THE AMERICA ONE NEWS
Jun 3, 2025  |  
0
 | Remer,MN
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET 
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge.
Sponsor:  QWIKET: Elevate your fantasy game! Interactive Sports Knowledge and Reasoning Support for Fantasy Sports and Betting Enthusiasts.
back  
topic
Times Of Israel
Times Of Israel
20 Feb 2025


NextImg:Arab leaders to meet Friday, try to agree on Egyptian alternative to Trump’s Gaza plan

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Arab leaders will gather in Saudi Arabia on Friday to counter US President Donald Trump’s plan for American control of Gaza and the expulsion of its inhabitants, diplomatic and government sources said.

The plan stirred rare unity among Arab states which roundly rejected the idea, but they could still disagree over who will govern the enclave and who will pay for reconstruction.

Umer Karim, an expert on Saudi foreign policy, told AFP the summit would be the “most consequential” in decades in relation to the wider Arab world and the Palestinian issue.

Trump provoked Arab outrage when he announced that the United States would “take over the Gaza Strip,” moving 2.4 million Gazans living there to neighboring Egypt and Jordan.

A source close to the Saudi government told AFP that Arab leaders would discuss “a reconstruction plan counter to Trump’s plan for Gaza.”

Meeting with Trump in Washington on February 11, Jordan’s King Abdullah II said Egypt would present a plan for a way forward.

US President Donald Trump (R) meets with King Abdullah II of Jordan during a meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, on February 11, 2025. (Saul Loeb/AFP)

The Saudi source said the talks would discuss “a version of the Egyptian plan” the king mentioned.

Friday’s summit was originally planned for Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Jordan.

However, it has been expanded to include the six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries and the Palestinian Authority.

Reconstruction will be a critical issue at the summit after Trump highlighted this as the key reason for moving its inhabitants out while Gaza’s infrastructure is rebuilt.

Egypt has not yet announced its counter-initiative, but Egyptian former diplomat Mohamed Hegazy described a plan “in three technical phases over a period of three to five years.”

The first would be a six-month “early recovery phase,” said the member of the Egyptian Council for Foreign Affairs, a think tank with strong ties to decision-making circles in Cairo.

“Heavy machinery will be brought in to remove debris, while designated safe zones will be identified within Gaza to temporarily relocate residents,” Hegazy said.

Displaced Palestinians, traveling in vehicles, wait to cross through a security checkpoint at the Netzarim Corridor as they make their way from central Gaza to the northern Gaza Strip, February 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Abdel Kareem Hana)

The second phase will require an international conference to provide details of reconstruction and would focus on rebuilding utility infrastructure, he said.

“The final phase will oversee the urban planning of Gaza, the construction of housing units, and the provision of educational and healthcare services.”

A UN estimate on Tuesday put the cost of rebuilding at more than $53 billion, including more than $20 billion over the first three years.

The last phase would include “launching a political track to implement the two-state solution and so that there is… an incentive for a sustainable truce.”

Umer Karim believes that adopting this plan would require “a degree of Arab unity not seen before in decades.”

One Arab diplomat familiar with the Gulf told AFP: “In the end, the biggest challenge facing the Egyptian plan is how to finance it. Some countries like Kuwait will inject funds, perhaps for humanitarian reasons, but other Gulf states will set specific conditions before any financial transfer.”

Karim said the “Saudis and Emiratis won’t spend any money if [the] Qataris and Egyptians don’t guarantee something on Hamas.”

Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi attends a ceremony at the Presidential palace in Ankara, September 4, 2024. (AP Photo/Francisco Seco)

Egypt’s plan seeks to address the complex issue of postwar oversight for Gaza, which the Hamas terror group has controlled since taking over in a 2007 coup, with “a Palestinian administration that is not aligned with any faction.”

It will comprise “experts” and will not be “factionally affiliated and is politically and legally subordinate to the Palestinian Authority,” Hegazy said.

The Cairo initiative also envisions a Palestinian Authority-affiliated police force supplemented with security forces from Egypt, Arab states and other countries.

Differences remain, however.

Hegazy said that Hamas “will retreat from the political scene in the coming period,” while the Saudi source said Riyadh envisions a Gaza Strip controlled by the Palestinian Authority.

Qatar, a key mediator in the war, believes the Palestinians themselves must decide Gaza’s future.

“I think all regional actors understand that any alternative plan they propose cannot include Hamas in any form as presence of Hamas will make it unpalatable for the US administration and Israel,” Karim said.

“So overall, some things within the Strip have to fundamentally change in order for this plan to at least have a chance.”

However, even if all these obstacles are overcome, the proposal is likely to be rejected out of hand by Israel, whose government has consistently ruled out any Palestinian Authority role in managing Gaza after the war.