The Trump administration has developed a post-war reconstruction plan for the Gaza Strip, which envisions temporary US administration for at least ten years and the transformation of the region into a tourism and high-tech hub, according to The Washington Post.
The 38-page document proposes the relocation of the entire two million residents of the Gaza Strip during the reconstruction period. This relocation will either be voluntary outside the region or by settling residents in safe zones within the Strip.
The plan offers landowners a digital token in exchange for the right to redevelop. This token can be used to finance living elsewhere or exchanged for housing in one of six to eight "smart cities" designed using artificial intelligence technologies. Each Palestinian who agrees to the temporary relocation will receive $5,000 in cash, along with funds for four years of rent and one year of food.
The GREAT (Reconstruction, Economic Acceleration, and Transformation) Trust Fund will manage the Gaza Strip's reconstruction under this plan. According to WP, the fund was created, in part, by the same people who launched the Gaza Humanitarian Aid Fund, established by Israel and the United States to distribute humanitarian aid.
The publication's sources note that key elements of the plan reflect Donald Trump's vision of the region as the "Riviera of the Middle East." The recovery plan is funded by public and private sources and aims to create modern infrastructure and technological facilities, attract investment, and develop tourism.





































