The Jerusalem Post

US Army ships bound for Gaza arrive in Crete

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

US Army ships heading for the Gaza Strip to build a build a temporary pier or floating dock have arrived in Crete, according to vessel-tracking websites.

The ships left Fort Eustis on the James River on March 12 to make their way across the Atlantic Ocean to Gaza after a stampede in March near a convoy of food trucks led to some 100 deaths.

Today, Israel has opened a new northern crossing to Gaza, more trucks are crossing into the Hamas-run enclave and the humanitari­an situation has improved.

The armada of ships includes five US Army watercraft including the USAV James A. Loux (LSV-6), USAV Montorrey (LCU2030), USAV Matamoros (LCU2026), USAV General Frank S. Besson Jr. (LSV-1) and USAV Wilson Wharf (LCU-2011).

They traveled down Chesapeake Bay and then headed south along the coast of the Carolinas into the open sea, passing Bermuda to arrive off the coast of Spain and Africa.

The ships are part of the US Army’s 7th Transporta­tion Brigade of the 18th Airborne Corps. In March, US Central Command said the ships “from the 7th Transporta­tion Brigade (Expedition­ary), 3rd Expedition­ary Sustainmen­t Command, XVIII Airborne Corps, departed Joint Base Langley-Eustis en route to the Eastern Mediterran­ean to establish a roll-on, roll-off dock capability that allows the ship to shore humanitari­an assistance to Gaza. SP4 James A. Loux, Monterrey, Matamoros, and Wilson Wharf are carrying equipment and supplies needed to establish a temporary pier to deliver vital humanitari­an supplies.”

According to the Vessel Finder website the ships are now moored at the Crete naval base that in Souda Bay. These include the USAV Matamoros, USAV James A. Loux, USAV Montorrey and USAV General Frank S. Besson Jr. The USAV Wilson’s Wharf however appears to be in the Canary Islands at a port near Tenerife. It’s not clear why it is lagging behind or if it was dispatched for a different mission.

The Crete naval base includes the US Naval Support Activity (NSA) at Souda Bay which is located near the Hellenic (Greek) Air Force Base near the village of Mouzouras. According to Military.com this site “occupies an area of approximat­ely 110 acres on the north side of the air base, which is home to the Hellenic Air

Force’s 115th Combat Wing flying F-16 aircraft.

They are physically located on the large, circular shaped Akrotiri Peninsula, which forms the northern face of Souda Harbor.” This is “an operationa­l ashore installati­on which enables and supports US, Allied, Coalition, and Partner nation forces to preserve security and stability in the European, African, and Central Command areas of responsibi­lity,” according to the site.

The Crete naval base has facilities for the Hellenic Navy and NATO. It is the second largest base of the Hellenic navy and is one of the key NATO bases in the eastern Mediterran­ean.

The area is near the picturesqu­e city of Chania which has a 14th century Venetian harbor. It’s not clear how long the ships will remain in port and it remains to be seen whether the temporary floating dock or pier is still necessary in Gaza.

Neverthele­ss, the voyage of the American armada has been an important logistical trial to see how these ships can cross oceans and bring essential capabiliti­es to a conflict zone. If they do arrive off Gaza this will provide much-needed training in a real time crisis.

Difficulti­es facing this mission have been made more complicate­d by the killing of seven humanitari­an workers from World Central Kitchen on April 1. This caused WCK and the UAE to pause support for the maritime corridor from Cyprus to Gaza, which had been offloading goods to a pier the IDF constructe­d that abuts the Netzarim corridor.

The status of this corridor is not clear today, but is expected to return to service. The Spanish ship Open Arms which was working with the aid workers is still in Cyprus, after it returned there on April 2 carrying tons of goods that could not be offloaded due to the killing of the WCK staff.

 ?? (Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images) ?? CREW AND FAMILIES on the ‘USAV SP4 James A. Loux’ currently anchored in Crete,during a farewell ceremony before setting sail for Gaza on March 12.
(Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images) CREW AND FAMILIES on the ‘USAV SP4 James A. Loux’ currently anchored in Crete,during a farewell ceremony before setting sail for Gaza on March 12.

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