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Mira Sucharov

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What's at Stake in Recognizing a Jewish State?

Posted: 10/10/11 01:35 AM ET

One could be forgiven for being confused about the nature of Israel's demand that it be recognized as a "Jewish state," and the Palestinian claim that this is unfair.

Almost 20 years ago, as part of the mutual exchange of letters in the Oslo agreement, the PLO recognized the State of Israel and declared in a missive from Yasser Arafat to Yitzhak Rabin: "Those articles of the Palestinian Covenant which deny Israel's right to exist...are now inoperative and no longer valid."

But along with settlements, final borders, refugees and Jerusalem, the recognition of Israel's Jewish identity is certain to be one of the stumbling blocks to a final peace agreement. In some previous rounds of negotiations, this demand has even precluded the parties sitting down at the table.

What seems like an intractable issue can perhaps gain some traction toward resolution by rethinking what we mean by "fairness."

In the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, neither side is going to be totally happy with the outcome. And neither side will necessarily view the negotiated outcome as totally "fair." But at the very least the rules of the game can be made more equitable. Moving the fairness discussion away from outcomes and toward process may in fact help restart and accelerate peace talks. The Jewish-state-recognition issue serves as a good example of this dynamic.

All this has come to light again recently through a widely-circulated essay in al-Jazeera by Palestinian Professor Sari Nusseibeh. There, Nusseibeh contends that Israel's demand that the Palestinians recognize it as a Jewish state is unreasonable. Nusseibeh argues not only that it would prejudice the rights of the Palestinian refugees to return, but that it would negate the rights of Christians and Muslims to share control over Jerusalem; it would reduce Israel's Arab minority to second-class status; and it would undermine Israel's democratic character.

Nusseibeh concludes that "rather than demand that Palestinians recognize Israel as a 'Jewish State'...we [suggest] that Israeli leaders ask instead that Palestinians recognize Israel (proper) as a civil, democratic, and pluralistic state whose official religion is Judaism, and whose majority is Jewish."

Nusseibeh's semantic olive branch sounds reasonable enough, except that he couches his argument in terms of "fairness." Nusseibeh claims that it isn't "fair" for Israel to allow Jews to "return" to Israel and become citizens when Palestinians cannot.

But simple game theory shows that the drive for perceived "fairness" in outcomes can leave players much worse off than they would otherwise be if they could swallow some of their pride.

In my class, we play the "ultimatum game." I offer two students a five dollar bill. If one student can make a dividing offer that the other will accept, they can keep the proceeds. Frequently one student will offer the other just one or two dollars, keeping three or four dollars for herself. The other student naturally feels jilted, and walks away, and both end up with nothing.

While Nusseibeh discusses Israel's democratic character and Jerusalem and Israel's Arab minority, the key aspect of the Jewish-state-recognition demand is the refugee issue. Even if Israel is recognized as a "Jewish state," Jerusalem can still be shared, and the Israeli Arab minority can be better accommodated than it currently is. But to retain Israel's Jewish character, the refugees cannot be granted full return.

So it's no secret that by insisting that the PA recognize Israel as a Jewish state, the Netanyahu government is trying to foreclose discussion of refugees. If Palestinian refugees are granted wholesale return to Israel, Israel ceases to be a Jewish state. By preventing refugee return, Israel is able to hold onto its core identity.

It follows that the most predictable outcome (limited return to inside Israel but unlimited migration to a nascent Palestinian state) is also the most pragmatic: Palestinian refugees get repatriated within their own state of Palestine, even if not exactly to their original homes, and Israel maintains its core identity, along with having to no doubt share Jerusalem and uproot tens of thousands of settlers.

The Palestinians may not be ready to acknowledge this likely outcome yet. That will be for the negotiations themselves to reveal.

But where the light of fairness should be shone is on the issue of process. By demanding that the Palestinians recognize Israel as a "Jewish state" at this juncture, Netanyahu is decidedly advancing an unfair process. However impractical it is to expect refugee return, the PA can't be expected to give up on the issue even before reaching the table.

The upshot? Israel should stop demanding that the Palestinians recognize Israel's Jewishness before actually negotiating the refugee issue (even though everyone knows what the solution will be). The Palestinians should stop attacking Israel's Law of Return (which is really a domestic Israeli issue) in terms of fairness. And Israel should cease and desist from the most unfair action of all -- the building of settlements, as it changes the rules of the game -- creating "facts on the ground" in Likud parlance -- even as it is being played.

