This scenario, farfetched as it seems, could potentially unfold in Judea and Samaria
A new refugee crisis breaks out in the Middle East.
More than 500,000 Jewish men, women, and children are forcibly evacuated from their homes in more than 150 communities in Israel. The throngs of refugees are transferred to hastily assembled tent cities adjacent to already overcrowded urban areas.
Mass protests before the evacuations receive minimal media coverage. Despite the obvious human rights violations, the High Court refuses to intervene in what it terms a foreign policy dispute. The international community, which heaped sympathy on Arab refugees from Gaza months earlier, hails the onset of a new era of peace and tags the Jewish evacuees as lawbreakers.
This scenario, farfetched as it seems, could potentially unfold in Judea and Samaria if the international community coalesces to compel Israel to accept a comprehensive agreement establishing a Palestinian state. In return, Arab and Muslim nations led by Saudi Arabia would grant diplomatic recognition to Israel, ending the war on Hamas, freeing the Israeli hostages held in Gaza, not to mention springing several thousand convicted Arab terrorists from Israeli prisons.
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