Trump Gaza plan: Blair joins the vultures feeding on a Palestinian Holocaust
4 September 2025
https://www.middleeasteye.net/opinion/trump-blair-chilling-plan-gaza-no-room-palestinian-holocaust
After nearly two years of genocide, western leaders
are discussing plans to build Dubai-style 'mega-projects' atop Israel's killing
field.
Nearly 18 years have passed since Tony Blair, then
Middle East envoy, presented a 34-page document that outlined a “corridor for
peace and prosperity”, stretching from the Red Sea to the occupied Golan
Heights.
The Blair plan envisaged an agro-industrial park near Jericho
in the occupied West Bank to facilitate the transportation of goods to the Gulf
via Jordan. Another industrial park, or “quick impact project”,
would have been created in Tarqumiya in Hebron, and a third in Jalameh, north
of Jenin.
Little of this was new. The Oslo Accords, signed in 1993 and 1995, envisaged the creation
of up to nine industrial estates along the Green Line from
Jenin in the north to Rafah in Gaza.
But filled with optimism and the backing of the Palestinian Authority (PA), the United Nations, the European
Union, USAID and Japan, Blair announced, like the true visionary he always knew himself to
be: “If the above package works, then it will be followed by further such
packages. In this way, over time and progressively, the weight of occupation can be lifted, but in a way that does not
put Israel’s security at risk.”
He added: “It is my firm belief that these steps shall
also facilitate the ongoing negotiations between the parties, aimed to achieve
a viable and lasting peace agreement between two countries, living side by side
in peace and prosperity.”
Today, little remains of Blair’s industrial park at
the Jalameh crossing with Israel. For years, the fenced-off site remained
empty, until the PA - with the backing of Turkish investors - attempted to establish an “industrial city” in Jenin. Now, a few roads and a smattering of
warehouses are all that exist of those dreams.
In 2008, Blair claimed credit for reducing the
number of
roadblocks in the occupied West Bank, which then numbered around 600. Today, there are 898 military checkpoints, including dozens of gates sealing off Palestinian
towns and villages for most of the day. All economic life is throttled.
Settler
militias roam
the land, terrorising Palestinian towns and driving Palestinians from vast
tracts of land, which are claimed by illegal “shepherd’s farms” in coordination
with Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich, who has assumed control of the
Civil Administration in the occupied West Bank.
Precursor to annexation
All of this is seen as a precursor to the widely
anticipated announcement of Israel’s annexation of Area C, comprising about
two-thirds of the West Bank.
More than 40,000 Palestinians have been made homeless by the demolition of
refugee camps in Jenin, Tulkarm and Nur Shams, in an Israeli army operation
called “Iron Wall”, now into its eighth month.
Back in 2009, Blair received an award for his
stillborn plan: a $1m prize for “leadership”, most of which went to his own
foundation “for religious understanding”.
Today, after 23 months of genocide and demolition in Gaza, Blair is back in
business, repackaging himself nearly two decades later as a seasoned hand of
the Middle East.
He has reportedly been advising the White House and talking with Donald Trump’s
son-in-law, Jared Kushner, about the US president’s latest plan for Gaza.
The strategy, or at least one version of it, is
contained in a 38-page slide
deck laying out a
vision for postwar Gaza.
Since October 2023, Gaza has been a 21st-century
laboratory of death - a horrifying lesson in how to rewrite the rules of war;
how to use drones and robots to maximise collateral damage; how to leverage
artificial intelligence to locate targets; how to use starvation and aid
distribution points to break the will of a people to resist; how to dismantle
health and education systems; and how to render an entire nation homeless.
Josef Mengele, the Nazi physician who performed deadly
experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz, would have recognised many of these
performance criteria as achievements.
Now, a further human experiment is about to be
conducted on the Palestinians of Gaza, focusing on how to build $324bn of Dubai-style “mega-projects” on their graves.
The emperors of Gaza
The first thing to note about this slide
deck is its
brutality. It is devoid of any acknowledgement of Gaza as a Palestinian
homeland. In this, its authors have regressed to the moral standards of
tsarist Russia, and to what happened in a field outside Moscow just four days
after the coronation of Tsar Nicholas II.
Up to half a million Russians gathered
at Khodynka for free food and gifts from the emperor, which
reportedly included bread rolls, sausages, pretzels, gingerbread and
commemorative cups. When rumours flew that there was not enough beer and pretzels
for everybody, and that the enamel cups contained gold coins, there was a
stampede, with more than 1,200 people killed and up to 20,000 more injured.
No matter. The emperor and empress went ahead with
their plans. They appeared in front of the crowds on the balcony of the tsar’s
pavilion in the middle of the field, by which time the corpses had been cleared
away.
This is equivalent to how today’s emperors are
behaving towards the famished and
dying population
of Gaza - only today, the scale of the tragedy makes Nicholas II’s
insouciance towards the fate of his people look restrained.
Trump intends to build a Dubai-style wonderland on the
fresh graves of 63,000 dead (and counting). This psychopathic lack of
empathy extends to the living as well as the dead: for the paradise that is
going to transform Gaza from a “demolished Iranian proxy” into a “prosperous Abrahamic ally’’ will
not only be “Hamas-free”, but free of most Palestinians as well.
In fact, the more Palestinians who leave, the cheaper
the project becomes. For every Palestinian who leaves, the plan calculates
that $23,000 will
be saved; for every one
percent of the population that relocates, that’s $500m in savings. To induce
the Palestinians of Gaza to leave their land, the plan proposes to give each
person $5,000 and to subsidise their rent in another country for four years, as
well as their food for one year.
