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[🇺🇸] Board of Peace
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Who has been invited to be on Trump's Gaza boards?

AFP Washington, United States
Updated: 19 Jan 2026, 16: 28

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A handout photograph released by Egypt’s State Information Service shows Ali Shaath (C), head of the new Palestinian technocratic committee for administering the Gaza Strip, posing with its members during the inaugural meeting of 'National Committee for the Administration of Gaza' (NCAG), in Cairo on 18 January 2026. AFP

US President Donald Trump's administration has reached out to various figures around the world to sit on a so-called "Board of Peace" and related entities meant to oversee governance and reconstruction in postwar Gaza.

The White House said there would be a main board, chaired by Trump himself, a Palestinian committee of technocrats meant to govern the war-wracked territory, and a second "executive board" that appears designed to have a more advisory role.

Here is the list of people involved so far in the various entities:

Confirmed by the White House

Board Of Peace

The White House says this body will focus on issues such as "governance capacity-building, regional relations, reconstruction, investment attraction, large-scale funding and capital mobilization".

US President Donald Trump, chair

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio


Steve Witkoff, Trump's special negotiator

Jared Kushner, Trump's son-in-law

Tony Blair, former UK prime minister

Marc Rowan, billionaire US financier

Ajay Banga, World Bank president

Robert Gabriel, loyal Trump aide on the National Security Council

National Committee for The Administration Of Gaza

This body, made up of technocrats, will "oversee the restoration of core public services, the rebuilding of civil institutions, and the stabilization of daily life in Gaza".

Ali Shaath, former Palestinian Authority deputy minister (head of committee)

Gaza Executive Board

This entity is meant to "support effective governance" and deliver services for the people of Gaza.

Steve Witkoff

Jared Kushner

Tony Blair

Marc Rowan

Nickolay Mladenov, Bulgarian diplomat

Sigrid Kaag, UN humanitarian coordinator for Gaza

Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan

Ali Al-Thawadi, Qatari diplomat

General Hassan Rashad, director of Egypt's intelligence agency

Reem Al-Hashimy, Emirati minister

Yakir Gabay, Israeli billionaire

Leaders who said they were invited to join

Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama

Argentine President Javier Milei

Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney

Cypriot President Nikos Christodoulides

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi

Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni

Jordanian King Abdullah II

Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif

Paraguayan President Santiago Pena

Romanian President Nicusor Dan

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan​
 
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Trump to charge $1b for ‘peace board’ membership
Agence France-Presse . Washington 20 January, 2026, 03:44

US president Donald Trump’s government has asked countries to pay $1 billion for a permanent spot on his ‘Board of Peace’ aimed at resolving conflicts, according to US media reports.

The White House has asked various world leaders to sit on the board, chaired by Trump himself, including Russian President Vladimir Putin, Hungarian premier Viktor Orban and Canada’s Mark Carney.

Member countries — represented on the board by their head of state — would be allowed to join for three years, or longer if they contributed more than $1 billion within the first year, according to Bloomberg, which first reported the sum.

‘Each Member State shall serve a term of no more than three years from this Charter’s entry into force, subject to renewal by the Chairman,’ stated the board’s draft charter obtained by Bloomberg and other media.

‘The three-year membership term shall not apply to Member States that contribute more than USD $1,00,00,00,000 in cash funds to the Board of Peace within the first year of the Charter’s entry into force.’

The board was originally conceived to oversee the rebuilding of Gaza, but its charter, widely cited by US media, does not appear to limit its role to the Palestinian territory.

The White House said there would be a main board, a Palestinian committee of technocrats meant to govern the war-wracked territory, and a second ‘executive board’ that appears designed to have a more advisory role.

‘The Board of Peace is an international organisation that seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict,’ the charter says.

The document was sent to dozens of world leaders who were invited to join the board, the Times of Israel reported.

It appears to take a swipe at international institutions such as the United Nations, saying that the board should have ‘the courage to depart from approaches and institutions that have too often failed.’

Trump has regularly criticised the United Nations and announced this month that his country will withdraw from 66 global organisations and treaties — roughly half affiliated with the UN.

Membership of the board would be ‘limited to States invited to participate by the Chairman’, according to the full draft charter published by the Times of Israel.

