Smotrich Calls on Netanyahu to Shut Down US-Led Gaza Coordination Hub
Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich on Monday pressed Prime Minister Bibi Netanyahu to dismantle a US-run multinational coordination center that plays a central role in advancing US President Donald Trump’s proposal for ending the fighting in Gaza.
The facility, known as the Civil Military Coordination Centre (CMCC), was set up by Washington last October. It brings together civilian and military officials from dozens of countries to work alongside Israeli and American counterparts on plans for Gaza after the war.
Smotrich, who leads the Religious Zionism party, said the base in Kiryat Gat should be shut down, arguing that its continued operation harms Israel’s interests. In remarks released by his office, he said closing the site would allow Israel to remove foreign representatives from countries he described as hostile and as acting against Israeli security, naming Egypt and the United Kingdom in particular. He did not elaborate on why Britain was singled out.
No immediate responses were issued by the Prime Minister’s Office, the US State Department, or US Central Command. The foreign ministries of Egypt and the United Kingdom also declined to comment.
In December, US Central Command said that roughly 60 countries and international organizations had personnel assigned to the CMCC. Since a ceasefire took effect in early October 2025, the center has also coordinated the entry of humanitarian aid into Gaza.
The CMCC was launched following Trump’s announcement of a 20-point framework for ending the war. Among the nations participating are Germany, France, and Canada.
Speaking at a ceremony marking the establishment of the new Jewish settlement of Yatziv in the West Bank, Smotrich said Israel owes Trump gratitude for his role in securing the release of hostages held by Hamas and other terror groups in two separate agreements. Nevertheless, he said the broader Gaza plan itself runs counter to Israel’s interests and should be abandoned.
Instead, Smotrich called for issuing Hamas a brief ultimatum to disarm and leave Gaza. If that demand is rejected, he said, Israel should launch a full-scale military campaign to eradicate the group.
“Gaza is ours, and its future will shape our own more than anyone else’s,” Smotrich said, adding that Israel must assume direct responsibility for the territory and impose military rule over its roughly 2.3 million residents.
Much of his speech revisited his long-standing opposition to Israel’s 2005 withdrawal from Gaza. He described that disengagement as a grave error and said that while the government has already reversed the evacuation of several northern West Bank settlements, the removal of Jewish communities from Gush Katif remains an uncorrected wrong.
Gush Katif was a bloc of 17 Jewish communities inside the Gaza Strip, home to some 8,600 residents before Israel evacuated the area in August 2005.
Smotrich cited the Hamas-led October 7, 2023, massacre in southern Israel as evidence that Israel must reestablish a permanent presence along Gaza’s coast. He argued that Israel has paid too high a price in blood over the past two years to allow foreign-backed actors to shape Gaza’s future.
He also lashed out at Turkey and Qatar, which back Hamas and have been included by the United States in the executive committee of the Board of Peace tasked with overseeing postwar Gaza. “There is no difference between them,” he said, equating Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Qatar with the terror group.
Smotrich framed the issue in stark terms, saying Israel faces a binary choice: full Israeli control of Gaza, the destruction of Hamas, sustained counterterrorism, encouragement of enemy emigration, and renewed Jewish settlement — or the loss of the gains achieved in the war and the inevitability of another round of violence.
Under Trump’s Gaza plan, Hamas members who renounce violence and surrender their weapons would be eligible for amnesty, while those wishing to leave Gaza would be offered safe passage to other countries.
The White House announced last week that the plan has entered its second phase, focusing on Gaza’s demilitarization and large-scale reconstruction.
{Matzav.com}