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The Washington Times Online Edition

Military brings in aid for Georgia

A displaced woman pauses outside the civil registry in Tbilisi on Friday where hundreds lined up to receive humanitarian aid. Marco Longari/AFP/Getty ImagesA displaced woman pauses outside the civil registry in Tbilisi on Friday where hundreds lined up to receive humanitarian aid. Marco Longari/AFP/Getty Images

The Pentagon has flown 86 tons of humanitarian supplies into the Georgian capital of Tbilisi on two C-17 and two C-130 aircraft as of Friday, a top military official said.

The humanitarian aid — delivered through what military officials are calling a “sustained air bridge” — has taken the form of cots, sleeping bags, blankets and 1,200 pounds of antibiotics, said Rear Adm. Steven Romano, U.S. European Command Director of Logistics.

He said medical supplies such as splints, bandages and field examination tables had also been transported.

Adm. Romano said he is in close contact with a U.S. advanced assessment team currently on the ground in Georgia to find critical-need spots and access security.

Information from that team, as well as from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the State Department and the government of Georgia will determine the content of future cargo lifts, he said. He said U.S. troops were not handing out aid in the country, only transferring cargo to officials from Georgia and the other two U.S. agencies for distribution.

The supplies are being drawn from a State Department warehouse located near Ramstein Air Base in Germany.

Adm. Romano said officials are working on other options, including the possibility of ferrying supplies via naval ships into Georgia’s Black Sea ports, and making use of pre-positioned ships in the Mediterranean.

The World Food Program is currently assisting the government of Georgia with food delivery.

But Adm. Romano said the Pentagon is ready to coordinate requests for rations and other food commodities. Thus far, he said, the Georgian government has not asked the Defense Department for food.

The first relief flights landed in Georgia 96 hours after the beginning of the war, he noted, adding that an average of two C-130 cargo planes depart from Ramstein each day.

“We have adequate capacity to sustain this effort into the weeks to come,” he said, noting that he anticipates “the scope of the operation and need to grow,” based on news reports and feedback from officials on the ground.

He praised cooperation between all parties involved and said no problems have emerged thus far.

Currently, flights are only landing in the Tbilisi airport, which is open and still serving some commercial airlines, he said, adding that Russia has pledged not to target U.S. humanitarian flights.

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