Three-state solution
The three-state solution is a proposed resolution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that envisions Israel retaining sovereignty within its pre-1967 borders as a Jewish-majority state, while administrative control of the West Bank reverts to Jordan and the Gaza Strip to Egypt, granting Palestinians citizenship in those respective countries rather than forming an independent Palestinian state.[1] This framework draws on the pre-1967 status quo, when Jordan administered the West Bank and Egypt held the Gaza Strip, aiming to sidestep the governance failures and internal divisions—such as the 2007 Hamas ouster of the Palestinian Authority from Gaza—that have undermined unified Palestinian statehood.[1][2] Proponents, including former U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton, argue the approach preserves Israel's demographic integrity and security by avoiding direct rule over large Palestinian populations, while leveraging Jordan's and Egypt's existing peace treaties with Israel and their relative stability to manage the territories.[1] Elements of the idea appear in earlier Israeli proposals, such as the 1967 Allon Plan, which suggested partitioning the West Bank between Israel and Jordan to balance territorial claims and security needs.[1] However, the solution has faced rejection from Palestinian leaders, who view it as denying their right to national self-determination, and from Jordan and Egypt, which have resisted reabsorption due to past instability, including Jordan's 1970 Black September clashes with Palestinian militants.[3] In contemporary discourse, particularly after the October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks, variants of the term have emerged to describe de facto separation, treating Hamas-controlled Gaza and Palestinian Authority-governed West Bank areas as distinct entities alongside Israel, reflecting irreconcilable ideological and governance divides that render a single Palestinian state empirically unfeasible.[4][5] These adaptations highlight causal realities, such as Hamas's Islamist rejection of Israel's existence and chronic corruption in Palestinian institutions, which have stalled traditional two-state negotiations despite international backing.[2] Despite occasional revivals in policy circles, the three-state solution remains marginal, lacking broad diplomatic traction amid entrenched positions and without formal implementation or binding agreements.[6]Definition and Core Proposal
Historical and Geographical Basis
The historical basis for the three-state solution emerges from the distinct administrative statuses of the Gaza Strip and West Bank prior to Israel's occupation in the 1967 Six-Day War. Following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and the 1949 Armistice Agreements, Egypt administered Gaza from 1948 to 1967, treating it as a separate military-administered territory without formal annexation, while Jordan annexed the West Bank in 1950, integrating it into its kingdom until 1967.[7][8] This period established a functional three-state reality—Israel, Egyptian-controlled Gaza, and Jordanian West Bank—that maintained relative stability until disrupted by the war, when Israel captured both territories.[6] Jordan's 1988 renunciation of claims to the West Bank shifted focus toward Palestinian self-rule, but the 1993 Oslo Accords' creation of the Palestinian Authority (PA) assumed unified governance, an assumption undermined by the 2007 Hamas-Fatah schism, where Hamas seized Gaza after winning 2006 elections and expelling PA forces on June 14, 2007.[8][2] Geographically, the non-contiguous nature of Gaza and the West Bank underpins the proposal's rationale, as the territories are separated by 33 to 40 kilometers of Israeli-controlled land at their nearest points, with Gaza confined to a 41-kilometer-long coastal strip bordered by Israel to the north and east, Egypt to the southwest, and the Mediterranean Sea.[9][10] This divide, absent direct land links and restricted by Israeli checkpoints and security policies since 1967, has prevented seamless movement and economic integration, as evidenced by near-total prohibitions on Palestinian travel between the areas post-2007.[11] The West Bank's inland, mountainous terrain and Jordan Valley proximity contrast with Gaza's dense urban coastal profile, fostering divergent local governance challenges: Gaza's isolation amplified Hamas's Islamist rule, while the West Bank's PA administration contends with Israeli settlements fragmenting its 5,655 square kilometers. These factors, rooted in post-1948 borders and reinforced by the 2005 Israeli Gaza disengagement, argue for separate statelets—potentially Gaza oriented toward Egypt and the West Bank toward Jordan—over a singular, territorially disjointed Palestinian entity.[2][6]Key Components of the Proposal
The three-state solution envisions the establishment of three distinct sovereign entities: the State of Israel within its pre-1967 borders plus agreed adjustments, an independent Gaza Strip, and an independent West Bank (also known as Judea and Samaria). This structure formalizes the territorial and political divisions that have persisted since Israel's 2005 disengagement from Gaza and Hamas's violent seizure of control there on June 14, 2007, which severed practical unity with the West Bank under Palestinian Authority (PA) governance dominated by Fatah.[2][5] Gaza's sovereignty would encompass full control over its internal governance, borders, territorial waters, and airspace, potentially as a demilitarized entity to mitigate threats from groups like Hamas, with international oversight or guarantees to facilitate reconstruction and economic viability through seaborne trade and tourism.