A serious new threat to the peace and security of Israel and the  people of the epicenter is rapidly emerging — the prospect that the  Palestinian leadership will unilaterally declare their own independent,  sovereign state as early as the summer of 2011, and attempt to divide  Jerusalem, and that the world will try to force Israel to accept this  new state rather than require the Palestinians to sit down and negotiate  a fair and just arrangement that both sides can accept.
Make no mistake: a unilateral declaration by the Palestinians is not a recipe for peace. It is a recipe for war. 
Over 450,000 Israelis live in the West Bank.  They are not going to quietly accept a Palestinian government in  Ramallah deciding their fate. Nor will these Israeli settlers allow the  Palestinian police to  forcibly remove them from their villages, towns  and cities. Especially Jerusalem. They will fight back. Israeli Prime  Minister Benjamin Netanyahu would be under enormous domestic political  pressure to back these Jewish citizens with the force of the Israeli  military, and should violence intensify, he would likely order the IDF  into battle. The results would not be pretty, and the Palestinian people  would pay a heavy price.
World leaders, therefore, should be putting enormous pressure on  Palestinian leaders to sit down to direct negotiations with the Israelis  and find a peaceful solution through diplomacy, lest violence result.  Sadly, that’s not what is happening. Instead, world leaders are putting  enormous pressure  on Israeli leaders to cut a fast deal with the  Palestinians or face the prospect of Palestinian state being imposed  upon them.
Bible prophecy makes it clear that the nations of the world will, in  the last days, divide up the land of Israel. But the Scriptures are  also crystal clear that the nations will face the judgment of Almighty  God for doing so. “For behold, in those days and at that time, when I  restore the fortunes of Judah and Jerusalem, I will gather all the  nations and bring them to the Valley of Jehoshaphat ["the Lord judges"].  Then I will enter into judgment with them there on behalf of My people  and My inheritance, Israel, whom they have scattered among the nations;  and they have divided up My land.” (Joel 3:1-2).
In 2009, Palestinian President Salam Fayyad developed a 
detailed plan  to have a Palestinian state ready within two years, and he has been  building the political and economic infrastructure ever since. In April  of 2010, during an 
exclusive interview with Israel’s
 Haaretz  newspaper, Fayyad said that ”the birth of a Palestinian state will be  celebrated as a day of joy by the entire community of nations….The time  for this baby to be born will come, and we estimate it will come around  2011. That is our vision, and a reflection of our will to exercise our  right to live in freedom and dignity in the country [where] we are born,  alongside the State of Israel in complete harmony.”
By the fall of 2010, several governments — including Brazil,  Argentina, Bolivia, Uruguay and Turkey — had announced immediate or  imminent recognition of a Palestinian state that hadn’t even been  declared yet. Other countries are hinting that they, too, are ready to  support the “unilateral option” soon. Top officials in the European  Union, for example, are pushing an initiative for the E.U. to formally  recognize an independent Palestinian state by the summer of 2011. 
Indeed, Members of Congress — both Democrats and Republicans — are  so concerned that the Obama administration will support the “unilateral  option” that on December 16th they voiced their opposition to such  an approach. “The United States House of Representatives unanimously on  Thursday approved a resolution opposing unilateral declaration of  Palestinian state,”
 reported Haaretz.  “The resolution introduced by Rep. Howard Berman, Chair of the House  Foreign Affairs Committee, slams Palestinian efforts to push the  international community to recognize a state in such a manner as ‘true  and lasting peace between Israel and the Palestinians can only be  achieved through direct negotiations between the parties.’ The  resolution calls on the U.S. administration to ‘deny recognition to any  unilaterally declared Palestinian state and veto any resolution by the  United Nations Security Council to establish or recognize a Palestinian  state outside of an agreement negotiated by the two parties.’”
Such a unilateral move by the Palestinians, combined with widespread  (and likely enthusiastic) international support would undermine six  decades of attempts by the international community to reach a negotiated  settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Indeed, a unilaterally  declared Palestinian state would violate 
U.N. Security Council Resolution 242,  which calls for ”a peaceful and accepted settlement.” How could the  settlement be “accepted” if it wasn’t negotiated and agreed upon by both  sides? A unilateral declaration would also violate Resolution 242′s  call for ”secure and recognized boundaries free from threats or acts of  force.” How could the borders between Israel and the Palestinians be  “secure and recognized” if they are not recognized by the Israelis?
Moreover, Resolution 242 doesn’t call on Israel to withdraw from” all  of the territories” it acquired in the Six Day War of June 1967, only  for the “withdrawal of Israel armed forces from territories” acquired in  “the recent conflict.” In other words, based on a negotiated peace,  Israel might withdraw from all of the territories, or only part of the  territories. The key was for the Israelis and the Palestinians to have  “secure” borders “free from threats or acts of force.”
Such a unilateral move by the Palestinians would also violate 
U.N. Security Council Resolution 338,  which called for an immediate cease-fire after the 1973 Yom Kippur War  and for “negotiations [to] start between the parties concerned under  appropriate auspices aimed at establishing a just and durable peace in  the Middle East.”
Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas and President Fayyad have  been resisting true, reasonable, direct negotiations with Israel for  months. They are simultaneously moving with confidence towards a  unilateral declaration of their state and the division of Jerusalem.  Why? Because they know they already have widespread international  support. As noted above, French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner and  Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel Moratinos announced in February  2010 that their two governments were likely to formally recognize an  independent Palestinian state in pre-1967 borders within 18 months,  regardless of whether Israelis and Palestinians reach a negotiated  agreement. Moreover, 
Kouchner and Moratinos began urging the European Union as whole to recognize a Palestinian state by the summer of 2011.
“The issue before us at the moment is the building of a reality,”  said Kouchner. “France is training Palestinian police, businesses are  being created in the West Bank… It follows that one can envision the  proclamation soon of a Palestinian state, and its immediate recognition  by the international community, even before negotiating its borders….If  by mid-2011, the political process has not ended the [Israeli]  occupation, I would bet that the developed state of Palestinian  infrastructure and institutions will be such that the pressure will  force Israel to give up its occupation.”
Let us continue to pray for the peace of Jerusalem, not the division  of Jerusalem. Let us pray for the Lord to restrain the Palestinian  leadership from making such a disastrous move, and pray that the Lord  would restrain world leaders from encouraging the “unilateral option.”  At the same time, we need to realize that eventually the land of Israel  will be divided by the nations. The only true hope of peace and  reconciliation is through the Prince of Peace, Jesus Christ, changing  the hearts of Israelis and their neighbors and enemies and drawing them  to Himself. Let us be praying, earnestly, therefore, towards that end.
AT-A-GLANCE: MOMENTUM BUILDING FOR A UNILATERALLY DECLARED PALESTINIAN STATE
- 2009 — Palestinian President Salam Fayyed issues detailed plan to have a Palestinian state ready in two years
- July 2009 — Javier  Solana, E.U. Foreign Policy Chief, calls on the U.N. to recognize a  Palestinian state by a certain deadline, even if negotiations break  down.
- February 2010 –France and Spain indicate they are seriously  considering formally recognizing an independent Palestinian state in  pre-1967 border by the summer of 2011.
- April — Palestinian President Fayyad tells an Israeli newspaper that the Palestinian state will be ready to be born in 2011.
- December 4 — Brazil announces that it is formally recognizing an independent Palestinian state
- December 6 — Turkey announces it will also soon formally recognize a Palestinian state
- December 6 — Argentina announces it will formally recognize a Palestinian state
- December 22 — Bolivia announces will formally recognize a Palestinian state
- December 23 — Uruguay announces that it will formally recognize a Palestinian state
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