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Inside The Trump Administration's "Master Plan" For Gaza Regime Change
• Independent media allianceRyan CristianThe Last AmFar from any real cessation of hostilities, US President Donald Trump has given the green-light for a multi-layered regime change plot in the Gaza Strip.
On October 10, the latest Gaza ceasefire was officially declared. According to the plan, 'Phase One' of the ceasefire was supposed to include a full cessation of hostilities, the mutual exchange of captives on both sides, with pledges for at least 400 humanitarian aid trucks to enter the besieged coastal territory for five days and an unlimited number afterwards.
From day one, Israel not only violated the ceasefire agreement through shooting dead a number of Palestinian civilians, but also unleashed a range of Palestinian collaborator militias to begin targeting Gaza's local security forces. Hamas, as the governing force inside the Gaza Strip decided to re-deploy some 7,000 police and security officers to the streets of the war-ravaged territory, attempting to restore order after its forces were prevented from operating during Israel's relentless bombardments.
Although Israel's own forces have directly murdered over 100 Palestinian civilians since the start of the ceasefire, it had decided to switch its strategy on October 10 to using proxy forces to do its bidding instead of its own soldiers. The insidious plot, or "master plan" that has been in the works over the past two years, as US Envoy Steve Witkoff admitted during a recent interview on 60-minutes, also involves carving up Gaza into cantons ruled by separate forces.
This plot is a strategy for a multi-layered scheme that will seek to effect regime change, and in its worst iteration means the tax payer will foot the bill for another multi-national war of aggression — the goal being the completion of the objectives Israel failed to achieve through its own military operations.
In order to fully understand this scheme, all the relevant factors must be explored.
Israeli Ceasefire Violations
As mentioned above, the Israelis had agreed upon letting a set number of humanitarian aid trucks enter the besieged coastal enclave since day one of the ceasefire. Originally that number was 400 for the first five days, and Tel Aviv had even agreed to allow 600 such trucks to enter during Phase One of the deal, which is the amount required to begin ensuring the population can access the bare minimum required under international law.




