At a joint appearance with Israel’s prime minister this week, US President Donald Trump reduced the future of Gaza to an ultimatum. Hamas, he said, must disarm within a “very short period of time” or there would be “hell to pay.” No parallel demand was made of Israel to halt its military campaign, lift the siege, or clarify Gaza’s political end-state. Instead, the threat was folded into a broader American-Israeli discussion of a post-war “peace plan” that increasingly treats Gaza’s two million residents not as protected civilians but as a problem to be managed–possibly elsewhere.
Credible reporting has shown that earlier this year, US and Israeli officials explored relocating Palestinians from Gaza to third countries in Africa and Southeast Asia as part of a so-called “day-after” plan. That potential host states recoiled does not absolve those who floated the idea. It merely exposes how far removed the planners are from the rules-based legal order they claim to defend.
It goes without saying that there is a word international law uses sparingly, because once invoked, it admits no ambiguity. That word is forcible transfer. It is not a metaphor, not a slogan, not a negotiating tactic. It is a war crime. Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Convention prohibits the deportation or transfer of protected persons from occupied territory. No qualifying clauses permit “voluntary” departures under conditions of bombardment, siege, and humanitarian collapse. The much-talked-about Gaza peace plan was meant to pivot the conflict toward reconstruction and a transitional governance structure. However, as of yet, only one party faces an explicit deadline enforced by threat. There remains no equivalently forceful demand that Israel withdraw fully from Gaza or halt settlement expansion in the West Bank–both indispensable to any viable political settlement.
The timing makes the rhetoric more destabilising, not less. Trump’s words have landed in a landscape already shaped by two years of war, tens of thousands of civilian casualties, and a ceasefire whose second phase remains fragile. Treating disarmament as a precondition extracted under threat, rather than an outcome of negotiations grounded in political reality, ensures stalemate rather than resolution. America’s role in any peace process carries weight precisely because it can impose consequences. But when that leverage is exercised unilaterally, it ceases to be leverage and becomes coercion.
Forcibly relocating a traumatised population into fragile regions threatens to export instability, inflame militancy, and widen the conflict’s geography. African and Muslim-majority states have already cautioned that such schemes would destabilise entire regions rather than resolving a single dispute.
Islamabad has rightly rejected any proposal involving forced displacement and anchored its position in international law rather than emotive rhetoric. That stance must remain firm.
Writing closer to home, Gaza is an intensely emotive issue: Pakistan does not recognise Israel, and public sympathy overwhelmingly lies with Palestinians. Even a hint of legitimising an agenda that uproots civilians would provoke a major backlash. Any role in post-conflict arrangements, therefore, can only be contemplated under clear legal mandates, civilian-protection guarantees, and transparent domestic debate. *