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.”
 
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.
How enlightened and original of an opinion for you to have, I've only ever heard this bothsidesism copout from just about everyone else on a&n. I get it, understanding the nuances of history and geopolitics is simply too hard :(
 
How enlightened and original of an opinion for you to have, I've only ever heard this bothsidesism copout from just about everyone else on a&n. I get it, understanding the nuances of history and geopolitics is simply too hard :(
It's not bothsidesism. It's destroy them all for the betterment of humanity. Most people in the world do not like Muslims or Jews. They both cry genocide so much maybe they should both be put out of their misery. The highest probability for nuclear exchange on earth is between Israel and Iran (if they get ballistic missiles) or India and Pakistan. Jews, Muslims and Indians, the people who are most foul to all human senses. So geopolitically the rest of humanity would be better off too
 
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This is strangely hilarious.

It’s like if, after the US dropped two nukes on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, they immediately followed that up by dropping food on the remaining toxic wasteland.
 
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.
I'm just going to say this now, this force is COMPLETELY insufficient. All hamas has to do is send little boat drones at those army ships, which are these:
LSV-7_SSGT_Robert_T_Kuroda.jpg
Unarmed landing ships, and blow them up. They need mine sweepers, hell, even those littoral combat ships to deal with all the shit thats going to be thrown at them. Insane.
 
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.
Great, I was hoping they weren't going to go through with it. Taking bets on how long it is before a very convenient attack happens on this pier that just so happens to be likened to 9/11 and comes with calls for direct military action by every whore MSM pundit.
bothsidesism
Back in my day when we didn't talk like fluorinated retards we called it centrism, and fence-sitting.
 
Mortar attack on Gaza coast spotlights risk to U.S. pier mission
The Washington Post (archive.ph)
By Dan Lamothe
2024-04-25 23:26:44GMT
Militants launched mortars at Israeli forces in Gaza as they prepared for the arrival of a floating U.S. Army pier dispatched to facilitate delivery of humanitarian aid, U.S. officials said Thursday, an incident that underscores the mission’s vulnerabilities.

The attack on a “marshaling area” for the pier caused minimal damage, and occurred while U.S. ships involved in the operation remain a ways off shore, said Maj. Gen. Patrick Ryder, a Pentagon spokesman. The pier is under construction by U.S. troops — though “nowhere near mortar range,” he said — and expected to be put into service by early May.

President Biden announced the pier’s deployment during his State of the Union address in March. With rising alarm about starvation in the war zone, and little sign that Israeli officials would heed U.S. pleas to allow more food into Gaza, Biden pledged to open a “maritime corridor” via the Mediterranean Sea using a temporary floating pier and a steel causeway connecting it to the shore.

While U.S. troops will not be deployed inside Gaza, U.S. officials say, security analysts have raised concerns about an array of threats, including speedboats packed with explosives, divers swimming in with mines and incoming rockets. They also have warned that if bottlenecks occur distributing aid flowing from the pier, it could upend the entire process.

Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said Thursday that he had just received a briefing about security efforts for the pier and expressed confidence that the risks can be mitigated through collaboration with Israeli military forces and other nations who’ve pledged to help protect the operation.

“Nothing we do is risk-free,” the general said during an appearance at Georgetown University in Washington.

“I feel strongly that it will be protected,” he added. “That doesn’t mean it won’t potentially have some threat against it, but it’s something we are focused on.”

Sen. Roger Wicker (Miss.), the Senate Armed Services Committee’s top Republican, doubled down on his earlier criticism of the mission, saying after news of the mortar attack circulated that the plan was “ill-conceived from the start.”

“The risks to Americans will only intensify,” Wicker said in a statement. “President Biden should never have put our men and women in this position, and he should abandon this project immediately before any U.S. troops are injured.”

A senior U.S. official, speaking on the condition of anonymity to discuss plans for the pier, said the aid will be delivered to a location near Wadi Gaza, south of the last security checkpoint on a “control corridor” that Israeli forces have established to split Gaza in two and control nearby movement.

Initially, the aid is expected to go north, where the risk of famine is considered highest, but planners envision it could eventually go in either direction, this person said.

A senior U.S. military official, speaking to reporters on the condition of anonymity under ground rules set by the Pentagon, said that assembly of the floating pier began Thursday miles from Gaza. U.S. service members will remain at least several hundred meters off shore at all times, this official said, and that those tasked with piloting military vessels to the causeway would come closest to land.

