A trident pier the length of five football fields is being anchored to the Gaza coast. Humanitarian aid will be dropped off there via ships from the floating pier, also built by the U.S. military, two miles off the coast. According to the Pentagon, two Navy warships will be protecting the floating pier and the sea bound transfer of the aid.
Some 1,000 U.S. service members are engaged in the project, which is costing an estimated $320 million for the first three months. U.S. personnel are not supposed to be going "on the ground" in Gaza at any time.
The military will be working with the World Food Program to deliver the aid into Gaza once it hits the beach. DOD officials say they hope to surge some 90 trucks of assistance into Gaza at first, ramping up to 150 trucks a day.
Here is what we dont know:
-The DOD is still not clear as to who will be providing security for this massive operation on the beach.
-We don't know if aid can safely get into Gaza. The Israelis say they are on board with the project, but their track record includes backed-up trucks at every crossing, and continued attacks on aid workers (including a U.N. representative, who came under tank fire this week).
-We don't know where the trident pier is. Earlier reports have pegged it somewhere north of the "humanitarian zone" at Al-Mawasi on the beach and south of the Israeli controlled corridor splitting the Gaza strip in two.
-How long will this pier be in operation? When asked, the DOD won't say.
@ISIDEWITH3wks3W
If aid delivery faces constant threats and obstacles, like attacks on aid workers, should the international community intervene more directly in the conflict?
@ISIDEWITH3wks3W
Would you support this use of $320M in U.S. funds for aid in Gaza if it meant sacrificing resources from domestic programs?
@ISIDEWITH3wks3W
Should the potential risks to U.S. service members deter the U.S. from engaging in humanitarian aid efforts in volatile regions like Gaza?
@ISIDEWITH3wks3W
How does the use of military resources for humanitarian aid in conflict zones change your perception of military intervention?