[5] The West Bank would similarly achieve independence, administered initially by the PA in Areas A and B, with negotiations over Area C—comprising roughly 60% of the land and hosting Israeli security coordination that has enabled over 100,000 Palestinian workers to enter Israel daily for employment.[2] This separation acknowledges the ideological incompatibility between Hamas's Islamist governance in Gaza and the PA's secular-nationalist model in the West Bank, rejecting enforced unification as unfeasible.[5] Security arrangements form a critical pillar, including armistice agreements between Israel and the two Palestinian states to prevent cross-border incursions, bolstered by Israel's defensive technologies and international pressure against aggression.[5] International recognition of Gaza and the West Bank as separate UN member states would end Israel's classification as an occupier in Gaza, shifting responsibility for governance failures to their respective authorities while enabling targeted aid flows.[5] Economic incentives, such as expanded living space or trade corridors for Gaza, could be incorporated in some variants to address demographic pressures, though core formulations prioritize political realism over territorial concessions.[2]Variations Across Formulations
Formulations of the three-state solution diverge primarily in their approaches to territorial control and administrative separation of Palestinian areas, reflecting evolving geopolitical realities since the 1967 Six-Day War. One variant, often termed the Jordan-Egypt option, envisions reverting the West Bank to Jordanian sovereignty and the Gaza Strip to Egyptian administration, while preserving Israel within its pre-1967 borders; Palestinians would receive citizenship from these neighboring Arab states, effectively creating three sovereign entities without a unified Palestinian state.[1] This model draws from historical proposals like the 1967 Allon Plan, which advocated partitioning the West Bank between Israel and Jordan, and has been endorsed by figures such as former U.S. Ambassador to the UN John Bolton for addressing demographic pressures on Israel by integrating Palestinians into existing Arab frameworks.[1] A more contemporary formulation acknowledges the de facto political schism between Gaza and the West Bank, proposing Israel alongside two independent Palestinian states: one in Gaza under Hamas governance and another in the West Bank under the Palestinian Authority (PA). This approach, highlighted since Hamas's 2007 seizure of Gaza, treats the territories as non-contiguous and ideologically distinct—Gaza functioning as a Sunni Islamist entity allied with Iran and Qatar, versus the PA's reliance on Israeli security cooperation and Western aid—rendering a single Palestinian state unfeasible under Oslo Accords assumptions.[5][4] Proponents argue it aligns with ground realities, including Israel's security barriers and the failure of reconciliation efforts, though it requires managing approximately 450,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank via relocation or bloc annexation.[5][12] Additional variations incorporate territorial expansions for viability, such as extending a Gaza-based state into northern Sinai (from Rafah to El-Arish) via long-term lease from Egypt, aiming to alleviate Gaza's economic isolation and population density of over 2 million in 365 square kilometers.[2] This hybrid model shifts focus from PA-centric West Bank governance to bolstering Gaza's infrastructure with international aid, while maintaining separation from the West Bank to avoid Hamas-PA conflicts, differing from stricter two-entity Palestinian divisions by leveraging Egyptian territory for development.[2] These proposals collectively prioritize pragmatic divisions over unified statehood, though critics note challenges like Egypt's reluctance to reabsorb Gaza and Jordan's aversion to West Bank annexation due to domestic Palestinian demographics exceeding 50% of its population.[1][5]Historical Development
Pre-1948 Partition Concepts
In 1921, British Colonial Secretary Winston Churchill decided to separate the territory east of the Jordan River from the Mandate for Palestine, establishing the Emirate of Transjordan under Emir Abdullah ibn Hussein as an autonomous Arab entity excluded from the provisions of the Balfour Declaration and Jewish national home policy.[13] This division, formalized in Article 25 of the Palestine Mandate approved by the League of Nations on July 24, 1922, reduced the area available for Jewish settlement to west of the Jordan while creating a distinct Arab polity spanning approximately 77% of the original Mandate territory.[14] The move reflected British efforts to balance Zionist aspirations with Arab demands, effectively partitioning the Mandate into two administrative zones: Transjordan for Arab self-rule and Cisjordan Palestine for mixed governance under the national home mandate.[15] The 1937 Peel Commission Report marked the first formal proposal to further partition the remaining Palestine west of the Jordan River amid escalating Arab-Jewish violence during the 1936-1939 revolt.[16] Chaired by Lord Robert Peel, the commission recommended dividing Cisjordan into a small Jewish state comprising about 20% of the area (including the Galilee, coastal plain from Haifa to Jaffa, and eastern Jerusalem suburbs), an Arab state in the hill country to be economically and politically united with Transjordan, and a British-administered zone incorporating Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and a corridor to the coast.