free,” Kirby said. “That’s particularly so in a war zone like Gaza. There will not be U.S. troops on the ground, and we know our military leaders will make every effort to ensure their safety as they build and operate this pier.”

This account is based on interviews with eight current and former U.S. national security officials familiar with the Gaza operation’s ongoing planning or otherwise knowledgeable about the complex coordination required to safely conduct humanitarian missions of such a scale.

Those who defended the plan said the risk is real, but manageable, and that the United States is showing leadership by looking for new ways to feed Palestinians trapped by the fighting.

Several, however, cited the deadly terrorist bombings in Beirut in 1983 and during the U.S. evacuation of Afghanistan in 2021 as examples of the immense difficulty protecting U.S. service members during extended stays in vulnerable conditions.
The former left 241 U.S. service members dead. The latter killed 13 U.S. troops alongside an estimated 170 Afghans, and remains a low point for the Biden administration and the focus of an ongoing oversight investigation in the Republican-controlled House.

President Biden announced the Gaza pier deployment during his State of the Union address March 7, saying it will enable a “massive increase” in humanitarian assistance. The United States and other nations have, for the last several weeks, airdropped aid into Gaza, but those efforts have not met the demand.

The pier idea has been met with a mixed response, with the International Rescue Committee and other aid organizations saying the United States must use its influence to press Israel to let in more humanitarian deliveries by land. Israeli officials have refused to open Gaza’s northern crossing, citing security concerns, while in the south a tedious inspection process has limited the volume of aid that can enter.

Israel has accused the United Nations agency responsible for distributing most aid within the enclave of diverting supplies to Hamas, and said that delays have been caused by logistical problems among aid organizations, including a shortage of drivers.

The Army-led pier operation will involve about 1,000 U.S. troops and four Army ships that deployed from southeastern Virginia on March 12. After an estimated 30-day transit, the vessels are expected to pull in offshore, where the soldiers will build the floating steel structure and an 1,800-foot, two-lane causeway stretching from the edge of the Mediterranean Sea to a beachhead.

All deliveries will be staged and inspected in Cyprus before being loaded onto vessels that carry them to the pier. U.S. personnel will move supplies to the causeway, but they will not leave it, defense officials have said. Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has expressed support for the maritime plan, saying that Israeli forces will ensure aid reaches those it should.

Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Biden’s top military adviser, told reporters last week that troops’ safety is “at the top of the list anytime we put our forces any place in harm’s way.” The United States will take measures to protect the soldiers, he said, and Israel and other countries are expected to assist with security. He did not elaborate.

Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, the No. 2 officer at U.S. Central Command, which coordinates all U.S. military operations in the Middle East, has held meetings in the region to set conditions for security and other requirements for the pier to work as envisioned, Brown said.

Brown said he received assurances from Lt. Gen. Herzi Halevi, his Israeli counterpart, that aid coming over the pier will not be subject to bottlenecks.

Gen. Michael “Erik” Kurilla, Centcom’s top commander, also sought to reassure lawmakers in congressional hearings earlier in March. But “strong reservations” remain, said Sen. Roger Wicker (Miss.), the Senate Armed Services Committee’s ranking Republican, and other GOP senators in a letter to Biden last week.

“We are gravely concerned,” they wrote to the White House, “that the Defense Department has given too little consideration to the likelihood that Hamas, Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ), and other U.S.-designated terrorist organizations operation in Gaza would attempt to attack the U.S. personnel that will be deployed to this mission.”

Officials with Kurilla’s headquarters in Tampa declined to answer questions from The Post about what security measures will be taken, and U.S. officials have not publicly disclosed where along the Gaza coastline the pier will be installed.

James Stavridis, a retired admiral and former supreme allied commander of NATO, characterized the risk as “modest” saying he believes the mission is “sensible and achievable.”

If U.S. forces come under attack, it is most likely to originate by air, Stavridis said, arguing that the nearby positioning of a Navy warship equipped with an Aegis ballistic missile defense system should be sufficient to protect personnel on or near the floating pier.

