“The Americans who have been tasked with the Board of Peace … are also discovering that the established institutions are quite useful. The World Bank, the [United Nations], different agencies actually have a lot of experience,” he said in an interview at Norway’s representation to the EU.

Trump’s administration has kept the Palestinian Authority somewhat at arm’s length in plans to govern Gaza, notably denying entry to the United States to anyone holding a Palestinian Authority passport.

But chief EU diplomat Kaja Kallas welcomed Palestinian Authority Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa in Brussels as a special guest — and Eide said that relations between Mustafa and the Board of Peace were better than they publicly appeared.

“The prime minister of the Palestinian Authority tells me that the conversation with the U.S. has been going much better, and that there is practical cooperation,” he said, adding that Trump’s plan for the governance of Gaza includes a long-term role for the Palestinian Authority after it has carried out reforms.

Eide — who co-hosted a donor conference called the “Ad Hoc Liaison Committee” on Monday alongside Kallas — pointed to the presence of Trump’s High Representative for Gaza, Nickolay Mladenov, at the event in Brussels as proof of bridge-building.

“What we really want to do is build a bridge between the established institutions … and the new structures which have come out of the ceasefire in Gaza — the Board of Peace and the NCAG,” he said, referring to the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, a technocratic body meant to oversee day-to-day activities in the Palestinian territory.

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