Trader consensus on foreign intervention in Gaza reflects stalled progress toward deploying the US-backed International Stabilisation Force (ISF), authorized by UN Security Council Resolution 2803 last year, amid Hamas resistance to disarmament demands. On March 24, Board of Peace envoy Nickolay Mladenov briefed the Council that Indonesia, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, and Albania have committed troops, with a decommissioning framework developed alongside guarantors US, Egypt, Türkiye, and Qatar, but no physical entry into Gaza has occurred despite Israeli media reports of May preparations. Recent US proposals for Hamas's full surrender have met pushback, delaying operational roles like peacekeeping or convoy escort before the March 31 window closes, with logistics and negotiations as key hurdles ahead.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated$410,819 Vol.

March 31
1%

April 30
11%

June 30
32%
$410,819 Vol.

March 31
1%

April 30
11%

June 30
32%
The foreign personnel must physically enter the terrestrial territory of the Gaza Strip to qualify. Entering the maritime territory, as occurred during the US’s attempt to construct a floating pier in 2024, or entering the airspace will not qualify.
Entering Israeli controlled buffer zones will not qualify.
Egyptian or other forces operating solely along the Egyptian/Gaza border will not qualify regardless of if they cross the border.
Foreign personnel carrying out individual special operations, diplomatic missions, or solely humanitarian operations will not qualify.
Qualifying deployments must involve active-duty personnel of at least one foreign state or international institution (e.g., the UN or multinational missions) who are officially sent to Gaza for an operational role (e.g., peacekeeping, convoy escort, detention, logistical support). To qualify, the deployment must occur within the specified timeframe; mere announcements will not suffice.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Market Opened: Feb 18, 2026, 6:39 PM ET
Resolver
0x65070BE91...The foreign personnel must physically enter the terrestrial territory of the Gaza Strip to qualify. Entering the maritime territory, as occurred during the US’s attempt to construct a floating pier in 2024, or entering the airspace will not qualify.
Entering Israeli controlled buffer zones will not qualify.
Egyptian or other forces operating solely along the Egyptian/Gaza border will not qualify regardless of if they cross the border.
Foreign personnel carrying out individual special operations, diplomatic missions, or solely humanitarian operations will not qualify.
Qualifying deployments must involve active-duty personnel of at least one foreign state or international institution (e.g., the UN or multinational missions) who are officially sent to Gaza for an operational role (e.g., peacekeeping, convoy escort, detention, logistical support). To qualify, the deployment must occur within the specified timeframe; mere announcements will not suffice.
The resolution source will be a consensus of credible reporting.
Resolver
0x65070BE91...Trader consensus on foreign intervention in Gaza reflects stalled progress toward deploying the US-backed International Stabilisation Force (ISF), authorized by UN Security Council Resolution 2803 last year, amid Hamas resistance to disarmament demands. On March 24, Board of Peace envoy Nickolay Mladenov briefed the Council that Indonesia, Morocco, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, and Albania have committed troops, with a decommissioning framework developed alongside guarantors US, Egypt, Türkiye, and Qatar, but no physical entry into Gaza has occurred despite Israeli media reports of May preparations. Recent US proposals for Hamas's full surrender have met pushback, delaying operational roles like peacekeeping or convoy escort before the March 31 window closes, with logistics and negotiations as key hurdles ahead.
Experimental AI-generated summary referencing Polymarket data · Updated


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