DONALD Trump has unveiled his bizarre AI-generated vision for Gaza featuring casino hotels, giant golden statues of himself, and futuristic skyscrapers.
The video, posted to his TruthSocial, also features bearded dancing girls, Elon Musk dancing under cash falling from the sky, and the President standing next to a half-naked belly dancer in a bar.
It comes as Trump has schemed to revamp Gaza into "the Riviera of the Middle East" and previously shared AI pictures of his controversial plans for the enclave.
The 30-second clip starts with Hamas fighters and children standing in a rubble-covered road before it poses the question: "Gaza 2025. What's next?"
Trump's clip then cuts to children running along a sunny beach and Tesla cars driving through a clean palm tree-lined boulevard.
A giant golden statue of Trump stands in the middle of one street while little golden statues of him are on sale at a hotel.
One child holds a giant golden balloon of Trump's face in the middle of a road that could be in one of the finest Italian towns.
Trump has also expanded his hotel chain to the strip, with two different Trump Gaza hotels lit up in bright orange lights as wealthy business people and guests stand outside.
Gaza, in Trump's mind, could be a gorgeous tourist destination where locals and holidaymakers live wealthy, fun-filled lives instead of fighting in poverty against Israel.
But Trump isn't the only famous figure in the clip, with Elon Musk featuring several times.
A tanned AI version of the billionaire Tesla owner and key ally of Trump can be seen dancing under money falling from the sky and grinning as he eats food.
Trump's vision then has Musk walking under more money falling from the sky as he looks proudly to the heavens.
Trump's chilling ultimatum to Hamas as he calls for all Gaza hostages to be freed this week or 'all hell break loose'
Nearby, on the golden sun-soaked beach, two women with thick black beards dance in a group.
Trump also dances with a half-naked belly dancer in a bar and holds her hand while he wears a full business suit and a crowd watches on.
Israeli PM Benjamin Netanyahu and Trump feature side-by-side shirtless sipping cocktails in deckchairs by the pool.
The two allies wear swim shorts on the loungers and, despite the clip being AI, both have their bellies hanging out.
The pair sit next to a pool on the other side of two tall hotels.
Gaza now also has dozens of futuristic skyscrapers and superyachts sitting in the sea just off the coast.
Trump posted the clip without any description to his social media but he has pinned it to the top of his account.
The clip also has its own AI soundtrack with a high-tempo dance beat belting out "Trump Gaza shining bright... Trump Gaza number one."
"Donald is coming to set you free, bringing the life for all to see, no more tunnels, no more fear, Trump Gaza is finally here.
"Trump Gaza is shining bright, a golden future, a brand new light, feast and dance the deal is done, Trump Gaza number one."
The song then repeats the second line as Trump's AI vision comes to a pumping crescendo.
Calling the strip a "demolition site", Trump said Gaza could be turned into a "Middle East Riviera" under US control.
Netanyahu has been working on a vision for Gaza behind the scenes and it is understood his input influenced Trump's announcement
During Netanyahu's visit to Washington last week Trump proposed the US takeover Gaza and that the two million Palestinians living there be resettled elsewhere.
Much of Gaza has been reduced to rubble from Israeli bombardment after Netanyahu vowed to wipe out Hamas in revenge for the terror proxy's October 7 atrocity.
Trump has long taken interest in the Middle East and during his first presidency unveiled a plan to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
His new AI clip is not the first time the technology has been used to create a vision of the strip's future.
Netanyahu shared a detailed vision for Gaza just months before Donald Trump unveiled controversial plans for the enclave.
Complete with surreal CGI imagery, the Israeli PM revealed a blueprint to redevelop Gaza into an idyllic urban and rural settlement.
It's thought Trump could have been shown this plan for Gaza - as well as a report prepared by George Washington University professor Joseph Pelzman that was sent to the president's advisers last year.
Nadav Shtrauchler, a former strategist for Netanyahu, previously told The Sun: "I think it'd been shown to Trump one way or another.
"Trump didn't wake up in the morning and come up with the idea, there would have been routes to this, probably from Israel - it was planted somehow."
Grand designs dubbed "Gaza 2035" that may have inspired Trump show the strip flooded with futuristic skyscrapers and a 132-mile railway to NEOM - a speculative $500 billion Saudi city.
War-torn Gaza would be transformed from a terrorism hotbed to a glistening gem in the Middle East landscape.
Where would Palestinians relocate to?
DONALD Trump said two million Palestinians would have to leave Gaza before it could be redeveloped.
He said those displaced would go to "various domains" - including Egypt and Jordan.
Both countries and other Arab nations have rejected this notion.
Suggestions have also been made that Palestinians could be resettled in Ireland.
Israel's defence minister last week tabled the idea of taking tens of thousands of Palestinians out of Gaza by air and sea.
Israel Katz said Ireland, Spain and Norway - which last year recognised a Palestinian state - would be "legally obligated" to take displaced Gaza residents.
He said: "Countries like Spain, Ireland, Norway, and others, which have levelled accusations and false claims against Israel over its actions in Gaza, are legally obligated to allow any Gaza resident to enter their territories."
Dr Kobby Barda told The Sun: "There are 150,00 ghost houses in Ireland.
"If you have a ghost house where no one is living, you need to pay tax to the government.
"There will be no problem for Israel to get them to Ben Gurion airport, and put them on a plane and fly them over to Dublin."
Ireland's foreign minister Simon Harris hit back at Katz's remarks, branding them "unhelpful and provocative".