| The Real Reason to Recognize Palestine Absolutists have attempted to kill the two-state solution for years. The international community just called their bluff.
 
 By  Yair Rosenberg
 
 
  Eyad Baba / AFP / Getty
 
 September 30, 2025, 7 AM ET
 
 
  
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 This   past week, Britain, Canada, and Australia, along with several smaller   countries, officially recognized the state of Palestine, in the run-up   to a United Nations conference devoted to the two-state solution. Yet   for all the ceremony and  celebration, it’s not clear whether these pronouncements actually matter. Critics have labeled the recognition effort “ empty,” “ a distraction,” or “ even harmful,” and it isn’t hard to see why. The diplomatic declarations do nothing to help Palestinians in Gaza or those  menaced by Israeli settler violence in the West Bank. They will not arrest the gradual,  de facto annexation of occupied Palestinian areas under the successive governments of Benjamin Netanyahu.
 
 The countries recognizing Palestine have  insisted  that   Hamas should have no role in its governance, but pious pledges do not   change the fact that the terrorist group remains the dominant   Palestinian power in Gaza—and still holds dozens of Israelis hostage,   despite the Gazan population’s desperation for the war to end. These   inconvenient complications suggest that recognizing a Palestinian state   that does not actually exist, governed by people who are not currently   in charge, is not a solution but rather a restatement of the problem.
 
 A   cynic might end the story here. But there is more to this moment than   mere symbolism. International recognition of a theoretical Palestinian   state alongside Israel does little for Palestinians today, but it sets   the stage for a full-.....
 
 theatlantic.com
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