U.S. sailors have repeatedly used the system off Yemen to take down missiles and attack drones launched by Iran-backed Houthi militants who, since November, have prosecuted an aggressive assault on commercial and military vessels transiting the Red Sea and Gulf of Aden. It has proved mostly successful, though a handful of Houthi attacks have slipped through, and a few civilian mariners have been killed.

To guard against manned and unmanned surface vessels that could pose threats, Stavridis said, commanders could position Navy SEALs or other armed personnel in small, high-speed boats, with Israeli security forces providing protection on land.

Anthony Zinni, a retired Marine general who led Central Command from 1997 to 2000, said a number of adversaries could target the pier, including Hamas and the Islamic State. He cited the 2000 attack on the USS Cole at a port in Yemen, in which al-Qaeda operatives drove a speedboat packed with explosives into the destroyer, killing 17 sailors and injuring dozens more.

Zinni predicted that the pier will have rings of security, with Israeli forces and others involved but U.S. troops providing the innermost layer of protection. Aircraft overhead also would be valuable, he said.

“The IDF is very capable, obviously — but I would still want my own internal security force,” he said.

Zinni said the mission seems reasonable, both to alleviate suffering and send the message that the United States cares about Palestinian civilians.

“It’s important for us to show that we’ve gone the distance with humanitarian concerns, or we’ll be seen as totally one-sided on this,” he said.

Joseph Votel, a retired Army general who oversaw Central Command from 2016 to 2019, said the Pentagon is “probably” going to be in a position off Gaza to provide adequate security. U.S. forces, he said, will be “well alerted and cognizant of the threat,” and probably have ample intelligence support.

Votel, now a senior fellow at the Middle East Institute, said the more significant challenge may be determining how the aid is distributed once it’s onshore. That, he said, is where the “real magic” will be.

“I think this is a pretty big undertaking,” he said. “But I think the benefit here is pretty significant.”

Others are less optimistic.

Jerry Hendrix, a retired naval officer and senior fellow at the Sagamore Institute, asserted that no matter what security is put in place, the causeway will be “highly vulnerable.” He called the plan “stupid.”

“There’s so much downside risk on this for what I think is relatively small upside in terms of potential to relieve the supply shortage and food shortage in the area,” Hendrix said, arguing that the delivery of more food over land routes is “the only method that brings a noticeable change to the Palestinian condition.”

Hendrix warned, too, of the unpredictability in what will happen ashore, where people’s desperation could create chaos, surging crowds and a new location for friction between Israeli forces and Palestinians.

“At some point in time, those supplies are effectively going to move from IDF-controlled territory or security into Palestinian hands,” he said. “And at that point in time, the reality is that the United States will not have control of those supplies at that interface point.”

Kennedy, the retired Marine general, recalled the aftermath of a typhoon that hit the Philippines in 2013. As U.S. forces deployed there to assist, he was concerned that Abu Sayyaf, a militant group there, would launch attacks on the Americans.

U.S. forces were not allowed to bring weapons on the deployment, he said, so he asked the Philippine government to position snipers nearby and had U.S. Marines work alongside them as observers.

“You’ve been entrusted with the lives of fellow citizens, and the children of fellow citizens, so your first obligation is force protection,” Kennedy said. “You have to ensure that your troops are safeguarded.”

Each day that U.S. forces remain involved is a day that they could come under attack, he assessed.

“There’s a point of diminishing returns, right?” Kennedy said. “They need to build that thing as quickly as possible, turn it over to any competent civilian authority — and get the hell out of there.”
 
Especially since the absolute retards sending the Navy to Gaza to build this damn thing don't know the first thing about the military requirements of the mission. The Navy can't just "build a dock". It needs to send forces to the shore to anchor said dock. This mission will require absolute air supremacy. Furthermore, the immediate environment around the dock anchor must be cleared by Marines in order to protect the naval engineers. The Marines must then occupy the buildings within at least 500 meter direct line of sight.

