Jordan’s King Abdullah heads to the White House as Trump pushes a Gaza takeover plan

AMMAN, Jordan — Jordan’s King Abdullah II is heading into what is expected to be one of the toughest meetings of his quarter-century reign at the White House Tuesday.

President Trump set the stage for a fraught face-to-face with a plan he announced last week to relocate some 2 million Palestinians from the Gaza Strip to Jordan and Egypt. Both countries have said they strongly oppose the plan, which Israel’s leadership has embraced.

Trump went further on Monday. He said he would “conceivably withhold aid” from Jordan and Egypt if they did not agree to take Gaza’s 2 million Palestinians.

Trump’s plan, articulated without consultation with Jordan or Egypt, would involve the U.S. taking over Gaza, a small Palestinian territory with a Mediterranean coastline. The “Riviera” of the Middle East he said he envisions would be rebuilt from the destruction of more than a year of war between Israel and Hamas. United Nations officials say 70% of the Palestinian territory’s structures are damaged or destroyed.

Seizing Gaza and expelling its population would be illegal under international law, United Nations officials and legal experts have warned.

It would also breach a key part of the peace deal Jordan signed with Israel three decades ago.

“Jordan signed a peace treaty with Israel precisely because it did not want a solution at Jordan’s expense,” said former Jordanian Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher.

“This is an existential issue to Jordan that does not lend itself to any economic pressure from the United States,” said Muasher, now vice president for studies at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.

Many of Jordan’s citizens are descendants of Palestinian refugees who fled or were expelled from their homes during and after the creation of Israel in the late 1940s and in subsequent wars, and were never allowed back. Jordan and other Arab countries have historically resisted accommodating more Palestinian refugees out of fear that it would weaken the case for a Palestinian state and the refugees’ right to return.

Muasher said the brake to Trump’s plans could be Saudi resistance. Trump has made clear he wants to broker a normalization agreement between Saudi Arabia, the most powerful Gulf state, and Israel. Saudi Arabia last week said expelling Palestinians would stand in the way of any normalization talks.

“Those are very strong words,” says Muasher. The White House “probably will take the Saudi position very seriously.”

 

Lawyer says an Alabama teen who was killed by police was shot in the back

Authorities have not released police body camera video of the June 23 encounter or disclosed the name of the officer who shot 18-year-old Jabari Peoples in the parking lot of a soccer field in the affluent Birmingham suburb of Homewood. They also haven't released the findings of the county's official autopsy.

An Israeli restaurant owner quits a controversial Gaza food program after criticism

Shahar Segal, who runs popular restaurants around the world, has left his role as a spokesman for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation amid calls to boycott his businesses.

Trump’s pick for U.N. Ambassador grilled over Signal chat scandal

Former national security adviser Mike Waltz, who was removed from office amid the Signal chat controversy, spent Tuesday in the Senate confirmation hearing for his nomination as U.S. ambassador to the United Nations.

5 takeaways from the 2025 Emmy nominations

Apple TV+ must be happy about how many nominations they've raked in this year for hit shows including Severance and The Studio, NPR critic Linda Holmes says.

The White House took down the nation’s top climate report. You can still find it here

The National Climate Assessment is the most influential source of information about climate change in the United States.

The Trump administration reverses its promise to publish key climate reports online

Earlier this month, the government websites that hosted the authoritative, peer-reviewed national climate assessments went dark. Officials say they're only obligated to give the reports to Congress.

More Front Page Coverage