U.S. Army Throws Relief to Air Gas

Three American cargo planes have dropped air food on Saturday at the Gaza Strip, an American official said, as humanitarian crisis concerns increase in the region after months of fighting. “We have implemented humanitarian combined aid through air in Gaza”, by committing three C-130 planes to send “to civilians [...]
Three American cargo planes have dropped air food on Saturday at the Gaza Strip, an American official said, as humanitarian crisis concerns increase in the region after months of fighting.
“We have implemented humanitarian combined aid through air in Gaza”, by engaging three C-130 planes to send “aid to civilians affected by conflict”, a US Central Command official has said in some comments to the AFP news agency under anonymity.
Planes have dropped large packages of pork-free food “on Saturday, the official said.
Some media have made it known that thousands of shots are involved.
US President Joe Biden has said the day before that the United States will start sending air aid to Gaza, following the death of more than 100 Palestinians Thursday in a crowd, how long they have been waiting for relief.
Some sources within the Israeli army have admitted to firing guns in the direction of the crowd, since they considered it a <x0-bed risk”.
American National Security Council spokesman John Kirby said on Friday that the US plans to send shots that will last for weeks.
He has described the operation as difficult, as it requires careful planning of the Pentagon to ensure the safety of Gaza civilians as well as US Army personnel.
Earlier in the day, two sources from Egypt have said that on Sunday in Cairo, they will resume talks on achieving weapons personnel in Gaza.
No comment has yet been made by Israel or the militant group Hamas, who have negotiated in the past through intermediaries, including Egypt and Qatar.
Hamas, a Palestinian group leading Gaza, has been declared a terrorist organisation by the United States and the European Union.
International pressure has increased, as over 30,000 Palestinians have been killed, according to Palestinian health authorities, from the start of the Israeli offensive in Gaza.
The United Nations warns that a quarter of the population is a step away from hunger.
Pledging to destroy Hamas, Israel has launched the offensive in Gaza following Hamas ' attacks on his land on October 7, last year, killing 1,200 people and taking 240 others hostage. / REL/












