The monthly peace index for August is out, and to me this is the most
striking finding.
- Peace Agreement as End of Conflict: 78% of Jewish
respondents do not believe that the Palestinians would truly see the
signing of a peace agreement as marking the end of the conflict, while
20% do. 48% of Arab respondents do not believe so either, and 44% do
believe the peace agreement would mark the end of conflict.
The report was headlined "Majority of Jewish, Arab Israelis Believe Two-State Solution Is Possible," and that was because of these two findings:
- Two-State Solution Is Not Dead: 54% of Israeli Jews
disagree with Minister Naftali Bennett's assertion that the two-state
solution is dead, while 41% agree with him. 58% of Israeli Arabs also
disagree, and 32% agree.
- Peace Agreement to Prevent a Binational State: 48%
of Jewish Israelis agree with Prime Minister Netanyahu's statement that a
peace agreement is vital to preventing Israel from becoming a
binational state without a Jewish majority in the foreseeable future,
while 45% disagree. Among Arab Israelis, 34% agree with Netanyahu's
assertion, and 50% do not.
Perhaps if the question had been phrased that the 'two-state solution' is dying rather than dead, the results would have been different. Perhaps the closeness of the agree/disagree margin on Netanyahu's statement that a peace agreement is 'vital' indicates that most Israelis don't believe that a peace agreement is going to happen, and in light of the end of conflict result I cited, most of them don't want it to happen either.
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