The pier route, run with oversight from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), will begin with the delivery of about 90 trucks per day from the causeway to the shore, and eventually expand to 150, the senior military official said. It is meant to complement other routes being used to let aid into Gaza, which he said now account for about 220 truckloads daily.

Trucks coming over the pier will be loaded and inspected in Cyprus, and driven on the causeway to the beach by personnel from a country that is neither the United States nor Israel, the military official said, declining to identify who would be responsible for what will be perhaps the most dangerous part of the mission.

USAID has established a coordination cell in Cyprus and the U.S. military has created one in Israel at Hatzor air base, with the expectation that American soldiers and sailors there will help coordinate aid delivery and watch for bottlenecks. A three-star U.S. Army general will oversee activities at the base.

Security is expected to include thousands of Israeli soldiers, several Israeli navy ships, and aircraft from the Israeli air force, the senior U.S. military official said. The Pentagon also will deploy additional security measures, he added, citing the presence of U.S. destroyers in the region as an example.

Still, the mortar attack spotlighted the various ways the aid mission could be strained or halted, said Mark Cancian, a senior adviser with the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Even if militants wanted to avoid interruptions in humanitarian assistance, they may consider it collateral damage to harm the pier system while attacking U.S. or Israeli personnel, he said.

Mortars are not an ideal weapon in this instance because they are not very accurate, Cancian said, but if enough are fired, eventually one may strike.

“You put a round on any of that,” he said, “and it will stop things.”

Karen DeYoung and Alex Horton contributed to this report.
 
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Despite Mortar Attack, U.S. Is Satisfied With Gaza Beachhead Security
The Warzone (archive.ph)
By Howard Altman
2024-04-25 22:01:10GMT
gaza01.jpg
Jetty and construction activity at Al Rashid Road in Gaza where the U.S. will deliver millions of pounds of supplies via the sea. Satellite image ©2024 Maxar Technologies
Even though a militant mortar attack occurred in the area where the U.S. is constructing a pier to pour humanitarian aid into Gaza, a senior American military official said the security environment there is “sufficient to support the execution of that mission.”

No Americans were even “remotely close” to the attack, which took place on Wednesday, the official told reporters, including from The War Zone, on Thursday. Speaking on condition of anonymity, the official added that the attack had nothing to do with the large-scale effort involving about 1,000 U.S. troops that is expected to begin delivery of vitally needed food and other supplies to starving Gaza residents early next month.

gaza02.jpg
Soldiers with the 7th Transportation Brigade (Expeditionary) ready the USAV Monterrey to deploy from Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Va., March 12, 2024. Soldiers with the unit are deploying as part of a Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore mission to enable the flow of critical aid from the sea to civilians affected by the ongoing conflict in Gaza. (Joseph D. Clark, DoD photo)

“We don't assess that the attack had anything to do with the [Joint Logistics Over-The-Shore] JLOTS mission or delivery of humanitarian assistance from the sea,” said the official, referring to a family of U.S. Army and U.S. Navy-managed logistical capabilities. JLOTS was among the things that The War Zone highlighted in our earlier story about how American forces might carry out this mission after news of it first emerged last month.

The humanitarian operation, which will be under the command of U.S. Central Command and conducted by the 7th Transportation Brigade from Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia, and other forces, will deploy JLOTS capability, according to the Pentagon. It comes as Gaza residents are suffering from more than seven months of heavy bombardment from Israeli forces reacting to the Oct. 7 Hamas surprise attack.

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A Joint Logistics Over-The-Shore (JLOTS) infographic that was shown at a Pentagon press conference last week as part of a discussion about the temporary pier plan. DOD

The militants lobbed mortars at Israeli forces preparing for the sea-borne relief effort, Politico reported. We raised concerns last month about how this area could be targeted which you can read more about here.

The official declined to offer specifics on how the JLOTS effort will be protected but said that “the defensive umbrella around JLOTS today looks nothing like it's going to look like when we actually execute the mission. It will be far more robust.”

The U.S. has been “working closely with the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) for weeks on a comprehensive integrated plan that protects U.S. troops from the land, air and sea. Forces from U.S. European Command and US Naval Forces Europe are also assigned to support the overall effort.”

"We have full confidence" in the plan "that we've developed over the last month, side by side with the Israelis," the official avowed. "We have rehearsed defenses and protective measures on multiple occasions. And feel very confident in that. And on top of all that, as we do with any missions, we're going to make a very thorough force protection assessment before actual execution."

In addition, the IDF “has as a brigade - thousands of soldiers - plus Israel Navy ships and the Air Force that are dedicated to force protection of this operation specifically,” the official noted. The U.S. also has “significant complementary capability for force protection.”

