17 October 2023; MEMO: Nearly 1,000 US citizens and family members have departed Israel on State Department-sponsored charter flights and other transport options since Friday for Europe, a department spokesperson told Reuters yesterday.
The State Department said it had offered more than 4,000 seats on US government-chartered transport by air and sea to US citizens and immediate family but said the flights and other departure options have generally departed at half capacity or less.
The State Department said the US government-facilitated flights to Athens are scheduled to continue from Tel Aviv through at least Thursday.
US airlines have added flights to Athens and boosted the size of planes to accommodate Americans flying from Israel seeking to return home.
The State Department yesterday offered departure for American citizens from Haifa aboard a ship to Cyprus.
The State Department said over 3,000 US citizens have also told the department they have successfully departed Israel and the West Bank in a variety of ways.
The state of Florida and a non-profit group partnered to charter a flight and helped more 270 Americans return from Israel, Governor Ron DeSantis said yesterday, adding additional flights are planned this week.
The State Department added it will “continue to monitor demand from US citizens for assistance in departing Israel on a real-time basis.”
United Airlines UAL.O, American Airlines AAL.O and Delta Air Lines DAL.N all temporarily halted direct flights to Israel.
More than 30 US lawmakers on Friday wrote the three airline CEOs urging them to resume flights to Tel Aviv “as quickly as possible.”
Deputy Secretary of State Richard Verma told airlines last week the US government had received roughly 17,000 inquiries about travel assistance leaving Israel.