US military starts moving floating pier toward
Gaza to begin delivery of additional aid
By
MATTHEW ADAMS AND ALISON BATH
STARS AND STRIPES • May
15, 2024
U.S.
military personnel construct a floating pier in the Mediterranean Sea off the
Gaza Strip in April 2024. (U.S. Army Central Command)
The U.S. military has begun moving
parts of a floating temporary pier toward Gaza to help deliver more
humanitarian aid to the war-torn territory, a defense official said Wednesday.
The pier, which troops finished assembling
last week, has been staged at the Israeli port of Ashdod, about 20
miles north of Gaza.
Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder, the
top Pentagon spokesman, told reporters Tuesday that the pier would be ready to
use “in the coming days.”
However, U.S. officials said the
pier is moving now into the waters off Gaza, and they expect the docking system
to be installed in the next 24 hours, according to an NBC News report. Once it
is ready, the delivery of food and other aid could begin in the first 24 to 48
hours after installation.
Hundreds of tons of needed aid is
waiting on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus and thousands more will follow
for distribution to Gaza once the pier is ready, senior U.S. officials said
Wednesday.
“We expect this flow to continue as
more international donors contribute,” said Vice Adm. Brad Cooper, deputy
commander of U.S. Central Command, which oversees military operations in the
Middle East.
The aid will be inspected and placed
on pallets before leaving Cyprus on military or commercial ships for delivery
to the Joint-Logistics Over-the-Shore, or JLOTS, floating pier several miles
off the Gaza shore. From the pier, it will be loaded onto trucks and
transported on smaller U.S. military ships capable of near-shore operations to
an 1,800-foot-long causeway. Each vessel would be capable of carrying five to
15 truckloads of aid, Cooper said.
The trucks would roll down the causeway
onto land, he said. Non-U.S. civilian contractors would drive the trucks, Ryder
said last week.
After the aid is delivered on shore,
“the United Nations and World Food Program will receive the aid for onward
distribution into Gaza,” Cooper said.
The U.S. military had been waiting
until weather conditions in the Eastern Mediterranean Sea improved before
pushing the pier onto the beach in northern Gaza, officials said.
In the last several weeks, U.S. and
Israeli officials have developed an integrated security plan designed to
protect personnel working at the JLOTS project and surrounding shore area,
Cooper said.
“We are confident in this security
arrangement to protect all those involved,” he said, adding the plan was
comprehensive but did not offer details.
Once in Gaza, humanitarian
organizations would determine “who gets assistance, who is prioritized … and
what that assistance is,” said Dan Dieckhaus, director of response for the U.S.
Agency for International Development.
Those organizations have several
processes in place to ensure the aid won’t be destroyed or stolen, he said.
“We would not deny that there is
heightened risk in Gaza for a variety of reasons,” Dieckhaus said. “But we have
not received substantial reports of widespread diversion of our own
assistance.”
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