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442866


Date: October 22, 2024 at 03:19:42
From: akira, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Businessman Pitching a $200 Million Plan to Deploy Mercenaries to Gaza

URL: https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/mercenary-deliver-humanitarian-aid-gaza


The Israeli-American Businessman Pitching a $200 Million Plan to Deploy
Mercenaries to Gaza

"Moti Kahana says he's talking to the Israeli government about creating a pilot
program for "gated communities" controlled by private U.S. security forces.

YANIV COGAN AND JEREMY SCAHILL
OCT 21, 2024

The Israeli government is actively considering a plan to deploy operatives from
private U.S. logistics and security companies in the Gaza Strip under the
auspices of delivering humanitarian aid, according to Israeli media reports.
Israel’s security cabinet convened Sunday evening to discuss the proposal and
is expected to approve a “pilot” program and begin conducting test runs in the
next two months, according to Israeli media reports. Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu “agreed to examine” the plan last week, according to Haaretz.

The media reports portray the plan as the brainchild of Israeli-American
businessman Mordechai “Moti” Kahana, the CEO of Global Delivery Company
(GDC), who describes his for-profit business as “Uber for War Zones.” Kahana,
a passionate supporter of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, has spent the past year
aggressively trying to find a role for his company in Israel’s war on Gaza.

Among Kahana’s goals is to create a “gated community” in Gaza where
Palestinians would be subjected to biometric screenings in order to receive
humanitarian aid. For months, there has been discussion in Israel of creating
“humanitarian bubbles” in northern Gaza where aid could be distributed after
Israeli forces declare Hamas fighters have been eliminated from the areas.
Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has championed the idea. Rumors have been
swirling in Israel about how this might be achieved and who might run the
operations.

“GDC and its subcontractor have had extensive discussions with the Israeli
government including the Ministry of Defense, the Israeli Defense Forces, and
the Prime Minister’s Office on the modalities for this initiative,” GDC said in a
statement on Monday. The company asserted that “well trained private security
is the only realistic way” to deliver aid to Gaza “as long as the nations are
unwilling to put their troops on the ground in Gaza and UN peacekeepers are
seen as ineffective.” It added, “Personnel working for our security sub-
contractor are trained and equipped for non-lethal and lethal methods of crowd
control. They are trained to use deadly force only as a last resort if their lives are
in danger. IDF forces on the other hand are combat troops who lack the training,
equipment and discipline to avoid deadly force unless absolutely necessary.
Using combat soldiers for this mission is almost sure to lead to civilian
casualties.”

GDC’s pilot proposal includes a plan to partner with Constellis—a successor
and parent company to what was once Blackwater, the infamous mercenary
company founded by Erik Prince. Constellis maintains it has no ties to Prince.
The company operates in Israel on a Pentagon contract to provide security for
U.S. personnel working at a discreet radar facility in the Negev desert 30 miles
from Gaza. The site was established to provide early warnings of Iranian
ballistic missile attacks. Among Constellis’s subsidiaries is the mercenary
company Triple Canopy, which has long worked for the U.S. government and
private companies in war and conflict zones across the globe. Constellis did not
respond to a request for comment.

While Kahana has been presented in Israeli media as generating the proposal
for a private security force to deliver aid to Gaza, it is unclear if the Israeli
government is actually considering his specific offer or exploring alternative
private security contractors. A private U.S. security company would need
approval from the State Department to offer armed services to a foreign entity
or the Israeli government. In its statement Monday, GDC said it planned to
follow up with the Israeli government and would “seek to meet with the
government of the United States, the United Nations and humanitarian
organizations active in Gaza.”

The barrage of media reports stating the Israeli government is increasingly
occupied with humanitarian aid distribution logistics comes at a time when
Israeli policy on the ground demonstrates it remains unwavering in its
commitment to wage a war of extermination against Palestinians in Gaza. The
entire discussion of “day after” plans for Gaza and the rumors and reports
about proposals for private security may be a smokescreen. Whether Israel is
seriously considering a plan to deploy a private force or not, it has made clear it
intends to remain in Gaza indefinitely and has no plans to end its genocidal
operations.

