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US, allies eye commercial maritime option for Gaza aid

14-03-2024

WASHINGTON: The US may urge partners and allies to fund a privately run operation to send aid by sea to Gaza that could begin before a much larger US military effort, said three people familiar with the planning and a US official.

If funding is secured, the plan could bring ashore large amounts of aid in a matter of weeks and could be faster than US military’s floating pier system that the Pentagon says could take up 60 days to become operational.

The U.S. official and one person familiar with the plan said the U.S. would not fund the project, and two other sources and the same US official said Washington was considering asking allies to fund and support it via an international foundation that would accept money from governments and private sources.

While the US government is prioritizing the military’s plan, the commercial project could complement that effort by providing support on shore in Gaza, since President Joe Biden’s administration has ruled out allowing US troops to set foot in the enclave, even as they build the pier system.

Biden announced during his Thursday State of the Union speech that the US military will build a temporary port on Gaza’s Mediterranean coast to receive humanitarian aid by sea.

The United Nations has warned that widespread famine in the Gaza Strip is “almost inevitable” without urgent action. A formal conclusion that famine has arrived in the coastal enclave of 2.3 million people could come this week.

A source familiar with the planning said the commercial option could become operational in 28 days once funded, although a second source said it would take at least a month. The plan would bring aid to Gaza aboard tug-boat pushed barges and then employ a crane to then lift containers onto shore.

Two sources said the project would allow delivery of about 200 truck-load equivalent containers of aid to Gaza per day. That would be less than the 500 truck-loads of aid that were delivered daily to the enclave before the start of the war.

US officials have said the US military operation would provide hundreds of additional truckloads of aid every day and those shipments would include more than two million meals, water, temporary shelters and medicine.

The anticipated cost of the commercial maritime project is around $200 million for six months, three sources said, with one source estimating it at $30 million a month.

The commercial planning is being spearheaded by Fogbow, an advisory firm which includes former US government officials from the Department of Defense, US AID and CIA, as well former UN officials, the sources said. (Int’l News Desk)

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