The plan’s authors are thought to be Israeli. The
proposal was reportedly led by Michael Eisenberg, an Israeli American
venture capitalist, and Liran Tancman, an Israeli tech entrepreneur and former
military intelligence officer. Their initials, “ME” and “LT”, appear to be
listed on the deck’s first page, alongside a mysterious third set of initials,
“TF”.
Eisenberg and Tancman were part of a group of Israeli
officials and businesspeople that first conceived of the Gaza Humanitarian
Foundation (GHF) in late 2023, weeks after the Hamas-led attacks on
Israel, according to
the New York Times.
A first draft of the Gaza redevelopment plan is
believed to have been finished this past April and presented to the Trump
administration. It is not known whether this proposal was discussed during the
recent meeting between Kushner and Blair, both of whom have been hammering out
similar ideas.
But the direction of travel is clear.
Doomed to failure
Blair, for one, should realise that any plan built on
making Gaza “Hamas-free” is doomed to failure. He should think back to his own
days as prime minister, and his government’s own efforts to negotiate with the
Irish Republican Army (IRA).
Just imagine if someone had come to him with an idea
to de-republicanise the Short Strand, the home of the Irish National Liberation
Army, or the whole of West Belfast as a precondition for peace.
Happily, the direction that three British prime
ministers - Margaret Thatcher, John Major and Tony Blair - took in the peace
process was the exact opposite. The acknowledgement that Dublin had a role in
the North was Thatcher’s
achievement,
followed by direct talks with the IRA under Major, who did most of the work.
This included a series of meetings that took place in
Derry between Michael Ancram, then a serving British minister in Major’s
government, and IRA leader Martin McGuinness. Many years later, Ancram told me
about those meetings in great detail, and with much mirth. But their existence
totally defied the government line at the time: that Britain does not talk to
those it qualifies as terrorists.
The IRA began the decommissioning process after Britain promised to release
Republican prisoners from the Maze prison, and when political guarantees were given to share
power in Stormont as part of the Good Friday Agreement.
McGuinness and his onetime arch foe, Ian Paisley, then
head of the Democratic Unionist Party, became allies. Such was their mutual
sense of ease with each other, that they became known as the “Chuckle Brothers”.
Now apply the formula that brought peace to Northern
Ireland to Gaza and Hamas, which is proscribed as a terrorist group in
the UK, and what do you get? Direct talks with Hamas on a
hostage and mass prisoner release, followed by talks with all resistance groups
on a technocratic government, alongside the restoration of all UN aid agencies,
the end of the siege, and a huge international flow of money and concrete to
rebuild. In the long term, Hamas could offer a “hudna”, or indefinite pause, to
armed conflict.
That is the Irish formula applied to Gaza. But the
exact opposite course is now being taken with regards to Gaza, because all
thinking on Palestine is seen through the prism of the need to defend and arm
Israel’s ever-expanding state.
Excluding Hamas
Peace in Northern Ireland could not have been achieved
without the active involvement of Dublin and Washington. The US today - as
represented by a succession of presidents, both Democrat and Republican - is
the chief sustainer of Greater Israel, and the chief obstacle to a sustainable
peace.
Hamas has been excluded from the broader political
process ever since the party won the last freely held elections in Palestine in
2006. Blair’s task in this regard was made much easier by the
behaviour of the PA and the leaders of every Arab government. He is far from
alone in attempting to apply a solution over the heads and against the will of
the Palestinian people.
Ten years ago, I revealed how
Blair met Khaled Meshaal,
then the political director of Hamas. Two of those meetings took place in Doha
when Blair was still envoy. But the meetings continued for some time after he
was no longer in the post.
Blair, accompanied by MI6, attempted to gain credit
for a revised Hamas foundational document that recognised the 1967 borders of
Israel, offering to take the document to Washington, Palestinian sources told
me. Hamas naturally refused Blair’s attempt to insert himself into an internal
matter
But the meetings were seen at the time as an
acknowledgment that the attempt to exclude Hamas from government, and from
talks about a future for Palestine, had failed.
Over the last 23 months, Israel has been attempting to
achieve by force what 17 years of an increasingly brutal siege failed to
achieve through deprivation and bouts of bombing.
Today, Blair has become yet another extremely wealthy,
tanned man, fully at ease in the company of other multimillionaires like
Kushner.
Today, $1m would mean little to him. Serial failures
in the Middle East have been a lucrative business for Blair, putting
former Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s plan for self-enrichment after office to shame.
But have no doubt: this plan for Gaza, or any other
scheme hatched over the heads of the Palestinian people, will meet the same
fate as all the other stillborn projects.
Gaza cannot be cleansed of Hamas, any more than
England can be cleansed of the English or France of the French.
No peace process would exist in Northern Ireland
without the IRA’s consent, and even with it, there are still active splinter
groups today.
No Palestinian postwar government will work in Gaza
without Hamas’s consent, stated or implied. That is the one fact on the ground
that has been established by 23 months of resistance.
Besides, in all the trite acronyms - in all the
dizzying plans for ports, airports, cities with vertiginous skyscrapers, a road
system filled with Mohammed bin Salman Ring Freeways - one small detail is
missing.
What place would there be in Trump’s Gaza Riviera for
a monument to the more than 63,000 Palestinians who have been killed and
160,000 wounded in Israel’s genocide?
And what would Trump call this? A memorial for the
Palestinian Holocaust created by the Netanyahu regime?
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