Geneva Initiative https://geneva-accord.org Wed, 22 Mar 2023 07:44:49 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.1 Jordan’s Abdullah: Israel, Palestinians Will Achieve ‘Genuine Security’ Only Through Two-State Solutionhttps://geneva-accord.org/2021/10/03/jordans-abdullah-israel-palestinians-will-achieve-genuine-security-only-through-two-state-solution/ Sun, 03 Oct 2021 07:30:39 +0000 https://geneva-accord.org/?p=1894 Addressing the UN General Assembly meeting on Wednesday 22nd September 2021, Jordan’s King Abdullah said:

“But how many more homes will be lost? How many more children will die, before the world wakes up? Genuine security for either side – indeed, for the whole world – can only be achieved through the two-state solution,” the Jordanian monarch said.

“A solution that leads to the establishment of an independent, sovereign, and viable Palestinian state on the basis of the June 1967 lines, with East Jerusalem as its capital, living side-by-side with Israel in peace and security,” as Abdullah described it, “and Jerusalem is at the heart of this peace. Billions of people around the world hold this Holy City dear.”

Read the full article here.

Photo credit: AP
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Endorsements by World Leadershttps://geneva-accord.org/2021/04/28/endorsements-of-the-two-state-solution/ Wed, 28 Apr 2021 15:24:06 +0000 https://geneva-accord.org/?p=1731 “I don’t support a one-state solution, I don’t believe that’s a solution at all. I support the vision of two states for two peoples.”

  • Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, May 2015

 

“We believe in the two-state solution based on pre-June 1967 borders based on international law… Only then will the states of Palestine and Israel be able to prosper and live side by side in peace and security.”

  • President Mahmoud Abbas, April 2021

 

“The only game in town is the two-state solution.”

  • Fatah Secretary-General Jibril Rajoub, March 2017

 

“There is no alternative to a two-state solution. There can be only one solution. This is two states.”

  • Former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert, March 2013

 

“Our goal is to set up a Palestinian state alongside Israel within the framework of a solution involving two states.”

  • Former PLO Leader Yasser Arafat, May 1989

 

“The Roadmap is a practical and just formula for the achievement of peace, opening a genuine window of opportunity for progress toward a settlement between Israel and the Palestinians, involving two states living side-by-side in peace and security.”

  • Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon, April 2004

 

“[The two-state solution is] the only way to guarantee Israel’s future security and its continued identity as a Jewish and democratic state.  It’s also the only way to ensure the dignity of the Palestinian people and provide the self-determination they deserve.  A two-state solution — there is no other alternative.”

  • US President Joseph Biden

 

“We favor and stand for the project of a two-state solution.”

  • German Chancellor Angela Merkel

 

“We remain committed to a two-state solution, to that vision, for the resolution of this conflict. You know I really think it is possible.”

  • UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson

 

“I call for a reprise of negotiations between the Israelis and the Palestinians to find a two-state solution, to live side-by-side within safe and recognized borders. This has been the consistent line of French diplomacy, to which I closely adhere.”

  • French President Emmanuel Macron

 

“The only path towards a just and permanent peace must result in establishing the sovereign and independent Palestinian state to live in security and peace beside Israel.”

  • King Abdullah II of Jordan

 

“Cairo supports efforts aimed at resolving the conflict on the basis of a two-state solution and the creation of Palestinian State with East Jerusalem as its capital.”

  • Egyptian President Sisi

 

“I believe the Palestinians and the Israelis have the right to have their own land. But we have to have a peace agreement to assure the stability for everyone and to have normal relations.”

  • Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman

 

“Relevant UN resolutions, the principle of land for peace and the general direction of the two-state solution should be observed and reaffirmed.”

  • Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi

 

“The two‑State solution remains the only path to ensuring that Palestinians and Israelis can both realize their legitimate aspirations, living side‑by‑side in peace and security.”

