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الجمعة: 02 يناير 2026
  • 01 November 2025
  • 19:43
After Flying Over Gaza  US Chief of Staff Reports to Trump

Khaberni - An American official stated that General Dan Kien, head of the US Army Staff, will submit a report to President Donald Trump, the Secretary of War, and the National Security Council regarding ways to stabilize the ceasefire in Gaza and transition to civilian rule in the sector.

This comes in light of Kien's visit to the Civil-Military Coordination Center in Israel, where he met with the Israeli Chief of Staff Eyal Zamir during his visit to Israel, and conducted a tour on an Israeli helicopter over the Gaza Strip.

The official reported that General Kien will be briefed on the latest developments in Gaza and will receive intelligence briefings, according to Al Jazeera.

This visit is the second one for this American military official after he accompanied Trump in mid-October on a tour during which he met with Israeli military leaders.

Kien arrived in Tel Aviv on Thursday evening, where he met his Israeli counterpart at the Israeli Army headquarters and held a series of closed meetings with senior Israeli military leaders. The meetings discussed security coordination, the future of Gaza post-war, and reconstruction plans, according to Israeli newspapers.

Last week, the US Central Command opened the Civil-Military Coordination Center in Kiryat Gat with the aim of "supporting Gaza's stability" and appointed the commander of the US Central Command, Patrick Frank, as the military leader of the center.

The American-Israeli Civil-Military Coordination Center is the first operational international platform established by the US Central Command in Israel to monitor developments in Gaza following the ceasefire agreement.

The ceasefire agreement—according to the Trump peace plan—ended a two-year Israeli genocide against Gaza that started on October 7, 2023, with US support.

This genocide left more than 68,000 martyrs and over 170,000 injured, mostly children and women, with destruction that affected 90% of the civilian infrastructure, and a reconstruction cost estimated by the United Nations at about 70 billion dollars.

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