Trump would have the power to remove member states from the board, subject to a veto by two-third of members, and choose his replacement should he leave his role as chairman.

The ‘Board of Peace’ began to take shape on Saturday as the leaders of Egypt, Turkey, Argentina and Canada were asked to join.

Trump also named his secretary of state Marco Rubio, former British prime minister Tony Blair, and senior negotiators Jared Kushner and Steve Witkoff as members.

Israel has objected to the line-up of a ‘Gaza executive board’ to operate under the body, which includes Turkish foreign minister Hakan Fidan and Qatari diplomat Ali Al-Thawadi.​
 
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Pakistan to join Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’ on Gaza, says foreign office

REUTERS
Published :
Jan 21, 2026 21:04
Updated :
Jan 21, 2026 21:04

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Pakistan will join US President Donald Trump’s “Board of Peace” to help achieve lasting peace in Gaza, its foreign ministry said on Wednesday.

Pakistan hoped “concrete steps will be taken towards the implementation of a permanent ceasefire” as well as to boost aid and Gaza’s reconstruction, the ministry said in a statement.

The announcement came after Pakistani army chief Field Marshal Asim Munir flew to Davos, three Pakistani officials told Reuters.

Munir, along with Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, is likely to see Trump, they said.

They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to disclose the information to the media.

Pakistan army’s public relations wing did not respond to a Reuters request for comment.

The board, set up late last year under Trump’s Gaza plan, is aimed at resolving global conflicts.

Some countries have reacted with caution to the initiative, although the US has said that over 20 countries have agreed to join so far.

Pakistan was invited by Trump to join the board, the ministry said.​
 
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What is Trump’s ‘Board of Peace’?
AFP Brussels, Belgium
Published: 21 Jan 2026, 11: 40

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US President Donald Trump AFP file photo

US President Donald Trump’s government has asked countries to pay up to $1 billion for a permanent spot on his “Board of Peace” aimed at resolving conflicts, according to its charter seen by AFP.

The board was originally conceived to oversee the rebuilding of Gaza, but the charter does not appear to limit its role to the Palestinian territory.

What will it do?

The Board of Peace will be chaired by Trump, according to its founding charter.

It is “an international organization that seeks to promote stability, restore dependable and lawful governance, and secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict”, reads the preamble of the charter sent to countries invited to participate.

It will “undertake such peace-building functions in accordance with international law”, it adds.


Who will run it?

Trump will be chairman but also “separately serve” as representative of the United States.

“The chairman shall have exclusive authority to create, modify or dissolve subsidiary entities as necessary or appropriate to fulfil the Board of Peace’s mission,” the document states.

He will pick members of an executive board to be “leaders of global stature” to “serve two-year terms, subject to removal by the chairman”.

The charter says the chairman can be replaced only in case of “voluntary resignation or as a result of incapacity”.

A US official confirmed that Trump can keep the chairmanship, even after leaving the White House, “until he resigns it”, although a future US president can appoint a different US representative.

Who can be a member?

Member states must be invited by the US president, and will be represented by their head of state or government.

Each member “shall serve a term of no more than three years”, the charter says.

But “the three-year membership term shall not apply to member states that contribute more than USD $1,000,000,000 in cash funds to the Board of Peace within the first year of the charter’s entry into force”, it adds.

The US official said that membership itself “does not carry any mandatory funding obligation beyond whatever a state or partner chooses to contribute voluntarily”.

The board will convene annual meetings with decisions by a majority vote, with the chairman breaking any tie.

Who’s on the executive board?

The executive board will be chaired by Trump and include seven members:

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio

Steve Witkoff, Trump’s special negotiator

Jared Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law

Tony Blair, former UK prime minister

Marc Rowan, billionaire US financier

Ajay Banga, World Bank president

Robert Gabriel, loyal Trump aide on the National Security Council

Which countries are invited?

Dozens of countries and leaders have said they have received an invitation, including close US allies but also adversaries.

China has been invited and both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, despite Russia’s ongoing invasion of Ukraine.

A number of governments immediately said they would join. Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, a nationalist who is Trump’s most ardent supporter in the European Union, is in, as is the United Arab Emirates, a close US partner.

