As Israel’s Gaza campaign against Hamas intensifies, the levels of Middle Eastern political rhetoric have also risen. Prominent Israeli political leaders proclaim their support for a ”Greater Israel,” a slogan perhaps as old as the modern Jewish state itself. Arab leaders, and many others outside the region, continue to insist on a “two-state solution,” another mantra with a long history.
Repeating these buzzwords undoubtedly satisfies the political supporters of the leaders doing so, and in which they honestly believe. But they are also backward- rather than forward-looking. Whatever validity such rhetorical flourishes may have had before October 7, 2023, they are now anachronisms. We face a very different world after Hamas’s barbaric attack. Moreover, globally, the June Israeli-US attacks on Iran’s nuclear-weapons and ballistic-missile programs are even more consequential.
Iran’s terrorist surrogates, led by Hamas, initiated Tehran’s “ring of fire” strategy against Israel, the consequences of which are still playing out. In retrospect, it is hard to imagine a more disastrous outcome for the ayatollahs and their proxies, but the grim truth is that what can properly be called the Third Gulf War is still not over. In the First Gulf War, the United States and its allies liberated Kuwait from Saddam Hussein’s aggression, restoring the status quo ante bellum. The Second Gulf War brought Saddam’s downfall, in effect completing the unfinished First Gulf War.
With Iraq eliminated as a threat to Middle Eastern peace and security, the Iranian threat took center stage, causing tectonic shifts in the region’s underlying strategic calculus. Because the Third Gulf War is still underway on several fronts, final judgments about its enduring effects are not yet possible. But it is imperative that all interested parties, both in the region and outside it, recognize that the regional environment is now dramatically different than before. We are long past the “old thinking” about the 1948-1973 period of military threats against Israel, which all failed, and also long past the 1973-1990 era of diplomacy, which produced mixed results in establishing lasting Middle East peace and security.
Most important strategically, the ayatollahs still govern in Tehran. They are engaged in widespread domestic repression, desperately trying to shore up a regime increasingly distrusted by its citizens. Nonetheless, events over the last two years, particularly the US-Israeli strikes, demonstrate clearly to its people how vulnerable the regime is, and fortify the widespread view that it is now a question of when it falls, not whether.
The fall of Assad’s dictatorship in Syria, Iran’s major ally, not only eliminated Tehran’s influence, but now permits Jerusalem and Damascus to reach a and ultimately lasting peace and an Abraham Accord. On that front, the jury is still out. In Lebanon, efforts to destroy Hezbollah militarily are underway, with reports of greater Israeli-Lebanese cooperation than have been seen in many decades. Considerable antagonism between Beirut and Jerusalem still exists, but they undeniably share strong mutual interests in defanging Hezbollah as a military and terrorist threat. Here again, the jury is still out.
Yemen’s Houthi terrorists remain a regional threat, both to Israel and nearby Arab states, and to international commerce in the Red Sea as well. This is clearly unfinished business for the world as a whole.
In Gaza and West Bank, conflict also continues against Hamas and other Palestinian terrorist groups. Focusing on issues of armed conflict in no way minimizes the current humanitarian plight of Gazans themselves, nor the imperative of securing them a decent future. Indeed, the only long-term solution from both a humanitarian and a politico-military perspective rests on eliminating Hamas as a viable political as well as military entity. If the cancer is not eliminated, it will likely re-emerge in its October 7 form and again threaten Israel and neighboring Arab states alike.
The two-state solution died on October 7. I have long advocated a “three-state solution,” which would transfer Gaza back to Egyptian control and require Israel and Jordan to resolve borders and security issues on the West Bank. Whether Egypt or Israel controls Gaza, or whether it is split between them, is less important than ensuring that Hamas (or other terrorist groups) does not emerge as a threat to either Cairo and Jersualem. That may require a significant reduction in Gaza’s population through refugee resettlement under the supervision of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees, consistent with its long-established humanitarian doctrines. That will, in turn, take time and resources. No serious observer, however, can argue that there is a quick-and-easy solution that has somehow eluded everyone’s imagination since Israel’s creation in 1948.
Cooling the rhetoric all around would help enormously. Egypt and Israel reached the landmark Camp David agreement, leading to the first exchange of full diplomatic relations between Israel and one of its neighbors. Together with their mutual friends, they can also make breakthroughs on Gaza.
This article was originally posted on September 9, 2025. Read the original article here.