The Times of Israel Daily Briefing

Day 693 - Yossi Klein Halevi: Worse than Disengagement is a one-state 'dissolution'

31 snips
Aug 29, 2025
Yossi Klein Halevi, an author and senior fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute, shares his insights on the 2005 disengagement from Gaza, discussing its legacy and the failures of both the left and right in Israeli politics. He reflects on the motivations behind unilateralism, the complexities of the two-state solution, and the evolving global interest in Palestinian statehood. Amidst ongoing conflict, Klein Halevi offers a thought-provoking perspective on Israel's political landscape and the possibility of renewed hope for peace.
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INSIGHT

Centrist Case For Unilateralism

  • Yossi Klein Halevi became a centrist after concluding both right and left approaches failed in securing peace and security.
  • He supported Sharon's unilateralism as a way to define defensible borders when negotiation seemed impossible.
INSIGHT

Status Quo Risks Dissolution

  • Klein Halevi argues the status quo after disengagement was an illusion that moved Israel toward de facto annexation and a dangerous bi-national future.
  • He calls the potential outcome a 'dissolution' rather than a one-state solution, warning it would erase Israel's Jewish-democratic character.
INSIGHT

Implementation, Not Idea, Failed

  • He says unilateralism failed mainly from weak implementation: tolerating rocket fire and mishandling evacuees undermined the policy.
  • He argues strict border enforcement and decently resettling those uprooted would have sustained unilateral withdrawal.
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