[17] This scheme would have enlarged Transjordan into a larger Arab kingdom while establishing a viable Jewish state, with population transfers proposed to address demographic intermingling—approximately 225,000 Arabs from the Jewish zone to the Arab state and 1,250 Jews from the Arab zone to the Jewish state.[16] The Peel plan acknowledged irreconcilable communal claims, arguing that partition offered the only practical resolution after failed binational alternatives, but it faced rejection by Arab leaders who opposed any Jewish sovereignty and demanded the Mandate's termination without partition.[16] Zionist leadership, including David Ben-Gurion, conditionally accepted it as a basis for negotiation despite its limited territory, viewing it as a stepping stone to future expansion.[18] A follow-up Woodhead Commission in 1938 examined technical feasibility and proposed alternative boundaries but deemed partition unviable due to economic interdependence and security concerns, leading Britain to abandon the idea at the 1939 St. James Conference.[8] These pre-1948 efforts thus laid conceptual groundwork for multi-entity divisions, separating Transjordan as an Arab state and contemplating a tripartite structure west of the Jordan involving Jewish, Arab, and international zones, though none were implemented amid mutual Arab-Jewish opposition and British policy shifts.1948-1967 Territorial Control by Neighbors
Following the conclusion of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and the subsequent armistice agreements in 1949, the West Bank—including East Jerusalem—fell under the military occupation of Transjordan (renamed Jordan in 1949), while the Gaza Strip was occupied by Egypt.[19][8] These arrangements left approximately 21% of the former British Mandate of Palestine outside Israeli control, with no independent Arab Palestinian state established in either territory.[19] Jordan consolidated its hold on the West Bank through formal annexation on April 24, 1950, via resolutions from its House of Deputies and House of Notables, which unified the occupied areas with the East Bank under Hashemite rule.[20][21] This annexation was recognized only by the United Kingdom and Pakistan, with the Arab League condemning it as a violation of collective Arab interests, and it granted Jordanian citizenship to most West Bank residents, integrating them into the kingdom's administrative and political systems.[21] Jordanian governance involved direct rule from Amman, suppression of Palestinian nationalist movements, and restrictions on local autonomy, amid a population that included over 400,000 Palestinian refugees from the 1948 war.[8] In contrast, Egypt exercised military administration over the Gaza Strip without annexation, maintaining control through an appointed military governor from 1949 until 1967.[22][19] A nominal All-Palestine Government had been declared in Gaza on September 22, 1948, under Egyptian auspices, but it lacked effective sovereignty, territorial authority beyond Gaza, or international recognition beyond transient Arab state support, functioning primarily as a propaganda entity before fading under Egyptian dominance.[8] Egypt's rule permitted limited Palestinian self-governance in civil matters but prioritized military oversight, with the territory serving as a base for fedayeen raids into Israel and hosting around 200,000 refugees in crowded camps by the mid-1950s.[22][8] Throughout this era, neither Jordan nor Egypt pursued the creation of a sovereign Palestinian state in the controlled territories, instead treating them as extensions of their own strategic interests—Jordan for territorial expansion and Egypt for anti-Israel leverage—despite UN Resolution 181's prior allocation of these areas to an Arab state.[8] This period of foreign Arab administration persisted until the Six-Day War in June 1967, when Israel captured both the West Bank and Gaza Strip, ending Jordanian and Egyptian control.[19][8]Emergence in Modern Discourse (1970s-2000s)
The concept of a three-state solution, involving Israeli retention of its core territories alongside Jordanian administration of the West Bank and Egyptian oversight of Gaza, began entering Israeli strategic debates in the 1970s as a pragmatic counter to burgeoning Palestinian separatist demands. Post-1967 Six-Day War occupation prompted early considerations of transferring the West Bank back to Jordan, which had controlled it from 1948 to 1967, to avert the creation of an independent Palestinian entity that could threaten Israel's security.[23] This "Jordanian option" gained traction amid the 1973 Yom Kippur War's aftermath and stalled peace efforts, with Israeli policymakers viewing Jordan's Hashemite monarchy as a stable buffer against radical Arab nationalism.[24] In the 1980s, the idea solidified within Israel's Likud-led governments, which promoted the slogan "Jordan is Palestine" to argue that the East Bank kingdom already fulfilled Palestinian aspirations through its majority-Palestinian population and prior West Bank integration.[25] Likud figures, including settlement expansion advocates, framed Jordanian re-engagement as a means to legitimize Israeli control over strategic areas like the Jordan Valley while delegating civil governance to Amman, thereby undermining PLO claims to statehood.[24] Jordan's King Hussein initially explored joint Jordanian-Palestinian frameworks, such as a 1983 negotiating platform, but these faltered due to PLO resistance and Hussein's 1988 disengagement from West Bank affairs, which severed legal ties and distributed passports to residents.[23] Gaza's role remained secondary in these discussions, often envisioned under Egyptian influence given Cairo's pre-1967 administration, though Egypt showed little enthusiasm for reabsorption amid its 1979 peace treaty with Israel.