Antony J. Blinken
delivered 30 April 2024, Jordanian Hashemite Charity Organization, Amman, Jordan
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Well, good evening, everyone. Since October 7th and the conflict between Israel and Hamas, we've put a focus on trying to make sure that those so desperately in need in Gaza get the humanitarian assistance they require. And this has been part of our work every single day. It's also been the focus of every single one of my trips to the region. The United States remains the largest provider of humanitarian assistance and assistance in general to the Palestinian people, but we're determined that people get the assistance that they need. And we're doing that in parallel with seeking to secure the ceasefire and the release of hostages. That's also the best way to create an environment in which we can maximize assistance getting in, ease the suffering of people, and also to create the conditions for an enduring, lasting peace. In their recent conversations, including on April 4th, President Biden has made clear to Prime Minister Netanyahu and the Israeli Government the imperative of taking concrete, measurable steps to improve the delivery of humanitarian assistance to those who need it as well as to protect civilians and those who are delivering the assistance to people in need. Here today in Jordan, I had an opportunity to meet with Gazan women who were able to get out of Gaza and are now here in Jordan. I heard their stories. I heard the suffering that they endured and that their friends and family continue to endure every day. I also met with the king, King Abdullah, as well as Foreign Minister Safadi, and among other things we focused on the coordination of providing assistance to Gazans and the critical role that Jordan is playing in doing that. And I also had an opportunity to meet with the senior UN envoy Sigrid Kaag and an entire team of humanitarians from different agencies that are working and coordinating their efforts every single day, and especially to hear from them the progress that's been made but also the work that remains to be done. And that's vitally important.
With me on this trip is our new envoy for
humanitarian affairs in the Middle East,
Lise
Grande, someone who is deeply experienced, most recently running the
U.S. Institute for Peace but before that a long career doing humanitarian
development work, including at the United Nations. She's taking the baton from
Ambassador Satterfield. You'll remember that
President Biden appointed him one week after October 7th. He's done
extraordinary work to try to improve conditions for Gazans and create a better
flow of humanitarian assistance. But we're delighted that Lise has taken on this
effort and carrying the baton forward. The What we've seen in the last few weeks is clear and demonstrable progress in getting more assistance into Gaza and getting more of it around within Gaza. And in particular, we've seen the opening of new crossings, including Erez, which was hugely important. We see now the use of Ashdod and the port to flow things into -- from Israel and then into Gaza. We have other efforts that have been undertaken. We have our maritime corridor that we've been working on that I'd say about a week from now will be ready to go. That will also significantly increase the assistance -- not a substitute for these land access routes but an important complement to them. And right here in Jordan, we're seeing a direct route from Jordan to northern Gaza through Erez, the first shipments leaving today. And in fact, the pallets that you see right here are exactly what's going into Gaza -- again, directly from Jordan. The Jordanians are doing a remarkable job putting this together. We're supporting that effort directly, and then this is moving much more effectively and efficiently into Gaza and to the people who need it in the north.
So this is real and important progress, but more
still needs to be done. And in particular, we have to make sure that our focus
is not only on inputs but on impact and really measuring whether the aid that
people need is actually getting to them in an effective way. And there we have
some ongoing challenges that have to be met to make sure that the volume of
assistance that needs to get in is getting there, the variety of
We still have to have a deconfliction mechanism
that is effective and works. That's a work in progress. It needs to happen. We
need to make sure that there are enough drivers and enough trucks within Gaza so
that
And finally, and maybe equally significantly, as
critical as food obviously is, it's not enough because you also need the entire
ecosystem of support that continues to be lacking -- it's water, it's
sanitation, it's
So we're going to drive forward on all these
fronts. Today, having heard directly from the humanitarians and the UN, I am now
able to go to Israel tomorrow and go over with the Israeli Government the things
that still So let me leave it there for now, and I'm sure we'll have an opportunity to report more tomorrow on our stop in Israel.
MR. MILLER: Michael. QUESTION: Yeah, Mr. Secretary -- is this working? Mr. Secretary, I'm Michael Gordon, Wall Street Journal. You said yesterday in Riyadh that the U.S. had not yet seen a humanitarian plan from Israel that gives you the confidence that civilians can be effectively protected if Israel is to proceed with a Rafah operation. Today, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu said Israel has already begun evacuating civilians in Rafah and that, quote, "there be an operation there soon." My question is: Do you have a firm commitment from Israel that it will not proceed with a Rafah operation until they have presented the United States with an updated and detailed humanitarian plan that gives you such confidence? And do you have information from Israel or otherwise to believe a Rafah operation is imminent?
And then a last point of clarification. The
Israeli prime minister also said today that Israeli forces would enter Rafah
with or without a deal, meaning if a ceasefire was arranged and it expired, they
would come in
SECRETARY BLINKEN:
Thanks, Michael. Look, our views on Rafah I think are very well known. The
President's been very clear about it. I've been clear about it and repeated it
as recently as yesterday. Where our focus So our focus is on this, and we want to see in the coming days this agreement coming together, because, again, that is the best way, the most effective way, to really deal with the suffering of the people and also to create an environment in which we can hopefully move forward to something that's really sustainable and that has lasting peace for the people who so desperately need it and lasting security for Israelis as well. MR. MILLER: Missy.
QUESTION: Hi,
Mr. Secretary. I have two questions. The first one is on aid to Gaza. You've
mentioned impact, and it now seems that the biggest emerging problem is the aid
shipments increases distribution of aid
And then the second question about human rights.
This administration came into office saying it would put human rights at the
center of its foreign policy. But six months into the war, there's a widespread
SECRETARY BLINKEN: Look, first on the aid, what I heard today from the UN and the other humanitarians and notably from the senior UN envoy, and this is Sigrid Kaag, is a determination to work closely and effectively with all concerned to make sure that the aid is getting in and then getting to people who need it. And this is not about pointing fingers and playing a blame game. It's about taking the practical, concrete steps that are necessary to make this work as effectively as it possibly can. And I heard a determination to do that.
I'm going to make sure that Israel has the same
determination, because that's the only thing that counts. And then as I mentioned, there's everything else that's attendant to this, particularly when it comes to repairing water pipelines. The Israelis are working on that, not only the lines that go into Gaza but within Gaza, the distribution networks. The same thing for sanitation. Anyway, there's a really important list of things that need to get done, and we want to make sure that everyone is working together to actually get it done.
When it comes to human rights, look, let me be
very clear, there is no double standard. We apply the same standards to everyone
around the world, including Israel. We do the work on a regular basis when we
have
And so you've seen that -- some of the work that
we're doing, including applying the Leahy Law and other steps that we're taking.
And again, we'll let the results speak for themselves. We will let the work that
we're Thank you. Original Text Source: State.gov
Original Image Source: twitter.com
(U.S. Department of State channel)
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