Trump’s Gaza board reports funding ‘gap’, urges quicker disbursement

Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a house that was pre-warned by the Israeli military to evacuate before the strike was carried out late on Monday, in Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip May 19, 2026. (REUTERS)
Palestinians inspect the site of an Israeli strike on a house that was pre-warned by the Israeli military to evacuate before the strike was carried out late on Monday, in Jabalia refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip May 19, 2026. (REUTERS)
Short Url
Updated 19 May 2026 21:37
Follow

Trump’s Gaza board reports funding ‘gap’, urges quicker disbursement

Trump’s Gaza board reports funding ‘gap’, urges quicker disbursement
  • $17 billion committed to the board earlier this year
  • Strip reduced to rubble by over 2 years of Israeli onslaught

GENEVA: The gap between funding pledges and disbursement ​for Donald Trump’s Gaza rebuilding plan must be closed urgently, the US president’s “Board of Peace” has said in a report, identifying a potential cash crunch in a plan estimated to cost $70 billion. 

Trump set up the Board of Peace to oversee his ambitious plan to end Israel’s war in Gaza and rebuild the shattered territory. Trump has said it would also tackle other conflicts. 
The UN Security Council has recognized the board, though many major powers have not joined Washington’s main Middle Eastern allies and some middling and smaller states in signing up. 
It was reported in April that the board had only received a small fraction of the $17 billion pledged by members ‌for Gaza, preventing the ‌president from moving ahead with his plan.
The board denied that report, ​saying ‌in a statement ​it was an “execution-focused organization that calls capital as needed” and that there “are no funding constraints.” 
The money is meant to pay for reconstruction and fund the activities of a new US-backed transitional Gaza government.
In a May 15 report to the UN Security Council, the board said that “the gap between commitment (to the Board of Peace) and disbursement must be closed with urgency.”
It added: “Funds committed but not yet disbursed represent the difference between a framework that exists on paper and one that delivers on the ground for the people of Gaza.”
The board also called on countries and organizations that are not part of the Board of ‌Peace to make contributions to Gaza’s reconstruction without delay, and urged any ‌country that has made pledges to “accelerate disbursement processes.”
The report did not ​say how much money it had received or ‌how big the gap was, though it said that the amount pledged remained $17 billion. The Board of Peace ‌did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
In a statement, a Board of Peace official said the board had been consistent in urging UN member states and international organizations to fulfill pledges and contribute funding for the reconstruction of Gaza. It did not address the gap in funding pledges to the Board of Peace and disbursement.
The US, Saudi ‌Arabia, the UAE and Qatar are among states to have pledged funds to the board. Others include Morocco, Uzbekistan and Kuwait.
Gaza’s reconstruction is a key element of Trump’s plan for Gaza’s future, but it has been held up as the plan has appeared to stall. 
In its report, the board said that 85 percent of Gaza buildings and infrastructure had been destroyed and that an estimated 70 million tonnes of rubble would need to be cleared. 
It was reported on May 15 that the US was considering asking Israel to give some tax money it is withholding from the Palestinian Authority to the Board of Peace to fund reconstruction.
Many states are hesitant to finance Gaza’s reconstruction through Trump’s board over transparency and oversight concerns and would rather fund efforts through traditional institutions like the UN, European and Asian officials say.
Under the board’s ​charter, member states would be limited to three-year terms unless they pay $1 billion each to fund the board’s activities and earn permanent membership. It is unclear whether any state has paid the fee.