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Israeli Navy boats patrol off the coast of Gaza. (IDF photo)

The IDF said on its Telegram channel Thursday that it “will operate to provide security and logistics support for the JLOTS initiative, which includes the establishment of a temporary floating pier to deliver humanitarian aid from the sea into Gaza.”

The IDF offered no specifics.

1783575773560889506.png
https://twitter.com/IDF/status/1783575773560889506 (archive.ph)

The plan is to deliver humanitarian assistance to Cyprus by air, where it will be screened, palletized, and prepared for delivery, said the official, adding that the aid is already flowing in.

From there, the pallets will be loaded onto commercial vessels traveling about 200 miles from Cyprus, to a large floating platform anchored miles off the Gaza coast.

“This floating platform is one component of the JLOTS system and provides a stable workspace to transfer the pallets from the larger commercial vessels on the smaller Army vessels that can reach closer to shore,” the official said.

Those vessels will be Logistics Support Vessels (LSVs) which can hold up to 15 trucks each and Landing Craft Utility (LCUs) that can hold up to five. You can read more about the LSVs in detail here.

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The USAV General Frank S. Besson Jr., one of the US Army's Logistics Support Vessels, which will help shuttle humanitarian aid to Gaza. US Army

The ships will “shuttle humanitarian assistance from the floating platform to a temporary pier fixed to the shore in Gaza,” said the official, adding that construction on the at-sea portion of that began today.

“Think of this as a floating causeway several hundred meters long and it's anchored into the sand on Gaza,” the official said.”Trucks then drive off the LSVs down the causeway onto the land and drop off commodities in a very secure area. The structure repeats the process over and over.”

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An example of the kind of floating pier the US military is looking to build off the coast of Gaza. US Army

There will be “no U.S. boots on the ground” for this effort, said the official. However, they will be several hundred meters from the shore on the causeway being built. The official sidestepped a question about whether those troops would be in range of Hamas rockets and missiles.

“We've factored in all the variables to maximize the force protection, both on the floating platform which is several miles offshore as well as on the temporary pier. No US vessels will touch the shore.”

The Pentagon estimates that when its temporary pier is up and running, it will have the capacity to bring "2,000,000 humanitarian aid meals per day" into Gaza.

If all things go according to plan, “we expect throughput to begin at about 90 trucks a day…and then quickly scale up to 150 trucks a day of humanitarian assistance if we achieve a full operating capability,” the official posited.

Everything going according to plan, however, is a tall order considering the burning enmity Hamas has both toward Israel and the U.S. which is providing tremendous amounts of weapons that the IDF uses to attack targets in Gaza.

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A Palestinian woman carrying some belongings walks in a neighborhood devastated by Israeli bombing in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza Strip on April 25, 2024, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas. (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)

This challenge is something we highlighted in our initial report on the topic last month:

“Then there is the desperation for survival that permeates Gaza. Keeping back the masses alone could be extremely problematic. One would be remiss to forget the situation U.S. troops and many citizens of Kabul endured during America's exit from Afghanistan via a similar fixed position. Under those circumstances, the Taliban was largely playing nice with the U.S. military and even helped with controlling the situation in many instances. Hamas sees the U.S. government as a direct backer of Israel and its actions against them and the Palestinian people. The U.S. has shipped loads of guided bombs to Israel to support its air campaign in Gaza, for instance.”

“On top of this, there is the question of where the aid will actually end up once it is in Gaza. Hamas is well known for seizing aid for its own use and/or distributing it on its own accord. The U.N. and NGOs that are established in Gaza would be key players in executing an equitable distribution scheme, but they have limited ability to protect the aid from confiscation by Hamas and other militant organizations.”

At the time, one of our biggest questions that was driving this analysis was if Israel would provide the essential security around the beachhead or not. At this point, it seems clear that is the plan. Bringing in additional capabilities, such as a corvette armed with navalized Iron Dome could be essential to protecting American and allied personnel operating right up near the beach.

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United Nations (UN) and World Health Organization (WHO) aid trucks are waiting for Israel's permission to enter Gaza in Gaza Valley, on April 25, 2024. (Photo by Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Wednesday’s mortar attack may not have been directly aimed at the relief effort, but it highlights how difficult things could become while performing humanitarian efforts in the active war zone that Gaza is. On April 1, seven World Central Kitchen aid workers were killed when munitions fired from Israeli armed drones ripped through vehicles in their convoy as they left one of the organization’s warehouse. Their convoy was hit shortly after they oversaw the unloading of 100 tons of food brought to Gaza by sea in what was billed as an independent civilian mission similar to what the U.S. is trying to execute, but on a much smaller scale.

