ASSESSMENTS
Israel's Pursuit of National Unity Risks Alienating Everyone Else
Oct 24, 2019 | 09:30 GMT

Palestinian protesters wave flags near the Israel-Gaza border on Oct. 4. Israel’s push to annex the West Bank could leave many Palestinians under Israeli control without political rights.
(ASHRAF AMRA/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)
Highlights
- Israeli foreign policy is increasingly dominated by centrist and right-wing nationalists who want to take formal control of the West Bank.
- These same nationalists will not want to risk Israel's Jewish character by giving citizenship to the Palestinians living in the West Bank, and will also be hard-pressed to find homes for them elsewhere.
- Israel is thus most likely to leave Palestinians in annexed territory without political rights, which risks isolating its regional relationships and empowering anti-Israel forces in the West.
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