“Uber for War Zones”

Kahana frequently posts on Twitter (X), expanding on his vision for a
“humanitarian” operation in Gaza in which eligibility to receive humanitarian aid
is conditioned on passing biometric tests to determine if one is a “terrorist.”
“Terrorists will get a bullet,” he vowed in one tweet. In response to questions
from Drop Site News, Kahana added that it would be “similar to Miami without
[a] golf course and swimming pool.” “It won’t be [a] ghetto,” he wrote, “they can
go in and out anytime but it will have the goal of safe and secure communities
with local Palestinian leadership and government.” GDC and company would be
“just [providing] security.”

GDC has counted among its employees Stuart Seldowitz, the disgraced Obama
administration official who was charged with a hate crime after harassing a
halal food cart vendor. Kahana said Seldowitz was his “humanitarian diplomacy
senior consultant.” GDC reportedly cut ties with Seldowitz soon after the
incident, but Kahana said he is open to Seldowitz working with GDC in Gaza.
“He is still a friend,” Kahana told Drop Site. “He helped GDC to save over 5,000
Muslims in Afghanistan, and he is welcome to do the same thing in Gaza with
us.” Kahana himself has a record of incendiary statements, describing U.S. Rep.
Rashida Tlaib as Hamas's “designated ambassador to the U.S.” and the
underground tunnel system used by Al-Qassam Brigades in Gaza as the
“system of the rat.”

GDC currently employs several former high-ranking Israeli officers—Brigadier
General (res.) Yossi Kuperwasser, a member of the extremist Think Tank
“HaBitchonistim” which has advised Netanyahu since the outset of the
genocide, and Lieutenant colonel Doron Avital, as well as former Chief
Intelligence Officer David Tzur. GDC’s team also includes recently retired U.S.
Green Beret Col. Justin Sapp, a consultant for Constellis and a veteran of covert
CIA paramilitary operations in Afghanistan after the 9/11 attacks. Its logistical
director is former U.S. Navy officer Michael Durnan.

On Monday, Kahana tweeted that GDC would start its Gaza project as soon as
it received approval and added, “our team leader who will be running the Gaza
[project] conquered [Mazar-i-Sharif] in Afghanistan after September 11.” In a
subsequent interview with YNet, Kahana said he was speaking about Sapp, the
former Green Beret.

Kahana has boasted that his company has operated for 14 years in five wars:
Afghanistan, Syria, Iraq, Ukraine, and Gaza. “Our slogan is ‘We Deliver,’” he
wrote on X in March. GDC, a for-profit business operating since at least 2019,
grew out of Kahana’s previous New York-based nonprofit called Amaliah. “My
company is like a war-zone Uber/UPS for people and goods,” Kahana said in
July 2023. “I can be here on my farm [in New Jersey] directing an operation in
the Middle East.”

Constellis is listed as an official partner on GDC’s site and GDC and Constellis
have worked together in Ukraine, according to The Jewish Chronicle and
confirmed by Kahana to Drop Site News. While GDC moved sunflower oil out
and diesel into the country, Constellis provided security services. Constellis is
one of the largest private security companies in the world. It claims to have
operated in more than 50 countries and has several divisions and subsidiaries.
In 2022, its subsidiary Triple Canopy won a 10-year contract to provide security
to the U.S. embassy in Iraq worth an estimated $1.3 billion. It also owns Olive
Group, a British private security and training firm.

In a recent tweet, Kahana shared a screenshot of a presentation dated May 30
describing the proposed pilot, which at the time was slated to begin in July and
focus on Beit Hanoun. Constellis is named as a partner. Haaretz reporter Amos
Harel, while not naming Constellis, said in a recent podcast interview that the
company Israel was considering outsourcing the project to “had apparently
worked with the Americans in Iraq.” Kahana has described the security force
he would work with as “made up of ex-combatants, veterans of elite units from
the USA, England and France. The common denominator of all of them is that
they are not Jewish.”

Kahana has been trying to get the Israeli government’s attention back in
October 2023 he touted a plan to leverage humanitarian aid in order to secure
the release of Israeli hostages. At the time, his plan was rejected by the Israeli
government as “[sounding] like Hamas propaganda stemming from the
pressure they are under.”

In November 2023, Kahana joked about ethnically cleansing Gaza and moving
its population to Jordan, and likened anti-genocide protesters in the US to “the
mice in the tunnels of Gaza.” Referring to footage of a Palestinian child who
arrived at Al-Shifa Hospital having survived an Israeli attack, covered in dust
and blood and trembling uncontrollably, he wrote, “No worries. We are going to
liberate him from Hamas.”

