For two-staters the  prevailing conditions—no matter what they are—are always favorable for  implementing the land-for-peace doctrine and establishing a Palestinian  state.                 
               
                                                                                                      There are two ways to be fooled. One is to believe what isn’t true; the other is  to refuse to believe what is true. – Søren Kierkegaard, Danish philosopher  (1813-1855) 
Not  since the time of Dr. Goebbels has there ever been a case in  which  continual repetition of a lie has borne such great fruits... Of all the   Palestinian lies there is no lie greater or more crushing than that  which calls  for the establishment of a separate Palestinian state in  the West Bank... –  Amnon Rubinstein, former education minister, far-left Meretz party, “Palestinian  Lies,” Haaretz, July 30, 1976 
I  am sure you have noticed how it is with  “twostaters” – a.k.a.  adherents of the dogma of political appeasement and  territorial  concessions as an effective measure for assuaging  despots.
 
 For them, the prevailing conditions – no matter what they are –   are always favorable for implementing the land-for-peace doctrine and   establishing a Palestinian state, and in fact comprise a compelling  imperative,  indeed, a veritable “historic opportunity” for doing so,  which cannot, must not  be missed, lest it be regretted for generations  to come.
Come rain, come  shine – ‘Palestine’...If  it rains, we are told we need a Palestinian  state – because it is  raining. When it is dry, we must have a Palestinian state  – because dry  weather is ideal for setting up such a state. When it is freezing  cold  – only the establishment of a Palestinian state can bring any warmth.  When  it is sizzling hot, it’s time for a Palestinian state – for only  it can bring  relief from the wilting heat...
So, whatever the  existing conditions,  they are seized upon as the irrefutable and urgent  rationale for the  establishment of a Palestinian state – even if they  constitute the utter  negation of the previous conditions, which  formerly had been invoked as the  exigent and incontestable rationale  for such a state.
If this sounds  flippant, just look back at the history of the last three decades and any  misgivings will be dispelled.
Thus  when in the months following the 1992  election, the Rabin government  found that – in contradiction to its declarations  during the campaign –  no agreement on autonomy with Palestinian Arabs in  Judea-Samaria was  forthcoming, it adopted precisely what it had always rejected:  the  notion of negotiating with Yasser Arafat’s terrorist organization, the  PLO,  with which all contacts had hitherto been punishable by law. So  when  negotiations with local leaders, which were undertaken to avoid  engaging Arafat  and the PLO, produced no progress, Arafat/ PLO were  engaged – despite the fact  that previously such engagement was  dismissed as an unacceptable and futile  anathema.
Rather than admit error, what was once to be stringently  avoided was now enthusiastically embraced.
More was yet to  come.
Any excuse – or the opposite – will do The  rationale for engaging  Arafat was the diametric reversal of that  invoked for eschewing such engagement  previously. Whereas his murderous  past was originally invoked as the reason for  avoiding him, the  implied “authority” his legacy of brutality allegedly bestowed  upon him  was cited as the reason for believing he could induce the Palestinians   to accept compromise and end the bloodshed.
However, when  contacts with  Arafat soon degenerated into a bloody spiral of  terrorism, culminating in the  second intifada, two-staters began to  despair of efficacy of his  “authority.”
So they embraced Mahmoud  Abbas (aka Abu Mazen), on the  rationale that he was not Arafat,  portraying him as everything that his  predecessor wasn’t – devoid of  Arafat’s grisly authority but with a genuine  desire for nonviolent  reconciliation with the Jewish state.
Soon,  however, it became  evident that Abbas had neither the will nor ability to  deliver what  Arafat could or would not deliver.
