March
21, 2024
Piers
allow things to come in. They allow things to go out. And Israel, which has no
intention of halting its murderous siege of Gaza, including its policy of
enforced starvation, appears to have found a solution to its problem of where
to expel the 2.3 million Palestinians.
If
the Arab world will not take them, as Secretary of State Antony Blinken
proposed during his first round of visits after Oct. 7, the Palestinians will
be cast adrift on ships. It worked in Beirut in 1982 when some eight and a half
thousand Palestine Liberation Organization members were sent by sea to Tunisia
and another two and a half thousand ended up in other Arab states. Israel
expects that the same forced deportation by sea will work in Gaza.
Israel,
for this reason, supports the “temporary pier” the Biden administration is
building, to ostensibly deliver food and aid to Gaza – food and aid whose
“distribution” will be overseen by the Israeli military.
“You
need drivers that don’t exist, trucks that don’t exist feeding into a
distribution system that doesn’t exist,” Jeremy Konyndyk, a former senior aid
official in the Biden administration, and now president of the Refugees
International aid advocacy group told The Guardian.
This
“maritime corridor” is Israel’s Trojan Horse, a subterfuge to expel
Palestinians. The small shipments of seaborne aid, like the food packets that
have been air dropped, will not alleviate the looming famine. They are not
meant to.
Five
Palestinians were killed and several others injured when a parachute carrying
aid failed and crashed onto a crowd of people near Gaza City’s Shati refugee
camp.
“Dropping
aid in this way is flashy propaganda rather than a humanitarian service,” the
media office of the local government in Gaza said. “We previously warned it
poses a threat to the lives of citizens in the Gaza Strip, and this is what
happened today when the parcels fell on the citizens’ heads.”
If
the U.S. or Israel were serious about alleviating the humanitarian crisis, the
thousands of trucks with food and aid currently at the southern border of Gaza
would be allowed to enter any of its multiple crossings. They are not. The
“temporary pier,” like the air drops, is ghoulish theater, a way to mask
Washington’s complicity in the genocide.
Israeli
media reported the building of the pier was due to pressure by the United Arab
Emirates, which threatened Israel with ending a land corridor trade route it
administers in collusion with Saudi Arabia and Jordan, to bypass Yemen’s naval
blockade.
The
Jerusalem Post reported it was Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu who proposed
the construction of the “temporary pier” to the Biden administration.
Israeli
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant, who has called Palestinians “human animals” and
advocated a total siege of Gaza, including cutting off electricity, food, water
and fuel, lauded the plan, saying “it is designed to bring aid directly to the
residents and thus continue the collapse of Hamas’s rule in Gaza.”
“Why
would Israel, the engineer of the Gaza famine, endorse the idea of establishing
a maritime corridor for aid to address a crisis it initiated and is now
worsening?” writes Tamara Nassar in an article titled “What’s the Real Purpose
of Biden’s Gaza Port?” in The Electronic
Intifada. “This might appear paradoxical if one were to assume that the primary
aim of the maritime corridor is to deliver aid.”
When
Israel offers a gift to the Palestinians you can be sure it is a poison apple.
That Israel got the Biden administration to construct the pier is one more
example of the inverted relationship between Washington and Jerusalem, where
the Israel lobby has bought off elected officials in the two ruling parties.
Oxfam
in a March 15 report accuses Israel of actively hindering aid operations in
Gaza in defiance of the orders by the International Court of Justice. It notes
that 1.7 million Palestinians, some 75 percent of the Gaza population, are
facing famine and two-thirds of the hospitals and over 80 percent of all health
clinics in Gaza are no longer operable. The majority of people, the report
reads, “have no access to clean drinking water” and “sanitation services are
not functioning.”
