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Trump Gaza Tokenization Plan Sparks Outrage and Hope in Post-War Vision
The proposed Trump Gaza tokenization plan has ignited fierce debate, with critics denouncing it as digital dispossession while backers tout it as a radical reconstruction model.

The 38-page proposal, dubbed the Gaza Reconstitution, Economic Acceleration, and Transformation (GREAT) Trust, envisions a U.S.-administered trusteeship lasting a decade.
Land Tokenization for Displaced Residents
At the heart of the Trump Gaza tokenization plan is the use of blockchain to tokenize land in Gaza. Displaced Palestinians would receive digital tokens representing their property rights, redeemable either for apartments in new smart cities or for financial compensation abroad.
Each departing resident would also receive a $5,000 cash grant, along with four years of rent subsidies and one year of food support. The system would be funded by selling land tokens to private investors, creating both a blockchain-based ownership registry and a new speculative asset class.
A Riviera Vision Meets Reality
Proponents of the Trump Gaza tokenization plan argue that it would pave the way for six to eight AI-powered smart cities, as well as ports, railways, and resort-style projects meant to transform Gaza into the so-called “Riviera of the Middle East.” Financial planning was reportedly conducted with input from Boston Consulting Group, while U.S. and Israeli-linked groups have been tied to the initiative.
Investors would be able to trade the tokens on secondary markets, with profits tied directly to the pace of population relocation. Observers warn this creates perverse incentives: the more departures, the greater the financial upside.
Criticism of Digital Dispossession
Human rights organizations, including the Council on American-Islamic Relations, condemned the Trump Gaza tokenization plan as a “war crime of historic proportions.” Critics argue it commodifies displacement, effectively turning human rights into blockchain assets.
The Washington Post reported that international observers fear the plan amounts to a form of algorithmic privatization of Gaza, one that skirts international law under the guise of economic revival.
The Bigger Picture
This isn’t the first time Trump or his allies have floated such ideas. Former Middle East envoy Jared Kushner previously suggested relocating Palestinians while turning Gaza into beachfront property and tech hubs. Despite revisions to earlier frameworks deemed “ethnic cleansing” by the UN, the Trump Gaza tokenization plan still centers on large-scale population transfers.
Between Promise and Peril
For supporters, the plan represents a bold attempt to rebuild Gaza with blockchain transparency, foreign investment, and digital governance. For opponents, it symbolizes exploitation at its most extreme: profit-driven dispossession wrapped in the language of innovation.
As Gaza looks toward an uncertain future, the Trump Gaza tokenization plan stands as both a beacon of possibility and a warning of the dangers in merging humanitarian crises with speculative crypto finance.