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Geoffrey Alderman

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Death of the two state solution

July 31, 2014 12:15
2 min read

I hereby dedicate this column to Harakat al-Muqawama al-Islamiyya, better known here in the west as Hamas. In the 14 years that I've been writing this column I never imagined that I would actually pen so much as one sentence – let alone an entire column – in praise of Hamas. But it's clear to me that that time has now come.

Why? Because, in its latest endeavours in support of its ambition to wage war on us Jews and bring about the complete annihilation of Israel, Hamas has achieved two victories of extraordinary significance. It has sabotaged any possibility of there being a two-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. And it has materially assisted in the final and – one hopes – irrevocable refutation of the arguments that contemporary anti-Zionism is in no sense whatever racist, and that all men and women of goodwill can, with a clear conscience, oppose the existence of a Jewish nation state, without running the risk of being exposed as the racists that they undoubtedly are.

I deal first with the death of the two-state solution. For the purposes of my argument I am going to ignore the fact that the kingdom of Jordan is, as a matter of historical fact, a Palestinian-Arab state, carved out of the geographic territory that was part of the original Palestine mandate.

The two-state solution is, strictly, speaking, the three-state solution. But never mind. For the moment I'm going to ignore this inconvenient truth, and argue on the basis that the phrase refers to the idea that the solution to the present conflict lies in the conflicted parties agreeing to the creation of a Palestinian state, based on the West Bank and Gaza, living in peace and harmony alongside a Jewish state – meaning Israel more or less within the 1949 armistice lines.