So, why don't we wait a couple of weeks and see if it is a distraction, or not? The US is currently air dropping and attempting to truck food in but it is not enough, hence the pier. Don't think for one minute Putin's trolls aren't trying to capitalize on this.
Are you accusing Doctors without borders of being Putin's trolls ? Please read the article, the implication of the US in this conflict is total, and it is abnormal that we can't criticize it without being accused of working for the Kremlin.
Maybe the US dual party system has made people think that you're either for Biden or Putin, but I assure you it's perfectly normal to endorse neither of them. The fact that I'm anti-Putin does not mean I can't criticize the US position, especially when internationally recognized experts (like doctors without borders, Amnesty international, UN,...) criticize it
I don't think anyone is saying criticism/scepticism is bad in any way. I also don't think most are just blindly taking what a politician/government says as fact.
I take these actions with a grain of salt just like most and assume nothing Biden or the government does is altruistic. I also have a hard time believing it's all of nefarious intentions.
Uh... People are dying now. Now it's infants and children, soon it'll be more children (the infants will've all died) and old people, then the adults will be next. And we're talking actual starvation; people have been dying of malnutrition-induced illness for some time now. By the time those "couple of weeks" pass half of Gaza will be dead.
I dont think Biden is trying to distract people. I think if anything the move points out the extreme measures the US is willing to go through to get aid to people in a territory controlled by what is supposed to be a close ally who is refusing to cooperate.
The pier is both an answer, if a bad one, and a glaring, flashing red light that the Biden admin has committed to prodding the Israel goverment with. It carries with it the threat of "we may put US soliders on the ground in Gaza," which would drastically shift the scope and direction of thr US/Israel relationship, a relationship that has been intensely beneficial to Israel. A change in its status quo will only be negative from a domestic and foreign policy standpoint locally.
It has indeed already prompted intense attention to Israel border police refusing to arrest or stop Israeli protestors calling for genocide that have been blocking the land routes for over a month. They have just now finally started apprenhending those protesters, but aid is still not getting in by Israel's choice.
This is not a logistics problem; it is a political problem. Rather than look to the US military to build a work-around, the US should insist on immediate humanitarian access using the roads and entry points that already exist.
Exactly. The pier is unnecessary. As an additional supplement, sure. But as the primary means to addresses the crisis... this is a poor solution.
If the plight of Gazan civilians mattered to the US government, then this is not the way. There's much more direct and timely solutions that are intentionally being bypassed.