Reuters reported Wednesday that "the United States and Israel have discussed the possibility of Washington leading a temporary post-war administration of Gaza, according to five people familiar with the matter," sparking widespread criticism across the globe.
Responses to the reporting on social media included: "Bonkers." "Madness." "Crazy and dangerous idea, besides being illegal."
Under
both the Biden and Trump administrations, the U.S. government has
provided armed and diplomatic support to Israel in the wake of the
Hamas-led October 7, 2023 attack. The Israeli assault over the past 19
months has killed
at least 52,653 Palestinians, with thousands more missing. Survivors
have been repeatedly displaced and are struggling to find food thanks to
an aid blockade.
According to Reuters,
other unnamed nations "would be invited to take part" in the
provisional U.S.-led administration, which "would draw on Palestinian
technocrats but would exclude Islamist group Hamas and the Palestinian
Authority."
As the news agency detailed:
The
sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized
to discuss the talks publicly, compared the proposal to the Coalition
Provisional Authority in Iraq that Washington established in 2003,
shortly after the U.S.-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.
The
authority was perceived by many Iraqis as an occupying force and it
transferred power to an interim Iraqi government in 2004 after failing
to contain a growing insurgency.
Several critics of the reported "high-level" talks also cited the United States' misadventures in Iraq in the early 2000s.
"This
would be a rerun of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, but in
a war-ravaged territory that isn't even a sovereign state and in which
no American official has been allowed to set foot for two decades," said Gregg Carlstrom, Middle East correspondent for The Economist.
"So bonkers, in fact, that whoever is floating this idea for Gaza is
literally comparing it to the CPA in Iraq, an entity which two decades
later remains a byword for waste, corruption, and incompetence."
Alexander Langlois, a contributing fellow at the foreign policy think tank Defense Priorities, quipped:
"Right, because the U.S. occupation of Iraq is certainly the best-case
scenario for Gaza today. Because that went so well the first time. It's
clear Washington has learned nothing, in no small part because it
refuses to actually reflect on such failures."
Journalist Bobby Ghosh said,
"I'm guessing Paul Bremer has pulled on his boots and is waiting by the
phone," a reference to the American diplomat who led the CPA in Iraq.
While the office of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu—a fugitive
of the International Criminal Court whose government also faces a
genocide case at the International Court of Justice over conduct in
Gaza—declined to comment, a spokesperson for U.S. State Department sent Reuters a statement that did not address the news agency's questions.
"We
want peace, and the immediate release of the hostages," the U.S.
spokesperson said, referring to captives taken by Palestinian militants
in October 2023. "The pillars of our approach remain resolute: stand
with Israel, stand for peace."
Earlier this week, Netanyahu's Security Cabinet unanimously approved
Operation Gideon's Chariots, a plan that involves "conquering" Gaza,
occupying the Palestinian territory, and forcibly expelling its
residents to the southern part of the strip.
Israeli Cabinet Minister Ze'ev Elkin suggested Monday that U.S. President Donald Trump
would not object to the plan, claiming, "I don't feel that there is
pressure on us from Trump and his administration—they understand exactly
what is happening here."
Trump in February proposed
a U.S. takeover of Gaza. He said that "we'll own it and be responsible
for dismantling all of the dangerous unexploded bombs and other weapons
on the site, level the site, and get rid of the destroyed
buildings—level it out and create an economic development that will
supply unlimited numbers of jobs and housing for the people of the
area."
In response to Reuters' Wednesday reporting, University of Florida political science professor Michael McDonald nodded to those remarks, saying, "One step closer to Trump's dream of bulldozing Gaza to build Trump resorts."
Some
critics connected the potential plan for Gaza to the Trump
administration's other international endeavors. U.K.-based Jewish Voice
for Labour said: "First Canada, then Greenland, now Palestine. This is what 21st-century imperialism looks like."
Johns Hopkins University historian Eugene Finkel—who was born in Ukraine and grew up in Israel—sarcastically said,
"Because the U.S. does state-building, governance of places destroyed
by U.S. weapons, and reconstruction even more effectively than Israel
does conflict resolution."
"I was skeptical it was possible to
produce something more unhinged than Trump's peace plans for Ukraine,"
Finkel added, "but hey, I've underestimated them."