Peace in the Middle East? Can Palestinian rejection of the PA lead to a binational state with Israel?



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Obada Nawawra was chatting with friends at a restaurant in Bethlehem. Outside the window, the terraced hills around the old West Bank city were rolling in the distance. It was early June, and most restaurants were closed for Ramadan; apart from a tourist table, the main square was almost empty. As the conversation turned about the Palestinian Authority (PA) – the semi-autonomous government based in the occupied West Bank – the idle waiters were getting closer to Nawawra's table.

A historically dominant position: The AP is an important institution for maintaining peace in the Palestinian enclaves. "Without authority," he said, there would be anarchy – "more crime and drugs." A waiter at the child's mine was incredulous: "How is authority good?" Before that, was there more crime? Another waiter, a woman who appeared to be in her twenties, answered: "No!" Other catering workers have added their disapproval – an attitude increasingly popular among young Palestinians.

After years of allegations of corruption and is considered with growing suspicion by this generation, their parents were dreaming of a Palestinian state and the end of the Israeli occupation, but they saw illegal Israeli settlements spreading, and they listened to the drums of Israeli politicians. 39, far right, like those of the Likud, claiming a "Greater Israel", which would bring back the territory rather than give in. They watched the Arab world come closer to Israel, turning its attention to the threat of the Iran,