Just as questions surround what role, if any , the U.S.-backed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation would have in the Strip under U.S. President Donald Trump’s peace deal, the U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees, which Israel has accused of ties to Palestinian terror, has an unclear future.
The Jewish state has documented UNRWA’s terror ties, including staff members at the U.N. agency who participated directly in the Oct. 7 attacks. Washington and the European Union cut funding to the agency, although some states have resumed supporting it.
Israeli legislation that went into effect in late January bars UNRWA from operating throughout internationally recognized Israeli territory and bans communication between UNRWA and Israeli officials.
The Trump administration’s 20-point peac