Halevy makes a very interesting point. Since we accept that no permanent resolution can occur and total non agreement is unsustainable, there's a middle ground, a wonderfully Machiavellian one of permanent interim agreement.
From news article:
- The options for Israel and the Palestinians basically can be boiled down to these: a permanent agreement, an interim agreement, a de facto interim agreement, and a situation of no agreement. The best possible option - a permanent agreement - is not operable at this time and is the least probable.
- Since the leaderships of Israel and the Palestinians are faced with the reality of a no-solution situation, one in which a permanent solution is not workable, both sides will have to do what people often do in life - they settle for less, settle for something which is less permanent, less perfect. There will have to be an interim solution.
We have ended a two-year effort in trying to map out what we call the future borders between Israel and the Palestinian Authority: principles, scenarios, and recommendations. The options for Israel and the Palestinians basically can be boiled down to these: a permanent agreement, an interim agreement, a de facto interim agreement, and a situation of no agreement. I think the best possible option - a permanent agreement - is not operable at this time and is the least probable. At the other end of the spectrum, the possibility that there will be no agreement is not desirable because it risks a situation unfolding in which the parties lose control of the scene.
The Advantages of Settling for Less
An interim solution is easier for each side to implement in part because each side can tell its constituency that it is not final. The Palestinians can say this is a step towards the ultimate. Israel can say that it is reversible, even if it is not entirely reversible. It is one step in the direction of maintaining the quality of the Jewish democratic system of government which we wish to maintain, in which the Jews are the majority of this country. This country was created ultimately to be the epitome and the expression of the Jewish People and Jewish nationalism, although we have an Arab minority which should have full rights. We did not fight the War of Independence in order to create a multinational state.
It's quite brilliant, really. Create a permanent interim agreement where both sides can walk away claiming they've more or less won enough to fight another day, which they don't. I'm thinking of the Two Koreas. There's never been a peace treaty or bilateral agreement that the war is over or even that the 38th parallel is a border or that two countries legitimately exist.
http://jcpa.org/JCPA/Templates/ShowP...ed_Middle_East

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