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Heavily damaged vehicle belonging to the US-based international volunteer aid organization World Central Kitchen is seen after an Israeli attack that killed seven of the group's aid workers. (Photo by Ashraf Amra/Anadolu via Getty Images)

There have been deadly consequences for previous U.S. humanitarian efforts in the region.

On Oct. 23, 1983, 220 Marines, 18 U.S. Navy sailors, and three U.S. Army soldiers lost their lives when jihadis attacked the Marine Barracks at the Beirut Airport. The troops were in Beirut as part of a Multinational Peacekeeping force.

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American Marines search for survivors and bodies in the rubble, all that was left of their barracks headquarters in Beirut, after a terrorist suicide car bomb was driven into the building and detonated, killing 241 US servicemen and wounding over 60. (Photo by Peter Charlesworth/LightRocket via Getty Images)

There remain many unknowns about how all this will unfold, and clearly, Hamas and other militant organization have a vote in the matter. We should get a better idea of the level of security Israel intends to provide as the mission spins-up in the coming weeks.
 
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Who dies first in this turkey shoot, UK or US forces?

British troops may be tasked with delivering Gaza aid, BBC report says
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Danica Kirka
2024-04-27 12:43:19GMT
gaza01.jpg
This satellite picture taken by Planet Labs PBC show the construction of a new aid port near Gaza City, Gaza Strip, on Wednesday, April 24, 2024. (Planet Labs PBC via AP)

LONDON (AP) — British troops may be tasked with delivering aid to Gaza from an offshore pier now under construction by the U.S. military, the BBC reported Saturday. U.K. government officials declined to comment on the report.

According to the BBC, the British government is considering deploying troops to drive the trucks that will carry aid from the pier along a floating causeway to the shore. No decision has been made and the proposal hasn’t yet reached Prime Minister Rishi Sunak, the BBC reported, citing unidentified government sources.

The report comes after a senior U.S. military official said on Thursday that there would be no American “boots on the ground” and another nation would provide the personnel to drive the delivery trucks to the shore. The official, who spoke to reporters on condition of anonymity to discuss details not yet made public, declined to identify the third party.

Britain is already providing logistical support for construction of the pier, including a Royal Navy ship that will house hundreds of U.S. soldiers and sailors working on the project.

In addition, British military planners have been embedded at U.S. Central Command in Florida and in Cyprus, where aid will be screened before shipment to Gaza, for several weeks, the U.K. Ministry of Defense said on Friday.

The U.K. Hydrographic Office has also shared analysis of the Gaza shoreline with the U.S. to aid in construction of the pier.

“It is critical we establish more routes for vital humanitarian aid to reach the people of Gaza, and the U.K. continues to take a leading role in the delivery of support in coordination with the U.S. and our international allies and partners,” Defense Secretary Grant Shapps said in a statement.

Development of the port and pier in Gaza comes as Israel faces widespread international criticism over the slow trickle of aid into the Palestinian territory, where the United Nations says at least a quarter of the population sits on the brink of starvation.

The Israel-Hamas began with a Hamas-led attack into southern Israel on Oct. 7, in which militants killed around 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took some 250 people as hostages. Israel says the militants are still holding around 100 hostages and the remains of more than 30 others. Since then, more than 34,000 Palestinians have been killed in Israel’s air and ground offensive, according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, around two-thirds of them children and women.
 
Who dies first in this turkey shoot, UK or US forces?
Palestinians.
They're going to rush the supply trucks and need to be forced back again. At which point suddenly it'll be that British soldiers opened up on on 6 year old children who were doing nothing but waving in greeting.

If this rumour turns out to be true it'll be because that cock gobbling pair of whores Stamer and Sunak (I know Kier isn't in yet but he'll be on board too) are willing to let British troops take the risk because it's election year for the Americans and Biden the human potato can't be seen doing any more fuck ups.
 
US military completes construction on temporary Gaza pier
Stars and Stripes (ghostarchive.org)
By Matthew Adams
2024-05-07
pier01.jpg
U.S. military personnel construct a floating pier in the Mediterranean Sea off the Gaza Strip in April 2024. (U.S. Army Central Command)

WASHINGTON — The U.S. military has completed construction on the floating pier off Gaza’s coast, but weather conditions make it unsafe to put the temporary dock in place to begin transporting more humanitarian aid into the war-torn enclave, the Pentagon said.