[4] By the 1990s and early 2000s, the three-state framework reemerged amid Oslo Accords' (1993–1995) implementation failures, the Second Intifada (2000–2005), and evident fractures between West Bank Fatah and Gaza Hamas elements.[2] Israeli analysts highlighted demographic and governance incompatibilities for a unified Palestinian state, proposing instead a tripartite division to reflect historical controls: Israel proper, a Jordan-augmented entity for the West Bank (potentially via confederation), and Gaza as a distinct, possibly Egyptian-linked polity.[26] U.S. figures like John Bolton articulated this explicitly around 2009, advocating Gaza's return to Egypt and West Bank's to Jordan as a realistic dissociation from irredentist claims, building on prior Israeli right-wing advocacy.[4] These proposals underscored empirical realities of territorial disunity, with over 400,000 Israeli settlers in the West Bank by 2000 complicating two-state contiguity, yet faced rejection from Palestinian leadership prioritizing unitary sovereignty.[2]Arguments in Favor
Security and Governance Realities
The persistent schism between Hamas's Islamist governance in Gaza and the Palestinian Authority's (PA) secular administration in the West Bank, formalized after Hamas's violent takeover of Gaza on June 14, 2007, underscores the impracticality of unifying these territories under a single Palestinian state.[2] Hamas, designated a terrorist organization by the United States, European Union, and Israel, has since maintained exclusive control over Gaza, using it as a base for rocket attacks—over 20,000 fired at Israel since 2001—and the October 7, 2023, assault that killed 1,200 Israelis and took 250 hostages, demonstrating its commitment to Israel's destruction as per its 1988 charter.[27] This governance model prioritizes militarization over development, with Gaza's economy contracting by 6% in 2023 amid war but already stifled by Hamas's diversion of aid to tunnels and weapons, rendering unification a vector for exporting instability rather than fostering peace.[28] In the West Bank, the PA under Mahmoud Abbas—whose term expired in 2009 but continues without elections—exhibits systemic corruption, with 87% of Palestinians viewing it as corrupt and 78% demanding Abbas's resignation as of 2023 polls.[29] The PA's "pay-for-slay" policy, allocating over $300 million annually to families of terrorists killed or imprisoned for attacks on Israelis, incentivizes violence while eroding internal legitimacy and security cooperation, despite occasional tactical alignments with Israel to counter Hamas influence.[30] These dual failures—Hamas's theocratic authoritarianism and the PA's kleptocratic inefficiency—have perpetuated territorial fragmentation, with no credible mechanism for reconciling ideological divides or establishing accountable institutions capable of statehood, as evidenced by the collapse of prior unification attempts like the 2014 Fatah-Hamas pact.[31] A three-state framework, positing separate entities for Israel, Gaza, and a Jordan-influenced West Bank, aligns with these realities by isolating governance pathologies and mitigating security risks. Jordan's historical stewardship of the West Bank (1948–1967) and ongoing demographic ties—over 2 million Palestinians in Jordan—offer a stabilizing alternative to PA mismanagement, potentially enhancing border security against Iranian proxies while preventing a contiguous Palestinian state that could amplify threats like those from Gaza's 2023–2025 escalations.[32] Formalizing separation curtails Hamas's expansionist ambitions, as a unified Palestine might enable it to dominate via superior military mobilization (over 30,000 fighters pre-2023 war), whereas discrete entities allow targeted Israeli defenses and international oversight, reducing the prospect of a failed state exporting terror akin to post-2007 Gaza.[33] Empirical outcomes from the split—relative calm in the West Bank versus Gaza's chronic hostilities—validate this approach over illusory unification, prioritizing causal containment of threats over aspirational integration.[2]Empirical Evidence from Palestinian Administration Failures
The Palestinian Authority (PA), established in 1994 under the Oslo Accords to administer parts of the West Bank, has demonstrated persistent governance shortcomings, including widespread corruption and institutional opacity. Surveys conducted by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR) indicate that 85% of Palestinians perceive corruption as prevalent in PA institutions to a large or medium extent, with 87% holding similar views in a subsequent poll. These perceptions are corroborated by recent scandals, such as the October 2025 dismissal of the PA's transportation minister amid allegations of granting undue licenses and approvals in exchange for bribes. The PA's failure to hold legislative elections since 2006—despite a planned vote postponed in 2021 citing Israeli restrictions on Jerusalem voting—has eroded legitimacy, leaving President Mahmoud Abbas in power without fresh mandates and fostering accusations of authoritarian entrenchment.[34][35][36][37] Fiscal mismanagement exacerbates these issues, as documented in World Bank assessments. The PA faces chronic budget deficits, arrears to suppliers, and weak monitoring of financial risks, contributing to a pre-existing fiscal crisis that risks systemic collapse even absent external conflicts. Public financial management reforms have shown limited progress, with persistent opacity in wage bills and off-budget expenditures, despite international aid exceeding tens of billions since inception. This has resulted in bloated civil service payrolls—estimated at over 140,000 employees in the West Bank—often criticized for patronage rather than efficiency, undermining service delivery in health, education, and infrastructure.