Ultimately, states decide the nature of their own identity and their own immigration policies. Identities will end up being declared and recognized, once the material issues are worked out -- including what will happen to the refugees, who will control Jerusalem, and what final borders will look like.

On various issues, both sides may end up worse off than they initially hoped for, but both sides will certainly be better off than they currently are in this seemingly endless cycle of conflict. Fixating on the fairness of solutions may preclude an agreement altogether. But trying to be fair about the process of negotiations is, well, only fair. And it is the only way to actually inch toward peace.

An earlier version of this appeared on Haaretz.com

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One could be forgiven for being confused about the nature of Israel's demand that it be recognized as a "Jewish state," and the Palestinian claim that this is unfair. Almost 20 years ago, as part of ...
One could be forgiven for being confused about the nature of Israel's demand that it be recognized as a "Jewish state," and the Palestinian claim that this is unfair. Almost 20 years ago, as part of ...
 
 
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09:25 AM on 10/17/2011
Lets go back to the Book: The Torah says that a Man confronted an angel and then was named Israel which then became his family name, but he still remained in the nation af the Hebrews Which were from the family of Abraham, Keep in mind that it does not mention Jews as being Hebrews and Abraham had eiight children. Which brings us to this day with the Jews who are from Europe claiming to be Israel; Stealing the lands of the Palestinians who are the true Hebrews... With all this lying and stealing, there is one thing forgotten, and that is (((GOD))) is watching. Read the book.
08:12 PM on 10/12/2011
If Abbas had any courage, and if he wanted to move his cause forward and do himself a favor, he'd call in the press, the reporters, the cameras, everyone, and state before all that he recognizes that Israel is the state of the Jews, just like France is the state of the French, Ireland is the state of the Irish, Italy is the state of the Italians, and so on and so forth and then maybe the Palestinian people will one day soon be able to say that Palestine is the state of the Palestinians. That puts the ball in Israel's court for now.

And for good measure, he'd say that going forward Jews may reside in Palestine. And why not? Israel has Arabs, Palestine can have Jews. It's the same thing.
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
10:53 AM on 10/15/2011
Jewish isnt a nationality.
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Readbetweentheelevens
You can't turn the wind so turn the sail.
06:36 PM on 10/16/2011
Why can't he just say Israel is the state of the Israelis?

"...just like France is the state of the French, Ireland is the state of the Irish, Italy is the state of the Italians, and so on and so forth..."
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01:01 PM on 10/11/2011
Israel is the nation-state of the Jewish people, grounded in the Jewish people's historic, ethical and legal right, and it is high time Israel's mortal enemies accepted it.

Historically, the Land of Israel has been the national home of this people for the past 4,000 years and the cradle of this people's civilization of Judaism.Ethically, the Israel is the exercise of the Jewish people's universally accepted right of all peoples to national self-determination and independence in the country in which the Jewish people has maintained presence, despite all odds, for 4,000 years.

Legally, the above has been understood and accepted by the international community and expressed in the Balfour Declaration, 1917, that was then incorporated into the San Remo Conference decisions, 1920. The San Remo Conference decisions were that accepted by the League of Nations, 1922, and the League of Nations decisions have been incorporated, as is, without the right to change them, by the United Nations. All of these declarations, decisions and resolutions are part of the corpus dubbed 'international law'.

Surely, neither European nor North American countries wish to violate international law; indeed, one would expect of them to impress the Muslim-Arab neighbors of Israel to live by them as well...!!
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
01:21 PM on 10/11/2011
Jews may or may not have lived in any country in the Middle East at any point in history.
That does not give the State of israel any right to invade random countries of their choosing, ship in their population and add it to their borders at gunpoint.
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piul05
Are you looking at my ears?! (Mo-om!!!)
02:15 PM on 10/11/2011
Part I

The Balfour declaratio­n stated : "..."His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishm­ent in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievemen­t of this object, it being clearly understood that NOTHING SHOULD BE DONE WHICH MAY PREJUDICE THE CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS RIGHTS OF EXISTING NON-JEWISH COMMUNITIE­S IN PALESTINE (my capitals), or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country".

