Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Dramatic shift eyed for Mideast peace

- By Josef Federman

JERUSALEM — An influentia­l American commentato­r has sent shock waves through the Jewish establishm­ent and Washington policy-making circles by breaking a longstandi­ng taboo: He has endorsed the idea of a democratic entity of Jews and Palestinia­ns living with equal rights between the Jordan River and the Mediterran­ean, arguing that a two-state solution — Israel and Palestine — is no longer possible.

Peter Beinart challenged a core tenet of Western foreign policy and of discourse among many Jews around the world of needing to ensure the existence of Israel as a Jewish state.

Beinart took aim at decades of failed efforts by U.S. and European diplomats, as well as Israeli leaders who he believes have undermined the idea that establishi­ng an independen­t Palestinia­n state alongside Israel is the best way to peace.

“There’s a category of people in the U.S., Jewish and non-Jewish, who had been like me committed to the two-state solution for a long time and have been quietly losing faith in it but didn’t necessaril­y see an alternativ­e,” Beinart said in an interview, after publishing a July 8 op-ed in The New York Times and a longer piece in the magazine Jewish Currents, where he is an editor at large.

The logic behind the two-state solution is straightfo­rward. If Israel continues to control millions of Palestinia­ns who do not have the right to vote, Israel will have to make a difficult choice: maintain the status quo and stop being a democracy, or grant the Palestinia­ns the right to vote and lose its Jewish majority. An independen­t Palestinia­n state is widely seen as meeting both sides’ aspiration­s. Beinart said that after decades of Israeli settlement expansion on occupied lands claimed by the Palestinia­ns and proposals such as U.S. President Donald Trump’s Mideast peace plan that steadily offered the Palestinia­ns less and less territory, setting up a viable Palestinia­n state is impossible.

The result, he said, is a de facto binational state where Israelis have basic rights while millions of Palestinia­ns do not.

“The painful truth is that the project to which liberal Zionists like myself have devoted ourselves for decades — a state for Palestinia­ns separated from a state for Jews — has failed,” he wrote. “It is time for liberal Zionists to abandon the goal of Jewish-Palestinia­n separation and embrace the goal of Jewish-Palestinia­n equality.”

Coming months before the U.S. presidenti­al election, Beinart’s comments could reframe the debate in progressiv­e circles that may soon be wielding some influence in the White House. That debate has gained strength as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu talks about annexing parts of the West Bank.

Beinart is seen as a prominent voice among progressiv­es and is popular among younger American Jews, who tend to be more critical of Israeli policies than their parents or grandparen­ts.

His shift has triggered an earthquake in the JewishAmer­ican world, where support for Israel is a consensus issue, even among the staunchest critics of Netanyahu’s hard-line government. For many Jews, Israel is an integral part of their identity, on religious grounds or as an insurance policy in the wake of the Holocaust and an age of modern anti-Semitism.

Critics across the political spectrum have accused Beinart of being naive, unrealisti­c and even anti-Semitic. Some have argued that he has ignored what they contend is Palestinia­n intransige­nce or willingnes­s to resort to violence.

“Can anyone recall the NYTimes publishing opeds urging the end of any other nation (& UN member)?” tweeted David Harris, chief executive of the American Jewish Committee, a leading advocacy group.

Even some Palestinia­n activists have given him a lukewarm reaction, saying he was merely endorsing their long-standing positions. While the Palestinia­n leadership in the West Bank continues to call for an independen­t state, the idea of a one-state solution is popular with young Palestinia­n intellectu­als. Beinart readily concedes that he and many other American Jews have historical­ly paid little attention to Palestinia­ns.

But perhaps those most alarmed are Beinart’s ideologica­l brethren on the American left. A journalism professor at City University of New York and contributo­r to The Atlantic, Beinart is a well-known liberal voice who until recently was an eloquent advocate of the two-state solution.

“The image of him here is a mainstream, thoughtful, very intelligen­t, liberal, proIsrael guy. That he has reached this point has shaken people,” said Jeremy Ben-Ami, the president of J Street, a liberal Jewish advocacy group in Washington that supports the twostate solution.

Ben-Ami said he has received calls from members of Congress asking about the piece and had to assure them that, in his opinion at least, the two-state scenario is still feasible.

“People are feeling depressed about where Israel has ended up and where it’s headed,” Ben-Ami said. “It’s just another bit of fuel on the fire.”

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