The King of Jordan Abdullah II said, on Wednesday, that he rejects any attempts to include lands and displace the Palestinians, after statements by US President Donald Trump, in which he said that the United States will control the Gaza Strip after resettlement of the Palestinians elsewhere, and will develop the sector economically.
Trump's suggestions have sparked widespread international condemnation, and the United States' allies, including the Europeans, expressed their rejection of the proposal, considering that Gaza is "the land of the Palestinians, and they must remain in it."
The Hashemite Royal Court stated in a publication via "X": "King Abdullah II confirms the need to stop the (Israeli) settlement procedures and reject any attempts to include lands and displace the Palestinians."
King Abdullah, while receiving Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, affirmed the full Jordanian support of the Palestinians, and the Jordanian monarch is scheduled to meet with Trump at the White House on February 11.
Trump said that he would support efforts to permanently "resettle" the Palestinians from the Gaza Strip to places in which they can live without fear of violence, and that he and his aides discuss this possibility with Jordan, Egypt and other countries in the region for Gaza, which entered the endowment agreement. It is in effect on January 19.
In a press conference, Trump stated that the Jordanian monarch, King Abdullah, and Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El -Sisi, will agree to the idea despite their rejection of it, saying that they "will open their hearts and will give us the type of land that we need to accomplish this task and people can live in harmony and peace." .
Trump had urged Jordan and Egypt in late January to receive the residents of the Gaza Strip, after the Israeli war caused him a humanitarian catastrophe.
Egypt, Jordan and other Arab countries reject the idea of transporting Palestinians from Gaza to their countries.
Trump plan to control the Gaza Strip
A senior official in the US administration told Axios, on Wednesday, that the plan, which was presented by President Donald Trump to control the Gaza Strip, on Tuesday, was the suggestion of Trump himself, and continued to think about it for at least two months, after he reached the conclusion That "no one else has any new ideas for Gaza."
US officials added, "The phrases that Trump used to explain his plan were previously studied, and reflects the ideas he put forward to some of the employees and individuals in particular." "Axius" considered that "there are two ways to look at President Trump's declaration", which he described as "epic, historical and unexpectedly shockingly", first, considering the matter as a threat or a trick to gain influence in the Middle East, "the declaration was similar to Some of the customs tariffs imposed on Canada and Mexico.
As for the second method, it is the concerns of Trump himself, so that the American president seeks to reach a major peace agreement in the Middle East, with his belief that Gaza will be hell for upcoming contracts, and its real intrigues on the development of coastal lands.