November 5, 2024
The pier attached to the Gaza Strip could reopen this week in an effort to streamline humanitarian aid to Palestinians, U.S. officials said Wednesday.
The pier attached to the Gaza Strip could reopen this week in an effort to streamline humanitarian aid to Palestinians, U.S. officials said Wednesday.



A pier built by the U.S. military to deliver aid to Gaza is expected to reopen, despite being closed twice as the fighting between Israel and Hamas continues. 

Pentagon press secretary Air Force Maj. Gen. Pat Ryder told reporters the U.S. is aiming to get it back online sometime this week but no specific date was mentioned. 

“Of course, as I just mentioned, we’re looking forward to getting it operational again soon and to delivering aid,” he said Wednesday. “And, you know, we’re going to capitalize on, on the conditions. You know, in terms of whether to get as much aid across that pier as we can.”


BEFORE AND AFTER: PHOTOS SHOW DESTRUCTION OF BIDEN’S $320M GAZA PIER

The U.S. has spent some $320 million building the pier in the Mediterranean Sea to facilitate the delivery of aid into Gaza. But there have been chaotic scenes of hundreds of Palestinians looting aid convoys, and the structure has been battered by choppy weather.

The pier has faced challenges since opening in late May, including choppy weather that battered the structure, forcing it to go offline. Prior to that, four vessels that had stabilized the pier broke off due to choppy waters, which forced its closure.

The Biden administration announced plans for the pier in March as a way to get crucial aid to Palestinians as basic necessities remain scarce in Gaza. 

See also  Angel Reese and Caitlin Clark’s Comments After Latest Heated Battle Couldn’t Be More Different

The pier’s failure has come as Israel conducts a sizable operation in Rafah, with tanks rolling into the heart of the city for the first time since the war began.

Ryder said he wasn’t aware of plans to dismantle the pier.

“I’m not tracking any established timeline at this point, in terms of when the pier will stop operating, again with the caveat that this was always intended to be a temporary pier,” he said. “I’m not aware at this point of any established date of this is when we’re going to stop.”

Share this article:
Share on FacebookTweet about this on Twitter