Gaza’s population, displaced and devastated by Israel’s continuing offensive against the narrow strip, is on the brink of famine.
International efforts to get aid in have faced challenges, so much so that President Joe Biden announced on Thursday night that the US would build a temporary port on Gaza’s coast.
The president insisted there would be “no US boots on the ground” but there has been little detail so far on how the ambitious project will work.
Sky News spoke to some experts to try and answer some of the key questions about the proposed temporary port, from how long it will take to set up, to how it can be run without US soldiers on the shoreline.
What is a temporary dock and why does Gaza need one?
A temporary or floating dock is used to allow boats and ships to moor up further away from the shore – generally so they can stay in deep enough water.
They’ve been used various times throughout history. Perhaps the most famous example were the floating mulberry harbours that Allied forces used during the D-Day landings.
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1:11
What is famine?
Gaza does not have a deep water port, hence the discussion of a temporary dock.
Professor Michael Clarke, a military analyst, told Sky News that both the US and the UK have ships that can deliver aid directly to the beaches.
But he added: “If you’re going to get tonnages in – which is what they need to do, the equivalent of 500 trucks a day – then you’ve got to have proper unloading facilities.”
Image: Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a house in Rafah. Pic: Reuters
How long will it take and who will be involved?
Getting a temporary dock on Gaza’s coast built, set up and in operation won’t happen overnight, according to Sky News’ Middle East correspondent Alistair Bunkall.
“It will take many weeks at least,” he said. “And it comes with all sorts of other questions.”
He pointed out that President Biden said the US military would lead the effort, suggesting others would be involved.
Shipments are expected to come via Cyprus enabled by the US military and a coalition of partners and allies, Sky News’ partner network NBC News is reporting, citing US officials.
What happens in the meantime?
Assuming that the project gets off the ground and can be made to work, there will still be a gap between that time and now.
Meanwhile, there is no easy answer on getting humanitarian aid into Gaza.
“This is an indication of a clear failure by the US administration in terms of its foreign policy,” says Baraa Shiban, associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute thinktank.
He pointed to humanitarian aid stacked up at the Rafah crossing in southern Gaza, that can’t get in, as evidence the Biden administration is failing to persuade Egypt and Israel to let enough aid through.
Image: Parachutes drop supplies into the northern Gaza Strip, as seen from southern Israel. Pic: AP
An Israeli government spokesperson told Sky News they welcomed their “allies’ support in getting more aid to the people that need it” and insisted there were “no limits on the amount of aid that can go into Gaza”.
Some aid is being dropped into the territory from above, but such are the acute shortages that children have begun to die of starvation.
World health authorities are conducting a famine review to assess whether one should be officially declared.
What about security at the new temporary dock?
There’s also the issue that any temporary or floating dock would be operating in a war zone.
It raises the question of who would staff the facility on the shore – and how it would be kept secure.
It’s possible that United Nations Relief and Works Agency (UNRWA) could help run the operation, though nothing is clear at the moment.
Military analyst Sean Bell said it was unclear how the security environment would be controlled.
“Because the need is so urgent now, that will create a real need for boots on the ground, which is something the West doesn’t want to do,” he told Sky News.
Professor Clarke said there would be a risk that Hamas militants, or members of the Palestinian Islamic Jihad group, could be tempted to fire at American ships offshore, creating additional risk.
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0:43
‘Gaza aid can’t be used as bargaining chip’
What else is happening with aid to Gaza?
Meanwhile, the European Commission, Cyprus, the UAE, the UK and the US announced today they are setting up a maritime corridor to deliver humanitarian assistance to Gaza.
European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said a ship carrying aid will head to Gaza today.
Belonging to Spain’s Open Arms charity, the ship will make a pilot voyage to test the maritime corridor.
In all the horrors of this war, the plight of thousands of civilians abducted by Russia is one of the worst, but is in danger of being overlooked.
Warning: This report contains details of torture and sexual abuse
Their fate is not mentioned for instance in Donald Trump’s peace plan currently being wrestled over, let alone any demands they are released by Russia.
But their plight is truly horrific. Ukraine has identified almost 16,000 names of people lost in a gulag of 180 prisons in Russian-held Ukraine and in Russia itself, as far away as Siberia.
