The Senate on Tuesday passed a long-delayed $95 billion package with wide bipartisan support after both sides of Capitol Hill have struggled for months to send aid to Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan.
The final vote was 79-18. Fifteen Republicans voted with three Democrats against the bill. Forty-eight Democrats and 31 Republicans voted for the bill.
The legislation next goes to President Joe Biden to sign it into law, who said he would sign the package Wednesday. Its passage is a significant victory for the US president, congressional Democrats and Senate GOP leader Mitch McConnell, who long pushed to send aid to Ukraine even as the right wing of his party increasingly soured on support for Kyiv.
The.US staged military equipment in Poland and Germany a week ago. All they have to do is roll trucks. So don’t be surprised if weapons packages are announced and delivered today or tomorrow. The logistics of the US DOD is outstanding.
IRC the US military is why the world has standardised 20ft/40ft shipping container sizes.
Like, WW2 convoys? Hmm. I don’t think that 20/40ft containers were used in WW2. I remember footage of people loading ships using pre-containerized stuff.
googles
Ah, after that, Korean War. It also sounds like the US military’s use did a lot to promote the use of a standard container size, but theirs was significantly smaller, and it wasn’t the first attempt.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intermodal_container
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conex_box
Then Malcom McLean tried – successfully – to introduce containerization at a large scale in the civilian sector:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcom_McLean
But while there’s a direct line of descent from McLean’s containers to ISO containers, it still wasn’t exactly his size that became the standard:
https://www.inventionandtech.com/content/evolution-box-0
https://www.icontainers.com/us/2019/08/06/history-of-teu-twenty-foot-equivalent-unit/#:~:text=TEU has its roots in,And it was.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malcom_McLean