But I doubt any of this will be done. Because Biden said no troops on the ground. Which means...what? Civilian Engineers in a combat zone operating without security? Naval Warships within gunfire range from shore with no clearance or air superiority?

What could go wrong!
 
Does anyone actually believe Biden wants to build a pier to help get food to starving Palestinians?

After sending more and more weapons to Israel?

lol, lmao even
he doesnt care who dies, or how many people die. he doesnt care about giving aid. he's just seeing poll numbers. he's a cut throat sodomite.
 
Assuming that the "Pier Plan" is even real to begin with and not just electionbait for the rubes, how do they even plan to put this up without Seabees? The White House itself says that there will be no troops on the ground, but how is it supposed to get built? Contractors?
 
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The primary reason for building the pier is not to feed Gazans, it's to create a place for them to leave that doesn't require them to go through Israel or Egypt.

The pier idea originated from Israel and Bibi has even said publicly this is what it can be used for. The whole thing is so stupid. Why would they be saying, "You need to build a pier to get aid in." When they could just let aid in by trucks. Gaza was already subsisting almost entirely on aid before the war. The lack of food is deliberate. The entire plan is to make life inhospitable in Gaza so they will have no choice to leave. Which will occur through this port.

This will be insane scenes compared to those scenes from Kabul airport. So it's on brand for the trainwreck which is genocide Joe.
 
I am just waiting for a Navy ship to be sinked preferably a carrier we all can finally stp pretending that usa army is functional.
They wont send a carrier for this abortion of a mission. The Navy will tell the retards with their hands up Bidens ass that they got this. And those retards won't ask any questions because they are idiots with gender studies degrees. The one boat in range will be a supply ship. And all the the men on the ground will peace corps soy boys. Good luck friends! No troops on the ground!
 
This is going to be USS Liberty 2: Electric Boogaloo, isn't it?
Mogadishu 2024. The US President is mandating a military operation in support of humanitarian operations, without necessary ground work.

Now, Bill Clinton made a big mistake. He gave the US Army open ended orders. Their orders? Make sure the poor innocents of Somalia got the USDA granted food aid. Unfortunately the warlord in chief of Mogadishu told the US Army he didn't give a shit what their orders were. He was the Boss Nigger, and the US Army would give the food aid to him and he would give it "to the people" *bane voice*.

The US Army, liberally interpreting Clintons orders to insure the Somalis got the aid interpreted this as a declaration of war and decided to take the warlord out. The end result was the most catastrophic military defeat in US history, which led to US soldiers being dragged through the streets of Mogadishu as war trophies and the the total retreat of the US Army from Somalia to Djibouti where they have since set up permanent shop.

Of course, our fearless leaders learned NOTHING from the Battle of Mogadishu. The Gaza Mission is going to be its redux.
 
This is going to be USS Liberty 2: Electric Boogaloo, isn't it?
Na, because Hamas are going to be idiots and blow up a bunch of Americans, striking a defiant blow at the lapdogs of the Jews.

Which will of course endear them to nobody, fuck things up further for Joe and the Democrats, and have the world care even less what eventually happens to them.
 
Which will of course endear them to nobody, fuck things up further for Joe and the Democrats, and have the world care even less what eventually happens to them.
The US military is super popular with the rest of the world, I'm sure that when those evil palis kill the heckin wholesome zogbotterinos then israel will suddenly stop being a pariah state because everyone just loves american zogbots so much.
Nope. This dock was another obvious "tripwire" from the moment the words were spoken. If Americans die there, all the better.
This guy gets it. If one American troop gets killed by a militant the white house has an excuse to turn this into a regional war and get America involved, which is what Israel has wanted from the beginning.
The primary reason for building the pier is not to feed Gazans, it's to create a place for them to leave that doesn't require them to go through Israel or Egypt.
The problem is a lot of the people in gaza don't want to leave, because they saw what happened the last time a bunch of Palestinians fled their homes during wartime. Sure some might leave, but many of them want to die on that land and don't want to go out without a fight. This means that if Israel wants to accomplish it's true goals (kicking out the palestinians) they would have to finally rip off the mask and commit a full scale genocide, completely invalidating their defense against any of the current genocide accusations being made against them.