Then came the 2006   Palestinian Authority elections, in which Hamas swept to victory,  trouncing  Abbas’s Fatah in a stinging rejection of his leadership. Yet,  even though Hamas  vehemently rejected any acceptance of Israel as the  nation-state of the Jews,  some two-staters were perversely buoyed by  this development. Indeed, I remember  participating in a morning TV  program with an indefatigable two-state supporter,  who expressed  optimism that now, finally, there were folk with the requisite   authority in place that Israel could deal with and forge binding peace –  all  this despite the fact that the rejection of peace comprised the  raison d’etre of  Hamas and, in large measure, the basis for its  electoral  success.
Recalling the record 
Of  course, when it comes to advancing their  political “philosophy” (for  want of a better word), two-staters have always been  adept at invoking  some or other argument, and when that proved totally  unfounded,  invoking precisely the opposite argument for endorsing the very same   policy.
Thus, for those old enough to remember, prior to the  start of the  Oslowian “peace process,” the two-state proponents  insisted that the terrorist  attacks, then perpetrated mainly with axes  and knives, were the “acts of  extremists,” precipitated by the  frustration at the “lack of a peace process.”  However, after the  initiation of the Oslowian “process,” when terrorist attacks  not only  continued unabated, but – now that the Palestinians had access to   military grade explosives – escalated to unprecedented levels,  two-staters  adamantly resisted admitting error. Instead, they still  maintained that the  “process” must continue. Terrorist attacks were  still dubbed the “acts of  extremists,” but now allegedly precipitated  by a desire to halt the “peace  process” – whose prior absence was  invoked to “explain” the previous acts of  terrorism.
So, first  it was the “extremist anger” at the lack of a “peace  process,” and then  “extremist anger” at its existence, that two-staters  presented as the  “rationale” for endorsing a policy of concessions and  withdrawal to  facilitate Palestinian statehood. 
 The record (cont.)
With  the initiation of the Oslo  process, two-staters argued that Israel should  withdraw from the  “territories” on the basis of a negotiated agreement because  “there was  someone to talk to” on the Palestinian side. However, when the  horrors  of the second intifada proved this to be unfounded, rather than concede   error, two-staters endorsed the idea that Israel should withdraw  unilaterally,  without negotiation, “because there was no one to talk.”
So  again, first  the existence, and then the nonexistence, of a  Palestinian negotiating partner  was invoked to justify the two-state  compliant policy of  concession.
Originally the two-staters  claimed that Israel could afford  to relinquish territory for a  Palestinian state, because it was strong enough to  contend with the  risks involved in forgoing it. Later, however, when it was  clear that  conceding territory did not produce the desired results, rather than   admit error, two-staters insisted that Israel should continue to  relinquish  territory because it was not strong enough to contend with  the risks involved in  retaining it.
So yet again, first Israel’s  strength, and then its lack of  strength, were invoked as the rationale  for their two-state-compliant policy of  withdrawal. 
 Two-stater desperation 
Almost a quarter-century has  come and  gone since the days of heady optimism when the Oslo process  was launched on the  White House lawn. Every argument – and its  subsequent converse – for the  two-state paradigm has been dashed on the  unforgiving rocks of  reality.
Every time land has been  relinquished in the hope of advancing  peace, the opposite has occurred,  and that land has – either immediately or  eventually – become a  platform for attacks against the Jewish state.
None  of this has  induced the slightest doubt, much less regret, on the part of   two-staters. Immune to both prudent reason and proven results, they plow  on  regardless, in a desperate search for some new contention, no  matter how  far-fetched, to justify their efforts to preserve the  alleged validity of the  failed and fatally flawed formula on which the  personal prestige and  professional standing of so many depend.
Of late, this process has begun  a descent into the depths of such absurdity that it approaches intellectual  depravity.
For  today, there is an increasing chorus of two-stater voices  that, in all  seriousness, suggest that now that the Mideast has proved to be   totally different from the suppositions the Oslo process was founded on,  Israel  should adopt exactly the same policy they prescribed before  those suppositions  were disproved.
Positively perverse prescription For  now, with Islamist  fundamentalism sweeping the region, Israel is being  urged by obsessive  two-staters to make precisely the same concessions  (arguably even more radical  ones) that they urged beforehand.
