Contrary to the two-state solution, which splits Israel between the Israelis and the Palestinians, Israeli scholar Mordechai Nisan proposes that the land west of the Jordan River should be granted to Israel alone.
“It became conventional and universally acceptable that there should be a Palestinian state next to Israel, west of the Jordan River,” Nisan, retired lecturer in Middle East Studies at Hebrew University of Jerusalem, told John Bachman and Miranda Khan on “America’s Forum” on Newsmax TV.
“This was a theme that was embedded in the Oslo Accords from 1993 and central to various rounds of negotiations, which took place in the last 20 years between the Israelis and the Palestinians,” he explained.
“But a Palestinian state hasn’t surfaced and the reasons for that are many,” he said.
There is “a grave incompatibility between what Israel needs for its own well being and national military integrity, its right to settlements in the land of Israel, and what the Palestinians demand, which is a Palestinian state emptied of any Jews and a Palestinian state, which is not ready to recognize Israel as a Jewish state at all,” he contends.
“Therefore, it’s not surprising that after 20 years, no agreement has been reached,” he added.