Canada said it would take part, but explicitly ruled out paying the $1 billion fee for permanent membership.

Who won’t be involved?

Longtime US ally France has indicated it will not join. The response sparked an immediate threat from Trump to slap sky-high tariffs on French wine.

Zelensky said it would be “very hard” to be a member of a council alongside Russia, and diplomats were “working on it”.

Britain echoed the sentiment, saying it was “concerned” that Putin had been invited.

“Putin is the aggressor in an illegal war against Ukraine, and he has shown time and time again he is not serious about peace,” said a Downing Street spokesperson.

The charter says the board enters into force “upon expression of consent to be bound by three States”.​
 
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Trump to unveil 'Board of Peace' at Davos after Greenland backtrack

AFP Davos, Switzerland
Published: 22 Jan 2026, 13: 19

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US President Donald Trump attends the 56th annual World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland, 21 January, 2026. Reuters

US President Donald Trump will show off his new "Board of Peace" and meet Ukraine's leader at Davos on Thursday -- burnishing his claim to be a peacemaker a day after backing off his own threats against Greenland.

Trump abruptly announced on Wednesday that he was scrapping tariffs against Europe and ruling out military action to take Greenland from Denmark, partially defusing a crisis which has shaken the meeting of global elites.

On his second day at the Swiss ski resort, Trump will seek to promote the "Board of Peace", his controversial body for resolving international conflicts, with a signing ceremony for the organisation's charter.

The fledgling board boasts a USD 1 billion price tag for permanent membership and Trump has invited leaders including Russia's Vladimir Putin, Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu and Hungary's Viktor Orban to join.

"I think it's the greatest board ever formed," Trump said Wednesday as he met Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi, another of the leaders who have agreed to join.

The launch of the board comes against the backdrop of Trump's frustration at having failed to win the Nobel Peace Prize, despite his disputed claim to have ended eight conflicts.

Originally meant to oversee the rebuilding of Gaza after the war between Hamas and Israel, the board's charter does not limit its role to the Strip and has sparked concerns that Trump wants it to rival the United Nations.

Key US allies including France and Britain have expressed skepticism but others have signed up, particularly in the Middle East where Trump-friendly Saudi Arabia, and Qatar have agreed to join.

About 35 world leaders have committed so far out of the 50 or so invitations that went out, a senior Trump administration official told reporters on Wednesday.

Trump also said on Wednesday that Putin had agreed to join -- despite the Kremlin so far saying it was still studying the invite.

'Framework of a future deal'

The inclusion of Russian president Putin has caused particular concern among US allies, but especially in Ukraine as it seeks an end to Moscow's nearly four-year-old invasion.

Trump said he was due to hold talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky after the "Board of Peace" meeting as difficult negotiations for a ceasefire in the Ukraine war continue.

At Davos on Wednesday, Trump said Russia and Ukraine would be "stupid" not to reach a peace deal in the conflict that he said he could solve within a day of taking office a year ago.

Trump repeated his oft-stated belief that Putin and Zelensky were close to a deal, although he has veered between blaming one or the other for the lack of a ceasefire so far.

"I believe they're at a point now where they can come together and get a deal done. And if they don't, they're stupid -- that goes for both of them," said the US president.

Trump has long been a skeptic of US support for Ukraine and says that it is now up to NATO and Europe to back Kyiv. But his belief that he has a personal connection with Putin has not brought an end to the war so far.

The US leader's roving special envoy, businessman Steve Witkoff, is set to travel to Moscow from Davos with Trump's son-in-law Jared Kushner and hold talks with Putin on Thursday.

Zelensky has meanwhile voiced fears that Trump's push to seize Greenland could divert focus away from Russia's invasion of his country.

Trump however said late Wednesday he had reached a "framework of a future deal" after meeting NATO chief Mark Rutte, and that he would therefore waive tariffs scheduled to hit European allies on 1 February.

Rutte told AFP in Davos that the meeting had been "very good" but that there was "still a lot of work to be done" on Greenland.

