‘Support growing for two-state solution’

It is impossible to reconcile this optomistic poll with the one in the post just above this one. Keep in mind that when this poll refers to Israelis, Arab Israelis are included. Ted Belman

By MELANIE LIDMAN, JPOST

Hebrew University poll finds that 58% of Israelis and 50% of Palestinians support the 2001 Clinton Parameters.

Israelis and Palestinians are inching closer to agreeing on a two-state solution based on the Clinton Parameters, according to the yearly Hebrew University Joint Israeli-Palestinian Public Opinion Poll released Wednesday.

According to the poll, 58 percent of Israelis and 50% of Palestinians supported the Clinton Parameters in 2011, compared with 47% of Israelis and 39% of Palestinians in 2003, the first year of the poll.

The Clinton Parameters, devised in the administration of former US president Bill Clinton, call for compromises in six fundamental issues: final borders and territorial exchange, refugees, sovereignty over Jerusalem, a demilitarized Palestinian state, final security arrangements and an end of armed conflict.

Most significantly, Jerusalem will be divided, and east Jerusalem, along with most of the Old City, save for the Jewish Quarter and the Western Wall, will become the Palestinian capital. Also, Israel will withdraw from all of the West Bank except for major settlement blocs consisting of about 3% of the West Bank, and there will be an equal territorial exchange for land inside Israel.

Among Palestinians, 63% support a territorial exchange based on these parameters, compared to 51% of Israelis.

Palestinians and Israelis feel similarly uncomfortable with the suggestion for Jerusalem’s future, with only 40% of Palestinians and 38% of Israelis supporting those borders.

Support grew for an end to the armed conflict with the implementation of the Clinton Parameters, with 63% of Palestinians and 70% of Israelis expressing their support for an end to violence, an increase of 2% for Israelis and 5% for Palestinians over last year.

The poll also found Israelis and Palestinians are equally split on whether or not Israel will attack Iran’s nuclear weapon program: 47% of Israelis supported a strike against Iran, and 48% of Palestinians said they believed Israel would strike Iran.

The poll was conducted by the Harry S. Truman Research Institute for the Advancement of Peace, and the Department of Communication and Journalism, at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and included 1,270 Palestinian respondents and 600 Israeli respondents.

Despite the fact there is actually support of at least 50% on both sides for the Clinton parameters, both sides do not believe that others in their society or on the other side support these suggestions. Only 34% of Israelis estimate that a majority in their society supports this package, and 55% of Israelis think the majority of Palestinians will support it. Send Large Small Print Share

June 27, 2012 | 3 Comments »

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  1. and 55% of Israelis think the majority of Palestinians will support it

    How is it that Israelis can be so naive about their sworn enemies?

  2. Polls should be taken with a grain of salt. For over 50 years I have been reading polls. It appears to me that it is a simple matter to conduct a poll so as to obtain desired results for publishing. Most readers do not even analyse a polls parameters on the most basic levels. Most news articles about polls give a headline which is not usually fully supported by the poll. Media tends to influence intentionally through headlines because lazy minds do not go further. Today, earlier, I read a news report about a poll which stated that people are happier as a result of peer respect of their work achievements than from financial reward. Later in the article it was mentioned that the poll group was new young college graduates. The headline and poll did not distinguish between new young graduates and the overall population. In this case it was obvious but most media stories about polls do not inform you of the “catch”.

  3. • “No Jew is at liberty to surrender the right of the Jewish Nation to the Land of Israel.

    • “No Jew has the authority to do so.

    • “No Jewish body is sanctioned to do so.

    • “Not even the entire Jewish People alive today has the authority to yield any part of the land whatsoever.

    • “This right is preserved for the Jewish People throughout the generations — and cannot be forfeited, or, under any circumstance or condition, cancelled.

    • “Even if, during some given era, there will be those Jews who declare that they are ‘relinquishing’ this right, they have neither the power nor the jurisdiction to negate it for future generations.

    • “Accordingly, the Jewish Nation is neither obligated by, nor responsible for, any such waiver or renunciation.

    • “Our right to this land — in its entirety — is steadfast, unalienable, and eternal.

    • “And until the coming of the Great Redemption, we shall never yield this historic right.”

    [David Ben-Gurion, Address to the 1937 Twentieth Biennial World Zionist Congress, Zurich]

    End of discussion.