US Launches Gaza Phase Two: Technocratic Rule Replaces Hamas & PA

The United States has initiated phase two of its Gaza peace plan, establishing a transitional technocratic administration called the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG). This move explicitly aims to end governance by both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority, shifting focus to demilitarization, reconstruction, and service delivery. US officials highlighted humanitarian gains from phase one, including massive aid delivery and vaccination drives, but stressed that future reconstruction depends on Hamas disarming. The US warned of "serious consequences" if Hamas fails to return the final deceased hostage's remains and meet its obligations.

Key Points: US Launches Phase Two of Gaza Peace Plan, Establishes New Rule

  • New technocratic body to govern Gaza
  • Shift from ceasefire to demilitarization
  • Aims to remove Hamas and Palestinian Authority
  • Reconstruction tied to disarmament
3 min read

US launches phase two of Gaza peace plan, announces technocratic rule

US announces technocratic administration for Gaza, moving to demilitarization and reconstruction under Trump's plan, removing Hamas and Palestinian Authority.

"Today... we are announcing the launch of Phase Two - US Special Envoy Steve Witkoff"

Washington, Jan 15

The United States has moved Gaza into a new post-war political framework by approving a technocratic administration and launching phase two of President Donald Trump's plan to end the conflict, marking the first explicit US-backed effort to remove both Hamas and the Palestinian Authority from governance in the territory.

Phase two establishes a transitional technocratic Palestinian body -- the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza (NCAG) -- and initiates a shift from ceasefire management to demilitarisation, governance, and reconstruction, according to two Senior administration officials.

"Today, on behalf of President Trump, we are announcing the launch of Phase Two of the President's 20-Point Plan to End the Gaza Conflict, moving from ceasefire to demilitarisation, technocratic governance, and reconstruction," US Special Envoy for Peace Missions Steve Witkoff said in a public statement.

The officials mentioned the NCAG was carefully selected through consultations with regional mediators and Palestinian factions and is intended to function as a non-political, service-oriented administration focused on rebuilding Gaza and improving the daily lives of its residents.

They described the move as the first time in years that Gaza would not be governed by either Hamas or the Palestinian Authority.

The decision to move into phase two was taken even as work continues on unresolved hostage issues, officials said.

All living hostages have returned. The remains of 27 of the 28 deceased hostages have also been recovered. Efforts are ongoing to locate the final remains while keeping the ceasefire in place, the official added.

Witkoff said Washington expects Hamas to meet its remaining obligations under the agreement. This includes the return of the final deceased hostage.

"Failure to do so will bring serious consequences," he said.

Senior officials acknowledged the scepticism over whether Hamas would fully disarm. They said the group has spent years building military infrastructure.

However, they stressed that removing terror capabilities is essential for Gaza's future. Reconstruction, they said, cannot move forward if another conflict remains likely.

Officials said dismantling terror infrastructure and removing heavy weapons are key goals. These steps, they said, are needed to prevent Gaza from returning to cycles of war. The aim is to create conditions where rebuilding efforts can last, and daily life can improve.

The officials pointed to what they described as major humanitarian gains during phase one. They said more than 53,000 aid trucks entered Gaza after the ceasefire.

Over two million pallets of goods were delivered. Vaccination drives reached tens of thousands of children, and large areas of rubble were cleared.

Witkoff also highlighted the role of regional mediators in his social media post. He said the US was "deeply grateful to Egypt, Turkey, and Qatar for their indispensable mediation efforts that made all progress to date possible."

Officials said these countries will continue to play a key role as the plan moves forward.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
The humanitarian gains in Phase One are impressive – 53,000 aid trucks is no small feat. If this plan can actually deliver reconstruction and a better life for civilians, especially the children, then it deserves cautious support. But the demilitarisation part seems like a huge challenge. 🤔
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Arjun K
From an Indian perspective, we know too well the complexities of long-standing conflicts. External solutions often fail without local buy-in. I hope the "consultations with Palestinian factions" were genuine. A non-political administration focusing on services could work, but only if it's seen as truly Palestinian, not American.
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Sarah B
Removing both Hamas and the PA is a bold move. It might be the shock the system needs to break the cycle. The focus on governance and reconstruction over pure politics is refreshing. Kudos to the mediators – Egypt, Turkey, Qatar – for their crucial role. Peace needs regional partners.
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Vikram M
The threat of "serious consequences" if Hamas doesn't comply shows the plan's weakness. It's still dependent on the cooperation of an armed group they want to dismantle. This feels like putting the cart before the horse. Reconstruction first, trust building, then maybe demilitarisation. This order seems reversed.
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Kavya N
As someone who has seen conflict resolution efforts up close, the devil is in the implementation. A committee with a long name (NCAG) is easy to announce. Delivering security, jobs, and hope on the ground is the real test. I pray for the people of Gaza that this brings real change and not just more promises. 🙏

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