The
report reads:
The conditions we have observed in
Gaza are beyond catastrophic, and we have not only seen failure by Israeli
authorities to meet their responsibility to facilitate and support
international aid efforts, but in fact seen active steps being taken to hinder
and undermine such aid efforts. Israel’s control of Gaza continues to be
characterized by deliberate restrictive actions that have led to a severe and
systemic dysfunctionality in the delivery of aid. Humanitarian organizations
operational in Gaza are reporting a worsening situation since the International
Court of Justice imposed provisional measures in light of the plausible risk of
genocide, with intensified Israeli barriers, restrictions and attacks against
humanitarian personnel. Israel has maintained a ‘convenient illusion of a
response’ in Gaza to serve its claim that it is allowing aid in and conducting
the war in line with international laws.
Oxfam
says Israel employs “a dysfunctional and undersized inspection system that
keeps aid snarled up, subjected to onerous, repetitive and unpredictable
bureaucratic procedures that are contributing to trucks being stranded in giant
queues for 20 days on average.” Israel, Oxfam explains, rejects “items of aid
as having ‘dual (military) use,’ banning vital fuel and generators entirely
along with other items essential for a meaningful humanitarian response such as
protective gear and communications kit.” Rejected aid, “must go through a
complex ‘pre-approval’ system or end up being held in limbo at the Al Arish
warehouse in Egypt.” Israel has also “cracked down on humanitarian missions,
largely sealing off northern Gaza, and restricting international humanitarian
workers’ access not only into Gaza, but Israel and the West Bank including East
Jerusalem too.”
Israel
has allowed 15,413 trucks into Gaza during the past 157 days of war. Oxfam
estimates that the population of Gaza needs five times that number. Israel
allowed 2,874 trucks in February, a 44 percent reduction from the previous
month. Before Oct. 7, 500 aid trucks entered Gaza daily.
Israeli
soldiers have also killed scores of Palestinians attempting to receive aid from
trucks in more than two dozen incidents. These attacks include the killing of
at least 21 Palestinians, and the wounding of 150, on March 14, when Israeli
forces fired on thousands of people in Gaza City. The same area had been
targeted by Israeli soldiers hours earlier.
“Israel’s
assault has caught Gaza’s own aid workers and international agencies’ partners
inside a ‘practically uninhabitable’ environment of mass displacement and
deprivation, where 75 percent of solid waste is now being dumped in random
sites, 97 percent of groundwater made unfit for human use, and the Israeli
state using starvation as a weapon of war,” Oxfam says.
There
is no place in Gaza, Oxfam notes, that is safe “amid the forcible and often
multiple displacements of almost the entire population, which makes the
principled distribution of aid unviable, including agencies’ ability to help
repair vital public services at scale.”
Oxfam
blasts Israel for its “disproportionate” and “indiscriminate” attacks on
“civilian and humanitarian assets” as well as “solar, water, power and
sanitation plants, UN premises, hospitals, roads, and aid convoys and
warehouses, even when these assets are supposedly ‘deconflicted’ after their
coordinates have been shared for protection.”
The
health ministry in Gaza said Monday that at least 31,726 people have been
killed since the Israeli assault began five months ago. The death toll includes
at least 81 deaths in the previous 24 hours, a ministry statement said, adding
that 73,792 people have been wounded in Gaza since Oct. 7. Thousands more are
missing, many buried under the rubble.
None
of these Israeli tactics will be altered with the building of a “temporary
pier.” In fact, given the pending ground assault on Rafah, where 1.2 million
displaced Palestinians are crowded in tent cities or camped out in the open
air, Israel’s tactics will only get worse.
Israel,
by design, is creating a humanitarian crisis of such catastrophic proportions,
with thousands of Palestinians killed by bombs, shells, missiles, bullets,
starvation and infectious diseases, that the only option will be death or
deportation. The pier is where the last act in this gruesome genocidal campaign
will be played out as Palestinians are herded by Israeli soldiers onto ships.
How
appropriate that the Biden administration, without whom this genocide could not
be carried out, will facilitate it.
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