“As of today, the construction of the two portions of the JLOTS — the floating pier and the Trident pier — are complete and awaiting final movement offshore,” Pentagon spokeswoman Sabrina Singh told reporters Tuesday. “Today, there are still forecasted high winds and high sea swells, which are causing unsafe conditions for the JLOTS components to be moved.”

The pier, known as Joint Logistics Over-the-Shore, or JLOTS, is meant to provide a new way to deliver badly needed aid into Gaza. The World Health Organization has warned some 2.3 million Gazans face extreme hunger that could become a full-blown famine by next month as Israel continues its war against Hamas militants who launched a surprise assault in October from the enclave.

President Joe Biden first announced the JLOTS operation on March 7 during his State of the Union speech. One day later, Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, the Pentagon’s top spokesman, said the temporary pier would be operational within about 60 days.

U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the Middle East, said Friday in a post on X that construction on the pier was paused Thursday due to “sea state considerations.” Construction of the pier moved to the Port of Ashdod, one of Israel’s three main cargo ports north of Gaza.

Singh said the pier sections and military vessels involved in the construction are still positioned at the Port of Ashdod. In the meantime, the U.S. is loading aid on the ship, MV Sagamore, currently in Cyprus.

“The Sagamore is a cargo vessel that will use the JLOTS system and will make trips between Cyprus and the offshore floating pier as [U.S. Agency for International Development] and other partners collect aid from around the world,” she said.

Singh said defense officials hope to have the pier in position later this week.

About 1,000 American troops are involved in the operation of the pier, which costs about $320 million.

The Pentagon has stressed no U.S. troops will be on the ground in Gaza, but some lawmakers have raised concerns about the involvement of American troops in Israel’s campaign in Gaza and risks to their safety.

Sen. Roger Wicker of Mississippi, the top Republican on the Senate Armed Services Committee, blasted the pier project last week and said troops working on its construction are within range of Hamas rockets. Following a mortar attack last month near the area where the pier will connect with the shore, Wicker called it “unfortunate but predictable.”

“This has been an ill-conceived mission from the start. President Biden should never have put our men and women in this position, and he should abandon this project immediately before any U.S. troops are injured,” he said.

The Army in March sent four ships from the 7th Transportation Brigade at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Va., toward the Mediterranean Sea to spearhead the operation. The Navy deployed three ships to help in the construction of the pier. One of those ships, the USNS 2nd Lt. John P. Bobo was forced to return to the United States last month after it had an engine room fire.

Once the pier is operational, commercial ships carrying aid will sail from Cyprus to the floating dock, where the aid will then be moved to smaller Army boats that will travel to the causeway and on to aid groups. The new port is located southwest of Gaza City.

American troops will be housed and fed on ships near the floating pier. The British navy announced toward the end of April that a support ship, RFA Cardigan Bay, was sailing to provide accommodation for hundreds of U.S. sailors and soldiers working to establish the platform.

The U.S. military has said it will provide its own security for Army and Navy forces offshore, while Israel will take care of security on shore.
 
Vessel carrying aid to US-built pier off Gaza leaves Cyprus
Reuters (archive.ph)
By Reuters Staff
2024-05-09 11:42:06GMT
NICOSIA, May 9 (Reuters) - A vessel carrying aid to a pier built by the United States off Gaza set sail from Cyprus on Thursday, Cypriot officials said.

The U.S. flagged Sagamore left the port of Larnaca in the morning. U.S. officials have said the vessel will be used to offload supplies onto a floating pier built to expedite aid into the besieged enclave.

Cyprus opened a sea corridor in March to ship aid directly to Gaza, where deliveries via land have been severely disrupted by border closures and Israel's military offensive.

A senior Biden administration official last month said aid going ashore would still be subject to inspection by Israeli authorities, raising the prospect of additional delays in getting desperately-needed supplies to Palestinians.

That is seemingly at odds with Cyprus' stated objective which was to screen cargoes on the island with Israeli oversight to elliminate bottlenecks at the other end.

Two Cypriot officials said they were not aware of further checks. "No other inspection is foreseen beyond what the mechanism that is carried out in Cyprus prescribes," one of them told Reuters.

Israel's military campaign against Hamas, in response to the militant group's attack on Israel on Oct. 7, has devastated the tiny Gaza Strip, where aid agencies warn its 2.3 million people are facing imminent famine.

U.S.-based charity World Food Kitchen used the route twice before seven of its workers were killed in an Israeli air strike on April 1.