[38][39][40] In Gaza, Hamas's administration since its 2007 takeover via violent ousting of Fatah forces has similarly faltered, prioritizing military expenditures over civilian welfare despite substantial aid inflows. Pre-October 2023 unemployment hovered at approximately 45%, reflecting economic stagnation amid reports of aid diversion; captured Hamas documents reviewed by outlets like The Wall Street Journal indicate up to 25% of humanitarian supplies directed to military wings, including construction materials repurposed for tunnels and weaponry. This contrasts with claims from U.S. and UN reviews finding no widespread systemic theft, though Israeli military assessments highlight localized hijackings and sales on black markets, underscoring governance prioritization of conflict over development. Hamas's refusal to hold elections and suppression of dissent further mirror PA democratic deficits, perpetuating factional rule and aid dependency without accountable institutions.[41][42][43] These parallel failures in separated territories—corruption eroding trust, electoral stasis breeding illegitimacy, and fiscal opacity squandering aid—provide empirical grounds for skepticism toward a unified Palestinian governance model, as neither entity has cultivated sustainable institutions capable of self-rule. PCPSR data reveal comparable distrust across regions, with 72% viewing Hamas institutions as corrupt, suggesting inherent administrative challenges rather than mere territorial constraints.[35]Economic and Demographic Incentives
The stark demographic disparities between Gaza and the West Bank underscore incentives for treating them as separate political entities rather than components of a unified Palestinian state. Gaza's population of approximately 2.1 million inhabits just 365 square kilometers, yielding a density of over 5,700 people per square kilometer, compared to the West Bank's 3 million residents across 5,655 square kilometers at around 500 per square kilometer. Gaza also features a younger median age of about 18 years and higher fertility rates (3.34 children per woman versus 2.96 in the West Bank), driving faster population growth that exacerbates resource strains in its confined geography.[44] These factors, combined with Gaza's higher religiosity (65% of residents identifying as highly religious versus 41% in the West Bank), foster divergent social dynamics and governance challenges that unification would amplify rather than resolve.[45] Proponents argue that separate states allow tailored demographic policies, such as targeted education and family planning in Gaza to mitigate youth bulges prone to radicalization, without diluting the West Bank's relatively more moderate and urbanized profile.[5] Economically, the territories' divergent trajectories incentivize separation to enable independent recovery paths unhindered by mutual liabilities. Pre-October 2023, Gaza's unemployment hovered at 45%, reliant on aid and informal smuggling, while the West Bank's rate was around 13-18%, bolstered by 130,000 Palestinian workers in Israel contributing remittances.[46] Post-conflict, Gaza's unemployment surged to 80% and its per capita GDP plummeted to just 5.2% of the West Bank's level, reflecting Hamas-era mismanagement and isolation, whereas the West Bank retains potential for trade integration with Israel and Jordan.[47] A unified state risks averaging these disparities, saddling the West Bank's nascent private sector—evident in sectors like agriculture and services—with Gaza's reconstruction costs estimated at $50 billion or more, perpetuating aid dependency.[46] Separate governance, as in three-state formulations, permits the West Bank to pursue export-oriented growth akin to its pre-intifada ties with Israel, while Gaza could attract specialized investment for port redevelopment under reformed or external oversight, avoiding the non-contiguous inefficiencies that doomed prior unification attempts under the Palestinian Authority.[2] For Israel, this structure preserves economic incentives like labor access from the West Bank without absorbing Gaza's volatility, maintaining a buffer against demographic spillover that could otherwise pressure Israel's Jewish-majority composition through unmanaged migration or conflict.[5]Proponents and Advocacy
Israeli Thinkers and Policymakers
Aryeh Eldad, a former Knesset member from the National Union party and founder of Professors for a Strong Israel, has been a prominent advocate of the "Jordan option" variant of the three-state solution, proposing that West Bank Arabs be granted Jordanian citizenship to recognize Jordan—home to a Palestinian Arab majority—as the Palestinian homeland, while Israel applies sovereignty over Judea and Samaria and Gaza operates separately.[48][49] In 2013, Eldad emphasized rejecting a Palestinian state in these territories, arguing instead for Israeli control to ensure security amid empirical failures of Palestinian governance.[50] Yigal Allon, Israel's deputy prime minister and a key Labor Party figure, outlined the Allon Plan in July 1967 shortly after the Six-Day War, advocating Israeli annexation of the Jordan Valley and other strategic West Bank border areas for defensible borders, with the remaining populated Arab regions returned to Jordanian sovereignty as a demilitarized entity, effectively creating three states: Israel, a Jordan-West Bank federation, and Gaza under Egyptian influence or separate administration.[51][52] Shlomo Ben-Ami, former Israeli foreign minister under Ehud Barak, described in 2019 the de facto existence of three states in the conflict—Israel, Hamas-ruled Gaza, and the Palestinian Authority-controlled West Bank—arguing that formalizing this separation, rather than pursuing an illusory unified Palestinian state, aligns with governance realities evidenced by Hamas's 2007 takeover of Gaza and ongoing PA corruption.[4] These proposals reflect a right-leaning Israeli perspective prioritizing security data, such as the narrow pre-1967 borders' vulnerability (Israel's width at 9 miles), and skepticism toward Palestinian statehood based on historical rejectionism, including the 1947 partition refusal and repeated terror waves post-Oslo Accords.[53] While not mainstream policy, elements persist in discussions among security officials, as noted in 2011 reports of quiet government explorations of Jordanian involvement to avert a sovereign Palestinian state.[54]International and Academic Supporters
Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton advocated a three-state solution in 2009, proposing the return of Gaza to Egyptian administration and the West Bank to Jordanian sovereignty to address the impracticalities of unifying the geographically separated Palestinian territories under a single state.[4] King Hussein of Jordan publicly supported the concept as early as 1972, suggesting Jordanian oversight or federation with the West Bank to stabilize the region amid Palestinian rejectionism, though it garnered limited backing at the time due to Arab opposition to partition.[3] The American Enterprise Institute has endorsed variants, arguing in policy analyses for attaching West Bank and Gaza populations to contiguous Arab states like Jordan and Egypt to leverage existing governance structures and avert the failures of Palestinian self-rule, as evidenced by Hamas's 2007 takeover of Gaza.[32] Internationally, discussions in outlets like Project Syndicate highlight the approach's historical precedents, such as the pre-1967 status quo where Egypt controlled Gaza and Jordan the West Bank, positioning it as a realistic reversion amid two-state stagnation.[4] Among academics, support remains niche, often from strategic studies scholars skeptical of unified Palestinian viability. The Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies outlined a model in 2018 for a Palestinian entity confined to Gaza with leased Sinai territory for expansion, citing demographic pressures and security risks of West Bank integration.[2] A 2023 analysis in E-International Relations by security scholar Hilly Towner advocates reviving the three-state framework—Israel, a Jordan-administered West Bank, and Egyptian-influenced Gaza—as a durable exit from endless conflict cycles, grounded in empirical failures of Oslo-era unification attempts.[6] Similarly, a policy essay in the Journal of Public and International Affairs from Princeton University contends that isolating Gaza's radical elements prevents their spread to the West Bank, drawing on data from Hamas's governance since 2007.[55] These propositions contrast with dominant academic preferences for two-state models, potentially reflecting institutional biases toward ideological continuity over pragmatic territorial realism.[56]Criticisms and Oppositions
Palestinian National Aspirations
The core of Palestinian national aspirations, as codified by the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) since its inception in 1964, entails the establishment of an independent, sovereign state encompassing the West Bank, Gaza Strip, and East Jerusalem as its capital, rooted in the 1967 borders.[57] This vision crystallized in the 1988 Palestinian Declaration of Independence, which asserted the State of Palestine as embodying the collective national and cultural identity of Palestinians wherever they reside, rejecting partition or absorption into other entities.[58] Originally outlined in the Palestinian National Charter of 1964 and revised in 1968, these aspirations demanded the "liberation" of the entire territory of former Mandatory Palestine from Israeli control, emphasizing armed struggle and the right to self-determination as a distinct people.[59] [60] Following the 1993 Oslo Accords, the PLO formally recognized Israel and amended its charter by 1996 to accept a two-state framework, though the charter's full revocation remains disputed and unverified in practice.[61] These goals directly conflict with the three-state solution, which envisions annexing the West Bank to Jordan and Gaza to Egypt, thereby nullifying Palestinian claims to independent statehood and reverting territories to pre-1967 administrative arrangements under Arab neighbors—arrangements historically rejected by Palestinian nationalists as inadequate for their emerging identity.[1] Integration into Jordan or Egypt would subordinate Palestinian governance, demographics, and decision-making to foreign sovereigns, undermining the PLO's longstanding insistence on a unitary Palestinian polity free from external Arab domination, as evidenced by the PLO's expulsion from Jordan during the 1970 Black September clashes over fedayeen autonomy.[62] Empirical data from Palestinian public opinion reinforces this opposition: surveys by the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research (PCPSR) in May 2025 found 40% support for a two-state solution—framed as independent Palestinian statehood alongside Israel—against 57% opposition, with alternatives favoring armed confrontation or a single binational state rather than territorial absorption by neighbors.[63] Earlier PCPSR polling in October 2024 showed a temporary rise to 46% two-state support post-October 7 events, but persistent majorities prioritize national independence over confederative or partitioned models that dilute sovereignty.