Trump challenges objections to his plan: Israel will hand us over the Gaza Strip after the war ends
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US President Donald Trump said in a post on the "Truth Social" platform, on Thursday, that Israel will hand over the Gaza Strip to the United States after the end of the fighting, despite the extensive international objections to his plan on the future of the sector, which he announced two days ago.
Trump added: “The Palestinians, like (the leader of the democratic minority in the US Senate), will have already resettlement in more secure and beautiful societies, with new and modern houses in the region, and they will also have the opportunity to live with happiness, safety and freedom.” .
The US President continued: “The United States, in cooperation with the great development teams from all over the world, will start slowly and warn in building what will become one of the greatest and most wonderful development projects of its kind on earth, and the United States soldiers will not be needed, and it will prevail. Stability in the region.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had previously expressed his support for the Trump Plan on Gaza, in which he announced that the United States would control the Strip, and turn it into what he called "Riviera Middle East."
International and regional rejection
The US President's proposal was met with absolute international rejection, as the allies of the United States, including the Europeans, expressed their refusal to propose President Donald Trump that the United States "take over the Gaza Strip and resettle its Palestinian population permanently, and condemned it immediately, considering that Gaza "is the land of the Palestinians, and they must remain in it.
Australia, Ireland, France, Germany, Britain, Spain, Japan and Italy emphasized their support for a two -state solution, rejecting the idea of "displacement" of the Palestinians from their land, which is a major challenge to the Trump administration, which must deal with its allies' fears before its opponents.
The idea also sparked confusion and varying reactions inside the American and even among the main Republican lawmakers, including Senator Lindsay Graham (Republican South Carolina). "We will see what our Arab friends say about it," Graham told reporters. Democrats have been largely opposed to the plan.
It is estimated that the costs of the reconstruction of Gaza may reach $ 100 billion. But the Gulf states, which are a potential source of investment in the reconstruction of the sector, strongly rejects any financing as long as the road to establishing an independent Palestinian state is blocked.
Various international laws
Besides the logistical and material challenges presented by the proposal, the idea is mainly inconsistent with the requirements of international laws and treaties that have been the long -term, which prohibits forcing people to leave and seize their lands.
The United Nations and the highest court in the organization, the International Court of Justice, the Gaza Strip, is part of the Palestinian territories under the Israeli military occupation.
International law prohibits the seizure of lands by force, which is defined as an aggressive act. The United Nations Charter states that "all members refrain from their international relations from the threat to use force and its use against the integrity of the lands of any country or its political independence."
The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 prohibits forced transport or the deportation of protected persons in the occupied territories.