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David Aaronovitch

ByDavid Aaronovitch, David Aaronovitch

Opinion

The two-state solution is the only solution, not a luxury belief

There has to be a parting between those who believe justice and reality demand an accommodation with Palestinians, and those who accept Israel can rule over them

January 11, 2024 11:09
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This picture taken on January 9, 2024 from the Israeli border with the Gaza Strip shows an Israeli army tank rolling in the center of the Gaza Strip, amid the ongoing battles between Israel and the militant Hamas group. (Photo by MENAHEM KAHANA/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Still, in the face of the blood tide, we moderates sing the same old song of the two states. But increasingly there are voices raised against it. From one side — broadly the right — comes the argument that the prospect of any deal with the Palestinians and involving Palestinian statehood is so remote that to invoke it is in effect to believe in a fairy tale and to seek — if only rhetorically — to impose that fairy tale on real people in Israel. It is described as a “luxury belief” (a term of art famously used by Suella Braverman last October to castigate those not supporting her plans to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda or drastically reduce immigration).

Usually attached to this is is a version of recent history in which the Palestinians, from the corrupt PA to the terrorists of Hamas, bear the entire responsibility for the failure of the Oslo Accords and the lack of any progress towards a settlement. There is and never will be a partner for peace so give it up.

As it happens this is also the belief of many on the pro-Palestinian left and even of what you might call the despairing centre. For the far-left it is Israel that is entirely to blame for the failure of Oslo (which they predicted) and the only solution that remains is a single-state one where Arabs and Jews live happily together, the Jews having given up the right to their own state. For them too the two-state solution is a fairy tale.

Twenty years ago the distinctly anti-leftist, anti-rightist Jewish historian Tony Judt controversially ditched the two-state solution, predicting that “in today’s ‘clash of cultures’ between open, pluralist democracies and belligerently intolerant, faith-driven ethno-states, Israel actually risks falling into the wrong camp”. I found his conclusion implausible.