Mortar strikes were reported landing in the Gaza Strip on Wednesday in the vicinity of a site that's been selected for a humanitarian pier.
In March, President Joe Biden ordered the U.S. military to construct a pier along Gaza's Mediterranean coastline, to facilitate increased deliveries of food and humanitarian supplies in the embattled territory.
The pier project, known as a joint logistics over-the-shore (JLOTS) mission, entails constructing a temporary pier at sea and connecting it to a shoreline. While the U.S. military has begun constructing the pier at sea, the designated section of coastline for which the pier will be eventually connected reportedly came under indirect fire on Wednesday.
The IDF reported no injuries from the attack.
Maj. Gen. Ryder reiterated that JLOTS pier is being assembled at sea, and thus U.S. personnel were not in range of any mortar fire.
Pier Construction and Force Protection
Speaking at an officially organized press call later on Thursday evening, a senior U.S. military official said on background that the U.S. does not believe the reported mortar attack had anything to do with the JLOTS pier mission in particular or with the delivery of humanitarian aid from the sea.During the background press call on Thursday, the senior U.S. military official gave assurances that U.S. personnel will be safe when the JLOTS pier is eventually linked up to the shoreline. He said commercial ships will use a floating platform at sea to transfer aid deliveries to U.S. Army logistics support vessels and Landing Craft Utility vessels, which will then travel to a causeway affixed to the Gaza shoreline. He said the trucks will carry the supplies off the Army support vessels and over the causeway, onto the sand, and into the marshaling area.
The senior military official also added that the current "defensive umbrella" around the aid delivery site and the JLOTS pier "looks nothing like it's going to look like when we actually execute the mission." The military official said the eventual defensive framework for the pier will be "far more robust" and there will be a daily assessment of force protection and security.
The senior military official said the JLOTS pier will likely be operational in early May.
The Humanitarian Situation in Gaza
The completion of this temporary pier will come more than six months on in the war in the Gaza Strip between Israel and Hamas. At an April 10 congressional hearing, U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Administrator Samantha Power said that a state of famine likely has already begun in parts of the Gaza Strip amid the ongoing fighting.Ms. Power said around 500 commercial and humanitarian trucks had enter the Gaza Strip on a daily basis prior to the start of the conflict.
In her April 10 remarks, Ms. Power concluded that even with 400 truckloads of humanitarian supplies going into the Gaza Strip each day, there's still a long way to go in assisting the civilian population there.
“The destruction of greeneries, and markets, and arable land, and then the fact that so few trucks got in over so many months means we have massive catch-up to do,” she said.