Reporting by Michele Kambas and Yiannis Kourtoglou; Editing by Toby Chopra and Emelia Sithole-Matarise
 
When this ends up with dead US troops, will Biden be at the airport when the plane with the flag-covered caskets shows up and check his watch like he did when those Marines and Corpsman were killed during the Afghanistan pull out?
 
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The US is wrapping up a pier to bring aid to Gaza by sea. But danger and uncertainty lie ahead
Associated Press (archive.ph)
By Ellen Knickmeyer
2024-05-14 20:00:59GMT
gaza01.jpg
FILE - In this image provided by the U.S. Army, soldiers assigned to the 7th Transportation Brigade (Expeditionary) and sailors attached to the MV Roy P. Benavidez assemble the Roll-On, Roll-Off Distribution Facility (RRDF), or floating pier, off the shore of Gaza in the Mediterranean Sea on April 26, 2024. (U.S. Army via AP, file)

WASHINGTON (AP) — In the coming days, the U.S. military in the eastern Mediterranean is expected to jab one end of a hulking metal dock — the length of five U.S. football fields — into a beach in northern Gaza.

And that may be the end of the easy part for the Biden administration’s two-month-long, $320 million effort to open a sea route to get humanitarian aid into Gaza, with dangers and uncertainties ahead for aid delivery teams as fighting surges and the plight of starving Palestinians grows more dire.

For President Joe Biden, the Pentagon’s new floating pier and causeway are a gamble, an attempted workaround to the challenges of getting aid into Gaza from intensifying war and the restrictions its ally Israel has placed at land crossings since Hamas’ deadly attacks on Israel launched the conflict in October.

Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, the Pentagon press secretary, said Tuesday that humanitarian groups were ready for the first shipments through the U.S. maritime route. “In the coming days, you can expect to see this effort underway. And we are confident that that we will be able to, working with our NGO partners, ensure that aid can be delivered,” he said.

Relief groups are watching to see if Israeli officials will allow a freer flow of food and other supplies through this sea route than they have by land and follow through on pledges to protect aid workers. They say protections for humanitarian workers have not improved and point to aid already piling up at Gaza’s border crossings, waiting for decisions by Israeli officials to distribute it.

Because land crossings could bring in all the needed aid if Israeli officials allowed, the U.S.-built pier and sea route “is a solution for a problem that doesn’t exist,” said Scott Paul, an associate director of the Oxfam humanitarian organization.

“Like all of the land crossings, it comes down to the consent of the government of Israel” on allowing aid through its screening process and ensuring aid teams are safe to distribute it within Gaza, Paul said.

“If Israel is comfortable with allowing the maritime corridor to function ... then it will work in a limited way,” he said this week, as the U.S. military said it was waiting out bad weather to put the pier and dock in place. “And if they don’t, it won’t. Which is why it’s a very, very expensive alternative.”

Ophir Falk, foreign policy adviser to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, said Tuesday that the country had enabled the entrance of thousands of aid trucks into Gaza and would continue to do so. It repeated accusations that Hamas was disrupting aid distribution by hijacking and attacking convoys. U.S. State Department spokesman Matthew Miller said this month that there was only one major incident of Hamas commandeering aid trucks.

The Israeli military said in a statement Tuesday that it will keep acting in line with international law to distribute aid to Gaza. It also has previously said there are no limits on aid, it is trying to keep crossings open despite Hamas attacks and has blamed the U.N. for problems with distribution.

With food and aid in short supply in Gaza throughout the war, the head of the U.N. World Food Program and others say that famine has taken hold in northern Gaza and is spreading south.

After an Israeli attack killed seven World Central Kitchen workers on an aid mission on April 1, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu pledged to Biden to allow in more aid and safeguard those workers.

Last month, truckloads of aid entering Gaza increased by 13%, said Anastasia Moran, an associate director for the International Rescue Committee, a global humanitarian group. But the daily average of trucks entering in April still was about half the average of 500 trucks a day that crossed before the war.

Moran also said Israeli officials have denied permission to roughly two-thirds of aid missions that humanitarian groups have asked to run into northern Gaza, where starvation is the worst.

Now, Israel’s military operation in the southern city of Rafah to root out Hamas militants has closed one of Gaza’s two main border crossings, while a spate of Hamas attacks has crippled operations at the other crossing, cutting fuel and aid deliveries into Gaza.

It’s unclear how much the cutoffs and surge in fighting will affect American-led efforts to deliver food, emergency nutrition for children and other aid to be brought in via the sea route. But humanitarian operations are under threat throughout Gaza, aid officials said.

