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The United States has long-since supported a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine but… not this week at the United Nations.
France is hosting a UN meeting with the explicit goal of advancing a two-state solution. This comes on the heels of France’s formal recognition of the state of Palestine. The U.K. is reported to be on the verge of doing the same. Israeli leaders have issued angry condemnations of this, saying that it is a reward for terror.
Despite the U.S. stated policy in favor of a two-state resolution, the U.S. State Department has rejected the summit entirely, dismissing it as a “publicity stunt” and “ill-timed.” In other words: we support peace, just not like this, not with them, and definitely not right now.
So the message from Washington is clear: the two-state solution remains official policy—just not while Israeli leaders are watching.
Meanwhile, President Trump admitted on Monday that people in Gaza are starving—despite claims from influencers that this is just propaganda. He said the barriers to food delivery were “set up by whoever” and that we “have to get rid of them.” According to the Wall Street Journal, those barriers were set up by Israel, and a former U.S. Green Beret says he witnessed Israeli tanks fire into crowds of civilians.
So here’s the question: if that “whoever” is Israel, will the U.S. finally stop them?