Biden’s Gaza Humanitarian Aid Pier Injured Far More US Service Members Than Previously Reported
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by Corey Walker

A US soldier leaves a cordoned-off area as other troops work on a beached vessel, used for delivering aid to Palestinians via a new US-built pier in Gaza, after it got stuck trying to help another vessel behind it, on the Mediterranean coast in Ashdod, Israel, May 25, 2024. Photo: REUTERS/Amir Cohen
Over 60 US military personnel were injured during the construction and deployment of former President Joe Biden’s humanitarian aid pier off the coast of Gaza, indicating that the failed project was more dangerous than previously believed, according to a new report released by the Pentagon Inspector General on Tuesday.
The new figures are substantially higher than the previously reported figures, which claimed three US service members were injured while working on the pier.
The investigation was also unable to discern how many of the injuries occurred while actually working on the humanitarian aid pier.
“Based on the information provided, we were not able to determine which of these 62 injuries occurred during the performance of duties or resulted off duty or from pre-existing medical conditions,” the report said.
In May 2024, Army Sgt. Quandarius Stanley incurred a severe injury from a forklift incident while working on the pier. Stanley eventually succumbed to his injuries and died at a Veterans Affair hospital five months later.
Moreover, the report alleges that inadequate materials were used in the construction of the pier, potentially contributing to its eventual structural failures.
US forces constructed the pier off the Gaza coast in April 2024 to streamline and accelerate transportation of humanitarian aid. The Biden administration ordered the construction in response to allegations that the Israeli government had not done enough to allow humanitarian aid into Gaza.
Gen. Patrick S. Ryder, the US Defense Department’s press secretary under the Biden administration, subsequently acknowledged that none of the 569 metric tons of aid delivered across the pier actually made it into the hands of Gaza residents. Ryder told reporters that the Biden administration’s “humanitarian partners” had not been able to distribute the aid to Palestinian civilians. Moreover, Ryder explained that some of the trucks delivering aid to warehouses in Gaza were “intercepted.”
The project was eventually scrapped after rough seas caused four transportation vessels to detach from their moorings and drift away from the pier. Two of the vessels subsequently beached near the pier and another two landed on the shore of Ashkelon, a city in southern Israel.
The failed project became a contentious issue in the US Congress, with Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) advancing a War Powers Resolution to force the Biden administration to abandon the humanitarian aid pier.
“The Biden White House’s foreign policy is utterly backwards,” Cruz told Punchbowl News in May 2024. “He is blocking weapons to Israel … and he has just recently spent hundreds of millions of dollars building this pier in Gaza to continue providing aid to Gaza that will go directly to Hamas.”
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