Rafi DeMogge
Rafi DeMogge is the pseudonym of an Israel-based author and researcher who writes on political demography. You can follow him on Twitter @HeTows.
August 14, 2025
Get a free e-book about the unforeseen diplomatic consequences Israel would face if it acceded to a Palestinian state.
In recent weeks, four of Israel's Western allies—France, Australia, the UK, and Canada—have moved toward recognizing a Palestinian state. France and Australia have declared they will recognize “Palestine” outright; the latter two have threatened to follow unless certain conditions are met, including Israel’s halting its military operation in Gaza and increasing the flow of humanitarian aid to the Strip. This push coincides with a familiar diplomatic narrative: if it doesn't agree to a Palestinian state, Israel risks a “diplomatic tsunami” and “international isolation”—despite having offered such a state many times in the last several decades.
Yet, as Rafi DeMogge argued earlier this year, the opposite is true: Israel giving up territory and recognizing a Palestinian state would likely cause the very isolation its advocates claim it would prevent. This free e-book brings that essay together with responses from leading analysts, who probe the real consequences of a two-state solution for Israel, the Palestinian people, Diaspora Jewry, and the Middle East.
Inside the book:
February 2025
February 2025
February 2025
February 2025
February 2025
Unlock the most serious Jewish, Zionist, and American thinking.
Subscribe NowIn recent weeks, four of Israel's Western allies—France, Australia, the UK, and Canada—have moved toward recognizing a Palestinian state. France and Australia have declared they will recognize “Palestine” outright; the latter two have threatened to follow unless certain conditions are met, including Israel’s halting its military operation in Gaza and increasing the flow of humanitarian aid to the Strip. This push coincides with a familiar diplomatic narrative: if it doesn't agree to a Palestinian state, Israel risks a “diplomatic tsunami” and “international isolation”—despite having offered such a state many times in the last several decades.
Yet, as Rafi DeMogge argued earlier this year, the opposite is true: Israel giving up territory and recognizing a Palestinian state would likely cause the very isolation its advocates claim it would prevent. This free e-book brings that essay together with responses from leading analysts, who probe the real consequences of a two-state solution for Israel, the Palestinian people, Diaspora Jewry, and the Middle East.
Inside the book:
Rafi DeMogge on the diplomatic case against territorial concessions
Calev Ben-Dor on why many Western liberals defend Palestinian terror
Evelyn Gordon on how Israeli territorial withdrawals foment anti-Semitism
Robert Satloff on the utility of keeping a two-state solution in reserve
Get the book free here:
Rafi DeMogge is the pseudonym of an Israel-based author and researcher who writes on political demography. You can follow him on Twitter @HeTows.
Robert Satloff is the Segal executive director at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy and its Howard P. Berkowitz chair in U.S. Middle East Policy.
Evelyn Gordon is a commentator and former legal-affairs reporter who immigrated to Israel in 1987. In addition to Mosaic, she has published in the Jerusalem Post, Azure, Commentary, and elsewhere. She blogs at Evelyn Gordon.
Calev Ben-Dor is the editor of Fathom Journal and a former analyst in the policy planning division of Israel's Foreign Ministry.