Of course that's not to say that their expert defense of "well if it was REALLY a genocide we'd just nuke them" was ever very convincing to begin with
 
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Especially since the absolute retards sending the Navy to Gaza to build this damn thing don't know the first thing about the military requirements of the mission. The Navy can't just "build a dock". It needs to send forces to the shore to anchor said dock. This mission will require absolute air supremacy. Furthermore, the immediate environment around the dock anchor must be cleared by Marines in order to protect the naval engineers. The Marines must then occupy the buildings within at least 500 meter direct line of sight.

But I doubt any of this will be done. Because Biden said no troops on the ground. Which means...what? Civilian Engineers in a combat zone operating without security? Naval Warships within gunfire range from shore with no clearance or air superiority?

What could go wrong!
Shh stop questioning the wisdom of the founding fathers when they decided things like the president should be the commander in chief of the military with no requirement for military experience or have the ability to pardon anyone for anything
 
The primary reason for building the pier is not to feed Gazans, it's to create a place for them to leave that doesn't require them to go through Israel or Egypt.

The pier idea originated from Israel and Bibi has even said publicly this is what it can be used for. The whole thing is so stupid. Why would they be saying, "You need to build a pier to get aid in." When they could just let aid in by trucks. Gaza was already subsisting almost entirely on aid before the war. The lack of food is deliberate. The entire plan is to make life inhospitable in Gaza so they will have no choice to leave. Which will occur through this port.

This will be insane scenes compared to those scenes from Kabul airport. So it's on brand for the trainwreck which is genocide Joe.
If they were actually trying to feed the Gazans, I have no doubt Israel would've put a stop to this plan before it left the drawing board.

You don't win a siege and force your opponent to leave by allowing someone to give them food and supplies.
 
Cost of US effort to build humanitarian aid pier off Gaza expected to top $180M
ABC News (archive.ph)
By Anne Flaherty and Luis Martinez
2024-04-10 10:37:46GMT
President Joe Biden's plan to build a humanitarian pier floating off the coast of Gaza that could enable delivery of food, water and medicine into the devastated region is expect to cost at least $180 million and could top $200 million, ABC News has learned.

The price tag was described by two people familiar with the initial estimate, which has not been released by U.S. Central Command.

The tally is expected to fluctuate as U.S. officials scramble to finalize key details on the project, including which humanitarian relief organizations and foreign governments are willing to help carry the shipments to shore and distribute them to ease the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza.

Officials also continue to discuss how to protect service members who will be operating three miles offshore of Gaza, where Hamas is believed to still operate.

The project -- which triggered the deployment of six Army and Navy ships and will involve some 1,000 U.S. military troops -- is on track to become operational in early May, enabling the delivery of some 2 million meals a day.

"No U.S. boots will be on the ground," Biden promised when announcing the project in his State of the Union speech last month. "A temporary pier will enable a massive increase in the amount of humanitarian assistance getting into Gaza every day."

The effort has largely been seen as a political move by the president, who faced criticism for not doing more to try to rein in Israel's destruction of Gaza following the Oct. 7 Hamas attacks inside Israel and for not forcing Israel to allow more humanitarian aid to get through. White House officials have acknowledged the pier is still weeks away and not as efficient in delivering aid as via ground convoys. But they describe the deployment as part of a broader effort to open up every aid route possible to address potential famine in Gaza.

For its part, Israel defended its initial refusal to open more humanitarian channels in recent months, noting a need to screen supplies carefully to ensure they don't help Hamas.

