Trump to Host Inaugural Peace Board Meeting to Fund Gaza Reconstruction
More than 40 countries pledged over $5 billion and thousands of personnel for Gaza reconstruction and an international stabilization force, aiming to disarm Hamas and secure lasting peace.
- U.S. President Donald Trump will host a Board of Peace meeting on Thursday in Washington, where member states have pledged more than $5 billion for reconstruction and humanitarian efforts in Gaza.
- The Trump administration pushed back on the Vatican's concerns, with White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt saying: 'This is a legitimate organization where there are tens of member countries from around the world.'
- Central to Thursday's discussions will be creating an armed international stabilization force to keep security and ensure the disarming of the militant Hamas group, a key demand of Israel and a cornerstone of the ceasefire deal.
151 Articles
151 Articles
The Council has been controversial: including representatives of Israel, but not of Palestine, and the suggestion of Trump that the group might possibly face challenges beyond Gaza caused concern.
Giorgia Meloni continues to strike increasingly difficult balances to be Donald Trump’s best friend in Europe and at the same time to act as a European leader in the line of the institutions of Brussels. The controversial proposal of the President of the United States to found a Peace Board, a body led by him and called to resolve the conflict in Gaza — and others in the rest of the world — has meant a new deadly leap for the Italian Prime Minis…
Donald Trump's controversial peace council to resolve the Gaza conflict is meeting for the first time this week in Washington. But can the participating states really solve all the problems? A Middle East expert expresses doubts and points to four major challenges.
Today, Trump's Peace Council meets for the first time in the United States. Representatives from some twenty countries will discuss the reconstruction of Gaza and how to finance it. A notable presence is Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán, as other EU countries are not on the council. "We're giving a lot of legitimacy to something nobody wants," says Catherine Brölmann, professor of international law at the University of Amsterdam.
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