The US will set up a port on the Gaza coast for large ships carrying humanitarian supplies, senior administration officials said on Thursday, following weeks of frustration over Israel’s failure to allow more aid into the enclave.
President Joe Biden will announce the decision during his State of the Union address on Thursday evening, as well as the opening of a new land crossing into war-torn northern Gaza in the coming week to deliver assistance by truck.
“The president will announce that he’s directing the US military to lead an emergency mission to establish a port in the Mediterranean on the Gaza coast that can receive large ships carrying food, water, medicine and temporary shelters,” a senior US official said.
The dramatic step comes as the Biden administration has been increasingly critical of Israel’s failure to open the way for more humanitarian aid to be delivered via land, which is far more efficient than by sea. The US began airdropping food aid along the Gaza coast over the weekend.
[ Gaza ceasefire talks at impasse as humanitarian crisis deepensOpens in new window ]
Mr Biden has faced a backlash from some members of his Democratic Party over his support for Israel’s war in Gaza. According to Palestinian health officials in the Hamas-run enclave, more than 30,000 people have been killed in Gaza since Israel launched its military campaign in response to Hamas’s October 7th attack on Israel, which the country’s government says killed 1,200 people.
US officials did not provide many of the critical details of the maritime effort, such as who will inspect aid and how it will be delivered once it arrives in Gaza. No US troops are expected to be on the ground in the besieged enclave.
One senior European official said the aid would be delivered from Cyprus to a floating platform off Gaza, which the US would establish. The plan was drawn up by the US in co-ordination between the EU, Cyprus, the United Arab Emirates and the UN, which would ultimately take over the administration of the aid supplies into Gaza.
Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides said on Thursday that his government had “worked tirelessly” to design a humanitarian maritime corridor to “deliver a high volume of aid to the people of Gaza”.
An Israeli official said the matter would be discussed at a security cabinet meeting late on Thursday.
The initiative comes after the US has largely failed to convince Israel to reverse course on its restrictions of food, water, medicine and other assistance for Gaza’s 2.3 million people, who are facing conditions that vice-president Kamala Harris described earlier this week as “inhumane”.
Israel had until Thursday resisted opening more border crossings, and has failed to disperse protesters blocking aid deliveries at the Kerem Shalom crossing and secure aid corridors to distribute assistance across the increasingly lawless Gaza Strip.
A second official said the port will include a temporary pier and is intended to provide “the capacity for hundreds of additional truckloads of assistance each day”. The US aims to transition it to a commercially operated port over time.
The US military will supply the shipments through Cyprus, in co-ordination with other partners and allies, the official said.
Many of the details need to be worked out and the port construction “will take a number of weeks to plan and execute”, the second official said.
“We look forward to working with our close partners and allies in Europe, the Middle East and beyond to build a coalition of countries that will contribute capabilities and funding for this initiative,” the official added.
The European Commission, which is the largest provider of aid to the Palestinian territories, said on Thursday it would ensure “all the necessary aid” would be available to move through the maritime corridor. Commission president Ursula von der Leyen is flying to Cyprus on Thursday. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2024
Mark Weiss in Jerusalem writes: A Hamas delegation to talks on a ceasefire in the Gaza war left Cairo on Thursday, effectively ending any chance of a breakthrough in talks before the start of the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, due to begin this weekend.
Israel refused to send a delegation to Cairo, saying it first wanted a list of hostages Hamas intended to set free under any agreement.
Talks are expected to resume next week over a framework deal that would see some 40 Israeli hostages released in the first phase in exchange for hundreds of Palestinian prisoners and a significant increase in aid entering the coastal enclave.
Israel and Hamas blamed each other for the deadlock. Israeli officials said Hamas’s leader in Gaza, Yahya Sinwar, was not interested in a deal and hoped continued warfare would lead to an escalation of violence in the occupied West Bank and Jerusalem during Ramadan.
A Hamas source said Israel had refused to agree to withdraw from Gaza, had refused to allow Palestinians from northern Gaza to return home and had refused to agree to a comprehensive ceasefire.
Prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu made it clear on Thursday that Israel intendeds to expand its military operation to the southern city of Rafah, where more than a million war refugees have sought safety.
“The Israel Defense Forces will continue to operate against all Hamas battalions all over the strip, and this includes Rafah – Hamas’s last stronghold,” Mr Netanyahu said. “Whoever tells us not to act in Rafah is telling us to lose the war and this won’t happen.”
Five months into the war, the fighting continues, focused on the upscale Hamad neighbourhood of western Khan Younis, built with Qatari money, where soldiers engaged the remaining Hamas militants in the area.
Israel on Thursday accused South Africa of continuing to act as “the legal arm of Hamas in an attempt to undermine Israel’s inherent right to defend itself”, after South Africa asked the International Court of Justice in The Hague to order additional emergency measures against Israel, given that residents of Gaza were facing starvation.
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