“The whole aid operation runs on fuel,” said Jeremy Konyndyk, president of Refugees International. “So if fuel is cut off, the aid operation collapses, and it collapses quickly.”

Safety is another essential need for humanitarian workers — and that too is in short supply. Oxfam, Save the Children, the International Rescue Committee and other organizations assert that Israel’s government has failed to make the promised changes to protect humanitarian missions within Gaza from Israeli attack.

On Monday, an attack on a U.N. convoy killed an Indian staff member and injured another staffer. The United Nations said Tuesday that the convoy was clearly marked and its planned movements had been announced in advance to Israeli authorities. Israeli officials said they were investigating and denied being told of the convoy’s whereabouts.

Around the world, the process of humanitarian workers communicating their planned movements to combatants and getting clearance to move is known as “deconfliction.”

The problem in Gaza, before and after the World Central Kitchen killings, is that Israel has aid teams communicate their plans to the civilian Israeli agency that oversees Palestinian territory, said Paul, the Oxfam official. But unlike the usual operations in other countries, aid teams typically receive no word back from that agency, no assurance that their plans have been passed along to Israeli forces on the ground and no assurances of safety, Paul said.

“There’s still not a functioning humanitarian notification system or deconfliction system,” said Alexandra Saieh, head of humanitarian policy and advocacy for Save the Children.

Human Rights Watch on Tuesday pointed to eight Israeli strikes on aid group lodgings and convoys whose locations, according to the organizations, had been passed along to Israeli authorities in advance.

The rights group quoted an aid official as saying that without security for these teams, vitally needed goods would pile up undelivered regardless of piers or shipments. Human Rights Watch did not identify the official, citing the person’s security.

The U.S. Agency for International Development, which is charged with helping organize and oversee the distribution of aid within Gaza that will be brought in through the U.S. sea route, said it would “continue to press Israel to create the conditions to ensure the safety of humanitarian actors and activities, open additional land crossings, remove impediments to the delivery of humanitarian aid and do far more to prevent the killings” of humanitarian workers and civilians.

The U.N. World Food Program and other humanitarian groups will do the actual delivery of aid from the sea route, USAID said. No U.S. troops will set foot in Gaza. The Israeli military is to handle security on shore, which has been a concern for the United Nations.

The WFP has emphasized the need for neutrality when delivering aid. The sea route can supplement land deliveries but “nothing can compete with truck convoys when it comes to volume of aid,” said Abeer Etefa, a spokeswoman for the organization.

Even if deconfliction problems were solved, teams charged with delivering aid from the sea route would find Gaza a deadly place to operate, said Paul, the Oxfam official. The war has killed more than 35,000 Palestinians, Palestinian health officials say.

“Even a functioning deconfliction system isn’t going to work in a free-fire zone,” Paul said.
 
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One of the first aid shipments to arrive at a U.S.-built pier was looted.
The New York Times (archive.ph)
By Adam Rasgon and Patrick Kingsley
2024-05-20 23:41:55GMT
pier01.jpg
Palestinians clamber over a truck transporting humanitarian aid from a U.S.-built pier in the central Gaza Strip on Saturday.Credit...Agence France-Presse via Getty Images

One of the first aid shipments to arrive in the Gaza Strip through a U.S.-built pier was looted, officials said on Monday, highlighting the ongoing challenge of securely delivering humanitarian assistance in a territory with serious food shortages and other needs.

The failed delivery on Saturday came two days after the floating pier, constructed by the U.S. military at an estimated cost of more than $300 million, was connected to the Mediterranean shore in central Gaza. The U.S. State Department did not respond to requests for comment.

Crowds of Palestinians intercepted a convoy of trucks that had loaded goods from the pier, hastily grabbing and running off with its contents, according to Abeer Etefa, a World Food Program spokeswoman. Two senior Western officials and Majdi Fathi, a Gazan photo journalist, confirmed Ms. Etefa’s account. The officials requested anonymity because they weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

Aid groups and the United Nations blame the hunger crisis in Gaza on Israel’s restrictions on aid entering the enclave and also on black marketers who have seized supplies to sell at inflated prices. Israeli officials have insisted that enough supplies have been entering the territory and have accused Hamas of stealing and hoarding aid.

For months, as famine has threatened Gaza, Palestinians have forcibly taken aid off trucks. U.N. officials say the looting reflects the desperation of ordinary people trying feed themselves and their families, and they say it has decreased when large amounts of aid consistently enter the enclave.

