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A first up-close look at the U.S. military’s Gaza pier project, which has struggled to get aid to Palestinians

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Off the coast of Gaza — CBS News was among the first media outlets invited by the U.S. Army to travel across the eastern Mediterranean Sea on a military vessel to see the pier constructed by American forces off the coast of the war-torn Gaza Strip. The Tuesday visit came just as operations resumed on the $230 million floating pier, after it was knocked out of commission by rough seas.

From the floating platform, the CBS News team could see entire neighborhoods in ruins, but the destruction inside the small, densely populated Palestinian territory was completely off limits to the journalists.

President Biden announced the pier project as a way to get more humanitarian aid to hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in desperate need, as Israel’s devastating war against the enclave’s long-time Hamas rulers grinds on into its 10th month.

U.S. and Israeli militaries put temporary pier to deliver humanitarian aid on the Gaza coast
A temporary pier built by U.S. and Israeli forces to deliver humanitarian aid is seen on the Gaza coast, amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and Hamas, May 16, 2024.

U.S. Central Command handout via Reuters


The U.S. troops who built and operate the pier don’t set foot inside Gaza either. The pier, which clangs and shakes even in calm seas, has been plagued by problems — so many, in fact, that it’s only been fully operational for around 16 days since it first opened to aid shipments. At one point a section of it was beached by bad weather.

The project has also come under intense scrutiny, particularly after Israeli forces rescued four hostages in an operation inside Gaza earlier this month. An Israeli military helicopter was seen taking off from the beach in front of the pier during the operation, which health officials in the area say killed more than 270 Palestinians.

The U.N.’s World Food Program suspended operations involving the pier out of concern the project had been compromised.

“This is a humanitarian pier,” Colonel Samuel Miller, commander of the U.S. Army’s 7th Transportation Brigade, told CBS News when asked whether both the security and the integrity of the pier remained intact. “It was not part of any operation. It’s focused on humanitarian assistance, and that’s my mission, and I’m going to continue to march through that, no matter what is in front of us obstacle-wise.”

ISRAEL-PALESTINIAN-US-CONFLICT
A U.S. soldier stands on a U.S. military vessel that ran aground at a beach in the Israeli coastal city of Ashdod, May 25, 2024. The US military said four of its vessels, supporting a temporary pier built to deliver aid to Gaza by sea, had run aground in heavy seas.

OREN ZIV/AFP/Getty


Trucks carrying pallets of desperately needed food aid are slowly making it across the pier and into the besieged Palestinian territory, but since the project became operational two months ago, only about 400 aid trucks have rolled off the structure. That’s nowhere near enough to even have a significant impact, given the scale of need among Gaza’s roughly 2.3 million people. 

Before the Oct. 7 attacks, more than 500 truckloads of aid would routinely enter Gaza in a single day. Since then, the United Nations says more than half of the territory’s population have been displaced from their homes, many of them multiple times, by the fighting.

Virtually all of Gaza’s infrastructure, from hospitals to bakeries and schools, has been severely impacted, if not destroyed, and particularly in the northern part of the territory, furthest from the aid entry points, there are desperate food shortages. 


Netanyahu says heavy fighting in Rafah nears end, but fears of war with Hezbollah rise

02:09

The U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization issued a statement Wednesday warning there was a “high risk of famine across the whole Gaza Strip” if the war continues and aid deliveries don’t ramp up.

“All I know is my objective is to get as many supplies as I can into Gaza for the people of Gaza,” Col. Miller told CBS News.

Since Israel launched its war in response to Hamas’ Oct. 7 terrorist attack, which saw the militants kill some 1,200 people and kidnap more than 240 others, Israel and Egypt, which control the only functional border crossings, have blocked international journalists from entering the Palestinian territory. 

Gaza’s Hamas-run Ministry of Health says the war has killed more than 37,400 Palestinians, many of them women and children.



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Here’s how much Americans say they need to earn to feel financially secure

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Americans have a specific dollar figure in mind for what it would take to financially secure, according to a new survey from Bankrate. That magic number? $186,000 in annual income.

Currently, only 6% of U.S. adults make that amount or more, Bankrate said. The median family income falls between $51,500 and $86,000, according to the latest federal data

Attaining a sense of financial security means paying all of one’s bills as well as purchasing some wants, while having enough left over to save for the future, the personal finance site said. However, many inflation-weary consumers are experiencing increased financial stress, with a new Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia survey finding that 35% of Americans are worried about making ends meet, up from 29% a year earlier.

That gap between what the typical American makes now and what they aspire to earn means “Americans have their eyes set on this high income, and they think they need to make more money even if they know it’s unrealistic they’ll never make that amount,” Sarah Foster, an analyst at Bankrate, told CBS MoneyWatch.

Earning more remains at the top of many Americans’ priorities as the price of shelter, food and medical care remain stubbornly high after two years of rising inflation. To cope, consumers are cutting spending on dining out, entertainment and travel, a TransUnion study found.

Bankrate’s survey of 2,400 Americans in mid-May found that younger generations are more optimistic about eventually earning enough to live comfortably.

