
On the Media David Remnick: How The Two State Solution Ended in Disaster
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Oct 15, 2025 Robert Malley is a veteran U.S. diplomat known for his work in Middle East peace efforts, while Hussein Agha is a seasoned Palestinian negotiator and scholar. They discuss their new book, highlighting the futility of the two-state solution and arguing it has only worsened the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Agha critiques the peace process for ignoring emotions and history, while Malley reflects on U.S. involvement and its detrimental impacts. They also address the challenges of security concerns, leadership weaknesses, and the need for a new approach to peace in the region.
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Conflict Not A Technical Puzzle
- Western peace efforts treated the conflict as a technical, material problem solvable by lines on a map.
- Hussein Agha argues that ignoring emotions and history made those solutions irrelevant to most people.
Two-State Became A Straitjacket
- Robert Malley calls the thirty-year U.S. push for two states a harmful project that left both sides worse off.
- He says the process froze out alternatives and propped up a weak Palestinian Authority.
Rhetoric Enabled Asymmetric Actions
- The two-state rhetoric excused Israeli unilateralism while criminalizing Palestinian activism.
- Malley says this asymmetry preserved settlement expansion and silenced accountability efforts.