That dynamic changed in recent days. After Israel struck and killed seven aid workers last week -- an incident Israel called a grave mistake -- Biden threatened to change U.S. policy toward Gaza condition if Israel didn't do more to allow humanitarian aid inside the enclave.

This week, Israel opened up ground checkpoints, allowing more than 1,000 trucks into Gaza -- the most since the war began.

It is unlikely Israel's new policy on allowing aid in would impact the deployment as the U.S. military ships neared the region. Aid groups say much more needs to be done to help Gaza residents.

The floating dock is expected to be nearly the size of a football field -- about 97 feet wide and 270 feet long -- stationed about three miles offshore. Container ships would screen their cargo in Cyprus before taking it to the floating dock and unloading it. From there, the aid would be moved aboard small Army ferries that would transport it to an 1,800-foot "trident" pier that connects to shore.

But with U.S. troops not allowed to go onshore, it's still not clear who will bring the cargo from the pier to shore and then distribute it. Officials have said only that it's working with "regional partners" on a solution that will ensure no American boots are on the ground in Gaza.

Deputy Defense Secretary Sabrina Singh said the military, State Department and USAID are working "around the clock" to find partners and set up the system.

"Still no boots on the ground. That is the policy that has been set by the president. We will not have boots on the ground when it comes to setting up this pier," she said.

Those operational details though became increasingly complicated after the recent Israeli airstrike that killed seven aid workers.

José Andrés, founder of World Central Kitchen, said much more needs to be done to ensure humanitarian groups can operate safely in Gaza.

"It's been six months of targeting anything that seems -- moves. This doesn't seem a war against terror. This doesn't seem anymore a war about defending Israel," he told ABC's "This Week" on Sunday.

"This really, at this point, seems it's a war against humanity itself," he said.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's foreign policy adviser, Ophir Falk, pushed back against claims that the attack on the WCK vehicles was intentional.

"That's absurd," Falk told ABC News last week. "The last thing we would want in the world is to endanger civilian lives."

In this episode, Sal Mercogliano - a maritime historian at Campbell University (@campbelledu) and former merchant mariner - discusses the fire onboard the US Navy's Military Sealift Command USNS 2nd Lt John P Bobo while enroute to Gaza, along with the status of the other ships sent to the Mediterranean.
 
The US military is super popular with the rest of the world, I'm sure that when those evil palis kill the heckin wholesome zogbotterinos then israel will suddenly stop being a pariah state because everyone just loves american zogbots so much.

This guy gets it. If one American troop gets killed by a militant the white house has an excuse to turn this into a regional war and get America involved, which is what Israel has wanted from the beginning.

The problem is a lot of the people in gaza don't want to leave, because they saw what happened the last time a bunch of Palestinians fled their homes during wartime. Sure some might leave, but many of them want to die on that land and don't want to go out without a fight. This means that if Israel wants to accomplish it's true goals (kicking out the palestinians) they would have to finally rip off the mask and commit a full scale genocide, completely invalidating their defense against any of the current genocide accusations being made against them.

Of course that's not to say that their expert defense of "well if it was REALLY a genocide we'd just nuke them" was ever very convincing to begin with
You're such a fucking fag. Imagine taking sides in a war where the two options are Muslims, all of whom are retarded, or Jews, all of whom are weaselly scum. Who cares if Israel kills them all, not like there's any shortage of Arab Muslims in the world, which is all they are. There's nothing inherently special about the "Palestinian people," they just so happened to be in the wrong spot when WWI and II ended. Stinky Arabs aplenty in all directions from Israel and in Israel itself for that matter. I wouldn't care if all the Muslim countries ganged up and murdered every last Israeli there, but we all know from the last 80 years of history they are far too incompetent to accomplish such a thing due to my aforementioned point of them all being retarded. Should do humanity a favor and nuke every major city in the entire MENA region frankly, it would objectively be a net positive for the world.
 
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