Wisdom of Crowds

Why the Two-State Solution Died

Oct 8, 2025
Robert Malley, a veteran American diplomat and Middle East expert, discusses his new book, focusing on the deep historical and emotional roots of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He argues that past traumas shape today's responses and critiques the limitations of liberal peacemaking. Malley emphasizes that any solution must acknowledge both sides' core yearnings. The conversation also explores the potential for generational shifts in U.S. policy to foster peace, while suggesting alternative frameworks to the traditional two-state solution.
Ask episode
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
INSIGHT

Conflict Reverts To Historical Yearnings

  • The conflict repeatedly reverts to historical grievances, not just contemporary politics.
  • Liberal peacemaking ignored deep yearnings, so peace efforts changed surface events but not the conflict's core.
INSIGHT

Technocratic Peace Missed Emotional Core

  • Negotiations that focus on technocratic territory swaps miss core emotional attachments on both sides.
  • Ignoring refugees, religion, and historical yearnings meant the peace process couldn't address what the conflict is about.
INSIGHT

Two-State Lacked Popular Momentum

  • Two-state plans rarely resonated with either population and lacked grassroots energy.
  • Even the best-crafted proposals under Clinton, Bush, and Obama failed because they didn't emerge from popular demand.
Get the Snipd Podcast app to discover more snips from this episode
Get the app