(Palestinians in Gaza do not want to live under Israeli occupation. Hell, the Palestinians in the West Bank, the ones who aren't corrupt traitors, they don't want to live under Israeli occupation either. I told you TrumpyBear was planning to do this.)
from the Times of Israel
One of the main proposals for rebuilding the Gaza Strip that US 
President Donald Trump’s administration has presented to potential Gulf 
donor countries envisions the construction of roughly half a dozen 
residential regions on the eastern half of the Strip, which is currently
 under Israeli control, two Arab diplomats familiar with the matter told
 The Times of Israel.
The diplomats said that “new Gaza” is the term frequently used by US 
officials to describe the project that will take place on the eastern 
side of the Yellow Line — the newly created boundary to which the IDF 
withdrew on October 10 at the start of the Gaza ceasefire agreement 
between Israel and Hamas.
The partial withdrawal left Israel in control of roughly 53 percent 
of Gaza, but Trump’s plan for ending the war envisions the IDF gradually
 withdrawing to the other side of the Gaza border and leaving the Strip 
altogether.
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
However, that withdrawal is linked to the success of a 
still-to-be-established International Stabilization Force (ISF) tasked 
with securing postwar Gaza, along with the disarmament of the Hamas 
terror group, which has shown no interest in giving up its weapons.
With those two conditions for continued Israeli withdrawal so 
difficult to meet, the US is not waiting to begin the reconstruction 
process, and Trump’s top adviser Jared Kushner has indicated that Washington wants to start with the Israeli side of the Yellow Line and with the southern city of Rafah in particular.
		
The US proposal envisions as many as one million Palestinians — 
around half of Gaza’s population — moving to the residential areas on 
the Israel-held side of the Yellow Line. These areas will be built 
within two years, even if IDF forces don’t withdraw by then, said the 
two diplomats briefed on the plan, adding that they found the benchmark 
highly unrealistic.