
Government officials warned President Joe Biden that his plan to build a humanitarian pier off the coast of Gaza would face major challenges, but Biden pushed the $230 million plan anyway, an internal report reveals.
Biden promised, during his March State of the Union address, to open a pier to deliver humanitarian aid to the two million-plus people in the war-torn Gaza Strip. At the time, âmultiple USAID staff expressed concernsâ that rough waves posed major challenges for the project, according to an inspector general report published Tuesday. Bidenâs focus on the pier also undermined the agencyâs advocacy for opening more on-land pathways for aidâwhich the report deemed âmore efficient and proven.â
Despite the agencyâs objections, the White House pressured USAID to build the pier, which survived a mere 20 days. From the start, the operation was plagued by rough weather and security problems that significantly limited the amount of aid flowing into Gaza. Humanitarian aid groups criticized the project, calling it ineffective and wasteful.
When Biden first presented his âmaritime corridorâ idea, USAID officials said that the pier system âwas not an option USAID would typically recommend in humanitarian response operations,â the report noted. Under pressure from the White House, however, the organization began looking for ways to use it âin a way that would maintain a separation between the military and humanitarian actorsâ in Gaza, the report said.
The inspector generalâs report cited numerous âexternal factorsââincluding rough seas, inclement weather, and the Pentagonâs security requirementsâthat it said hindered the agencyâs effort to distribute supplies delivered via the pier, the Washington Post reported.
Although USAID typically leads the U.S. governmentâs humanitarian assistance overseas, the report found that the agency had âlimited controlâ over various aspects of the Gaza pier, such as where it would be located and who would provide security.
The pier was permanently shut down last month after only three weeks of operation. The corridor helped the U.S. military deliver just 137 trucks of aid into the region, but several of the trucks never reached the civilian population.
Original News Source â Washington Free Beacon
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