Gaza

Trump has announced that he thinks all Paletstinians should be moved from Gaza and into neighbouring countries where they can live in nice new modern homes, America will take over Gaza and turn it into a massive resort and it will create lots of jobs and money.

Why should the Palestinians have to give up thier country?

Where would they go? Both Egypt and Jordan have said they can't/won't accept them and why should they, they both have the same pressure with migration the rest of the world has.

Does America intend to fund all these new homes etc and where would they be?

Who would staff all these hotels etc in this new resort?

Where would they live?

Who will profit from this enterprise

Any move to displace the Palestinians would break at least two international treaties, so will Trump be forced to take any notice of the treaties the US has made previously, or does he just intend to ignore them?

Does anyone else think this is a totally stupid idea?

Parents
  • I see Trump has now confirmed that this will be ethnic cleansing as the Palestinians will not be allowed back after he deports them to their new homes:

    https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cn57neepx4vo

    US President Donald Trump has said the two million Palestinians who would be resettled in neighbouring countries under his plan to take over and rebuild the Gaza Strip would have no right of return.

    "No, they wouldn't, because they're going to have much better housing," he told Fox News. "I'm talking about building a permanent place for them."

    It is chilling that he is so comfortably blatant about this.

  • Just like I said in my OP, now the ceasefire has broken down too, both sides are blaming the other for breaches, I just thought 'surprise surprise' as I don't really think either side negotiated in good faith.

    Yes it is chilling that he's so comfortable with it, but then I don't think he really see's others as people, only a small and select group around qualify as humans and only if they keep molifying him.

    But with his rafts of executive orders, each seemingly more outrageous than the last and with Musk cutting out whole sections of government, illegally too, I can see a situation where the rest of the world sort of cuts America out of any deals or agreements as they will see any deal done by Trump as being made in bad faith. I think he's more likely to push the rest of the world towards China and maybe Russia.

    Does Trump's America actually have any friends internationally now, he seems to have alienated much of the rest of the world, I think the only friend left is Israel?

  • Does Trump's America actually have any friends internationally now,

    Just Israel and countries who desperately want to get access to their hige internal market. So mostly sycophants.

  • I do get the feeling that there is only ever an offer made when it is under pressure from an outside party and it feels to me that it is purposly poisoned with unacceptable terms to make sure it isn't accepted.

    This is pretty much what historians of the region are continuing to argue over, and what the US chooses to ignore. Rather than a conflict going back x hundred or thousand years between Jews and Arabs, it is a recent manifestation of the rise of imperialism and nation-state nationalisms in the Middle East, and the colonial methods employed to make Palestine become Israel. The historian and author Rashid Khalid argues that the war has never been just about Israel and Palestinians, with occasional support from some Arab nations, rather it has always involved massive interventions by the greatest powers on the side of the Zionist movement and Israel, namely Britain pre World War II and the US and others since (The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine, 2020). He argues that there wasn’t anything close to equivalence between the two sides and a vast imbalance in favour of Zionism and Israel. 

  • the Arabs that remained in Israel after the creation of the state of Jordan in 1921 actually identified as Syrian. Up until 1967, indeed, they mainly identified as Syrian and the concept of a Palestinian people and Palestinian nationhood did not exist.

    I find it more helpful to look past the labels and see that these are people whose descendents have lived on the land currently called Palestine for a very, very long time.

    What label they are currenty given does not change the fact they are fighting for the right to live on their own land - land that has been in their famies for any generations and certainly predates the creation of the state of Israel.

    Arguing the semantics of who lived there 50 generations ago or 100 - seems academic as there was alway someone before that.

    It's also worth noting that a Palestinian state has been offered many times over the years by Israel, with US and UK support. Every single time it has been rejected

    I remember looking into this in detail at school back in the 1980s and when you started to read the details of the "offer" it was tremendously biassed agains the people living in Palestine.

    From the limited way I have kept up with this over the decades there has been a repeat of the poison offer, the rejection and a counter then toys being thrown out the pram and a cycle of conflict.

    I do get the feeling that there is only ever an offer made when it is under pressure from an outside party and it feels to me that it is purposly poisoned with unacceptable terms to make sure it isn't accepted.

    Why is it done this way? I suspect it is because there is a war of erosion and each cycle there is a bit more land grabbed, more illegal settlements allowed and the land of Israel inches closer to its stated objective of owning "from the river to the sea" - ie taking all of Palestine.

    This is only my conclusion from 6 decades of observing the repeating cycle of a state that commits international war crimes and get away with them because the USA vetoes any action against them.

    There are war crime committed by the Paletinian too, but after generations of this level of oppresion it i hardly a surprise that they resort to extreme action.

    I don't see a way out of this as both sides are so entrenched so I suspect the outcome will be the ethnic cleansing of the arabs living in Palestine and ongoing terror attacks by those displaced.

Reply
  • the Arabs that remained in Israel after the creation of the state of Jordan in 1921 actually identified as Syrian. Up until 1967, indeed, they mainly identified as Syrian and the concept of a Palestinian people and Palestinian nationhood did not exist.

    I find it more helpful to look past the labels and see that these are people whose descendents have lived on the land currently called Palestine for a very, very long time.

    What label they are currenty given does not change the fact they are fighting for the right to live on their own land - land that has been in their famies for any generations and certainly predates the creation of the state of Israel.

    Arguing the semantics of who lived there 50 generations ago or 100 - seems academic as there was alway someone before that.

    It's also worth noting that a Palestinian state has been offered many times over the years by Israel, with US and UK support. Every single time it has been rejected

    I remember looking into this in detail at school back in the 1980s and when you started to read the details of the "offer" it was tremendously biassed agains the people living in Palestine.

    From the limited way I have kept up with this over the decades there has been a repeat of the poison offer, the rejection and a counter then toys being thrown out the pram and a cycle of conflict.

    I do get the feeling that there is only ever an offer made when it is under pressure from an outside party and it feels to me that it is purposly poisoned with unacceptable terms to make sure it isn't accepted.

    Why is it done this way? I suspect it is because there is a war of erosion and each cycle there is a bit more land grabbed, more illegal settlements allowed and the land of Israel inches closer to its stated objective of owning "from the river to the sea" - ie taking all of Palestine.

    This is only my conclusion from 6 decades of observing the repeating cycle of a state that commits international war crimes and get away with them because the USA vetoes any action against them.

    There are war crime committed by the Paletinian too, but after generations of this level of oppresion it i hardly a surprise that they resort to extreme action.

    I don't see a way out of this as both sides are so entrenched so I suspect the outcome will be the ethnic cleansing of the arabs living in Palestine and ongoing terror attacks by those displaced.

Children
  • I do get the feeling that there is only ever an offer made when it is under pressure from an outside party and it feels to me that it is purposly poisoned with unacceptable terms to make sure it isn't accepted.

    This is pretty much what historians of the region are continuing to argue over, and what the US chooses to ignore. Rather than a conflict going back x hundred or thousand years between Jews and Arabs, it is a recent manifestation of the rise of imperialism and nation-state nationalisms in the Middle East, and the colonial methods employed to make Palestine become Israel. The historian and author Rashid Khalid argues that the war has never been just about Israel and Palestinians, with occasional support from some Arab nations, rather it has always involved massive interventions by the greatest powers on the side of the Zionist movement and Israel, namely Britain pre World War II and the US and others since (The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine, 2020). He argues that there wasn’t anything close to equivalence between the two sides and a vast imbalance in favour of Zionism and Israel.