[64] Declining two-state endorsement, particularly among Hamas supporters and youth (who comprise a demographic majority), stems from perceived Israeli intransigence rather than openness to Jordanian-Egyptian oversight, which polls do not register as viable.[65] Hamas, representing Gaza's de facto governance since 2007, amplifies these aspirations through its 1988 charter (revised 2017), advocating an Islamic state over historic Palestine while rejecting interim solutions short of full liberation, further entrenching resistance to any framework erasing Palestinian territorial unity or agency.[65] PCPSR data attributes low viability to three-state-like options implicitly, as Palestinian preferences cluster around self-rule variants, with no surveyed support for reverting to Hashemite or Egyptian administration amid enduring nationalist sentiments forged post-1948 displacement and 1967 occupation.[63][65]Positions of Jordan and Egypt
Jordan has consistently rejected proposals akin to the three-state solution that would involve absorbing the West Bank, viewing such arrangements as existential threats to its national stability and Hashemite monarchy. King Abdullah II has emphasized that Jordan categorically opposes any notion of the kingdom serving as an alternative homeland for Palestinians, citing severe demographic pressures from its existing Palestinian-origin population (estimated at over 50% of citizens) and the risk of political upheaval that could lead to the monarchy's overthrow.[66] In 2018, Abdullah explicitly dismissed confederation ideas with Palestinian territories as incompatible with Jordan's interests, insisting that the sole viable path is an independent Palestinian state alongside Israel.[67] Earlier, in 2007, he described confederation proposals at that stage as a "conspiracy," underscoring Jordan's long-standing renunciation of territorial claims to the West Bank since 1988 and its prioritization of a two-state framework to avoid refugee influxes that could exacerbate economic strains like high debt (over 90% of GDP) and water scarcity.[68][69] Egypt similarly opposes elements of the three-state solution that would entail regaining control over Gaza, deeming such burden-shifting unacceptable due to security risks, economic costs, and threats to Sinai stability from militant spillover. President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has repeatedly affirmed Egypt's rejection of administering Gaza, as stated in response to Israeli proposals in February 2025, calling the idea "unacceptable" and reaffirming commitment to Palestinian sovereignty in Gaza and the West Bank as part of a two-state solution.[70] Egypt views reabsorption of Gaza's 2.3 million residents—many affiliated with groups like Hamas—as a pathway to importing instability, including insurgency threats across the border, while reconstruction demands would strain Cairo's resources amid its own economic challenges.[71] Sisi has framed displacement or control transfers as undermining the Palestinian cause entirely, declaring in October 2023 that Egypt "cannot take part" in such forced movements, a stance reinforced in 2025 amid fears of mass expulsion liquidating aspirations for statehood.[72][73] This position aligns with Egypt's diplomatic efforts, such as mediating ceasefires, which prioritize Gaza's unity with the West Bank under Palestinian Authority governance rather than Egyptian oversight.[74]Ideological and Logistical Objections
Critics of the three-state solution argue that it ideologically undermines Palestinian national cohesion by institutionalizing the geographic and political schism between Gaza and the West Bank, which has persisted since Hamas seized control of Gaza on June 14, 2007, ousting Fatah forces in violent clashes.[75] This division, they contend, fragments what proponents of Palestinian self-determination view as an indivisible national territory, diluting collective leverage in negotiations with Israel and perpetuating intra-Palestinian rivalries that weaken unified resistance to perceived occupation.[76] Such formal separation is seen as conceding to Israel's strategy of territorial compartmentalization, which erodes the ideological foundation of a singular Palestinian statehood claim rooted in historic mandates for contiguous lands including the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem.[77] From a broader ideological standpoint, the proposal clashes with pan-Arabist legacies that frame Palestinian liberation as integral to regional Arab unity, rather than subdividing it into potentially client states beholden to neighbors like Egypt or Jordan. Advocates for comprehensive Palestinian sovereignty, including factions within the Palestine Liberation Organization, maintain that endorsing separate entities rewards the 2007 Hamas-Fatah split—itself a product of electoral victory in January 2006 followed by armed takeover—without resolving underlying governance failures or fostering reconciliation.[78] This approach is criticized for sidelining the Palestinian right of return and equitable land division, prioritizing pragmatic divorce over aspirational wholeness.[79] Logistically, the non-contiguous nature of Gaza and the West Bank—separated by approximately 40 kilometers of Israeli sovereign territory—renders coordinated state functions untenable without perpetual Israeli mediation, which security experts deem unreliable given historical smuggling and attack precedents.[5] Economic interdependence is hampered by restricted crossings, such as the Erez and Kerem Shalom points for Gaza and multiple West Bank checkpoints, leading to disparate development: Gaza's GDP per capita languished at around $1,100 in 2022 amid blockade effects, versus the West Bank's $3,700, complicating unified fiscal policy or trade.