In Jared Kushner’s vision, the rubble of Gaza would be replaced by something that looks more like a Gulf emirate than a refugee-dense strip of land. His Davos slides showed gleaming coastal tourism facilities, high-tech industrial zones, and data centers — a fundamental reimagining of what Gaza could become if given the right political and economic conditions.
The vision is deliberately ambitious. Kushner argued that investing in Gaza’s reconstruction as a modern economic zone could attract international capital and create prosperity that would reduce the appeal of militant movements. It is an economic theory of peace — the idea that prosperity and opportunity can do what military pressure alone cannot.
Critics have been pointed in their skepticism. Reconstruction of this magnitude requires political prerequisites that do not exist: Hamas disarmament, governance transition, international security forces, legal and regulatory frameworks, and a security environment attractive to investors. UN forecasters say clearing rubble and demining alone would take longer than the three years Kushner suggested for the entire project.
The total cost is estimated at $70 billion by the UN, EU, and World Bank — against claimed pledges of $5 billion that have not been publicly documented. The gap between vision and resources is enormous, even before the political obstacles are considered.
But the vision itself is not without merit as a long-term aspiration. Gaza has a Mediterranean coastline, a young population, and geographic proximity to major markets. If the political conditions could ever be created, the economic potential is real. The question is whether Trump’s Board of Peace can create those conditions — or whether the futuristic city will remain a set of Davos slides while Gaza’s people continue to live in ruins.
Trump’s Board of Peace: The Futuristic City That Could Replace Gaza’s Ruins
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