The San Remo Resolution­, April 25, 1920, stated: "(a) To accept the terms of the Mandates Article as given below with reference to Palestine, on the understand­ing that there was inserted in the process-ve­rbal an undertakin­g by the Mandatory Power that THIS WOULD NOT SURRENDER THE RIGHTS HITHERTO ENJOYED BY THE NON-JEWISH COMMUNITIE­S IN PALESTINE (my capitals again);...­"

League of Nations, 1922: Palestine was to be divided in two halves; the Eastern part being given to the Hashemite to administer -Transjord­a­­n.

(continue...)
10:24 AM on 10/11/2011
Recognizing Israel as a "Jewish state" is just another obstacle created by Israelis to prevent the peace process. If the Palestinians accepted the "Jewish state" another clever obstacle would magically appear, maybe the demand that non-Jews be ethnically cleansed since, after all, it is a "Jewish state".

In an interview Netanyahu stated that he would sabotage Oslo Accords.The same goes for any peace plan until Israel claims all the land it wants.

After all the land theft supported by Israel policies in Jerusalem and the West Bank, the only viable solution is one state. It's the result of 40+ years of Israel policies so Israel should accept it.
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mjc
Avoid printing any..
11:40 AM on 10/11/2011
Agree that the Israelis and especially its present leader, Netanyahu, is playing the clever chip but disagree that the Palestinians will ever be welcome or treated fairly by the Israelis in one state. There should be two states, with Palestinians having enough access to the sea and to other states without having to go through or around Israel. The Palestinians would probably need a great deal of financial and perhaps military security as well because the trend for Israel is...as always...to expand itself into a small empire they like to imagine occurred centuries ago.
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
11:41 AM on 10/11/2011
If israel wants to declare themselves a Jewish state they should just get on with it. If its so important they can stick it in the country name or something and rename israel to the "Jewish Republic of Israel".

It is no business of Palestinians nor the rest of the word how israel wants to define itself. They can declare themselves a nation of Scientologists or atheists for all the world cares.
10:14 AM on 10/11/2011
The Palestinian leaders stated many times in the past (in Arabic only) that the creation of a Palestinian state is only a stage in getting rid of the Jews. By demanding that they accept Israel as a Jewish state, Israel is forcing them to show their hand now and not after Israel has uprooted hundreds of thousands of Jews and given away half of it's capital.

Here is what Palestine's ambassador to Lebanon Abdullah Abdullah
told the Daily Star just a few weeks ago. Palestinian refugees
would not become citizens of the proposed Palestinian state.
"Even Palestinian refugees who are living inside the [Palestinian] state,
they are still refugees. They will not be considered citizens."
He said statehood "will never affect the right of return for Palestinian refugees."
"When we have a state accepted as a member of the United Nations,
this is not the end of the conflict.
This is not a solution to the conflict.
This is only a new framework that will change the rules of the game."
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Hls Cvs
01:34 PM on 10/11/2011
And we Palestinians totally agree with him , we will never give up our right of return , if Israelis are willing to live with us with equal rights then they are welcome if they wish a pure Jewish state they have to find somewhere else to establish it
02:55 PM on 10/11/2011
The Weekly Standard's John McCormack reported that Areikat claimed the state (Palestine) would tolerate minorities. "Asked by the Daily Caller's Jamie Weinstein if, following the establishment of a Palestinian state, 'there would be no Jews in the West Bank or Gaza,' Areikat answered in the affirmative. 'We have to be separated, we have to work on our own national identities,' he said."
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notmisaacm
That which is attributed to malice is often explai
09:04 AM on 10/12/2011
The Israelis have never sought "a pure Jewish state", 20% of Israel is Muslim. There are Arabs in the Knesset and on the Supreme Court. It is the Arabs who have driven all of the Jews out of their lands. And by the activity currently under in Egypt, they are seeking to drive out the Christians too.
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notmisaacm
That which is attributed to malice is often explai
09:12 AM on 10/11/2011
"Israel should stop demanding that the Palestinians recognize Israel's Jewishness before actually negotiating the refugee issue (even though everyone knows what the solution will be)."

