For many Pakistanis, joining Trump’s Board of Peace feels like a Faustian pact

Pakistan is no stranger to political polarization, but on one thing, nearly everyone could agree: solidarity with the Palestinian cause.

A Gallup poll conducted soon after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel found that 91% of Pakistanis aligned their sympathies with the Palestinians of Gaza, compared with just 2% who said they supported Israel. It’s a solidarity seen everywhere – from the ATM home screens that explain how to donate to the Pakistani Prime Minister’s Relief Fund for Gaza and Lebanon, to the countless mosques where every Friday imams ask Allah to protect their “brothers in Palestine.”

This is why Islamabad’s decision to join the U.S.-led Board of Peace, at a time when Pakistan has been drawing closer to Washington, has rattled the nation of 250 million. Critics note that the board, which is expected to oversee the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, has no Palestinian representation. More than 20 countries have joined the initiative.

Why We Wrote This

In Pakistan, U.S.-Pakistan rapprochement has always been viewed as a double-edged sword. But now that Islamabad is joining Trump’s “Board of Peace,” many worry the government has made a Faustian pact.

“It is a betrayal not just of the Palestinian people, but of the Pakistani people as well,” says human rights activist Tahira Abdullah.

Colonial or practical?

The Board of Peace was first proposed in September as a body that would support the reconstruction of the Gaza Strip, but it has been controversial from the start. The charter of the board does not mention Gaza by name, instead describing itself as an organization that seeks to “secure enduring peace in areas affected or threatened by conflict.”

It includes no Palestinians. Ibrahim Khraishi, the Palestinian Authority’s permanent observer to the United Nations in Geneva, said that there had been no contact with the Trump administration since last year. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu initially objected to the board’s makeup, which included regional rival Turkey, but Israel has since agreed to join.

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