Symmetry wrote:1) The Palestinian state exists, and is recognised by most of the world.
Exists more as a territory than as a state, I would argue. I mentioned it in the
other "Palestine" thread:
"As
this article in the Palestine Chronicle points out (which I do not entirely agree with, but makes some good points), the PA doesn't fulfill three of the basic conditions of statehood: national unity, economic viability, and security."
Symmetry wrote:4) Taiwan is not recognised by the UN, Iran is.
I'm not sure what Iran has to do with anything. Taiwan has much more reason to be recognized as a state because the country is unified nationally, strong economically, and peaceful on the world stage (not continuously firing rockets at--and suicide bombing--the civilians of the nation next door). The main point against it is that it might cease to exist if the US wouldn't stand up for it all the time. China would be more than happy to reclaim its "wayward child" and I doubt the Taiwanese could stand on their own.
Edit: BBS fastposted me and knows more about it than I...
Symmetry wrote:5) I'd like to hear from someone who voted "never". The two state solution is kind of the holy grail for most serious minded folk. The "Never" option would suggest that that peace is off the table.
I must say I was planning to vote for "Not now, but possibly in the future," but I saw the "Never" category dominating and thought I'd join the winning side lol It doesn't accurately portray my view, however.
As long as Hamas and Fatah, the two governments of the Palestinian territories, refuse to recognize Israel's right to exist, why should Israel in any way endorse the PA's bid at statehood? Without the West Bank, Israel is 9 miles wide--hardly a defensible position. And why would Israel's allies, such as the US, endorse such a plan? Netanyahu has made it clear that he's willing to recognize the Palestinian statehood, but only after peace is achieved. Sounds reasonable to me.
"The Palestinians should first make peace with Israel and then get their state. But I also want to tell you this. After such a peace agreement is signed, Israel will not be the last country to welcome a Palestinian state as a new member of the United Nations. We will be the first."
The fact is, the Palestinians are there in the land, and aren't going anywhere anytime soon. Israel cannot and would not kick them out to retake the entire Palestinian territories. The territories' pre-67 occupiers (Jordan and Egypt) don't seem to have much interest in the them, plus I doubt Israel would allow control to revert back to them since they didn't do a good job of keeping the peace either (recall the early Palestinian fedayeen from Egyptian-controlled Gaza). International peacekeepers have already tried and failed to keep the peace in the region before, so that option is out the window.The PA doesn't deserve to be an independent state as long as they refuse to recognize their neighbors and continue to espouse terrorism against civilians. Therefore in the mean time I don't see how anything will turn for the better unless real positive change happens on the ground between Israelis and Palestinians. In the mean time, the UN bid is merely a distraction from what really needs to be done.
tl;dr Rough Summary:
The PA doesn't stand up to basic criteria for statehood.
It is unreasonable of the PA to expect Israel and the US, among others, to recognize their statehood as long as their governments of Hamas and Fatah refuse to recognize Israel's right to exist.
Even were the UN to recognize Palestinian statehood, it would do virtually nothing to change things on the ground (I didn't talk about this, but it seems fairly obvious).
Conclusion: the UN should not recognize Palestinian statehood, although in the future once peace is achieved, that would be possible and most probably beneficial.
In advance, don't be surprised if I don't keep up with the debate here. I pop in here now and again but generally read without posting.