On Saturday, 11 of 16 trucks that left the pier with aid were looted as they were on their way to a World Food Program warehouse, Ms. Etefa said, adding that the food aid agency had suspended deliveries from the pier on Sunday and Monday.

Footage taken by Mr. Fathi showed dozens of men chaotically grabbing and hurling boxes of supplies from the bed of a truck near Gaza’s coast. In an interview, Mr. Fathi, 43, a freelance photographer, said throngs of people had gathered on the coastal north-south road after hearing that a group of trucks had passed through the area the previous day.

“They completely emptied them,” he said.

In recent days, the aid has been driven from the pier to an Israeli-controlled section of Gaza. There, it has been offloaded from one set of trucks and put on another set of trucks before being transferred to population centers. It is unclear what arrangements have been made to guard the trucks after they leave the Israeli-controlled area

On Friday, 10 trucks carrying aid from the pier, including high-energy biscuits, had arrived at the W.F.P. warehouse without incident, Ms. Etefa said.

She said that incidents like the one on Saturday would recur as long as insufficient food assistance was reaching the people in Gaza, and that more Israeli-approved routes for delivering aid were needed to avoid crowds.

Aid delivery through the two main border crossings in southern Gaza increased sharply in April and early May, though it remained below the level that aid groups said was needed.

But since Israel invaded the eastern section of the southern city of Rafah on May 7 and closed the border crossing there, aid shipments through the southern routes has come to a near-halt, according to the primary U.N. agency for Palestinian aid. The agency, known as UNRWA, said that in a 15-day period through Monday, just 69 aid trucks entered through the two crossings — the lowest rate since the first weeks of the war.

In April, U.S. officials briefed reporters that they hoped the pier operation would initially bring in enough aid for around 90 trucks per day, before scaling up to 150 per day.

The war-torn territory of about 2.2 million civilians is more reliant than ever on humanitarian aid. The devastation after seven months of war and strict Israeli inspections and restrictions on crossing points has limited what can enter Gaza.
 
U.S. ‘Floating Pier’ for Gaza Damaged by Choppy Seas
The Wall Street Journal (archive.ph)
By Carrie Keller-Lynn and Nancy A. Youssef
2024-05-26 13:03:00GMT
EL AVIV—Part of the support system for a floating pier built by the U.S. to boost humanitarian aid to Palestinians broke off Saturday morning in choppy waters off the Gaza coast, the U.S. military said.

Four boats stabilizing the $320 million structure detached, U.S. Central Command, which is responsible for military operations in the Middle East, said Saturday. Two of them floated northward, eventually landing on the beach in Ashdod, Israel, it said. Two others are now anchored on the beach near the pier, the military said, adding that the dock is still operational despite the damage. It said that no U.S. military personnel would enter Gaza.

“Efforts to recover the vessels are under way with assistance from the Israeli Navy,” U.S. Central Command said.

An Israeli military official confirmed that Israel is assisting the U.S. to recover the two vessels beached in Ashdod.

The floating dock is the centerpiece of the Biden administration’s efforts to increase humanitarian aid to the beleaguered Gaza Strip, where food and medical services are scarce amid a nearly eight-month-long war between Israel and Hamas, the U.S.-designated terror organization that controls Gaza. The effort is in the spotlight as President Biden juggles domestic criticism about his handling of the war, especially from Democratic voters who have threatened to withhold their support in November’s presidential election.


Biden announced plans to build the pier in his State of the Union address. Roughly 1,000 U.S. soldiers and sailors have been engaged in the mission, the Pentagon has said.

The damage to the dock is only the latest setback in the U.S.’s attempt to deliver aid via the sea for the first time since the war began in October. Shipments at the floating pier began this month and are expected to scale up. Roughly 820 tons of aid were delivered through the floating dock in its first week, the U.S. government’s official international development arm USAID said, a number that is about 20% below the Pentagon’s initial daily target.

Separately, three U.S. troops were injured on the pier this week in accidents, the Pentagon said, including one seriously. No U.S. troops were injured during Saturday’s incident, the U.S. military said.

The U.S. has said that land crossings are the most effective way to transfer aid into Gaza and has pressed Israel to increase the flow of aid across the Gaza Strip, where a large portion of more than two million civilians are facing severe hunger.

The pier has begun operations just as fighting in Gaza regains momentum, with Israeli military advances in the city of Rafah obstructing passage through the two southern border crossings that were supplying most of the aid to the Gaza Strip. The maritime corridor—and a continuing airdrop campaign—was meant to supplement ground deliveries, which are cheaper and more efficient, though it could serve as a potential lifeline as Gaza’s population faces famine.

 
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