Leaders | The legacy of the six-day war

Why Israel needs a Palestinian state

More than ever, land for peace also means land for democracy

THE victory of Israel over the Arab armies that encircled it in 1967 was so swift and absolute that, many Jews thought, the divine hand must have tipped the scales. Before the six-day war Israel had feared another Holocaust; thereafter it became an empire of sorts. Awestruck, the Jews took the holy sites of Jerusalem and the places of their biblical stories. But the land came with many Palestinians whom Israel could neither expel nor absorb. Was Providence smiling on Israel, or testing it?

This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline “Why Israel needs a Palestinian state”

Why Israel needs a Palestinian state

From the May 20th 2017 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition
El Salvador's President Nayib Bukele

First he busted gangs. Now Nayib Bukele busts critics

El Salvador’s president has all the tools of repression he needs to stay in power indefinitely

The illustration is showing a feeding clear feeding bag with a rose inside

How Labour should save the NHS

Among all its ideas, the most important is to go all-in for digital transformation


American finance, always unique, is now uniquely dangerous

Donald Trump is putting an untested system under almighty strain


India needs to turn the air-con on

If its awful air pollution is ever solved the country will get even hotter

Pausing foreign applications to American universities is a terrible idea

The Trump administration hobbles a great American export