The Sovereignty Movement joins those supporting the former President of the United States, Donald Trump, who distanced himself from the notion of two states that he, too, finds to be increasingly unlikely.
This comes against the backdrop of an interview that Trump granted TIME Magazine, in which he stated that he has come around to the now widespread belief in Israel that a Palestinian state existing side by side in peace is increasingly unlikely. “There was a time when I thought two-state could work,” he says. “Now I think two-state is going to be very, very tough.”
“After the October 7th massacre, it is eminently clear, even to the most sober analysts in the United States, that these dangerous ideas pose an existential threat to Israel’s future. It is time to promote, in practice, the alternative of sovereignty as Israel’s only realistic political plan,” said Sovereignty heads Yehudit Katsover and Nadia Matar.