WASHINGTON — The Gaza Strip is in ruins with entire city neighborhoods reduced to rubble and serious questions about rebuilding basic water and sewage facilities, roads, electrical grids and the critical infrastructure needed to consistently produce enough food to prevent widespread starvation.
But a gleaming new national soccer stadium for an area devastated by two-plus years of war between Israel and Hamas? That's covered — or so promises the sport's international governing body.
The unusual pledge was part of a showy and often strange display of political theater at the inaugural meeting of President Donald Trump 's Board of Peace in Washington on Thursday, where nine governments pledged $7 billion toward a Gaza relief package and five others said they'd deploy troops as part of an international stabilization force.
''We don't have to just rebuild houses or schools or hospitals or roads,'' said FIFA President Gianni Infantino. ''We also have to rebuild and build people, emotion, hope and trust. And this is what football, my sport, is about.''
FIFA pledged $50 million for a new stadium holding between 20,000 and 25,000 spectators, and said it would build a $15 million FIFA academy. The organization also promised to spend an additional $2.5 million for 50 ''arena mini pitches,'' or soccer fields, and five full-sized fields costing $1 million each.
Gaza doesn't have a national soccer team. A unified Palestinian squad represents it and the West Bank and has been recognized by FIFA since 1998 — but has never qualified for the World Cup.
''Football, or soccer, as it is called here, is the world's universal language,'' Infantino said. ''It's about hope. It's about joy. It's about happiness. It's about coming together. It's about uniting the world.''
He showed a video that proclaimed, ''A simple ball. A shared field. A reason to believe again,'' while noting that FIFA and the Board of Peace were joining forces to ''turn football into a bridge toward peace, dignity and hope.''