Egypt lobbies against Trump plan to empty Gaza of Palestinians as Israel prepares for it
By SAMY MAGDY
February 6, 2025
CAIRO (AP) — Israel says it has begun preparations for
the departure of Palestinians from Gaza despite international rejection of President
Donald Trump’s plan to empty the territory of its population. Egypt has
launched a diplomatic blitz behind the scenes against the proposal, warning it
would put its peace deal with Israel at risk, officials said.
Trump administration officials have tried to dial back aspects of the proposal after it was widely rejected internationally, saying the relocation of Palestinians would be
temporary. But officials have provided few details.
In a social media post Thursday, Trump said that the
Palestinians would be “resettled in far safer and more beautiful communities,
with new and modern homes,” after which Israel would turn Gaza over to the
United States. No U.S. soldiers would be needed for his plan to redevelop it,
he said. Hours later, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio insisted again that
the relocations would be temporary, with Palestinians living “somewhere else in
the interim,” while Gaza is cleaned up and rebuilt.
Palestinians have vehemently rejected Trump’s
proposal, fearing that Israel would never allow refugees to return. Egypt has warned that an expulsion of Palestinians
would destabilize the region and undermine its peace treaty with Israel, a
cornerstone of stability and American influence for decades.
Saudi Arabia, another key U.S. ally, has also rejected
any mass transfer of Palestinians and says it will not normalize relations with
Israel — a key goal of the Trump administration — without the creation of a
Palestinian state that includes Gaza.
Trump and Israeli officials have depicted the proposed
relocation from war-ravaged Gaza as voluntary, but the Palestinians have
universally expressed their determination to remain in
their homeland.
Trump and Israeli officials have not said how they
would respond if Palestinians refused to leave. But Human Rights Watch and
other groups say the plan, if implemented, would amount to “ethnic cleansing,”
the forcible relocation of the civilian population of an ethnic group from a
geographic area.
Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said Thursday
that he has ordered the military to make preparations to facilitate the
emigration of large numbers of Palestinians from Gaza through land crossings as
well as “special arrangements for exit by sea and air.”
There were no immediate signs of such preparations on
the ground.
Egypt wages a behind-the-scenes campaign
Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi has not
publicly responded to Trump’s stunning proposal that most of Gaza’s population
of 2.3 million Palestinians be relocated and the United States take charge of
rebuilding the territory. Israel’s 15-month campaign against the militant Hamas
group had reduced large parts of Gaza to
rubble before a
fragile ceasefire took hold last month.
But in a statement Thursday, the Egyptian government
rejected efforts to move Palestinians from Gaza as a “blatant violation” of
international law that could undercut ceasefire talks and threaten Middle East
relations.
“This behavior provokes the return of hostilities and
poses risks on the entire region and the foundations of peace,” the statement
said.
Egyptian officials, speaking on condition of anonymity
to discuss closed-door talks, said Cairo has made clear to the Trump
administration and Israel that it will resist any such proposal, and that the
peace deal with Israel — which has stood for nearly half a century — is at
risk.
One official said the message has been delivered to
the Pentagon, the State Department and members of the U.S. Congress. A second
official said it has also been conveyed to Israel and its Western European
allies, including Britain, France and Germany.
A Western diplomat in Cairo, also speaking anonymously
because the discussions have not been made public, confirmed receiving Egypt’s
message of its strong opposition through multiple channels. The diplomat said
Egypt was very serious and viewed the plan as a threat to its national
security.
The diplomat said Egypt rejected similar proposals
from the Biden administration and European countries early in the war, which
was sparked by Hamas’ Oct. 7, 2023 attack into southern Israel. The earlier
proposals were broached privately, while Trump announced his plan at a White
House press conference alongside Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
Hamas, which still rules most of Gaza, has repeatedly
condemned Trump’s proposal. On Thursday it said that any U.S. takeover of Gaza
would be considered an occupation, implying that the militant group would
respond with armed resistance. The group has yet to draw any connection between
its objections to Trump’s proposal and the ongoing ceasefire. It’s unclear if
it will have any impact on the next release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian
prisoners, set for Saturday.
US officials scale back Trump’s proposal
When Trump unveiled his proposal, he said he wanted to
“permanently” resettle most of Gaza’s population in other countries, allowing
the U.S. to rebuild it as a “Riviera of the Middle East” for all people.
Egyptian officials said their government does not
believe the Palestinians need to be relocated for reconstruction to proceed and
is committed to the creation of a Palestinian state in Gaza, the West Bank and
east Jerusalem, territories Israel seized in the 1967 Mideast war.
Israel’s government is opposed to Palestinian
statehood and has said it will maintain open-ended security control over both
Gaza and the occupied West Bank. Israel annexed east Jerusalem in a move not
recognized by most of the international community and considers the entire city
its capital.
Last week, Egypt hosted a meeting of top diplomats
from Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates — which was the
driving force behind the 2020 Abraham Accords Trump brokered with Israel. All
five Arab nations rejected the transfer of Palestinians out of Gaza or the West
Bank.
In an editorial on Thursday, Egypt’s main state-run
daily, Al-Ahram, warned that “the Arab countries’ independence, their peoples’
unity and their territorial integrity are under grave threat.”
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