First Of Three US Military Planes To Arrive In Egypt With Humanitarian Aid For Gaza

The White House on Tuesday announced that the first humanitarian aid flight facilitated by the US military is set to arrive in Egypt for civilians in Gaza amid the temporary truce between Israel and Hamas.

It is worth mentioning that the temporary truce has been extended by two days on Monday. Since Friday, the pause in the deadly fighting in Gaza has allowed for some hostages held by Hamas to be released and for a surge of humanitarian aid to get into Gaza.

It is notably going to be the “first of three flights” that are facilitated by the US military to bring medical supplies, food, and winter necessities to prepare for the impending winter in Gaza, The Hill reported.

The UN will subsequently distribute these supplies to the civilian population.

According to The Hill, a senior administration official told reporters that this is the first of three relief flights that would be “facilitated by the unique capabilities of the US military that will be arriving into North Sinai in Egypt.

The next two flights with humanitarian aid “will be coming in the coming days,” the official said further.

Since the start of the crisis, the United States has sponsored five commercial aircraft that have delivered products into Egypt; however, they are the first flights that are made possible by the military.

The military aircraft are en route to Egypt in the midst of Israel and Hamas’s two-day extension of their brief ceasefire in Gaza.

The cease-fire in the deadly fighting in Gaza that began on Friday has made it possible for a large amount of humanitarian assistance to enter Gaza as well as the release of several captives held by Hamas. Military aircraft carrying supplies are an addition to the 200 or so trucks that travel into Gaza every day to bring food, water, and gasoline, according to The Hill.

According to the White House, the decision to send military aircraft into the Middle East was made in response to the necessity to backfill supplies due to the increase in the flow of products into Gaza during the halt.

“The movement over the last four or five days of assistance has been so significant in volume that a backfill into El-Arish is now needed. These planes are part of that backfill,” The Hill quoted the official as saying.

El-Arish is a city in North Sinai, Egypt, where the United Nations will transfer humanitarian aid from the United States into civilian areas in Gaza.

The Israel-Hamas truce will be extended by two days, and

Qatar and the US confirmed the extension of the Israel-Hamas truce by two days and there is the likelihood of about 10 more Israeli hostages to be released per day.

As per the initial four-day truce agreement, which will expire today (Tuesday), Israel agreed to halt its military operations in Gaza for four days and emphasized that it would release three Palestinian security prisoners for each of the 50 hostages freed from Gaza, The Times of Israel reported.

Since Friday, over 50 hostages have now been released, whereas, 117 Palestinians have been freed.

US President Joe Biden on Monday welcomed the additional two-day truce between Israel and Hamas after Qatar’s successful mediation. Biden issued a statement, welcoming the extended truce, as reported by The Times of Israel.

“I have remained deeply engaged over the last few days to ensure that this deal–brokered and sustained through extensive US mediation and diplomacy–can continue to deliver results,” the US President said. (ANI)

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US military

US Says Its Military Targeted In Iraq, Syria

After the October 7 attack by Iranian-backed Hamas forces on Israel, the US military has blamed other Iranian-backed proxy groups for near-daily attacks against its forces in Iraq and Syria.

US forces in Iraq and Syria have been attacked with drones or rockets at least 27 times in recent days, a Pentagon spokesman said on Tuesday (local time) as cited by a Voice of America report.

US personnel believe that retaliatory action is required before more powerful weaponry is used against the US military.

The US military has responded with precision strikes against facilities in Syria tied to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps and affiliated groups, but the attacks against American personnel, while largely unsuccessful, have not stopped, according to Voice of America.

After nearly 30 days of continuous attacks on American military vessels, American Secretary of Defence, Lloyd Austin has warned, “If this does not stop, then we will respond.”

Senior Republic Senator, Marco Antonio Rubio expressed concerns that responses to attacks on the US military have not been strong enough. Rubio believes, “If we do not have a credible deterrence with Iranians, these attacks are going to escalate”.

Rubio speaking in a video posted on the Voice of America website claimed that Iranian-back proxy fighters will, “involve weaponry of increasing sophistication and lethality.”

With Israel intensifying its retaliatory assault on Hamas targets in Gaza, the US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is set to travel to Israel and Jordan on Friday.

The Secretary will meet with Prime Minister Netanyahu and other leaders of the Israeli government to “receive an update on their military objectives,” Voice of America reported.

15 Israeli soldiers have so far been killed so far during their ground operation of Gaza. The 15 deaths, mostly of infantry soldiers, were the first casualties inside Gaza publicly confirmed by Israel’s military since it launched a ground invasion on Friday.

The IDF confirmed the death in battle of two additional fallen soldiers, Times of Israel reported.

Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant said that the IDF is making immense achievements in its ground operation in the Gaza Strip, “I am impressed by the activities of our forces,” he said in comments during an assessment held near the Gaza border.

“This is a determined, decisive action. There is strong cooperation between ground and air forces,” the Times of Israel cited Gallant.

Meanwhile, Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Defence Secretary Lloyd Austin on testified on US President’s Biden’s USD 106 billion emergency aid request that would provide military and humanitarian assistance to Israel and Ukraine.

The two secretaries testified before the Senate Appropriations Committee on Tuesday seeking USD 68.3 billion in supplemental funds.

Blinken said in his testimony that he believed the aid would show “enduring support” for the countries. Of the USD106 billion, USD 3.7 billion would be dedicated to Israel’s “security needs,” including bolstering “air and missile defence systems.”

In total, USD14 billion would be directed to Israel. Another USD50 billion of the funding “will replenish US military stocks, strengthen our domestic defence industrial base, and will be spent through American businesses,” Blinken told the Senate Committee. (ANI)

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