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America’s plan for Gaza is absurd: The Palestinians don’t want this plan. They rejected it outright during Trump’s first term
The Spectator ^ | 01/23/2026 | Jonathan Sacerdoti

Posted on 01/23/2026 9:57:37 PM PST by SeekAndFind

Donald Trump’s strangely artificial Board of Peace event in Davos on Thursday looked like a Hollywood rendering of an international summit. Everything was too slick, faintly uncanny. Like an AI-generated image, it was photo-real yet failed the most basic human glance test. Too perfect. No wabi-sabi.

The first tell was visual: the set, complete with a crisp new institutional logo: a globe on a shield, flanked by olive branches. It carried the unmistakable whiff of Grok or ChatGPT, but the strangeness went deeper than design. The speeches themselves were weirdly messianic and utopian.

The most peculiar part was the show-within-a-show: a piece of political meta-theatre featuring Marco Rubio, Steve Witkoff, Jared Kushner and a pre-recorded video greeting from Ali Shaath, newly appointed head of the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, the technocratic body intended to run Gaza’s civil administration under the new framework. Like Hamlet’s play-within-a-play, The Murder of Gonzago, this pantomime may yet prove to be the event’s central dramatic device, designed to force an uncomfortable truth into the open. If that sounds far-fetched, stick with me.

The segment, billed as a showcase for Gaza’s reconstruction, unravelled into a series of contradictory and fantastical claims that strained credibility.

Kushner, long associated with the Peace to Prosperity plan from Trump’s first term, once again took centre stage. Despite its wholesale rejection by Palestinians at the time, the plan has been defrosted, reheated and rebranded. Today it is called Phase B of the Trump ‘point plan’. But it is the same meal, just a bit staler.

Undeterred, Kushner radiated optimism. ‘We do not have a Plan B,’ he declared. ‘We have a plan. We signed an agreement.’ He spoke of holding Hamas to its commitment to disarm, planning for what he called ‘catastrophic success’. The concern most normal people have is that the catastrophe will vastly outweigh the success.

He noted, correctly, that roughly 85 per cent of Gaza’s GDP has long come from aid. ‘That’s not sustainable. It doesn’t give these people dignity. It doesn’t give them hope.’ He may be right. Yet he spoke as if Palestinian mainstream politics were not riddled with corruption and the systematic embezzlement of aid. Yasser Arafat died a billionaire. Hamas leaders today are exceptionally wealthy, many living comfortably in Qatar. Palestinian society depends on only one natural resource – victimhood, and is consequently deeply addicted to aid. When the reserves dry up, withdrawal will be brutal.

Still, Kushner promised speed, showing absurd Jetsons style building renders. ‘In the Middle East they build this in three years,’ he said, airily ignoring that such feats of construction are often achieved through brutal migrant slave labour regimes. In ‘New Gaza’, he implausibly promised ‘100 per cent full employment and opportunity for everybody.’ His PowerPoint projected over $10 billion in GDP and average household incomes exceeding $13,000 by 2035. It was absurd.

What renders these claims detached from reality is not only the scale of destruction since October 7th, but the historical record. For years, billions in aid and resources were siphoned away from civilian prosperity and into the Palestinian war economy: tunnel networks, weapons stockpiles, command infrastructure, salaries for fighters and stipends for the families of terrorists. Alongside this sat entrenched corruption, the enrichment of leaders abroad, and the systematic militarisation of what should have been civilian reconstruction.

Against that backdrop, projecting a tripling of Gaza’s GDP and a leap to near-western household incomes within a decade reads less like an economic plan than a childish fantasy. It assumes not merely the physical rebuilding of a shattered territory, but a total transformation of governance, incentives, and security structures that have been absent for decades. Without confronting how aid was weaponised, and without dismantling the culture that turned international generosity into an engine of violence, the Davos numbers are laughable.

‘This really gives the Gazan people an opportunity to live their aspirations,’ Kushner said, as if those aspirations had not already been expressed when Gaza was handed enormous opportunity for growth, peace and self-rule, only for its population to elect a genocidal Islamist jihadist movement that abused and impoverished them on the promise of fighting Jews, and ultimately launched an invasion of Israel, slaughtering civilians in their homes and at a music festival. Perhaps their aspirations are not quite what Kushner imagines.

