• Push Israel now for a two-state solution? You must be kidding.

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    Opinion Push Israel now for a two-state solution? You must be kidding.

    By Jason Willick
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    January 26, 2024 at 6:00 a.m. EST

    A display, in Jerusalem on Oct. 29, of posters of Israeli hostages
    abducted by Hamas on Oct. 7. (Mahmoud Illean/AP)
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    In 2005, Israel, with U.S. encouragement, embarked on a unilateral trial
    run for a Palestinian state. It evacuated its soldiers and settlers from
    the Gaza Strip, leaving the coastal enclave, then of 1.3 million people,
    to govern itself. Palestinians held elections in 2006. Hamas, the
    revolutionary party dedicated to Israel’s destruction, swiftly seized power.

    That experiment in Palestinian sovereignty is ending in untold
    suffering. Hamas thoroughly militarized the Strip, importing arms from
    Iran, starting rocket wars every few years, tunneling under civilian
    centers, and finally invading and rampaging through Israel’s south on
    Oct. 7, killing 1,200 and abducting 250. The humanitarian calamity in
    Gaza as Israel’s military tries to extirpate Hamas and free Israeli
    hostages is the predictable result.

    You might expect the origins of the current war to inspire caution about
    the practicality of barreling toward a Palestinian state alongside
    Israel. Instead, the concept — essentially moribund before the war began
    — is suddenly at the center of U.S. diplomacy. It was elevated by
    Secretary of State Antony Blinken in Davos, Switzerland, on Jan. 17,
    pushed two days later by President Biden in a widely reported phone call
    with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and this week is the
    subject of a Senate resolution supported by 49 Democrats.

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    The two-state solution has eluded a series of U.S. presidents. What is
    supposed to have changed now? Israelis have learned a brutal lesson in
    the dangers of withdrawing from territory. Meanwhile, polls show
    Palestinians in the West Bank overwhelmingly support the Oct. 7 massacre
    of Israelis, and support for Hamas generally has surged there as well.
    Implicit in Blinken’s two-state exhortations is that the Hamas attacks
    were driven by the lack of Palestinian statehood. But a Hamas leader
    last week exuberantly explained that he sees Palestinian statehood as
    just a way station to Israel’s destruction.


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    It has long been popular for critics to blame Israeli policy for the
    political weakness of Palestinian moderates. Since Oct. 7, that argument
    has taken a more pointed form: that Netanyahu empowered Hamas in a divide-and-conquer strategy against the Palestinians. But it wasn’t
    Israel that hurled Palestinians off buildings in the 2007 battle to
    control Gaza. Hamas and Fatah did that to each other. Israel has
    certainly tried to exploit Palestinian divisions, but it did not create
    them. Hamas’s claim to popular legitimacy rooted in a commitment to destroying Israel is now the foremost obstacle to a Palestinian state.

    Former diplomat Alon Pinkas, writing for the liberal Israeli newspaper
    Haaretz, describes the current two-state discussion as “completely artificial” and “untethered from political realities.” He observes that the politically embattled but conniving Netanyahu can nonetheless
    brandish the specter of a U.S.-imposed Palestinian state to shore up his flighty right-wing coalition. But Netanyahu isn’t the only one for whom
    a phantom two-state debate is useful. Biden’s election-year advocacy of statehood might mollify some progressives incensed at his backing of
    Israel’s war on Hamas. The two leaders benefit with their respective political bases from two-state shadowboxing.

    For many journalists, meanwhile, the two-state posturing is a delicious opportunity to play up divisions between the United States and Israel —
    and to construct a tidy moral binary about the conflict. But look more
    closely at what Biden and Netanyahu are saying, and there might be more
    give in both leaders’ positions than is sometimes portrayed.

    For example, in one statement deemed as ruling out a Palestinian state, Netanyahu said that “Israel must have security control of the entire
    area west of the Jordan,” adding: “It’s a necessary requirement, and it clashes with the idea of sovereignty.” In other words, any Palestinian
    polity west of the Jordan River would not be fully sovereign. But when
    Biden leaned on Netanyahu about Palestinian statehood last week, in the
    New York Times’s account, the president also “raised options that would limit Palestinian sovereignty.”

    Biden told reporters after the call that “there are a number of types of two-state solutions.” The question of Palestinian statehood — yes or no
    — misses the point. The relevant question is how to increase the
    capacity of Palestinian governing institutions, in the West Bank and
    Gaza, in a regime that draws its legitimacy from a source other than the
    sort of eliminationism advocated by Hamas.

    As political scientist Samuel Huntington observed in his 1968 study of political development, “The problem is not to hold elections but to
    create organizations. In many, if not most, modernizing countries
    elections serve only to enhance the power of disruptive and often
    reactionary social forces.” There’s every reason to fear that Hamas or similar entities would control a nascent democratic Palestinian state in
    the near-term aftermath of this brutal war.

    The term “two-state solution” assumes its own conclusion. If the United States and other powers recognized the pre-1967 Palestinian territories
    as a state tomorrow, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would not be
    solved. The solution will come only with the demonstration of effective Palestinian governance and engagement with Israel — and the Israeli concessions that could come about, under pressure from Washington and
    Arab states, in response. The decimated landscape of Gaza shows the
    price of getting that sequence wrong.


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    Opinion by Jason Willick
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