Trump insists the mineral-rich Arctic island is vital for US and NATO security against Russia and China.​
 
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Trump’s board of peace: dystopia in motion

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Counterpunch/Marco Zuppone

WHILE the sheer pomposity, Trumpian megalomania and painfully paradoxical context surrounding the so-called ‘Board of Peace’ (BoP) might tempt some to dismiss it as mere spectacle or farce, its criminal, inhumane and hegemonic nature makes it far too dangerous to ignore.

Last week, Trump and his new, thuggish boys’ club of heads of state publicly celebrated the launch of the Board at the World Economic Forum in Davos. Its hypocrisy was inadvertently underscored by Elon Musk — Trump’s on-again, off-again ally — when he quipped onstage that one might call it the Board of ‘p-i-e-c-e,’ a venture devoted to claiming ‘a little piece of Greenland, a little piece of Venezuela,’ to which his interviewer, Larry Fink, billionaire CEO of BlackRock, responded with cheer: ‘We got one.’ Only a room filled with the world’s tech and business elite could find this funny.

In the week since, people of conscience around the world have been left to reckon with what may come of this brazen proclamation of a Trumpified world order. In particular, the BoP’s presentation of plans for ‘New Gaza’ offered stark clarity about the greed-driven intentions Trump, his inner circle and their Israeli billionaire partners seek to pursue, while raising a fundamental question as to how such a project of colonization and land theft could claim any legal basis at all, let alone a moral one.

As it stands, the BoP charter elevates Trump to a position akin to a global dictator for life, unchecked — on paper — by any external mechanisms of accountability or transparency. Acting as permanent chairman, chief executive and controlling shareholder of the organization, Trump has declared that he holds absolute veto power, while retaining complete discretion over the potential multibillion-dollar slush fund generated through permanent member fees. In keeping with his long record of felonies and fraud, all budgets, financial accounts, or disbursements the BoP deems ‘necessary’ to carry out its sweeping mission are subject only to the so-called ‘institutions of controls or oversight mechanisms’ designed by the very same Executive Board.

A few invited world leaders, mostly from the EU, have done little more than politely decline their invitations. While they have not yet bent the knee to Trump in this mobster’s reality-show version of U.S. imperial power in action, this has not stopped those same governments from endorsing the other ‘peaceful actions’ Trump is poised to pursue under the guise of BoP authority. These include the kidnapping of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro and the seizure of Venezuelan oil; the execution of dozens of extrajudicial boat strikes that have killed more than one hundred people in the Caribbean; threats of war and the promotion of dangerous regime-change fantasies in Iran and Cuba; and support for his complete takeover of occupied Palestine through U.N. Security Council Resolution 2803. That resolution effectively granted Trump authority in Gaza by endorsing his 20-point Gaza peace plan and welcoming the BoP as a transitional governing body. Thus far, Greenland remains the only red line EU states have managed to articulate.

Despite some rejections, other governments have gone ahead and accepted their invitations for a free three-year membership. The participation of Israel’s wanted genocidaire-in-chief, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, should serve as the clearest red flag that this organization has no interest in even pretending to care about the lives of the Palestinian people or any standard of international law. Netanyahu could not even fly to Davos to attend the BoP’s self-appointed pomp and circumstance for fear of being arrested as a wanted war criminal.

Other beacons of democracy and world peace, eager to lend legitimacy to the BoP, include Trump’s own ‘favorite dictator,’ Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi; Argentina’s scandal-prone, right-wing President Javier Milei; ‘Europe’s last dictator,’ Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko; Netanyahu’s idea of a ‘moral conscience,’ Albanian President Edi Rama; and Hungary’s model in authoritarianism, Viktor Orbán. Leaders from Arab states — including Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan and Qatar — have also joined and will presumably stand alongside Trump and the Executive Board to help oversee and quietly endorse, ‘New Gaza.’

Their participation set the stage for Davos, where none other than Jared Kushner delivered the first public presentation of an investment plan contingent upon the ethnic cleansing and erasure of a national Palestinian identity. Kushner, Trump’s son-in-law and a member of the BoP ‘Executive Board,’ has long served as the self-styled ‘master planner’ of transforming Gaza into a prime real estate opportunity. He has a track record of articulating his absolute disregard for Palestinian life, describing the besieged Gaza Strip in February 2024 as ‘very valuable…waterfront property.’