And that video message from Shaath, set to rousing music: ‘Judge us by our actions. Hold us to clear standards and stand with the people of Gaza as we take responsibility for our future,’ he urged. So we will.

Shaath cited the proposed imminent reopening of the Rafah crossing with Egypt as proof that a new phase had begun. The claim sat uneasily alongside the grand redevelopment promises, given that much of Gaza remains in ruins, littered with unexploded ordnance, with infrastructure destroyed and a large displaced population.

If Shaath is unfamiliar to western audiences, billed simply as a ‘technocrat’ with a background in civil engineering, they might wish to watch his Arabic-language speech from just 11 months ago at a conference titled ‘The Palestine Forum – The Genocidal Israeli War on Gaza: Scenarios for the Day After’. In that address, he presented in Arabic a paper outlining 13 possible post-war outcomes, ranked ‘mathematically’ by probability and desirability.

Ironically, he now heads the body responsible for implementing the very scenario he described as the least likely: ‘moving from crisis to prosperity, President Trump’s project within the framework of the Abraham Accords.’ He characterised Trump’s plan as ‘dangerous talk’, describing it as an attempt to turn catastrophe into prosperity through a so-called ‘new deal’.

Certainly the Palestinians don’t want this plan. They rejected it outright during Trump’s first term, choosing neither peace nor prosperity. They later launched the October 7th invasion as if to confirm their preference, opting once again for the more traditional Palestinian tradition of terrorism and violence. But maybe that disastrous decision changed some minds? Maybe not.

In that same speech, delivered well into the war, Shaath opened with a dedication to wounded Palestinians, invoking the 1925 Arabic poem ‘Nakbat Dimashq’, written in response to the French bombardment of Damascus during the Great Syrian Revolt: ‘For red freedom there is a door, knocked upon by every blood-stained hand,’ he said to the gathered conference.

The reference would have sailed over most western heads, particularly through the patchy simultaneous translation. But it would not have been lost on Arab audiences. It romanticises violent resistance and martyrdom as the path to liberation, equating Israel’s defensive actions in Gaza with French colonial brutality, while erasing the fact that the current devastation followed the October 7th atrocities initiated by Hamas and joined by other factions and civilians. Those crimes were committed against Israeli civilians in undisputed territory. They included mass murder, rape and kidnapping.

The analogy is grotesque. France was an imperial power imposing alien rule for exploitation. Israel is a sovereign democracy defending its existence against terrorist entities embedded within civilian populations. It has no imperial project, only a right to self-defence under international law.

The rhetoric of ‘red freedom’ sanctifies bloodshed. It feeds extremism. It is especially revealing coming from the man now tasked with overseeing a Trump-backed technocratic administration that claims to prioritise demilitarisation, disarmament and non-violent governance. However carefully the Davos video was scripted, it could not erase what Shaath said less than a year ago.

So when Kushner announced the mission statement of the 14 technocrats under Shaath as committing them to ‘cultivating a society rooted in peace, democracy, and justice, operating with the highest standards of integrity and transparency’, concluding with ‘we embrace peace’, it sounded unconvincing.

Of course Trump, Kushner, Rubio and Witkoff know this. They know the Palestinians rejected the plan once and are likely to reject it again. Their aspirations, repeatedly demonstrated, have centred on ‘resistance’ and violence rather than coexistence and peace. Stating this is neither pessimistic nor racist. It is empirical.

So why the spectacle? Why this fairytale fantasy? Trump might as well have promised every Gazan a unicorn to ride into the sunset. One can only hope there is a method here, not just madness.

Perhaps there is. Because running in parallel to the Davos performance is another Trump production: a significant US military buildup in the region, accompanied by blunt warnings that if Hamas does not disarm, ‘they’ll be blown away.’ He repeated the threat in talks with Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, stating that compliance would become clear ‘in the next two or three days, certainly within three weeks.’

