
April 3, 2017
The Israel-Palestinian Peace Process Has Been a Massive Charade
By Daniel PipesSo long as Palestinian rejectionism runs rampant, debates about one-, two-, and three-state solutions are for naught.
Daniel Polisar of Shalem College in Jerusalem shook the debate over Palestinian-Israeli relations in November 2015 with his essay, “What Do Palestinians Want?” In it, having studied 330 polls to “understand the perspective of everyday Palestinians” toward Israel, Israelis, Jews, and the utility of violence against them, he found that Palestinian attackers are “venerated” by their society—with all that that implies.
He’s done it again with “Do Palestinians Want a Two-State Solution?” This time, he pored over some 400 opinion polls of Palestinian views to find consistency among seemingly contradictory evidence on the topic of ways to resolve the conflict with Israel. From this confusing bulk, Polisar convincingly establishes that Palestinians collectively hold three related views of Israel: it has no historical or moral claim to exist, it is inherently rapacious and expansionist, and it is doomed to extinction. In combination, these attitudes explain and justify the widespread Palestinian demand for a state from “the river to the sea,” the grand Palestine of their maps that erases Israel.
With this analysis, Polisar has elegantly dissected the phenomenon that I call Palestinian rejectionism. That’s the policy first implemented by the monstrous mufti of Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, in 1921 and consistently followed over the next near-century. Rejectionism demands that Palestinians (and beyond them, Arabs and Muslims) repudiate every aspect of Zionism: deny Jewish ties to the land of Israel, fight Jewish ownership of that land, refuse to recognize Jewish political power, refuse to trade with Zionists, murder Zionists where possible, and ally with any foreign power, including Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia, to eradicate Zionism.
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April 2017
The Israel-Palestinian Peace Process Has Been a Massive Charade
By Daniel PipesApril 2017
Palestinians Aren’t Ready to Make Peace with Israel. That Doesn’t Rule Out a Peace Deal.
By Ghaith al-OmariApril 2017
The Need to Change Palestinian Political Culture
By Elliott AbramsApril 2017
Why Making Peace with the Palestinians Isn’t Like Making Peace with Egypt and Jordan
By Daniel Polisar