TEL AVIV:Â Top US diplomat Marco Rubio voiced hope on Friday of soon putting together an international force to police the ceasefire in Gaza, as Palestinian factions agreed that a committee of technocrats would run the post-war territory.
The secretary of state visited Israel on the heels of Vice President J.D. Vance as part of an all-out effort by the US to persuade both Hamas and Israel to respect the truce.
Rubio said it was critical for the deal to create “the conditions for the stabilization force to come in as soon as it possibly can be put together.â€
During a meeting in Cairo, according to a joint statement published on the Hamas website, the Palestinian groups agreed to hand “over the administration of the Gaza Strip to a temporary Palestinian committee composed of independent ‘technocrats’, which will manage the affairs of life and basic services in cooperation with Arab brothers and international institutions.â€
In Gaza on Friday, families were still trying to find their way back to their ruined homes — in many cases only to find they lie in areas controlled by Israeli forces beyond the so-called “Yellow Line.â€
The US is considering a proposal for humanitarian aid delivery in Gaza that would replace the controversial US-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation. It is one of several concepts being explored, said two US officials and a humanitarian official familiar with the plan, as Washington seeks to facilitate increased deliveries of assistance to the Palestinian enclave after two years of war.
“Multiple approaches are being considered to effectively get aid to the people of Gaza — nothing is finalized,†said a senior US administration official.
After two years of war, Gaza is buried under more than 61 million tonnes of debris and three quarters of buildings have been destroyed, a UN data analysis shows.
As of July 8, 2025, the Israeli army had damaged or destroyed nearly 193,000 buildings in the densely populated territory, representing about 78 percent of existing structures before the conflict began on Oct. 7, 2023, according to satellite analysis by the UN’s UNOSAT programme.
In an assessment of images from Sept. 22-23 of Gaza City, the UN agency estimated that an even higher proportion — 83 percent — of buildings there had been damaged or destroyed.
The total 61.5 million tonnes of debris is nearly 170 times the weight of New York’s Empire State Building and is equivalent to over 169 kg of debris for each square metre of Gaza’s small territory.













