Trump's 'take over' of Gaza Strip suggestion rejected by allies
Egypt, Jordan and other American allies in the Middle East have already rejected the idea of relocating more than 2 million Palestinians from Gaza elsewhere in the region.
PTI
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US President Donald Trump and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
DUBAI, 5 FEB
President Donald
Trump's proposal that the United States “take over” the Gaza Strip and
permanently resettle its Palestinian residents was swiftly rejected and
denounced on Wednesday by American allies and adversaries alike.
Trump's suggestion
came at a White House news conference with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who smiled several times as the president detailed a plan to build
new settlements for Palestinians outside the Gaza Strip, and for the US to take
“ownership” in redeveloping the war-torn territory into “the Riviera of the
Middle East.”
“The US will take
over the Gaza Strip, and we will do a job with it too,” Trump said. “We'll own
it and be responsible for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and
other weapons on the site, level the site, and get rid of the destroyed
buildings, level it out, create an economic development that will supply
unlimited numbers of jobs.”
The comments came
amid a fragile ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, during which the militant
group has been turning over hostages in exchange for the release of prisoners
held by Israel.
Egypt, Jordan and other
American allies in the Middle East have already rejected the idea of relocating
more than 2 million Palestinians from Gaza elsewhere in the region.
Saudi Arabia, an
important American ally, weighed in quickly on Trump's expanded idea to take
over the Gaza Strip in a sharply worded statement, noting that its long call
for an independent Palestinian state was a “firm, steadfast and unwavering
position.”
“The kingdom of Saudi
Arabia also stresses what it had previously announced regarding its absolute
rejection of infringement on the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people,
whether through Israeli settlement policies, annexation of Palestinian lands or
efforts to displace the Palestinian people from their land,” the statement
said.
Similarly, Australian
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese told reporters in Canberra, Australia, that his
country has long supported a two-state solution in the Middle East and that
nothing had changed.
“Australia's position
is the same as it was this morning, as it was last year, as it was 10 years
ago,” he said.
Trump has already
made waves — and upset longtime allies — suggesting the purchase of Greenland,
the annexation of Canada and the possible takeover of the Panama Canal. It was
not immediately clear whether the idea of taking over the Gaza Strip was a well
thought out plan, or an opening gambit in negotiations.
Albanese, whose
country is one of the strongest American allies in the Asia-Pacific region,
seemed frustrated to even be asked about the Gaza plan, underscoring that his
policies "will be consistent."
“I'm not going to, as
Australia's prime minister, give a daily commentary on statements by the US
president,” he said. “My job is to support Australia's position.”
New Zealand's Foreign
Ministry said in a statement that its “long-standing support for a two-state
solution is on the record” and added that it, too, “won't be commenting on
every proposal that is put forward.”
Hamas, which sparked
the war with its October 7, 2023, attack on Israel, said Trump's proposal was a
“recipe for creating chaos and tension in the region."
“Instead of holding
the Zionist occupation accountable for the crime of genocide and displacement,
it is being rewarded, not punished,” the militant group said in a statement.
In its attack on
Israel, Hamas killed some 1,200 people, primarily civilians, and took about 250
hostages.
Israel's ensuing air
and ground war has has killed over 47,000 Palestinians, more than half of them
women and children, according to local health authorities who do not say how
many of the dead were fighters. The war has left large parts of several cities
in ruins and displaced around 90 per cent of Gaza's population of 2.3 million
people.
In the US, opposition
politicians quickly rejected Trump's idea, with Democratic Sen Chris Coons
calling his comments "offensive and insane and dangerous and foolish.”
The idea “risks the
rest of the world thinking that we are an unbalanced and unreliable partner
because our president makes insane proposals,” Coons said, noting the irony of
the proposal coming shortly after Trump had moved to dismantle the US Agency
for International Development.
“Why on earth would
we abandon decades of well-established humanitarian programmes around the
world, and now launch into one of the world's greatest humanitarian
challenges?” Coons said.
Democratic Rep. Rashida Tlaib, a Palestinian American member of Congress from Michigan, accused Trump in a social media post of “openly calling for ethnic cleansing” with the idea of resettling Gaza's entire population.
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