It is a war crime to take civilians hostage during a conflict but that has not deterred Vladimir Putin’s regime.
Worse, there is abundant evidence they are being tortured, sexually abused and killed in custody.
Oleksandra Matviichuk, a Nobel Prize-winning Ukrainian human rights lawyer, said: “I interviewed hundreds of people who survived Russian captivity, men and women, mostly civilians, and they told me how they were beaten, raped, smashed into wooden boxes.
“Their fingers were cut, their nails were torn away, their nails were drilled. There were electrical shocks through their genitalia. One woman told me how her eye was dug out with a spoon.”
Image: Dmytro Khilyuk has been detained by Russia since March 2022
When the Russians took territory north of Kyiv at the start of their illegal invasion, they came for the men, among them Dmytro Khilyuk.
Apart from a short letter sent from captivity a few months later, his elderly parents have not seen him since.
Image: Mr Khilyuk’s mother and father, Halyna and Vasyl, show photo of their son
‘I just can’t take it anymore’
“We’re old and we’re sick,” his mother Halyna, bedridden after a stroke, told us.
“We’ve been without our only child for four years now, not knowing anything, where he is, how he is.”
She wept as she told us of the agony of living with the uncertainty about their son.
“I just can’t take it anymore. Why is my child suffering like this? It’s been four years. All we get are endless talks, talks, and more talks. And nothing changes. I could die any day… and never see my child again.”
Image: Mr Khilyuk’s mother, Halyna
Khilyuk has lost half his weight and most of his teeth
A year ago a fellow prisoner who had shared a cell with Mr Khilyuk was released. He said Mr Khilyuk had lost half his weight and most of his teeth.
Fellow journalist and friend of Mr Khilyuk, Stas Kozluk, told us he was worried about his state of mind.
“We just can’t imagine what can happen with the mind of a human being that’s captured and spends three years in that condition. To be honest, I don’t know how to help him. And that’s the most terrifying thing,” he said.
Russia releases no information
Ukrainian authorities can only piece together information about the abducted civilians. Mr Kozluk told us those who’ve been detained learn the phone numbers and names of relatives of others they are held with.
Those who are released pass on what information they can.
Russia releases no information about those civilians it is holding illegally, against the rules of war.
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Thousands of innocent civilians are lost in a hellish archipelago of Russian jails notorious for their evil regime of abuse.
And the world, says Oleksandra Matviichuk, is in danger of forgetting about them.
“I think the world doesn’t understand, first, the cruelty and unhuman conditions in which Ukrainians are held in Russian captivity,” she says.
“Second, they don’t understand that Russia detained not just military, but civilians. And according to the Geneva Convention, they have to be released immediately without any exchanges, without any conditions.”
Diplomatic efforts to end this war grind on fitfully. But there has been very little pressure on Russia to end its illegal abduction of thousands of innocents.
The United States “doesn’t have high expectations” for negotiations in Turkey between Russia and Ukraine to end the war, America’s top diplomat has admitted.
US secretary of state Marco Rubio said he did not think there would be a “breakthrough” in discussions until Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin meet to discuss it directly.
Russia and Ukraine are preparing to hold their first direct peace talks in three years, but the negotiations will take place in the aftermath of Mr Putin declining Volodymyr Zelenskyy‘s offer of an in-person meeting.
It came after Mr Putin proposed direct negotiations with Ukraine over the war “without any preconditions” after the “coalition of the willing” countries threatened Russia with fresh sanctions if it failed to take part in a 30-day ceasefire beginning on Monday. In response Mr Zelenskyy had called on Mr Putin to meet him in Istanbul.
Image: Russian President Vladimir Putin chairs a meeting with senior officials. PIc: Reuters
The Ukrainian president said he was sending a team headed by his defence minister, from the Turkish capital Ankara to Istanbul, to meet the Ukrainian delegation, though he said Moscow’s team did not include “anyone who actually makes decisions”.
Mr Zelenskyy accused Moscow of not taking efforts to end the conflict seriously by sending a low-level negotiating team he described as “a theatre prop”.
