A forceful rejection of renewed international attempts to promote a pathway to Palestinian statehood has gained fresh momentum in Israel, following the circulation of a U.S.-drafted UN resolution suggesting that a “credible path to a Palestinian state may finally be in place.”
The proposal, which has not yet reached a vote, was swiftly dismissed by Israeli voices who argue that October 7 irrevocably reshaped the nation’s security doctrine. Commentators aligned with nationalist and security-focused groups insist that Israel will never accept the establishment of a Palestinian state in Gaza, the West Bank, or any territory between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea.
The position, widely echoed across Israel’s political spectrum since the Hamas attacks, contends that only the Israel Defense Forces can disarm Hamas, demilitarize Gaza, and prevent future assaults.
Analysts note that the sentiment is no longer confined to hardline circles. October 7, they argue, dismantled decades of hopes tied to the two-state framework and pushed even traditionally moderate Israelis toward a hardened outlook.
Public polling in late 2023 indicated significant support among Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank for Hamas’s October 7 actions a factor cited by Israeli officials and commentators as proof that a sovereign Palestinian entity would pose an existential risk.
Senior government members have openly dismissed the UN proposal. National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir declared that Israel “will never accept the establishment of a terrorist state,” while Defense Minister Yisrael Katz reaffirmed long-term military control over strategic territories and a commitment to fully eliminating Hamas’s military infrastructure.
The commentary published by the Pulse of Israel, credited to writer Aviv Abelow, argues that foreign governments and institutions are attempting to revive a political vision that no longer aligns with Israeli public sentiment. The piece calls for assertive Israeli sovereignty across its “biblical homeland” and proposes long-term security control over Gaza, dismantling the Palestinian Authority, and exploring voluntary emigration options for Palestinians.
The UN initiative remains under discussion, but Israeli officials maintain that no diplomatic text will override the security realities exposed on October 7, nor the public mood that has emerged since.
