“There will be no Palestinian state — not even in 1,000 years. After October 7, Israel will not give it.”
Those uncompromising words weren’t spoken by an Israeli official in the aftermath of Hamas’ attack nearly two years ago; they came from Sheikh Wadee’ al-Jaabari and four fellow Hebron sheikhs determined to shatter the long-standing notion of Palestinian nationalism.
On July 5, the sheikhs sent Economy Minister Nir Barkat a letter expressing Hebron’s wish to break away from the widely unpopular Palestinian Authority, establish an “Emirate of Hebron,” and formally recognize Israel as a Jewish state under the Abraham Accords—striking a blow to the antisemitic rallying cry, “From the River to the Sea, Palestine Will Be Free.”
Rather than clinging to the dream of Palestinian statehood with all its pie-in-the-sky demands—like a right of return and an East Jerusalem capital—these Hebron leaders embrace normalization, integration, and cooperation
They see the writing on the wall, and now is the opportune time to abandon the global grandstanding and to act through localized self-determination that brings tangible benefits to their people, seeing Israel as a partner, not a public enemy.
Jaabari and his fellow sheikhs champion a principled peace, built first and foremost on mutual recognition of Israel as the Jewish nation-state. His words expose the cracks in the foundations of Yasser Arafat’s vision and mark a decisive turn away from the Palestinian politics of just saying, “No!”
In 1967, the Arab League’s Khartoum Resolution insisted upon “Three No’s”: no peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel, and no negotiations with Israel. In contrast, the Hebron sheikhs’ letter delivers three emphatic “Yeses.”
- Yes to peace: An “Emirate of Hebron” with shared security guarantees and a 1,000-acre economic zone seamlessly integrated into Israel’s marketplace.
- Yes to recognition: Formal acknowledgment of Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state.
- Yes to negotiations: Direct engagement with Israel’s Economy Minister and a clear intent to join the Abraham Accords framework.
This isn’t just symbolism. They have a strategy.
Their plan includes strict anti-terror measures and full integration alongside UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco—nations that normalized ties with Israel beginning in 2020 over their shared concern regarding Iran.
Since October 7, Israel has flipped the Middle East script, shifting from a defensive posture to one of offense. In little time, they defeated Hamas, dismantled Hezbollah’s capabilities, watched Syria abandon Tehran, and neutered Iran’s proxy influence and nuclear ambition. Iran has become a country teetering on the edge of potential regime change.
Israel is in the Middle East’s driver’s seat now; they are the partner of choice for Arab states and, increasingly, for pragmatic Palestinian leaders looking for a new path forward.
Remember the uproar from foreign policy wonks over moving the U.S. embassy to Jerusalem? Instead of unrest, it paved the way for the Abraham Accords.
Pragmatic Palestinians—like the Hebron sheikhs—refuse to be left behind while the rest of the Middle East moves ahead. Yet, like bees to honey, Western countries still preach a two-state solution. Instead of letting the Middle East organically solve its problems, they insist that Israel hand over the reins.
On June 26, the European Council reaffirmed its “firm commitment to a lasting and sustainable peace based on the two-state solution.” Can someone remind me what year it is? Because it sounds like the 1990s are calling.
Over the years, the Palestinian Authority raced to the United Nations to demand Israel partition the land, but now—with Israel firmly in the driver’s seat—Pragmatic Palestinians are turning straight to Jerusalem in search of peace.
The nations of the world would do well to heed the sheikh’s warning: “To think only about making a Palestinian state will bring us all to disaster.”
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