[75] Proposals for overhead bridges or underwater tunnels to link the territories face prohibitive engineering costs—estimated in billions—and vulnerability to sabotage, as evidenced by repeated tunnel destructions during conflicts like 2014's Operation Protective Edge.[80] Governance logistics exacerbate these issues, with Hamas's Islamist rule in Gaza enforcing Sharia-influenced policies divergent from the Palestinian Authority's secular-leaning administration in the West Bank, fostering incompatible legal frameworks and mutual non-recognition since the 2007 Mecca Agreement's collapse.[2] Security coordination remains fragmented, as dual entities could independently harbor militants, amplifying risks of cross-territory incursions; for instance, post-2007, Gaza-launched rockets numbered over 20,000 by 2023, unmitigated by West Bank authorities. Demographic pressures, including Gaza's 2.3 million residents in 365 square kilometers versus the West Bank's 3 million across 5,655 square kilometers, strain resource allocation without shared infrastructure, rendering the model susceptible to collapse akin to prior unification attempts under the short-lived 1994-2007 Palestinian National Authority.[6]Feasibility Assessment
Geopolitical and Security Hurdles
Egypt has consistently rejected proposals implying responsibility for Gaza under a three-state framework, citing severe security risks from cross-border militant activity into the Sinai Peninsula, where groups like ISIS affiliates have historically exploited Gaza smuggling tunnels for operations.[74] Egyptian officials have described such burden-shifting as a "nightmare," fearing destabilization of domestic politics, economic strain from refugee inflows, and entanglement in Israel's conflicts without commensurate benefits.[81] Similarly, Jordan opposes reintegration of the West Bank, which it annexed in 1950 but disengaged from in 1988, due to the demographic shift that would create a Palestinian majority threatening the Hashemite monarchy's stability, as evidenced by the 1970 Black September clashes.[6] From Israel's perspective, legitimizing a Hamas-controlled Gaza as a sovereign state poses acute security threats, given Hamas's designation as a terrorist organization by the United States, European Union, and Israel, and its October 7, 2023, attack that killed approximately 1,200 Israelis and took over 250 hostages.[4] A sovereign Gaza entity would enable unrestricted military buildup, including Iranian-supplied rockets and tunnels, endangering Israel's southern communities; since 2001, Gaza-based groups have fired over 20,000 rockets and mortars into Israel, necessitating ongoing border defenses.[82] Israeli analysts argue that statehood for Hamas, whose founding charter explicitly calls for Israel's destruction, would preclude demilitarization and invite perpetual low-intensity warfare, undermining any peace dividend.[32] Geopolitically, the proposal lacks regional buy-in, as Saudi Arabia and other Gulf states tie normalization with Israel to progress toward a unified Palestinian state, viewing division as perpetuating instability and Iranian influence via proxies like Hamas.[55] The geographic separation of Gaza and the West Bank—over 40 kilometers apart, bisected by Israel—exacerbates coordination failures, as demonstrated by the Palestinian Authority's inability to hold elections since 2006 due to Hamas's 2007 Gaza takeover, potentially fostering intra-Palestinian rivalry and civil strife rather than stability.[81] International bodies like the United Nations prioritize a single Palestinian entity, rendering three-state recognition diplomatically isolating for proponents.[83]Economic and Demographic Data Analysis
The Gaza Strip's population was estimated at approximately 2.1 million in mid-2024, with a density exceeding 5,000 people per square kilometer, among the highest globally, exacerbating resource strains in a territory of just 365 square kilometers.[84][85] Pre-conflict annual growth rates hovered around 2%, driven by high fertility (around 3.3 births per woman), but the 2023-2024 war led to net declines estimated at 6% due to casualties, displacement, and restricted access, though official projections vary.[86] In a three-state framework positing Gaza as an independent entity, this demographic profile—marked by a median age under 20 and youth bulge—poses severe feasibility risks, as limited arable land (less than 30% cultivable) and water scarcity (annual per capita supply below 100 cubic meters) cannot support self-sustaining growth without external dependencies.[84] The West Bank's Palestinian population stands at about 3 million, with a density of roughly 500 people per square kilometer, lower than Gaza's but complicated by fragmented geography and Israeli settlements housing over 500,000 residents.[87][88] Growth rates average 1.7% annually, with a more balanced age structure (median age around 20) compared to Gaza, yet integration into a Jordanian-led entity would add this population to Jordan's 11.5 million, where densities are far lower at 130 per square kilometer and growth is about 1.5%.[89] Jordan already hosts a substantial Palestinian-origin demographic (over 50% of its citizens), raising concerns of diluted national cohesion and accelerated urbanization pressures in a kingdom with limited economic buffers.| Region | Population (2024 est.) | Density (per km²) | Annual Growth Rate (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gaza Strip | 2.1 million | >5,000 | ~2 (pre-war; net decline post-2023)[84][85] |
| West Bank (Palestinians) | 3 million | ~500 | 1.7[87] |
| Israel | 9.5 million | ~430 | 1.4[90][91] |
| Jordan | 11.5 million | 130 | 1.5[89] |