Kushner began his chilling slideshow by urging skeptical investors to ‘just calm down for 30 days,’ declaring, ‘the war is over. Let’s work together.’ Eager to move on to their real business of ‘peace,’ Kushner appeared wholly willing to ignore the ongoing forced starvation, imprisonment, systemic torture, murder and displacement of Palestinians across the occupied territories. Since the supposed ‘ceasefire’ in October 2025, the Israeli military has killed at least 477 Palestinians in Gaza.

Trump has also failed to address Israel’s continued ban on dozens of international humanitarian and non-governmental organizations, a policy that has deliberately denied life-saving aid and medical care to the region while newborn babies continue to die of hypothermia. Instead, Kushner outright lied about the current scale of Israel’s designed humanitarian catastrophe, claiming that ‘100 per cent of the food needs are met’ and that ‘the cost of needs has gone down,’ before unironically describing the administration’s role as ‘the largest humanitarian effort into a war zone that anyone’s been able to tell us about.’ Meanwhile, as the conference unfolded, Israeli forces bulldozed the UN Refugee headquarters in East Jerusalem and the Israeli

Knesset voted by an overwhelming majority to annex the entirety of the West Bank.

Amid the distortions and denials of reality, Kushner did allow the logic of the project to surface when he identified the architect behind the purported $25 billion master plan for Gaza: Yakir Gabay, whom he described as “one of the most successful real estate developers and brilliant people I know.” Gabay is an Israeli billionaire and international real estate tycoon with close familial ties to the Israeli government. Reports also indicate that he has participated in efforts to pressure Columbia University administrators to suppress student protests.

Much like Kushner, a recent article by the editor-in-chief of The Jerusalem Post, described Gabay as having been eager to craft a plan for “New Gaza” from the very first weeks of Israel’s prolonged assault on the densely populated region:

“October 7, [Gabay] tends to say, woke him to action. [Gabay] thought: This time, my capabilities can change the face of reality…Other businesspeople heard about his work a year and a half ago. The White House had asked him to develop something even during Joe Biden’s term. He has good relationships with Tony Blair and Kushner and when Trump won the elections, it became easier to push the issue.”

On the whole, Kushner’s “New Gaza” presentation made no attempt to acknowledge a Palestinian state, recognize Palestinian self-determination, nor address Israeli occupation or the implications of Gaza’s ‘reconstruction’ for the other occupied Palestinian territories. Instead, the eerily bizarre AI-generated slideshow of skyscrapers, oil rigs and industrial complexes offered only a glimpse into the twisted billionaire fantasy that Kushner’s inner circle — including figures like Gabay — has sought to merge with Zionist imaginaries.

The only part of Kushner’s presentation that even acknowledged Palestinians was a single slide on “Palestinian-led demilitarization.” Beyond this ominous token reference, the narrative repeatedly circled back to framing Gaza as ‘an amazing investment opportunity’ to the room full of multi-millionaires and billionaires.

Recent reporting from Drop Site News has confirmed and expanded upon this language, revealing ‘Resolution No. 2026/1,’ an unsigned State Department document from December 2025 that declares the Board of Peace aims to transform Gaza into a ‘deradicalised and demilitarized terror-free zone.’

Here, ‘deradicalisation’ functions as a catch-all term to delegitimize resistance and criminalize opposition to Israeli occupation — a legal right under international law. Palestinians who maintain their political consciousness, national identity, or will for self-determination and who refuse to normalize occupation, are almost certain to be labelled ‘terrorists’ or deemed insufficiently ‘deradicalised.’ Those who take up arms to defend their people against some of the world’s most heavily armed and nuclear powers risk being denied existence in their own lands — murdered or turned away by the very architects of genocide who now claim to bring “peace.” Access to basic rights is made contingent on surrendering political and economic agency, including abandoning a historically rooted cultural identity of resistance under occupation, forsaking traditional livelihoods and subordinating the desire to shape the future of the land to whatever ‘economic opportunities’ BoP members deem investible.

The document further states that only those who ‘support and act consistently’ to establish a ‘deradicalised, terror-free Gaza that poses no threat to its neighbors’ may participate in governance, reconstruction, economic development, or humanitarian assistance. It also bars any individuals or organizations the Board deems to have ‘supported or demonstrated a history of collaboration, infiltration, or influence with or by Hamas or other terror groups’ — a sweeping allegation Israel has long weaponized without evidence.

