Israeli and Palestinian obstinance, not settlements, obstructs two-state solution.
By James M.
Dorsey
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When US
President Joe Biden insisted there could be no return to the status ante quo once the guns fall silent in Gaza,
he revived debate about the viability of a two-state resolution of the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Yet, for all
practical purposes, Hamas’ brutal October 7 attack against Israel and Israel’s
more than month-long indiscriminate bombing of Gaza have likely delayed any
realistic effort to resolve the conflict.
As a result,
international efforts will largely focus initially on achieving a ceasefire and
interim arrangements for governing the devastated Palestinian territory.
Hardening perceptions
of the other on both sides of the Israeli-Palestinian divide and a war driven
by the most destructive human emotions -- survival, anger, fear, despair, and
vengeance – complicate, if not make impossible, talking about peace in the
immediate future that would involve compromises.
Moreover,
any talk of a resolution of the conflict will depend on the political future of
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu and his government, the most
ultra-nationalist and ultra-conservative in Israeli history, as well as
Palestinian players’ prospects.
With a majority of Israelis holding Mr.
Netanyahu responsible
for the October 7 Israeli intelligence and military failure that allowed Hamas
to breach the Jewish state’s defenses, many expect Mr. Netanyahu’s political
future to be short-lived once the war is over.
However, Mr.
Netanyahu’s demise does not mean he would be succeeded by a lovey-dovey
government eager to reverse long-standing Israeli policies and negotiate an
equitable deal with the Palestinians.
Benny Gantz,
a member of Mr. Netanyahu’s war cabinet, who is touted as the prime minister’s
possible successor, has ruled out a return to Israel’s pre-1967 borders and
insisted that Palestinians should have an “entity” but not a state.
Israel
conquered the West Bank, Gaza, East Jerusalem, and the Golan Heights during the
1967 Middle East war. Israel withdrew from Gaza in 2005 but, assisted by Egypt,
has blockaded the territory since 2007.
Many have
long believed that the international community’s almost universal support, with
Iran the major exception, for a two-state solution involving the creation of an
independent Palestinian state alongside Israel, amounted to paying lip service
to a concept past its shelf life.
Beyond
long-standing Israeli policies designed to thwart the viability of a two-state
solution and Palestinian inability to form a united front by bridging the
divide between Hamas and Al Fatah, the governing party of President Mahmoud
Abbas in the West Bank, Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land
populated by some 750,000 settlers, are widely seen as having rendered the notion of an independent Palestinian state
unviable.
To be sure,
the Hamas attack and the Israeli response are likely to harden future Israeli
and Palestinian negotiating positions.
For its
part, Israel, if and when it decides to sincerely engage in peace talks, is
certain to demand demilitarization and a controlling say in Palestinian
security affairs. This could prove unacceptable to the Palestinians.
Irrespective
of whether Hamas physically survives the Gaza war, support in the West Bank
for, at least one of the group’s tenets, armed struggle until a deal with
Israel is achieved, is on the increase. So is support for Hamas itself.
Less clear
is whether the Gaza war will further weaken support in the
territory for Hamas
that already was on the decline prior to the hostilities.
However, in
contrast to attitudes towards armed struggle, Palestinians are unlikely to back
away from widespread support for an independent Palestinian state that
recognizes Israel as part of a peace treaty that ends the intractable conflict.
Support for
a two-state resolution of the conflict contrasts starkly with Hamas’ insistence that a Palestinian
state can at best agree to a long-term ceasefire with Israel but not surrender its claims to all
of historic Palestine.
All of this impacts
Mr. Biden’s revival of the debate about a two-state solution amid doubts that the
United States will seriously pressure Israelis and Palestinians to return to the
negotiating table and ensure that discussions are result-oriented rather than
another round of motion without movement.
A study by Shaul Arieli, a former Israeli
paratrooper, advisor to the governments of Yitzhak Rabin and Ehud Barak on
negotiations with the Palestinians, and a scholar, suggests that lack of
political will rather than settlements constitute the main obstacle to
achieving a two-state solution.
Mr. Ariel’s
study concluded that 80 percent of Israeli settlers live on approximately four
per cent of the West Bank’s land close to Israel’s pre-1967 border, despite the
large number of settlements – 144 legal settlements under Israeli law and 100
illegal outposts – spread throughout the West Bank. Legal settlements include
twelve in Jerusalem.
Mr. Ariele
suggested that the 80 per cent could remain resident in Israel by swapping West
Bank land for Israeli land adjacent to the border. The remaining 20 percent of
settlers would have to choose between packing up and moving to Israel or living
under Palestinian rule.
“This
solution is fully feasible in the field by exchanging territories of the order
of four per cent which guarantees that 80 percent of Israelis living beyond the
Green Line (the pre-1967 border) will be annexed to Israel… Israel has the
ability to deal with the reception of evacuees in the context of
residences and workplaces,” Mr. Aureli said in a text message.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an Honorary Fellow at
Singapore’s Middle East Institute-NUS, an Adjunct Senior Fellow at Nanyang
Technological University’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, and
the author of the syndicated column and podcast, The
Turbulent World with James M. Dorsey.
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