Russian presidential aide Vladimir Medinsky, who is heading Moscow’s delegation, said: “The task of these direct negotiations with Ukraine is to establish long-term peace sooner or later by eliminating the root causes of this conflict.”
He later said he expected Ukraine’s representatives to turn up for the beginning of discussions on Friday morning.
Image: Marco Rubio. Pic: Reuters
Mr Rubio said he will meet Ukraine’s delegation on Friday, adding: “It’s my assessment that I don’t think we’re going to have a breakthrough here until the president [Mr Trump] and President Putin interact directly on this topic.”
The team sent by Russia “does not indicate a breakthrough”, he said, before going on to say: “I hope tomorrow the news says they’ve agreed a ceasefire. But it’s not my assessment.”
He was echoing remarks made by Mr Trump earlier in the day, when he said: “Nothing’s going to happen until Putin and I get together.”
Asked if any plans were under way for a meeting between the US and Russian leaders, Mr Rubio said Mr Trump was going to make a decision once his trip to the Middle East finishes.
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Tens of thousands of soldiers have been killed on both sides in the war since Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, along with more than 12,000 Ukrainian civilians, according to the UN.
Russian forces are preparing for a fresh military offensive, Ukrainian government and Western military analysts have warned.
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Sir Keir Starmer accused Mr Putin of “standing in the way of peace”, with the prime minister saying: “There was only one country that started this conflict – that was Russia. That was Putin. There’s only one country now standing in the way of peace – that is Russia, that is Putin.”
A top Iranian official has said the country is prepared to make a number of concessions related to its nuclear programme, in exchange for the lifting of economic sanctions.
It comes as Donald Trump, during his tour of the Middle East, urged Qatar to wield its influence over Iran to persuade it to give up its nuclear programme.
Ali Shamkhani, a top political, military and nuclear adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, spoke to Sky News’ US partner NBC News.
Image: Ali Shamkhani pictured in 2023.
Pic: Reuters
He said Tehran was willing to commit to never making nuclear weapons again, getting rid of its stockpiles of highly enriched uranium, which can be weaponised, agree to only enrich uranium to the lower levels needed for civilian use and allow international inspectors to supervise the process.
This was in exchange for the prospect of the immediate lifting of all economic sanctions on the country.
Asked if Iran would sign an agreement today if those conditions were met, Mr Shamkhani told NBC: “Yes.”
His comments are the clearest public indication of what Iran hopes to get out of a deal and their willingness to do one.
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“It’s still possible. If the Americans act as they say, for sure we can have better relations,” Mr Shamkhani added.
However, he expressed frustration at continued threats from the US president, describing them as “all barbed wire” and no olive branch.
Similarly, he warned that Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu might try to derail the deal.
Trump goes to the Middle East
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1:46
Trump’s second day in the Middle East
Elsewhere, on the second of three stops on his tour of the Middle East, Mr Trump appealed to Qatar for help in the process.
He urged the country to use its influence over Iran to persuade its leadership to reach a deal with the US and dial back its rapidly advancing nuclear programme.
Mr Trump made the comments during a state dinner.
He said: “I hope you can help me with the Iran situation.
“It’s a perilous situation, and we want to do the right thing.”
Image: Donald Trump listens as Qatar’s Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (not pictured) speaks at a state dinner.
Pic: Reuters
Over the years, Qatar has played the role of intermediary between the US and Iran and its proxies – including talks with Hamas as its 19-month war with Israel grinds on.
This comes after Mr Trump told a Gulf Cooperation Council meeting in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, this week that he wants “to make a deal”.
However, he said that as part of any agreement, Iran must end its support of proxy groups throughout the Middle East.
A nuclear Iran
Mr Trump has always said Iran could not be allowed to develop a nuclear weapon.
While Iran has always denied doing so, the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, has warned that Tehran has enough enriched uranium close to weapons-grade quality for nearly six bombs.
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1:53
Trump 100 breaks down the president and Iran
The US and Iran reached a nuclear deal in 2015, under Barack Obama, in which Iran agreed to drastically reduce its stockpile of uranium and limit enriching up to 3.67%.
But Mr Trump scrapped that deal in his first term.
Today, Iran enriches up to 60%, a short, technical step from weapons-grade levels.
Washington and Tehran have engaged in four rounds of talks since early April.