Unfortunately not everyone knows what the solution will be, the Arabs certainly don't. The author failed to cite any examples in the entire Arab where it is accepted that millions of angry Arabs won't be moving to Israel. That is because the entire Arab world still believes the fallacy that the descendants of the people who fled the Arab attacks of 48 and 67 will be moving to Israel. Please show me any Palestinian who understands the reality of the situation.

Accepting and recognizing Israel as a Jewish state is necessary because it will show the Israeli public that the Palestinians have given up their dream of destroying Israel. It will show that Palestinian possession of the west bank will be the end of the conflict, not another step in the Arabs' obsession with destroying Israel and ensuring Muslim rule over 100% of the middle east.

Ms Sucharov, please show me I'm wrong. Show me dozens of Arab and Palestinian leaders who understand that the descendants of refugees who moved to Arab countries understand that they will never move to Israel.
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
12:15 PM on 10/11/2011
You're right. Right of return should only apply exclusively to Jews. Because thats what democracy is all about.
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notmisaacm
That which is attributed to malice is often explai
09:02 AM on 10/12/2011
If you want to lecture someone on the workings of democracy, first concentrate on the 22 Arab states and the Palestinian Authority. When you finish getting them up to speed, then you can comment on the flaws in Israeli democracy.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
08:09 AM on 10/11/2011
The Game theory aIways benefits the strong at the expense of the weak. It's easy to pIay the prisoner's diIemma. The Game theory was wideIy used in concentrat­­ion camps to deaI with the so caIIed "kapos" (roughIy, "comrade poIice force"). You persuade them to do the worst work in exchange of IittIe perks Iike a few grams of bread. But to suggest that this Game theory is a recipe for peace is nonsense.
10:44 AM on 10/11/2011
"The Game theory aIways benefits the strong at the expense of the weak." You must be referring to all the Muslim conquests.
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Marcus047
given up on HP
10:47 AM on 10/11/2011
"But to suggest that this Game theory is a recipe for peace is nonsense"

If you had any education and any experience in games theory, especially as it is utilized in poli sci circles, you would know that it is a very good predictor of human responses, and as such, it can be used to develop strategies that will result in the best possible solution in negotiations. now of course, both sides in the negotiations probably also use some measure of games theory in their strategies, as is quite evident from the positions they take, but it can be an invaluable tool for a mediator to use.
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06:36 AM on 10/11/2011
The greatest influx of Jews into Asia Minor and the Ottoman Empire occurred during
the reign of Mehmed the Conquerors's successor, Beyazid II (1481–1512­), after the expulsion
of the Jews from Spain and Portugal. The Sultan issued a formal invitation to Jews expelled
from Spain and Portugal and they started arriving in the empire in great numbers.

The Jewish population at Jerusalem increased from 70 families in 1488 to 1,500 at the beginning of the 16th century.

It was only on the eve of the Annapolis conference in November 2007 that then
Prime Minister Ehud Olmert first trotted out the Jewish card, conditioning his
participat­­ion on Palestinia­­n recognitio­­n of Israel as a Jewish state. The internatio­­nal
community completely ignored this new rhetoric and Olmert abandoned his demand.

Netanyahu revive this "fundamental demand" which Palestinia­­n President Mahmoud Abbas rejected: “Name yourself the Hebrew Socialist Republic — it is none of my business".
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Hls Cvs
05:49 AM on 10/11/2011
So let me ask the writer , if Palestinians give up their right of return to their homeland , Israel accepts a Palestinian state within the 67 borders including East Jerusalem , what does Israel have to lose ? what will be Israel's compromise ?
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Marcus047
given up on HP
10:53 AM on 10/11/2011
it loses land that is settled by 500,000 israelis, homes and infrastructure built with israeli money, that will be the most modern and efficient structures in the new palestinians state and the perfect place for the palestinian state to house all those refugees. And israel will have to deal with housing and employing those 500,000 israelis who are left homeless and unemployed, adding additional costs to israel and israelis.

