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The competing plans for rebuilding Gaza after the war

Arab nations have agreed plans to rebuild Gaza after the war, including details on who would run the territory - but Donald Trump wants to build a "Riviera" under US control.

An AI generated vision of what a rebuilt Gaza could look like taken from a draft of Egypt's plan for the enclave. Pic: Egyptian Presidency
Image: An AI-generated vision of what a rebuilt Gaza could look like, taken from a draft of Egypt's plan for the territory. Pic: Egyptian presidency
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Arab leaders have adopted a plan to rebuild Gaza that will cost tens of billions of pounds - and is in stark contrast to President Donald Trump's proposal for the US to take control of the Palestinian territory.

Israel's military offensive in Gaza following the Hamas attacks on 7 October 2023 has left swathes of the densely populated enclave razed to the ground and nearly two million people displaced from their homes.

The ceasefire deal between Israel and Gaza's rulers Hamas, which includes Israeli hostages being exchanged for Palestinian prisoners, continues to hold - but has become very fragile following the end of phase one with no agreement on phase two.

Questions remain about the future of the Gaza Strip, such as who will pay for the reconstruction and who will govern it.

What is Egypt's plan for Gaza?

Discussed at a summit of Arab nations on Tuesday, the plan comes after Egypt, Jordan and the Gulf Arab states spent almost a month consulting on an alternative to Mr Trump's proposal.

Palestinians walk among the rubble of buildings, amid a ceasefire between Israel and Hamas, in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip, February 27, 2025. REUTERS/Ramadan Abed
Image: Palestinians walk among the rubble of buildings in Khan Younis, in the southern Gaza Strip. Pic: Reuters

The 112-page document includes maps of how the land would be re-developed and dozens of colourful AI-generated images of housing developments, gardens and community centres.

It also includes a commercial harbour, a technology hub, beach hotels and an airport.

Unlike Mr Trump's plan, Egypt's proposal would not see the mass displacement of Palestinians to other nations.

An AI generated vision of what a rebuilt Gaza could look like taken from a draft of Egypt's plan for the enclave. Pic: Egyptian Presidency
Image: An AI-generated vision of what a rebuilt Gaza Strip may look like, under Egypt's plan. Pic: Egyptian presidency

In terms of who would run Gaza, Egypt's President Abdel Fattah el Sisi said his country had worked in cooperation with Palestinians to create a committee of independent Palestinian technocrats who would be entrusted with governing Gaza after the war.

This committee would oversee humanitarian aid and would manage the territory for a temporary period, before governance is eventually handed over to the Palestinian Authority (PA), which currently governs in the West Bank.

The other critical issue is what happens to Hamas. It has been in charge in Gaza since 2007, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has vowed to destroy the militant group.

Hamas has agreed not to field candidates for the technocrat committee, but it would have to give its consent to the tasks, members and the agenda of the committee that would work under the PA's supervision.

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Palestinians mark Ramadan among rubble

The Israeli foreign ministry called the plan "rooted in outdated perspectives" and rejected the reliance on the PA, while complaining Hamas was left in power by the plan. The US also voiced its disapproval.

Sky News understands foreign ministers from the Middle East countries are set to present the plan to the US secretary of state Marco Rubio in the next fortnight to work out more details, with the hope that leaders can then meet Mr Trump in the US to agree it.

The overdue Egypt plan is far more realistic than Trump's proposal

Photo of Alistair Bunkall
Alistair Bunkall

Middle East correspondent

The overdue plan for Gaza, put forward by Arab states, is a counter-response to President Trump's proposal to forcibly remove Palestinians from Gaza.

Compared to Trump's plan, supported by Israel, which would amount to ethnic cleansing, this is far more realistic.

It allows for Gazans to remain in the Strip and be housed in temporary locations whilst specific areas of Gaza are cleared and rebuilt.

It's clear to everybody that this could take a decade or more.

I'm told the money to pay for reconstruction, which would run into the tens of billions of dollars, isn't an issue - if Trump approves the plan, then several Middle Eastern countries are onboard to contribute.

What hasn't been addressed adequately is Hamas. The group cannot be a part of Gaza's future. Arab nations know that and broadly agree.

Some diplomats I've spoken to recently hope that Qatar will take four of five of the senior figures, which would help dismantle the group's authority in Gaza - while showing ordinary Gazans the leadership is ready to run to a comfortable life in the Gulf and abandon Gaza.

Trump, I'm told by people who have been in meetings with him, is not committed to his extraordinary plan, despite what he says in public and tweets.

The 'Egypt plan' is not there yet, Washington isn't convinced, but there is confidence in the region that it is a solid proposal which, with some negotiated tweaks, could get the presidential seal of approval.

What is Trump's plan for Gaza?

The US leader's claims that the US should take control of Gaza and build a "Riviera" were condemned internationally - and an AI video shared by the president showing a giant golden Trump statue was not well received either.

Speaking alongside Mr Netanyahu last month, Mr Trump said the US will take over Gaza and "own it".

He said the US would "develop it, create thousands and thousands of jobs" and turn it into "something the entire Middle East can be very proud of".

Donald Trump Truth Social Gaza
Image: A still image from an AI video shared by Mr Trump showing a hypothetical future Gaza

Mr Trump said the two million Palestinians living in the territory, which he described as a "demolition site", could be relocated to Egypt and Jordan - something both countries as well as other Arab nations have rejected.

Read more:
Israel stops all goods and supplies into Gaza
Starmer faces calls for UK's role in Gaza war to be scrutinised

President Donald Trump meets with Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Pic: AP
Image: Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Donald Trump. Pic: AP
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Asked on what authority the US could take control of Gaza, Mr Trump told reporters he sees a "long-term ownership position" which would, he claimed, bring stability to that part of the Middle East.

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"This was not a decision made lightly," he said.

"Everybody I've spoken to loves the idea of the United States owning that piece of land, developing and creating thousands of jobs."

It would be the "Riviera of the Middle East", he added.