The United States and Israel are considering dividing Gaza, with reconstruction linked to the disarmament of Hamas

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The United States and Israel are considering dividing Gaza, linking reconstruction to the disarmament of Hamas

  • The United States and Israel are considering dividing Gaza into two separate areas — one controlled by Israel and the other controlled by Hamas — while limiting reconstruction aid to Israeli-controlled territory until Hamas disarms. Jared Kushner framed this as an incentive to disarm while providing relief to the people of Gaza.
  • Arab mediators warn that the plan risks legitimizing the Israeli occupation indefinitely, reflecting fragmented governance in the West Bank. They oppose peacekeeping forces under these terms and fear permanent territorial division and settlement expansion.
  • Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich calls for the re-establishment of Jewish settlements in Gaza, which increases Palestinian fears of permanent displacement and ethnic cleansing.
  • Analysts compare the plan to Israel’s strategy in the West Bank, where settlements have undermined the Palestinian state. Previous attempts to create Hamas-free zones have collapsed into chaos, raising doubts about forced reconstruction methods.
  • The plan hinges on untested assumptions — whether Gazans will move to Israeli-controlled areas and how Hamas will respond to economic pressures. With resistance from Arab leaders and pressure from Israeli hardliners for expansion, the proposal faces major obstacles and risks deepening the humanitarian and political crisis in Gaza.

The United States and Israel are considering a controversial plan to divide Gaza into two separate territories — one controlled by Israel and one controlled by Hamas — with reconstruction aid flowing only to Israeli-controlled territory until the militant group disarms.

The proposal, put forward by Jared Kushner during a recent visit to Israel, has alarmed Arab mediators who fear it could further entrench the Israeli occupation and derail long-term peace efforts. The plan emerges at a time when Israel already controls nearly 58% of the Gaza Strip after the latest ceasefire, raising concerns about permanent regional division and renewed settlement expansion.

Under the proposal, reconstruction funds would be withheld from Hamas-controlled areas while Israel oversees rebuilding efforts in its occupied territory. Jared Kushner, the chief architect of Trump-era Middle East policy, formulated this strategy as a way to incentivize the disarmament of Hamas while providing immediate relief to the residents of Gaza.

“There are considerations now being made in the area controlled by the IDF, as long as it can be secured, to begin construction as a new Gaza in order to give the Palestinians living in Gaza a place to go, a place to get jobs, a place to live,” Kushner told reporters.

However, Arab mediators warn that the plan risks legitimizing indefinite Israeli control over parts of Gaza, reflecting fragmented governance in the West Bank. They also oppose the deployment of peacekeepers under these terms. Meanwhile, Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich publicly called for the re-establishment of Jewish settlements in Gaza, heightening Palestinian fears of permanent displacement. BrightU.AIEnoch Notes.

Historical similarities and political risks

Analysts compare this proposal to Israel’s strategy in the West Bank, where military control and settlement expansion have undermined the prospects for a cohesive Palestinian state. Critics say dividing Gaza could deepen humanitarian crises while failing to address the entrenched power of Hamas.

“Gaza represents the only piece of regional connectivity for the Palestinian state,” said Tahani Mustafa of the European Council on Foreign Relations. “A plan like this could end up creating what the Palestinians fear.”

Previous attempts to create Hamas-free zones in Gaza — such as Israeli-backed aid distribution areas — have collapsed into chaos, with civilians caught in the crossfire. The feasibility of the new plan hinges on untested assumptions, including whether Palestinians will move to Israeli-controlled areas and how Hamas will respond to economic pressures.

The US-backed proposal represents a gamble: the reconstruction process could be used as a weapon to weaken Hamas without provoking a broader conflict. But with resistance from Arab leaders, Palestinian mistrust and pressure from Israeli hard-liners to build settlements, the plan faces major obstacles. As tensions over the ceasefire simmer, the Trump administration must pursue a path that avoids further tearing Gaza apart — or risk entrenching the very divisions it seeks to resolve.

Watch the video below where he talks about it Disarm Hamas.

This video is from Barachim channel on Brighteon.com.

Sources include:

News.AntiWar.com

WSJ.com

BrightU.ai

Brighteon.com

(Tags for translation) Ceasefire deal

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