The palestinians will bare none of the costs of acquiring or building these relatively new and modern homes, they will only need to maintain them, and hopefully they will do a better job of it than they did with the greenhouses in gaza.
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Hls Cvs
11:28 AM on 10/11/2011
But nobody asked them to create that problem , when people begged them to halt construction they just increased the number of settlers, in fact they are doing it today so later they will say ,"well people we cant force out civilians out of their 1 year old stolen homes".Israel demands keeping large settlements which house more than 200,000 settlers , so we arent talking about 500,000 settlers.When Israel removed the 2 small settlements in Gaza they made sure Palestinians will never benefit from them , they demolished every single room , pipe line everything, who are you fooling ,Israel isnt generous !We are talking about millions of refugees not thousands , plus people who are currently living there in refugees camps need a new life.Do you really think that Israel finance new projects , its the USA and gulf states.So technically Israel will lose nothing....
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
03:10 AM on 10/11/2011
The problem with Sucharov's theory is that peace and by the way, human nature in general, is not achieved with John Forbes Nash's style Game Theory when dealing with conflicts of identity. Time and justice is on the side of Palestine and the Palestinians. To ignore fairness and focus on narrow minded short-term gains is a sure way for failure of any resemblance negotiations. To expect the Palestinian to loose more than 50% of 1948 Palestine, renounce to their inalienable right to return to their homes in 1948 Palestine, to loose part of Jerusalem which belongs to Palestine, to loose their water in Palestine, to loose control of their borders and of their airwaves, to renounce to its own security, and a long list of other things, is nonsense. Anyone who has studied negotiations, like Aaron David Miller, who has actually participated in those negotiations can explain Sucharov that her ideas are not only extremely unfair against justice and the Palestinians, but also a recipe for out right failure. An unjust peace process is a non-starter.
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fairwayhill
1948 Palestine belongs to the Palestinians
02:38 AM on 10/11/2011
The only solution is a one state solution without an official religion, just like the US, and a Constitution that strictly forbids discrimination based on race or religion. A state that is inclusive of all the people living in that country and where all the people are equal under the law. All the PaIestinia­n refugees have the inaIienabl­e right to return to their homes and lands in PaIestine. And any idea of discriminating people based on race or religion precludes any chance of peace now and will make peace impossible in the future.
09:56 AM on 10/11/2011
This is why Occupation continues. hamas-ites like you will not make peace with israel bercause you want to see Israel eliminated. Fine, live your life under occupation.
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Marcus047
given up on HP
10:55 AM on 10/11/2011
"The only solution is a one state solution without an official religion"

Well that won't happen, players like hamas and hezbollah would never agree to that.
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Readbetweentheelevens
You can't turn the wind so turn the sail.
12:52 AM on 10/11/2011
There is no reason for Israel to make peace, none. They have what they want. They increase the size of Israel everyday and control almost every aspect of Palestinian life. A real peace would be the end of Israel.
10:18 AM on 10/11/2011
And this comment shows why Israel can't give up land that is essential to it's defense. So many still don't accept Israel and Jews have a right to live in peace.
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Readbetweentheelevens
You can't turn the wind so turn the sail.
10:51 AM on 10/11/2011
Israel can't abide by international law because of my comments? If I withdraw them, will peace come to occupied Palestine?

Everyone has a right to live in peace, even people who have had their land stolen.
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AntonioSaucedo
11:46 PM on 10/10/2011
Israel has the right to live in that neighborhood; the neighbors --all of them, not just the Pelestinians-- want their destruction, so they have to defend themselves. One thing is for certain, this is a modern nation-state conflict (200/100/50 years old) that has nothing to do with what might've happened 2000 years ago.
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STOCKTON JOE
11:23 PM on 10/10/2011
All of the countries that have the word " Islamic" in front of the name of their country did not " negotiate" with another country to name its country as such. Why does Israel just say its the Jewish state of Israel and be done with it. Israel is to powerful of a state to worry about what the Palestinians might claim in the future. The Palestinians will never be able to change the immigration policy of the Jewish state.
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Nwo2012
Sue me, I boycott products from the settlements
07:28 AM on 10/11/2011
Bingo. Its just an attempt to legitimize apartheid.
11:00 PM on 10/10/2011
There are more Palestinian refugees than there are inside of Israel and the West bank. I doubt those refugess would accept any solutions other than returning to the towns they were evicted from. This is the core issue of the dispute and will continue to be so unless they return to their homeland. The only solution to this matter is that the jews and the Arabs moslem and Christian have to live peacefully together, share the land, and have equal rights under the law. Intimidation and force will not dissuade the weak party from giving up their rights even if it last for centuries.Both sides must reign on the extremist and reach to the other side.