After meeting with Trump, Jordan's king says his country opposes
displacing Palestinians in Gaza
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[February 12, 2025]
By ZEKE MILLER, CHRIS MEGERIAN and WILL WEISSERT
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump hosted Jordan’s King Abdullah
II at the White House on Tuesday and renewed his insistence that Gaza
could somehow be emptied of all residents, controlled by the U.S. and
redeveloped as a tourist area.
It's an audacious, but highly unlikely, scheme to dramatically remake
the Middle East and would require Jordan and other Arab nations to
accept more Gazans — something Abdullah reiterated after their meeting
that he opposes.
The pair met in the Oval Office with Secretary of State Marco Rubio also
on hand. The president suggested he wouldn't withhold U.S. aid to Jordan
or Egypt if they don't agree to dramatically increase the number of
people from Gaza they take in.
“I don’t have to threaten that. I do believe we’re above that," Trump
said. That contradicted the Republican president's previous suggestion
that holding back aid from Washington was a possibility.
Abdullah was asked repeatedly about Trump's plan to clear out Gaza and
overhaul it as a resort on the Mediterranean Sea. He didn't make
substantive comments on it and didn't commit to the idea that his
country could accept large numbers of Gazans.
He did say, however, that Jordan would be willing “right away” to take
as many as 2,000 children in Gaza who are suffering from cancer or
otherwise ill.
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“I finally see somebody that can take us across the finish line to bring
stability, peace and prosperity to all of us in the region,” the king
said of Trump in his statement at the top of the meeting.
Abdullah left the White House after about two hours and headed to
Capitol Hill to meet with a bipartisan group of lawmakers. He posted on
X that during his meeting with Trump, “I reiterated Jordan’s steadfast
position against the displacement of Palestinians in Gaza and the West
Bank.”
“This is the unified Arab position. Rebuilding Gaza without displacing
the Palestinians and addressing the dire humanitarian situation should
be the priority for all,” Abdullah wrote.
That was despite Trump using his appearance with Abdullah to repeat
suggestions that the U.S. could come to control Gaza. Trump also said
Tuesday that it wouldn't require committing American funds but that the
U.S. overseeing the war-torn region would be possible, “Under the U.S.
authority,” without elaborating what that actually was.
“We’re not going to buy anything. We’re going to have it," Trump said of
U.S. control in Gaza. He suggested that the redeveloped area could have
new hotels, office buildings and houses, "and we’ll make it exciting.”
“I can tell you about real estate. They’re going to be in love with it,”
Trump, who built a New York real estate empire that catapulted him to
fame, said of Gaza's residents, while also insisting that he personally
would not be involved in development.
Trump has previously suggested that Gaza’s residents could be displaced
temporarily or permanently, an idea that leaders around the Arab world
have sharply rebuked.
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President Donald Trump greets Jordan's King Abdullah II in the Oval
Office at the White House, Tuesday, Feb. 11, 2025, in Washington.
(Photo/Alex Brandon)
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Additionally, Trump renewed his suggestions that a tenuous ceasefire
between Hamas and Israel could be canceled if Hamas doesn't release
all of the remaining hostages it is holding by midday on Saturday.
Trump first made that suggestion on Monday, though he insisted then
that the ultimate decision lies with Israel.
“I don’t think they’re going to make the deadline, personally,"
Trump said Tuesday of Hamas. "They want to play tough guy. We’ll see
how tough they are.”
The king's visit came at a perilous moment for the ongoing ceasefire
in Gaza. Hamas is accusing Israel of violating the truce and says it
will delay future releases of hostages captured in its Oct. 7, 2023,
attack.
In a statement, Hamas called Trump's Tuesday comments “racist” and
“a call for ethnic cleansing.” It also accused the president of
seeking to “liquidate the Palestinian cause and deny the national
rights of the Palestinian people.”
Trump has repeatedly proposed the U.S. take control of Gaza and
turn it into “the Riviera of the Middle East,” with Palestinians in
the war-torn territory pushed into neighboring nations with no right
of return.
Trump's Tuesday comments contradicted his Monday suggestions that,
if necessary, he would withhold U.S. funding from Jordan and Egypt —
longtime U.S. allies and among the top recipients of its foreign aid
— as a means of persuading them to accept additional Palestinians
from Gaza.
Jordan is home to more than 2 million Palestinians. Jordan’s foreign
minister, Ayman Safadi, said last week that his country’s opposition
to Trump’s idea about displacing Gaza's residents was “firm and
unwavering.”
Besides concerns about jeopardizing the long-held goals of a
two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict, Egypt and
Jordan have privately raised security concerns about welcoming large
numbers of additional refugees into their countries even
temporarily.
Trump announced his ideas for resettling Palestinians from Gaza and
taking ownership of the territory for the U.S. during a press
conference last week with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
The president initially didn’t rule out deploying U.S. troops to
help secure Gaza but at the same time insisted no U.S. funds would
go to pay for the reconstruction of the territory, raising
fundamental questions about the nature of his plan.
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After Trump’s initial comments, Rubio and White House press
secretary Karoline Leavitt insisted that Trump only wanted
Palestinians relocated from Gaza “temporarily” and sought an
“interim” period to allow for debris removal, the disposal of
unexploded ordnance and reconstruction.
But asked in an interview with Fox News’ Bret Baier that aired
Monday if Palestinians in Gaza would have a right to return to the
territory under his plan, he replied, “No, they wouldn’t.”
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