Now,  we are told, since radical  extremists are threatening a number of  “moderate” Arab regimes, there is a  “convergence of interests” between  these states and Israel. Consequently, we are  told, with a straight  face, that in order for these regimes to allow Israel to  assist in  pursuit of their interests (of self-preservation), Israel must not  only  undertake the very policy they prescribed prior to that alleged   convergence, but relinquish territory that, in all likelihood, will fall  to the  control of precisely the forces the “moderates” are threatened  by.
This,  of course, is a positively perverse prescription – at  once gravely flawed in the  logical foundations it is based on, and  seriously counterproductive in outcomes  it is likely to produce.
For  if there is a genuine confluence of  interests between the regimes in  countries such as Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Jordan  and several Gulf states,  trenchant questions arise: • Why should Israel have to  make any  concessions to help these regimes (I use the word “regime” rather than   “state” or “country” deliberately) pursue or preserve their own vital  interests?  • Why would it be in the interests of those regimes for  Israel to relinquish any  territory for the establishment of a  Palestinian state? After all, both  precedent and prudent projections  strongly indicate that such territory would  soon be taken over by the  very elements which imperil the vital interests of  both Israel and the  allegedly allied regimes, considerably empowering the forces  that  jeopardize those purported common interests.
Eclipse of common sense  When it comes to the Palestinian issue, the eclipse of common sense – even  self-interest – is the rule.
For  as the Gaza precedent, and a large body  of expert evaluation, clearly  indicate, the best, arguably the only, way to  ensure that the territory  designated for a prospective Palestinian state,  well-funded by Iran,  Qatar and the burgeoning ill-gotten coffers of Islamic  State, will not  become a mortal threat to both Israel and its professed  potential Arab  allies, is for Israel to retain control of it.
After all,  who  would protect the nascent state from external threats or a compliant   incumbent regime from domestic ones? The IDF? Some Arab army, deployed  east of  the Jordan River – something every Israeli government since the  late 1960s has  refused to consider? But even more troubling questions  arise: What if Israel  makes the perilous concessions twostaters  prescribe, and all, or some, of  purportedly allied Arabs regimes (among  the most decadent on the face of the  planet today) succumb to their  Islamist adversaries? What will become of the  “convergence of  interests” then? What would, indeed, could, Israel do to redress  the  situation? This is particularly pertinent in the case of Jordan, which  if it  fell to, or even fell under the influence, of Islamic  State/al-Qaida affiliates,  would create a huge Islamic expanse, from  Islamic State-controlled central Iraq  to the eastern approaches to the  sedate sidewalks of Ra’anana and Kfar Saba, and  to the runways of  Ben-Gurion Airport.
And if the presumed Arab allies did  vanquish  the Islamist threat to their survival, with the common threat gone,   what would there be to sustain the convergence of interests and prevent a   reversion to the inimical status quo ante – after Israel has made the  prescribed  two-state compliant concessions? 
Depraved indifference? All  these – and other  unmentioned – deadly dangers, which with a high  degree of probability, could  arise from the implementation of the  two-state prescription in an Islamic  ascendant Middle East, are so  starkly discernible, predictable and plausible, it  is difficult not to  question the motivation of anyone blatantly unmindful of  them.
The  following is the legal definition of “depraved indifference” in  US  law: “To constitute depraved indifference, [one’s] conduct must be so  wanton,  so deficient in a moral sense of concern, so lacking in regard  for the life or  lives of others, and so blameworthy as to warrant the  same criminal liability as  that which the law imposes upon a person who  intentionally causes a  crime.”
I leave the readers to judge whether this adequately  characterizes the conduct of today’s two-staters.
In any event, when  Islamic State becomes the excuse 
du jour for their policy, Israel and Israelis  have much to worry about. 
 Martin Sherman (www.martinsherman.org) is the  founder and executive  director of the Israel Institute for Strategic Studies.   (www.strategic-israel.org)