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Toby Greene

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Toby Greene,

ToGreene

Opinion

Bi-national state is a dangerous delusion

The notion risks leading a generation of well-meaning, liberal, diaspora Jews into a rabbit hole, writes Toby Greene

July 16, 2020 13:17
Settlement of Maale Adumim
2 min read

Those announcing the death of the two-state solution should wonder why its death needs announcing so often. The answer is, a compelling solution to a difficult problem won’t die without a better one coming along. Usually those keenest to bury the two-state solution are those opposed to it. Now former proponents — such as Peter Beinart, cited approvingly by Jonathan Freedland — are joining them. This is a big mistake.

Beinart is half right in analysing the dangers of the current order. It can be sustained only through Israeli power, with escalating costs to Israel’s liberal democracy and social cohesion. A new intifada could lead to Israeli withdrawals, but also, as Beinart warns, to a Palestinian catastrophe. Beinart’s error is in claiming a bi-national state is the most attainable alternative to this dark fate.

It is not correct — as Beinart claims — that the current reality is a bi-national state minus Palestinian rights. The Gaza Strip, though besieged and impoverished, looks more like a mini-state than anything else, since Hamas controls the territory and its borders with both Egypt and Israel. The Palestinian Authority, though having only limited territorial control in the West Bank, is nonetheless a foreign country to most Israelis.

Nor is it correct that Israel has consumed too much West Bank land to make a Palestinian state possible. Some 80 per cent of settlers live in blocs close to the Green Line that can be annexed in a territorial agreement. Isolated settlements represent barely one per cent of Israel’s population, living on built-up area covering barely one per cent of the West Bank. What’s more, most Israelis are ambivalent about isolated settlements. They value maintaining a Jewish majority over controlling all the territory.