Damaged temporary US aid pier in Gaza reopens
The location of a temporary floating pier previously anchored by the United States to boost aid deliveries, in the northern Gaza Strip, May 29, 2024. (EPA File Photo)


The repair of the aid pier established by the U.S. that was damaged in a storm has been completed, the military said Friday.

Gaza has been devastated by Israeli attacks that are now entering their ninth month, uprooting the coastal territory's population and leaving them in dire need of humanitarian assistance.

"U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) successfully reestablished the temporary pier in Gaza, enabling the continued delivery of much-needed humanitarian aid to the people of Gaza," the military command responsible for the Middle East said in a social media post.

Vice Admiral Brad Cooper, deputy head of CENTCOM, told journalists that "we expect to resume delivery of humanitarian assistance from the sea in the coming days."

"The policy of no U.S. boots on the ground does remain in effect," so Israeli forces assisted with the process onshore, Cooper said.

"The Israeli Defense Force engineers were the enabling force on the beach," he said. "This is the same unit that we trained several months ago in how to conduct this operation. They conducted it flawlessly this morning."

More than two million pounds of humanitarian aid were delivered via the pier last month, but it was damaged by high seas around a week after deliveries began.

Air drops to resume

In addition to working to establish a maritime corridor for aid shipments, the United States has delivered assistance by air, but the air drops were suspended due to fighting in northern Gaza.

"We do expect those to resume here in the coming days," Cooper said.

"Aid from the pier to the people of Gaza was the second-highest volume of aid entering Gaza from any crossing during that period," Cooper said.

"Given its proven success, we expect to increase the volume of humanitarian assistance," he said.

The pier was repaired in the Israeli port of Ashdod before being brought back to the Gaza coast and reestablished on Friday.

Israel's retaliatory attacks after Oct. 7 killed at least 36,731 people in Gaza, also mostly civilians, according to the Hamas-run territory's health ministry.

Israel has delayed the entry of aid into Gaza, depriving the territory's 2.4 million people of clean water, food, medicines and fuel.

Plans for the pier were first announced by U.S. President Joe Biden in early March as Israel held up deliveries of assistance, and US Army troops and vessels soon set out on a lengthy trip to the Mediterranean to build the pier.