What does it take to be rich?

Americans have an even higher yardstick for feeling rich. The survey found they believe they would need to earn $520,000 a year to qualify as wealthy — up from their $483,000 response during the same survey last year. 

The rising cost of consumer goods is a chief reason for the increase, Foster said.  “Inflation is the centerpiece to this narrative,” Foster said. “Americans know where the bar is for living comfortably, but every time they get there, the cost of living goes up and the bar grows further and further away.”

Another recent report found that adults in major U.S. cities need to earn $96,500 annually before taxes to afford basic necessities and savings, while a two-parent household with two children needs a combined $235,000 for a comfortable life.

Interestingly, 2023 research from the late Nobel Prize-winning economist Daniel Kahneman and colleagues suggests that happiness does increase with income, up to about $500,000 – roughly the income Americans told Bankrate would make them feel rich.



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U.S. Olympics gymnastics team set as Simone Biles secures third trip

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Simone Biles is heading back to the Olympics and the white-hot spotlight that comes with it.

The gymnastics superstar earned a third trip to her sport’s biggest stage by cruising to victory at the U.S. Olympic trials on Sunday night, posting a two-day all-around total of 117.225 to clinch the lone automatic spot on the five-woman team.

Three years removed from the Tokyo Olympics — where she pulled out of multiple finals to prioritize her safety and mental health — Biles heads back to the games looking perhaps as good as ever.

“Trusting the process and (my coaches), I knew I’d be back,” Biles said.

A trip to France has never really been in doubt since she returned from a two-year break last summer. All she’s done over the last 12 months is win a sixth world all-around title and her eighth and ninth national championship — both records — while further cementing her status as the best-ever in her sport.

2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials – Gymnastics - Day 4
Simone Biles waves to fans on Day Four of the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Gymnastics Trials at Target Center on June 30, 2024 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Jamie Squire/Getty Images


She’ll head to Paris as a prohibitive favorite to bookend the Olympic gold she won in 2016, but with things to work on, too.

Biles backpedaled after landing her Yurchenko double pike vault, a testament to both the vault’s difficulty and the immense power she generates during a skill few male gymnasts try and even fewer land as cleanly.

She hopped off the beam after failing to land her side aerial, though she wasn’t quite as frustrated as she was during a sloppy performance on Friday that left her uttering an expletive for all the world to see.

Biles finished with a flourish on floor exercise, her signature event. Though there was a small step out of bounds, there was also the unmatched world-class tumbling that recently drew a shoutout from pop star Taylor Swift, whose song “Ready For It” opens Biles’ routine.

She stepped off the podium to a standing ovation, then sat down atop the steps to take in the moment in what could be her last competitive round on American soil for quite a while.

Next stop, Paris.

The Americans will be loaded with experience as they try to return to the top of the podium after finishing second to Russia in 2020.

Reigning Olympic champion Sunisa Lee, 2020 Olympic floor exercise champion Jade Carey and 2020 Olympic silver medalist Jordan Chiles and Hezley Rivera all made the final roster for Team USA. Joscelyn Roberson and Leanne Wong will travel to Paris as alternates.

2024 U.S. Olympic Team Trials – Gymnastics - Day 4
Simone Biles, Suni Lee and Jordan Chiles react after competing on Day Four of the 2024 U.S. Olympic Team Gymnastics Trials at Target Center on June 30, 2024 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Elsa/Getty Images


Yet the Biles that will step onto the floor at Bercy Arena for Olympic qualifying in four weeks isn’t the same one that left Tokyo.

She’s taken intentional steps to make sure her life is no longer defined by her gymnastics. Biles married Chicago Bears safety Jonathan Owens in the spring of 2023 and the two are building a house in the northern Houston suburbs they hope to move into shortly after Biles returns from Paris.

Biles heads to France as perhaps the face of the U.S. Olympic movement, though she’s well aware that more than a few of the millions that will tune in to watch next month will be checking to see if the demons that derailed her in Tokyo resurface.

And while there are still moments of anxiety — including at last year’s world championships — she has put safeguards in place to protect herself. She meets with a therapist weekly, even during competition season, something she didn’t do in preparation for the 2020 games.

Biles, Lee, Carey, Chiles and Rivera will be considered heavy favorites in France, particularly with defending Olympic champion Russia unable to compete as part of the fallout from the war in Ukraine.

The Americans will take their oldest women’s team ever to the games, as Biles’ unrivaled longevity — she hasn’t lost a meet she’s started and finished since 2013 — and the easing of rules around name, image and likeness rules at the NCAA level allowed 2020 Olympic veterans Carey, Chiles and Lee to continue to compete while cashing in on their newfound fame at the same time.

They have relied on that experience to get back to this moment during a sometimes harrowing meet that saw leading contenders Shilese Jones, Skye Blakely and Kayla DiCello exit with leg injuries that took them out of the mix weeks before opening ceremonies.



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6/30/2024: The Heritage War; The Air We Breathe; The Mismatch

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6/30/2024: The Heritage War; The Air We Breathe; The Mismatch – CBS News


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