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US-led coordination center overseeing Gaza rebuilding to be operational in coming days, officials say

1:37
Fragile peace deal on the line in Gaza
AP
ByAnne Flaherty
October 16, 2025, 1:22 PM

A U.S.-led coordination center based in Israel that will oversee implementation of the ceasefire agreement in Gaza is expected to become operational in coming days, two U.S. officials tell ABC News.

The command center, which is tasked with coordinating security, aid and rebuilding efforts inside Gaza, will be led by a U.S. three-star general, at least initially, who has not been identified publicly. The commander will have a foreign deputy, who would be the equivalent of a two-star officer, the officials said.

The center is located inside Israel, just northeast of Gaza at a location not being disclosed to the public for security reasons. Officials said the center will not be located on an Israeli military base to ensure it can remain open to officials from other countries involved in the rebuilding of Gaza.

Palestinians receive donated food at a community kitchen in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza Strip, Oct. 16, 2025.
Abdel Kareem Hana/AP

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The center is seen as key to being to execute the extraordinary logistics involved in trying to rebuild and secure Gaza after two years of war. The U.S. and other countries are still discussing what an international security force might look like and how it would operate inside the strip, as well as how food and other aid will be distributed.

Trump has already sent 200 U.S. troops to coordinate the heavy lift; those military units specialize in transportation, planning, logistics and security. They will be working alongside representatives from other partner nations, the private sector and non-governmental organizations.

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Sources say the command center is starting off slow, reaching what the military calls “initial operational capability” in coming days.  

Senior White House advisers told reporters Wednesday that creation of the International Stabilization Force is under way. They said that Indonesia, Egypt, the UAE, Qatar, Azerbaijan and other Arab and Muslim countries have offered to play a role. 

"The International Stabilization Force is starting to be, starting to be constructed and and once that occurs, there'll be more efforts, but there's a lot of planning and a lot of very positive conversations between the sides," one senior U.S. official said. 

 ABC News' Isabella Murray contributed to this report.

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