And so we return to Hamlet. The inner play exists to expose the truth. Trump loves to put on a show. Without elevating him to Shakespearean genius, one is left wondering whether this extravagantly staged promise of wealth, investment, recognition, and statehood is itself a test. Everything is on offer – a virtual paradise lacking only the 72 virgins. All that is required is compliance.

If it fails, nobody will be able to say he didn’t try.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Gaza; Hamas; News/Current Events; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: bloggers; concerntrolling; gaza; jonathansacerdoti; nonexistentpeople; palestinians; peaceplan; rop; tds; whocares

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1 posted on 01/23/2026 9:57:37 PM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind
America’s plan for Gaza is absurd: The Palestinians don’t want this plan.

Yes, that's the point. The Palestinians don't get a vote.

2 posted on 01/23/2026 10:02:14 PM PST by Right_Wing_Madman
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The Palestinians don’t want this plan …
They do not exist, Johnny. Irrelevant what a nonexistent people who are dedicated to terrorism and genocide want. Next!
3 posted on 01/23/2026 10:05:21 PM PST by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is goings to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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To: Right_Wing_Madman

Trump was pretty clear in saying that all this has only been possible since they took out iran’s nuclear capabilities. This author seems to think that the earthquake that changed everything in the Middle East wouldn’t change what the Palestinians “want”. They may not have wanted Trump’s plan when they thought Iran could save them, but when the choices are to agree to peace or be blown to bits it changes the equation a bit. I don’t know a lot about Middle East stuff but even I can see that this author is an idiot.


4 posted on 01/23/2026 10:11:10 PM PST by butterdezillion
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To: SeekAndFind

It no longer matters what the Palis want. They lost the war.


5 posted on 01/23/2026 10:12:27 PM PST by Spktyr (Overwhelmingly superior firepower and the willingness to use it is the only proven peace solution.)
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To: Right_Wing_Madman

A developed Gaza strip hinders their tunnel making.


6 posted on 01/23/2026 10:13:35 PM PST by stars & stripes forever (Blessed is the nation whose GOD is the LORD. ~ Psalm 33:12)
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To: SeekAndFind

This isn’t about the Palestinians...it never was. It’s about CCP style smart cities which the billionaire class desires for us all. I said it many months ago, we’re all Palestinians. Nothing has changed.


7 posted on 01/23/2026 10:26:33 PM PST by LilOlLady
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To: SeekAndFind

Well, after October 7th, 2023 they don’t get a say anymore.

CC


8 posted on 01/23/2026 10:34:34 PM PST by Celtic Conservative (Heghlu'meH QaQ jajvam!)
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To: Right_Wing_Madman

The Palestinians don’t want any plan that does not include killing all the Jews. Therefore, who cares what they want. This is not for them.


9 posted on 01/23/2026 10:58:37 PM PST by Colorado Doug
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To: SeekAndFind

The Gazans will destroy anything they touch.


10 posted on 01/23/2026 11:03:58 PM PST by UnwashedPeasant (The pandemic we suffer from is not COVID. It is Marxist Democrat Leftism. )
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To: SeekAndFind

I believe the plan is to get rid of them.


11 posted on 01/23/2026 11:04:09 PM PST by roving
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To: SeekAndFind

It doesn’t matter what they want.


12 posted on 01/23/2026 11:15:32 PM PST by ConservativeMind (Trump: Befuddling Democrats, Republicans, and the Media for the benefit of the US and all mankind.)
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To: SeekAndFind

Since they were given a decent place when Israel left the strip and they proceeded to let it go to ruin while crying they were mistreated etc for decades, i can see why they wouldnt want a nicer place. It would mess up their plan to try to continue to appear as victims when they were not and still are not.


13 posted on 01/23/2026 11:53:41 PM PST by b4me (Pray, and let God change you. He knows better than you or anyone else, who He made you to be.)
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To: SeekAndFind




14 posted on 01/23/2026 11:55:17 PM PST by Albion Wilde (Yesterday only comes one time. —Sorrells Pickard)
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To: SeekAndFind

15 posted on 01/24/2026 12:01:09 AM PST by Albion Wilde (Yesterday only comes one time. —Sorrells Pickard)
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