Political leaders in Washington, Jerusalem, Doha, and Ankara will assess Trump’s Board of Peace by their own criteria — strategic interests, diplomatic positioning, alliance management, domestic politics. But the real judges of the board’s success or failure are the approximately two million Palestinians living in Gaza, whose daily reality is shaped by whether the board’s work translates into tangible improvements in their lives.
Those two million people have endured two years of devastating warfare. They have seen their homes, schools, hospitals, and infrastructure destroyed. They have lost family members. They are living in conditions of acute humanitarian deprivation — insufficient food, water, shelter, and medical care. Their capacity for patience with another round of international promises that do not materialize is understandably limited.
The Board of Peace has assembled its coalition, made its announcements, and held its first meeting. Its reconstruction vision includes coastal tourism strips and data centers. Its governance framework includes a transitional committee and a stabilization force. Its security architecture includes Hamas disarmament and Israeli withdrawal. All of these elements are designed, ultimately, to make Gaza better for its people.
But those people are not waiting for the vision to be realized — they are living in the void that precedes it. Food, water, shelter, and medical care are needed now, not after the political questions are resolved. The board’s first test is not whether it can articulate a vision for Gaza’s future but whether it can make life measurably better for Gaza’s people in the near term.
Expert observers have said this clearly: fast, tangible improvements on the ground — particularly on the humanitarian front — are the minimum standard for the board’s credibility. The two million people of Gaza will make that assessment through their lived experience, not through diplomatic communiqués.
