One state solution os Pal and Isr

I think this is the right solution for the conflict, which guarantees equal rights for all people, Jews and Muslims.

The Palestinian Turn to a One-State Solution | Newsweek International Edition | Newsweek.com

In a recent report, peace now (an Israeli NGO) revealed that since President George W. Bush convened the Annapolis peace talks last October, the number of construction tenders issued in East Jerusalem has increased by a factor of 38 compared to the previous year. Since 1967, when Israel occupied the West Bank and Gaza, and especially since the Madrid peace negotiations of 1993, Israel has built almost 13 new neighborhoods in East Jerusalem, which is now home to more than a quarter million Israelis—almost the same number as Palestinians allowed to reside within the city. If you recall that most plans for a two-state solution envisage East Jerusalem as the capital of a future Palestinian state (alongside the Israeli capital in West Jerusalem), it’s easy to understand why many Palestinians are losing faith in this project.

There is another reason the two-state solution is losing support: Washington’s attitude. On a recent trip to Ramallah, U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, when reminded that Palestinians have already shown willingness to concede 78 percent of what they consider their rightful territory to Israel, reportedly shot back, “Forget the 78 percent. What is being negotiated now is the remaining 22 percent.” The message was clear: Palestinians must be ready to give up more land.

Israelis have long described their West Bank settlements—long fingers of territory that stretch along the north-south and east-west axes, serviced by highways, electrical networks, etc.—as organic extensions of the Israeli community. But Israeli construction has (again according to Peace Now) increased by 550 percent in the past year. This building, combined with that of the nearly complete separation wall or barrier, and reports that Israel wishes to maintain security control along the eastern edge of the Jordan Valley, sends another message: that Israel plans to hold onto the land for good. Combine this with the still unaddressed refugee problem, and it’s no wonder many former two-staters are giving up hope.

It is important to remember that the Palestinian national movement only began to endorse the idea of a two-state solution 20 or 30 years ago, as a practical compromise. Realizing that Israel wasn’t going anywhere, moderates decided that their best hope for a state was one alongside Israel, not one that sought to replace it. Yet the 15 years of negotiations that have followed have produced little, and thus it’s no surprise that faith in this supposedly pragmatic option is waning. The lack of progress, as well as the unmistakably expansionist reality on the ground and the growth in popularity of Hamas, have left little room for anyone seeking a positive future for Palestine. Except, that is, to rejuvenate the old idea of one binational, secular and democratic state where Jewish and Arab citizens live side by side in equality.

For some, such as the intellectuals and activists who make up the Palestinian Strategy Group (which recently made this case in Arabic newspapers), talk of a one-state scenario is meant to warn Israel of the dangers posed by its expansionist policies. This group would still prefer a two-state solution to emerge. Others, however, are returning to the one-state vision first espoused by Fatah (the mainstream Palestinian nationalist movement) back in the late '60s. The first group believes that one-state talk might help knock some sense into the heads of Israeli decision-makers. The second prefers a one-state solution because it would create a government they would eventually control as a demographic majority. Although even Prime Minister Ehud Olmert has lately recognized the danger Israel faces, it is not clear that other decision-makers in Israel do. They may try to defer the problem through some diversionary tactic, such as throwing control of the West Bank’s population centers to Jordan under continued Israeli military supervision. Such a “solution” was first floated by Israel back in the '70s. According to this scenario, Gaza would also be thrown to Egypt.

But even if Jordan and Egypt could be persuaded to accept such burdens—and they couldn’t be—neither tactic would bring lasting stability in the region. And serious proponents of the one-state scenario seem not to realize how much more human suffering it would take to attain. As for sounding alarm bells, this might have made sense 25 years ago, when settlement building in East Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank was just starting. Today, with over half a million Jews living across the 1949 Armistice Line, it’s almost too late to reverse the process. It is therefore time for action, not words. Practically, this means pushing within the next few months for a fair deal both parties can live with. And that means a two-state deal; the Israelis will never agree to anything else. Many Palestinians think a single state might be ideal—since it would involve the defeat of the Zionist project and its replacement by a binational country that would eventually be ruled by its Arab majority. But many ships have been wrecked on such rocks before. And the one state likely to emerge from a cataclysmic conflict would likely to be anything but ideal.

Nusseibeh is president of Al-Quds University.

Re: One state solution os Pal and Isr

This will NEVER happen.

If the non-Jewish population of the West Bank and Gaza were granted Israeli citizenship, Arabs would comprise nearly 49% of the national population...within a decade or two, there would be a clear Arab and Muslim majority, and the "Jewish nature" of the state would be lost. The only way Israel can preserve its Jewishness is through the continued disenfranchisement of the Arab population, or the creation of a separate Arab state.

Re: One state solution os Pal and Isr

^ So preserving Zionist state's Jewish identity is more important than giving equal rights to all people without regard to their religion?

Both Muslims and Jews consider that land holy. Hence the best solution to the problem is that everyone, Muslims/Christians/Jews, live there in peace and harmony. No reasonable person could deny it.

Re: One state solution os Pal and Isr

There is one very important fact that all our Jewish cousins seem to be ignoring......Holy Land can no longer be Holy if it does not sustain the Population.......


Without Outside support the Aparthied State of Israel can not sustain itself......


it is totally dependant on aid from Europe and USA............


in essence USA is the NEW Holy Land for Jews...sooner they realize that....sooner there will be peace on Earth............:)

In a utopian world that would be wonderful. I'm just pointing out why it's never going to happen.

The Israelis have no interest in extending voting rights to the Palestinians for the reasons I already mentioned. And ultimately they're the ones with the power to decide. The best solution anyone can hope for is the establishment of some separate Palestinian state, so the Israelis can maintain their "Jewish state," and the Palestinians can have their basic democratic rights. I think even the Israelis realize this (outside of the right-wing chauvinists)...

[quote]
In a utopian world that would be wonderful.
[/quote]

There goes all the talk of 'freedom' and 'liberty' down the drain.

Zionist state may not accept such solution, and everyone knows it.

Re: One state solution os Pal and Isr

^^ You really think Saudi Arabia and other Muslims will allow Saudi Arabia to become a non-muslim majority country

Come back to reality

There is no way Israel is going to Jewish identity by forming a one state solution

that happened in Lebanon and led to civil war between muslims and christians

Like I said, the most practical way to accomplish "freedom & liberty" for the greatest number of people is the two state solution.

LOL. And you think they're willingly going to accept becoming a minority in their country? Keep dreaming.