How Should We Respond to European Recognition of a Palestinian State?

By Michael Brown Published on May 29, 2024

On May 22, the nations of Norway, Spain, and Ireland announced their intentions to recognize a Palestinian state. As reported in The Epoch Times, the announcement prompted β€œIsrael to immediately recall its ambassadors to the three nations.”

How should we respond?

The leaders of these three countries are calling for β€œtwo states, living side by side, in peace and security” (Norwegian Prime Minister Jonas Gahr Store), β€œwith mutual security guarantees” (Spanish Prime Minister Pedro SΓ‘nchez), and with β€œIreland’s dream” being β€œthat the Israeli and Palestinian children of May 28, 2024 will grow up to be neighbors at peace” (Irish Prime Minister Simon Harris).

Israel’s response was harsh and swift, with Minister of Foreign Affairs Israel Katz describing it as β€œthe Irish-Norwegian folly.”

Wrong Solution

Katz claimed in a post on X that the announcement undermines Israeli sovereignty and endangers its security, stating,

β€œToday’s decision sends a message to the Palestinians and the world: Terrorism pays. After the Hamas terror organization carried out the largest massacre of Jews since the Holocaust, after committing heinous sexual crimes witnessed by the world, these countries chose to reward Hamas and Iran by recognizing a Palestinian state.

β€œToday’s decision sends a message to the Palestinians and the world: Terrorism pays.”

β€œThis distorted step by these countries is an injustice to the memory of the victims of 7/10, a blow to efforts to return the 128 hostages, and a boost to Hamas and Iran’s jihadists, which undermines the chance for peace and questions Israel’s right to self-defense.”

Then, speaking directly to Ireland, he posted, β€œIreland, if your goal was to reward terrorism by declaring support for a Palestinian state, you’ve achieved it.

β€œ@SimonHarrisTD , Hamas thanks you for your service.”

Accompanying the post was a 19-second video depicting some of the horrors of the October 7 massacre with the caption, β€œHamas: THANKS IRELAND.”

A One-State Solution

Why this extreme reaction from Israeli leadership? After all, the Irish government called for β€œthe unconditional release of hostages held by Hamas and β€˜full, safe, and unhindered’ humanitarian access to Gaza.” And SΓ‘nchez said that recognition of the Palestinian state was a necessary step to β€œempower the Palestinian National Authority against Hamas, a terrorist group that must disappear.”

Don’t most Israelis also share the dream of living side by side in peace and prosperity with their Arab neighbors? What, then, was so wrong with this formal recognition of a Palestinian state?

First, these nations have no authority whatsoever, legally or morally, to tell Israel what to do with the disputed territories β€” territories that were acquired in the midst of defensive wars. Who appointed these three countries the arbiters of the Middle East?

Please Support The Stream: Equipping Christians to Think Clearly About the Political, Economic, and Moral Issues of Our Day.

Second, as the old saying goes, the devil is in the details β€” in this case, the details of what, exactly, constitutes a Palestinian state. Palestinian leaders in Judea and Samaria (aka the West Bank) have made it clear that no Jews can live in a Palestinian state (in contrast with Israel being home to more than two million Palestinian Arabs).

As Eric Mandel noted in 2018, when Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, put forth a serious proposal for a two-state solution to the United Nations Security Council, it will only work β€œif your goal is a Palestinian state ethnically cleansed of every Jew.”

There are now reportedly more than 500,000 Israeli Jews living in the West Bank, all of whom would have to go based on the European countries’ pollyannaish vision. To repeat: Who gave Norway, Spain, and Ireland the right to expel half a million people from their homes?

How the Palestinian Authority Views β€˜Peace’ with Israel

Third, the announcement is completely unrealistic, envisioning a peaceful way to oust Hamas from power as well envisioning Abbas and the Palestinian Authority as serious peace partners for Israel.

As Mandel noted in 2018,

β€œIn 2014, [Abbas] told the Arab League, β€˜We will never recognize the Jewishness of the state of Israel.’ In 2016 in Sudan, he reiterated that he will β€˜recognize the State of Israel, and that is it. However a Jewish state is not my affair. I will not recognize it at all and I will not accept it.’ In December, his chief negotiator Saeb Erekat said Palestinians need to strive to reclaim β€˜historic Palestine, from the river to the sea.’ And this January, clearing up any ambiguity, Abbas asserted from the safety of his West Bank compound that the state of Israel is β€˜a colonial project that has nothing to do with Judaism,’ and rejected any Jewish ties to the land.

β€œAs for accepting Israel’s legitimacy and right to a state, Abbas asserts that Israel’s occupation started in 1948, not 1967. This clearly means that he believes Israel proper to be occupied, not just the West Bank and Gaza.”

This is Israel’s wonderful peace partner?

Poll Results

To the extent that Abbas and other Palestinian leaders call for a one-state solution, they do so with the caveat that it must include the β€œright to return” for multiplied millions of descendants of Palestinian refugees, thereby overwhelming the demographics and effectively ending the idea of a Jewish state.

As for the popularity of Hamas, it actually surged in the West Bank after October 7.

As the Irish Times (!) reported regarding a major poll conducted last December,

β€œIn the survey, 72 per cent of respondents backed the Hamas-led attack of October 7th in which 1,200 people were killed, according to Israel, and some 240 taken hostage. Support for the attack was higher among Palestinians in the West Bank, at 82 per cent, than in Gaza (57 per cent).”

Additionally,

β€œAbout 44 per cent of West Bank residents support Hamas, the survey found, an increase from 12 per cent in September, while 42 per cent of Gazans (up from 38 per cent) expressed support for the militant group, which runs Gaza. Some 60 per cent in Gaza expressed support for the armed struggle against Israel, as did 70 per cent in the West Bank, where 490 Palestinians have been killed by Israeli soldiers and settlers since the Gaza war began.”

Is that clear enough?

Fourth, the announcement undermines Israel’s efforts to eliminate Hamas from power, instead encouraging the violent Palestinian resistance with the idea that, with perseverance, they will achieve their goals as support for Israel’s offensive wanes.

By all means, let us continue to work toward and dream about the peaceful and prosperous coexistence of the Israeli and Palestinian peoples. But announcements like this are as unhelpful as they are untimely.

Israel had good reason to react as sharply as it has.

 

Dr. Michael Brown is the host of the nationally syndicated Line of Fire radio program. He is the author of more than 40 books, including Can You be Gay and Christian?; Our Hands Are Stained With Blood; and Seize the Moment: How to Fuel the Fires of Revival. You can connect with him on Facebook, X, or YouTube.

Like the article? Share it with your friends! And use our social media pages to join or start the conversation! Find us on Facebook, X, Instagram, MeWe and Gab.

Inspiration
The Good Life
Katherine Wolf
More from The Stream
Connect with Us