WASHINGTON, US
President Joe Biden ordered the U.S. military Thursday to set up a temporary port off the coast of Gaza, joining international partners in trying to carve out a sea route to deliver food and other aid to desperate Palestinian civilians cut off by the Hamas-Israel war and by Israeli restrictions on humanitarian access by land.
While reiterating his support
for Israel, Biden used the announcement and the bright spotlight of his State of the Union speech to renew months of U.S.
calls to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to change how he conducts
the war, including by allowing in more aid to Gaza and doing more to protect
humanitarian workers there.
“To the leadership of Israel I say this: Humanitarian assistance cannot be a secondary consideration or a bargaining chip,” Biden declared before Congress. He repeated calls as well for Israel to do more to protect civilians in the fighting, and to work toward Palestinian statehood as the only long-term solution to Israeli-Palestinian violence.
The U.S. announcement,
signaling deepening U.S. involvement in the war and the escalating fighting in
the region, comes as Biden faces pressure to act more forcefully to ease what
the U.N. says are near-famine conditions for many of Gaza’s 2.3 million people.
It also shows the
administration resorting to an unusual workaround after months of appealing to
Israel, the U.S.'s close ally and top recipient of military aid, to step up
access and protection for trucks bearing humanitarian goods for Gaza.
Meanwhile Thursday, efforts to
reach a cease-fire before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which starts within
days, appeared stalled. Hamas said its delegation had left Cairo, where talks
were being held. The outline for the cease-fire included a wide infusion of aid
into Gaza.
A widening humanitarian crisis across Gaza and tight Israeli control of aid trucks has left virtually the entire population desperately short of food, the U.N. says. Medical workers in northern Gaza this past week reported 15 children dead of starvation there. In a meeting pressing Israel Ambassador Michael Herzog to provide access and security for more aid trucks, the U.S. international development director, Samantha Power, warned that blockaded Gaza “faced a real risk of famine,” her office said Thursday.
Israel accuses Hamas of
commandeering some aid deliveries.
The U.S. officials, who spoke
on the condition of anonymity to preview Biden’s announcement before his State
of the Union speech, said the planned operation will not require American
troops on the ground to build the pier that is intended to allow more shipments
of food, medicine and other essential items from a port in the Mediterranean
island country of Cyprus.
The U.S. officials said it
would likely take weeks before the pier was operational. They gave few other
immediate details.
One of the options under
consideration is for the military to provide a floating pier called a JLOTS, or
Joint Logistics-Over-the-Shore, another U.S. official said on the condition of
anonymity to discuss the options before a decision has been made. The large
floating pier allows supplies to be delivered without having a fixed port in
place, alleviating the need to have troops on a dock on shore. Ships can sail
to the pier, which is secured by anchors, and dock there.
Defense Department spokesman
Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder said in a statement Thursday that U.S. officials and
international partners were looking at options, including using commercial
companies and contractors to aid in the delivery.
Officials from the U.S., Europe, Israel and the Middle East have already
been deep in discussions and preparations on the possibility of opening a
maritime sea route.
Cypriot President Nikos
Christodoulides in November offered use of his country’s port in Larnaca for
aid deliveries to the Palestinian enclave, a 230-mile (370-kilometer) journey from Cyprus.
European Union Commission
Chief Ursula von der Leyen planned to visit Larnaca on Friday to inspect
installations.
Cyprus early on invited
authorities from Israel, the U.S. and other European countries to join Cypriot
agents in vetting all shipments so nothing could be used by Hamas against
Israel.
Aid groups have said their efforts to deliver desperately needed supplies to Gaza have
been badly hampered because of the difficulty of coordinating with the Israeli
military, the ongoing hostilities and the breakdown of public order. It is even more difficult to get aid to the isolated
north.
The United Arab Emirates also
says it is working with its partners, including chef and humanitarian Jose
Andres and his World Central Kitchen, to launch deliveries by sea, and is
finishing details and timing.
While land routes could be the
most efficient way to get aid into Gaza, one of the senior U.S. administration
officials said, Biden has directed that “we not wait for the Israelis” to get
more humanitarian help in, more quickly.
Sigrid Kaag, the U.N. senior
humanitarian and reconstruction coordinator for Gaza, told reporters late
Thursday after briefing the U.N. Security Council behind closed doors that air
and sea deliveries cannot substitute for expanding and diversifying supply
routes on land, which remains “the optimal solution.”
The Biden administration’s
latest move provides one more layer to the extraordinary dynamic that’s emerged
as the United States has had to go around Israel, its main Mideast ally, and
find ways to get aid into Gaza, including through airdrops that started last week.
Biden has been a crucial
partner to Netanyahu’s military offensive following Hamas’s Oct. 7 attacks in
Israel. That includes providing bombs and other weapons to Israel and fending
off efforts to censure Israel in the United Nations for the growing deaths
among Gaza civilians.
But administration officials
have grown frustrated at Netanyahu for seeming to shrug off much of the U.S.
pressure for Israel to do more to reduce civilian deaths and to allow in
humanitarian aid.
The World Food Program says an
average of 99 aid trucks a day entered Gaza in February, one-fifth of what is
needed.
“This is an expensive,
inefficient workaround to a problem that has other ready solutions,” Brian
Finucane, a former State Department official now with the International Crisis
Group, said of the U.S. announcement on a temporary port and wartime sea route.
“It’s another symptom of the
pathology of the overall approach to the war in Gaza ... which is that the
Biden administration is unwilling to use U.S. leverage either unilaterally or
multilaterally” to try to influence conduct of the war by Netanyahu, Finucane
said.
Pressure on the Biden
administration surged last week after Gaza health officials reported more than
100 people killed at an attempted aid delivery to the isolated north. Israel
said its forces fired warning shots when members of the crowd began moving toward
them. Witnesses and medical workers told The Associated Press that most of
those injured were shot when Israeli forces fired into the crowds of hungry
people.
International mediators had
hoped to alleviate some of the immediate crisis with a six-week cease-fire,
which would have seen Hamas release some of the Israeli hostages it is holding,
Israel release some Palestinian prisoners and aid groups be given access to to
get a major influx of assistance into Gaza.
Palestinian militants are
believed to be holding around 100 hostages and the remains of 30 others
captured during Hamas’ Oct. 7 attack.
Egyptian officials said Hamas
has agreed to the main terms of such an agreement as a first stage but wants
commitments that it will lead to an eventual more permanent cease-fire. They say Israel wants to confine
the negotiations to the more limited agreement.
The officials spoke on
condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the
negotiations with media. Both officials said mediators are still pressing the
two parties to soften their positions.
Hamas spokesman Jihad Taha
said Israel “refuses to commit to and give guarantees regarding the cease-fire,
the return of the displaced, and withdrawal from the areas of its incursion.”
But he said the talks were still ongoing and would resume next week. There was
no immediate comment from Israel.
Mediators had looked to
Ramadan, which is expected to begin on Sunday, as an informal deadline for a
deal because the month of dawn-to-dusk fasting often sees Israeli-Palestinian violence linked to
access to a major Jerusalem holy site. The war already has the wider region on edge, with Iran-backed groups trading
fire with Israel and the United States.
Netanyahu has publicly ruled
out Hamas’ demands for an end to the war, saying Israel intends to resume the
offensive after any cease-fire, expand it to the crowded southern city of Rafah and battle on until
“total victory.” He has said military pressure will help bring about the
release of the hostages.
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