  • UN Secretary-General António Guterres

 

 

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Two-State Solution Timelinehttps://geneva-accord.org/2021/04/14/timeline/ Wed, 14 Apr 2021 09:10:12 +0000 https://geneva-accord.org/?p=1703 See the full timeline HERE

 

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Myths About the Conflicthttps://geneva-accord.org/2021/04/14/myths-about-the-conflict/ Wed, 14 Apr 2021 08:57:30 +0000 https://geneva-accord.org/?p=1699 The conflict is intractable

There is not a single issue in the conflict that defies resolution. For almost a century, it has been clear that only a partition of the land can serve the interests of both peoples and therefore all serious proposals have been based on the two-state solution. The commonly cited core issues in the Palestinian-Israeli conflict are Jerusalem, refugees, borders and settlements, and security. While no single negotiation process in the past has led to a comprehensive agreement, each one has clarified potential compromises and mutually acceptable solutions for all of the above. In addition, the Geneva Accord provided a detailed, public, agreed-upon blueprint for peace on the core issues as well as many more (water allocation, Gaza-West Bank contiguity, etc.). While the negotiations and final Accord were unofficial, bilateral support for it reached the highest levels of both societies, with significant public support for the plan as well.

 

Neither side is prepared to make compromises

Throughout the history of the peace process, leadership on both sides has offered substantial compromises on core issues that are popularly portrayed as “unsolvable.” For just a few examples out of many:

  • Israel agreed that the Arabs parts of East Jerusalem will become the capital of Palestine
  • The Palestinians agreed to a land swap that will enable Israel to annex land which is home for the majority of the settlers
  • The Palestinians agreed that their state will be a non-militarized one
  • Israel agreed that a symbolic number of Palestinian refugees will be able to return to Israel

 

While leaders throughout the decades have presented different levels of openness and flexibility on different issues, the offers on the table represented concrete steps within a zone of possible agreement. One consistently harmful issue, however, is how little the Israeli and Palestinian publics know or believe in the concessions for peace that the other side’s leadership has been prepared to make over the years.

The failure of the Oslo Accords proves that the peace process is hopeless

The Oslo Accords established the Palestinian Authority and the transfer of authority in civil matters such as education, culture, health and policing to the Palestinians for a temporary period of five years, after which time a permanent agreement was supposed to be reached in which the parties would resolve all core issues. In practice, the fact that this was only an interim agreement which set aside negotiations on complex issues for a later date created opportunities for the continued establishment of facts on the ground that are counterproductive to a final-status agreement (e.g. expansion of settlements), and for violent extremists trying to sabotage the peace process. The truth, however, is that despite the failures and problematic nature of the interim agreement, almost thirty years after Oslo, Israel has not dismantled the Palestinian Authority and the Palestinian Authority has continued coordination with Israel. Both sides implicitly recognize that without the Oslo Accords and the establishment of the Palestinian Authority, the likelihood of violence increases.

 

We have reached a point of no return

The Geneva Accord provides a blueprint in which 75% of Israeli settlers living in the West Bank would be annexed to Israel as part of a land swap, and would not have to be evacuated. Israel has the capacity to absorb the rest – in fact, the majority of Israeli settlers living in the West Bank already work in Israel proper. This would create territorial contiguity throughout the West Bank, alongside a special corridor connecting Gaza and the West Bank to ensure freedom of movement within a unified Palestinian state. Evacuations of homes is an inherently difficult and sensitive policy to carry out, but the Israeli government has made that call in the past (Sinai in 1982 and Gaza in 2005) when necessary to ensure the security and identity of the state.

Meanwhile, public opinion polls among both Palestinians and Israelis consistently show that the majority in both societies still prefers peace in the form of the two-state solution. Due to misinformation, continued cycles of violence, and stagnation of negotiations, that support has shown a decline in recent years – but the preference for a two-state solution over any other option remains clear among Israelis and Palestinians. It is true that there are extremists in both societies that envision, promote, and work for permanent domination of one people by the other throughout the entire territory; these represent a small minority of the broader populations, and the lack of progress towards a peace agreement only serves to strengthen them.

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