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Recognizing Palestine: What Israeli Leaders Should Tell Israelis, if They Had the Guts

In lockstep with Netanyahu, opposition leaders lined up to condemn Israel's closest allies who recognized the State of Palestine. If they had the guts, they'd tell the truth: that death, destruction and 'Super Sparta' need not be their fate.

The leaders of the opposition in the Knesset, from left: Yair Golan, Benny Gantz, Yair Lapid and Avigdor Lieberman, Credit: Photos: Itay Ron/Moti Milrod/Tomer Appelbaum/Oren Ben Hakoon/Hussein Kassir/Shutterstock.com; Artwork: Anastasia Shub

As some of Israel's closest allies declared they were recognizing the State of Palestine this week at the United Nations General Assembly, a string of Israeli opposition leaders lined up dutifully, in lockstep with Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, to condemn them.

Opposition leader Yair Lapid parroted the government, calling the recognitions by the U.K., Canada and Australia a "diplomatic disaster, a terrible move and a prize for terror." He also went UN-bashing ahead of the recognitions, telling Fox News he supports a secession of democratic countries from the global body to form a new club of democracies only (sounding so confident of Israel's credentials to join this circle).

Israel's furthest left Zionist opposition leader Yair Golan called the recognitions "a destructive move for Israel's security," while nodding to a future demilitarized Palestinian state." Benny Gantz and Avigdor Lieberman intoned on cue: recognition is good for Hamas, supports Iran, panders to the publics of those countries recognizing Palestine. Of the opposition, only Ayman Odeh, the Arab leader of Hadash supported the declarations.