In March, NBC News reported the Israeli government was contemplating
outsourcing aid truck escorts to a private U.S. contractor, stating Israeli officials
indicated it has “approached several security companies already, but declined
to specify which ones.” Kahana posted a link to the article on his Facebook
profile, alongside the comment: “GDC does not get paid by the Israeli taxpayer
✌️🇺🇸.” In the recent interview with Ynet, Kahana claimed the U.S. will bankroll
the project to the tune of $200 million for six months of operations.

After the killing of seven World Central Kitchen workers in successive airstrikes
by the Israeli military in April, Kahana complained that his plan to establish what
he described as a secure corridor into Gaza was not being implemented. “Israel
has had this plan on the table for more than two months. We have had several
meetings at the highest level to present the plan and go over the ideas. The
army was in favor and we have been waiting for the green light, but when we
asked if we could go ahead, the Prime Minister’s Office asked, ‘What’s the
rush?’” he said. Kahana claimed his proposal “was presented to high level
officials of the White House, State Department and Department of Defense. We
did not receive a response to our request for a meeting to discuss and explain
the plan.”

By May, media reports indicated the Israeli government was engaged in talks
with a private American security company, said to employ former soldiers from
elite military units, with the aim of handing the company responsibility for
managing the Rafah crossing. Kahana posted the report on his personal
Facebook account, writing: “No comments 😎.” A few days later he followed up
with an announcement: “I am finally able to share that I will be assisting with
humanitarian supplies for civilians in #Gaza. After 14 years and 5 wars, I am
now in my homeland 🇮🇱. My company has been approved to provide logistics
within Gaza. Hamas, be aware that none of our supplies will be stolen by you!
This is my first and final warning. 😎”

In August, the idea of the Israeli military outsourcing the occupation of Gaza to
private American companies was once again floated, this time around in
relation to the Netzarim corridor, which bisects the Strip. GDC was named as
the firm the Israeli government was considering for the job. On his Facebook
page Kahana proclaimed: “We are on our way to 🇮🇱 Netzarim Corridor 🇺🇸 😎.”

In the aftermath of 9/11, the U.S. government dramatically expanded its use of
private security companies to service its wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Often
portrayed as engaging in humanitarian operations, private security companies
offer hired guns to both governments and the private sector. The U.S. has used
them in CIA and military operations and to guard American and foreign
diplomats and dignitaries.

Blackwater entered Iraq in 2003 under the auspices of guarding humanitarian
convoys and providing security for corporations. The company was then hired
to guard senior U.S. occupation officials. In September 2007, Blackwater
operatives gunned down 17 Iraqi civilians in Baghdad’s Nisour Square, a
massacre which drew global public attention to the burgeoning and secretive
world of private military contracting. Private forces are not subject to the
military justice system and do not fall under a military chain of command. Part
of the pitch for Israel to use private contractors in Gaza would be to argue they
do not constitute an official Israeli occupation force. It also offers Israel the
option of using retired soldiers from the U.S. and other nations to do its bidding
in Gaza.

Kahana has also claimed he was “involved” with a pitch developed by Erik
Prince early in the Gaza war to assist the IDF in flooding underground tunnels in
Gaza with sea water, which scientists warned would render the Strip “unlivable
for up to 100 years.” Prince “asked me to talk to Israelis about the tunnel
situation and his idea,” Kahana told Drop Site, “but the Israelis had no interest to
do so.”

Kahana has repeatedly called Prince “a good friend” and stated “we definitely
share the same security views and our [love] for 🇺🇸🇮🇱🌍.” When it comes to
U.S. politics, however, Prince is a close ally of Donald Trump, while Kahana has
been outspoken in his enthusiasm for Kamala Harris’s candidacy for president.
“It’s about time for a woman to run the world,” he wrote in a Facebook post in
July accompanied by a picture of Harris. “Politically we are 180, I am a
Democrat,” Kahana told Drop Site. But, he added, “I did buy 9 cows from
[Prince’s] wife.”"


Responses:
[442878]


442878


Date: October 22, 2024 at 10:43:38
From: mr bopp, [DNS_Address]
Subject: Re: Businessman Pitching a $200 Million Plan to Deploy Mercenaries to...


international...


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