In practice, such standards mean that anyone who stands in firm solidarity with Palestinians, including international NGOs that seek to hold Israel to even minimal standards of accountability, will likely be barred from operating in Gaza. This has already become an entrenched and worsening reality since October 2023. What the BoP presents as a security framework is, in essence, a blueprint for controlling Palestinian movement, erasing any viable possibility of a Palestinian state and ultimately, advancing ethnic cleansing, while preventing humanitarian organizations from participating in any meaningful process of reconstruction or the delivery of aid. A framework that insists ‘no one will be forced to leave Gaza’ — as if forced removal were ever legitimate — while simultaneously conditioning access to aid, resources and even limited political participation on compliance with what Trump and his confidants dictate, is not a framework in which any meaningful shred of freedom or dignity can exist.

In essence, Trump now supposedly wields full legislative, executive and judicial control over the future of Gaza. He alone, along with his board of resort profiteers — who would hastily clear away the rubble burying the bodies of erased bloodlines and the remnants of mosques, churches, hospitals and schools — will have complete authority over how surviving Palestinians live, how they are governed and who may participate in decision-making. Only at the very bottom of the BoP’s tyrannical hierarchy sits a so-called ‘technocratic committee,’ nominally including members of the Palestinian Authority. Its role appears purely advisory, permitted to exist only insofar as it appeases Trump and aligns with his agenda. There is little indication that it will serve, or even slightly represent, the people it claims to speak for.

The development is ultimately so jarring, so rooted in supremacist ideologies and so flagrantly opposed to basic principles of sovereignty and human rights that it has few historical parallels. The closest comparison seems to be the gruesome reign of Belgian King Leopold II.

Those who participate in this process, including figures such as World Bank President Ajay Banga, lend legitimacy to a project that advances a perverse vision and a chapter of history that is not inevitable. Collaboration in the name of “reconstruction and development of Gaza” for a project so morally and legally corrupt is not a pragmatic compromise — it is active participation in a plan that has no place in the world. The human cost of this complicity is impossible to ignore.

The BoP plan also offers no conception of justice, reparations, or accountability for Israeli terror. Its version of “peace” is imposed through state violence to silence, control and force Palestinians into submission. It is a project that raises skyscrapers for Western elites atop mass graves, without including, or even acknowledging, the Palestinians, its architects have killed and displaced. It relies too on the pathetic inaction of the overwhelming majority of UN member states.

Much remains unknown about what is immediately required to take a single step toward ‘peace’ in the region: if and when Palestinians may finally find reprieve from Israeli bombardment, whether the Rafah crossing will actually open, what will become of finding and returning the bodies of loved ones buried under the rubble, whether human rights organizations or journalists will even be permitted to document the reality–and work safely–on the ground, if displaced Palestinians will ever be allowed to return to Gaza and crucially, whether other states will intervene. What is clear, however, is the sheer evil of this project.

Following Kushner’s presentation, many have rightfully said that if this BoP monstrosity were fictional, it would be so dark it would border on being unbelievable. And yet it is profoundly real: a greed-soaked plan dependent on mass murder and land theft, driven by men so wealthy and entitled that they believe they can escape accountability while reaping billions in profit in the process.

World leaders have long entrenched impunity and rewarded the most atrocious US-Israeli war crimes and crimes against humanity, especially over the past two and a half years. Yet the Board’s ambitions — laid out in a charter that mirrors the UN and spans what Trump calls ‘the whole region of the world’ — reveal a danger that stretches far beyond Palestine. The very consideration of such an inhumane, corrupt and cruel project is a threat to humanity. And still — precisely because of the chaos, confusion and sheer audacity of their plans — this dystopian vision for ‘New Gaza’ is not inevitable. Those with political and economic power must firmly reject and actively work to rein in this Orwellian BoP. If any entity requires immediate disarmament and deradicalisation, it is Trump and his so-called Executive Board.

Counterpunch.org, February 6. Julia Norman is an independent writer and researcher from Los Angeles, California.​
 
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