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The Treaty

The Hiyat Peace
Coalition Treaty

The full text of the conceptual treaty, presented in the form of twelve foundational articles and six technical annexes. Read in sequence, this is the architecture of a serious, multi-decade peace framework.

Preamble

A new beginning, written in the language of law.

The signatory parties, recognizing the historical depth of their dispute and the imperative of a just and lasting peace, hereby enter into this treaty as a binding framework for cooperation, security, and shared stewardship of the Holy Land. The treaty is conceived as a 7-year transitional instrument, subject to renewal, amendment, or expiration at the end of its term.

Article I

Establishment of the Hiyat Peace Coalition

The HPC is hereby established as a sovereign-collaborative entity tasked with the administration of security, economic revitalization, and interfaith oversight. Its primary mandate is to ensure the non-violation of the borders established herein and the protection of all civilian populations.

Article II

Foundational Purpose

Formalizing the Hiyat Peace Coalition (HPC) as the foundational framework for regional stability, economic prosperity, and interfaith harmony.

Article III

Transitional Mandate

The HPC operates within a 7-year transitional period during which its treaty framework holds supremacy over domestic legislation in matters of security and holy site administration. At the end of the period, the framework is either renewed, amended, or full sovereignty is restored to the signatory parties.

Article IV

Eleven Nation Guarantor Bloc

The HPC is supported by an Eleven Nation Guarantor Bloc: a ten-nation Middle East coalition plus the United States as the eleventh member and leading strategic partner, providing strategic leadership, security guarantees, logistical support, and diplomatic backing.

Article V

Security Architecture

A 75,000-person HPC Multinational Force (HPC-MF), led by the United States with contributions from European and regional guarantors, neutralizes militant threats, provides border security, and enforces demilitarized zones monitored 24/7 by advanced satellite and ground sensor arrays.

Article VI

Borders & Territorial Integrity

Final status borders are based on negotiated adjustments to the 1967 lines, ensuring territorial contiguity for both Israel and Palestine, addressing Israel's security requirements and Palestine's demographic realities. Safe-passage corridors connect Gaza and the West Bank under HPC jurisdiction.

Article VII

Jerusalem & Holy Sites

The Old City is governed under a shared custodianship model managed by the Jerusalem Interfaith Oversight Body (JIOB). The Dome of the Rock and Al-Aqsa Mosque remain under Islamic custodianship β€” guaranteed not to be removed, diminished, or physically altered. Jewish prayer at the Western Wall is guaranteed and secured by the HPC-MF.

Article VIII

Reconstruction & Economic Renewal

A 75,000,000,000 USD Reconstruction and Stability Fund is established, administered by an International Administrative Council (IAC) with strict anti-corruption safeguards. Disbursement is conditional on adherence to treaty terms, transparency requirements, and anti-corruption safeguards.

Article IX

Regional Integration

A Middle East Free Trade Zone (MEFTZ) is established as a customs union between Israel, Palestine, Jordan, and potentially other regional partners. The Port of Gaza is revitalized as a major Mediterranean hub, with duty-free transit zones for Palestine at the Port of Haifa.

Article X

Interfaith & Cultural Cooperation

Curriculum reform in both Israeli and Palestinian educational systems removes incitement and promotes tolerance, coexistence, and mutual understanding. The Jerusalem Peace University is established as a joint institution offering degrees across former lines of conflict.

Article XI

Natural Resources & Environment

Joint management of the Mountain and Coastal Aquifers, a 300 million cubic meter desalination plant in Ashdod, and a unified regional power grid integrating solar projects in the Negev and the West Bank β€” all governed by environmental impact assessment criteria.

Article XII

A World Free from Oppression

The ultimate goal of the HPC is to dismantle systems of political, economic, and religious oppression, to protect human dignity, to ensure equal rights and security for all peoples, and to create conditions in which individuals and communities can live without fear, discrimination, or structural injustice.

Technical Annexes

The depth behind the framework.

The treaty is accompanied by a series of technical annexes that provide the operational specificity required for any serious peace implementation. These annexes are evidence of the treaty's depth, seriousness, and implementability.

Annex A

Geographical Survey Coordinates

Precise perimeters, latitudes, and longitudes for all demilitarized zones, security perimeters, and the safe-passage corridor.

Annex B

HPC-MF Logistics & Supply Chain

Detailed logistical supply chain requirements for the 75,000-person Multinational Force, including rotation schedules, materiel flow, and medical evacuation protocols.

Annex C

Reconstruction Disbursement

Quarterly disbursement schedules for the 75B USD Reconstruction Fund, with milestones and verification criteria for each tranche.

Annex D

Environmental Impact Criteria

Standardized environmental impact assessment criteria for all joint infrastructure projects, including aquifer protection, biodiversity safeguards, and emissions targets.

Annex E

Municipal Council Legal Standing

Legal standing of municipal councils during the phased 7-year transition, including electoral cycles, budgetary authority, and coordination protocols with the HPC.

Annex F

Jerusalem Interfaith Oversight Body

Constitution of the JIOB, voting procedures, dispute resolution, and the unanimous-consent rule for sensitive actions in the Holy Basin.