Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Can you question Israel without being called antisemitic?


 

Can you question Israel without being called antisemitic?

Many people feel uneasy discussing Israel and Palestine.

If you question Israeli policies, you risk being accused of antisemitism.
If you defend Israel, you risk ignoring Palestinian realities.

So a basic question becomes difficult:

⮚ Can we evaluate this issue without being forced into a side?


The real problem: we lack a shared way to judge

Public debate on the Middle East is not only politically polarized—it is methodologically fragmented.

Arguments often shift between:

  • historical narratives
  • moral claims
  • identity-based accusations

But what is missing is something simple:

a shared framework for judging what is justified—and what is not.

Without that, disagreement quickly turns into:

  • “you are biased”
  • “you are denying rights”
  • “you are antisemitic”

This makes serious discussion almost impossible.


A different approach: evaluate the claim, not the identity

What if we step back and ask a different question?

Not:

  • Who is right?
  • Who deserves support?

But:

⮚ Does a specific claim to statehood meet a consistent threshold for justification?

This is the starting point of a framework developed to evaluate statehood claims across cases.

The principle is straightforward:

  • apply the same criteria to all peoples
  • separate need from justification
  • distinguish between intent, implementation, and outcome

The model evaluates claims based on:

  • necessity
  • justice
  • proportionality
  • stability

It does not compare alternatives or prescribe solutions.
It asks a narrower question:

⮚ Does the claim meet the minimum threshold for justification?

 

👉 Full methodology:

Self-Determination Statehood Evaluation Framework (Reference Document v2.0):
https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/03/self-determination-statehood-evaluation.html


Testing the framework: Israel and Palestine

To test whether the framework works in practice, it was applied to two cases:

  • the establishment of Israel (1948)
  • a potential formal Palestinian Arab claim to statehood in the same period

Both were evaluated using:

  • identical criteria
  • identical scoring logic
  • identical weighting profiles

👉 Full reports available here:

Evaluating Statehood: Israel (1948)
https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/03/evaluating-statehood-israel-1948.html

Evaluating Statehood: Palestine (1947–1948)
https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/03/evaluating-statehood-palestine-c.html


The results are not intuitive

The outcomes are striking:

  • The Israeli statehood claim scores negative across all tested profiles
  • The Palestinian claim scores positive across all rested profiles

This does not deny:

  • Jewish history
  • Jewish identity
  • the reality of Jewish insecurity in the 1940s

But it shows something more precise:

⮚ A real and urgent need does not automatically justify a specific political solution


What the comparison reveals

Looking at both cases side by side clarifies a structural asymmetry:

  • A claim can be historically successful without meeting a normative threshold
  • A claim can be normatively justified without being realized

In the Israeli case:

  • necessity was real
  • but territorial justification, proportionality, and stability scored lower

In the Palestinian case:

  • the claim was grounded in a majority population already present in the territory
  • and did not rely on large-scale demographic transformation

The model does not produce a political judgement.
It produces a structured evaluation.


So what about antisemitism?

This brings us back to the original question.

If someone questions the justification of Israel’s creation—or current policies—are they being antisemitic?

The framework suggests a clear distinction:

  • Criticism based on consistent criteria applied to all cases ≠ antisemitism
  • Criticism targeting identity or denying Jewish peoplehood = antisemitism

In other words:

⮚ The key question is not what is being criticized—but how and on what basis


Why this matters in Europe

In Europe, this distinction is often blurred.

This leads to:

  • hesitation in public debate
  • internal tensions in political parties
  • increasing legal and social boundaries around acceptable discourse

At the same time:

  • support for Palestinian perspectives is often treated as suspect
  • while criticism of Israeli policy becomes difficult to express

A structured framework can help clarify:

  • what constitutes legitimate critique
  • what crosses into discrimination


What this approach does—and does not do

This approach does not:

  • offer solutions to the conflict
  • assign moral blame
  • resolve competing narratives

It does something more limited—but essential:

⮚ It provides a consistent way to evaluate claims without relying on identity or emotion.


A way forward

The Israeli–Palestinian conflict is unlikely to be resolved by arguments alone.

But how we approach it intellectually matters.

If every critique is framed as hostility, and every defense as denial, then discussion collapses.

What is needed is not more opinion—but more structure.

⮚ Not polarization—but a structured and neutral way to evaluate reality.


Final thought

This is not an argument about who is right.

It is an attempt to answer a more basic question:

⮚ How can we judge such claims in a way that applies equally to everyone?

Until we can do that, the debate will remain trapped between accusation and defense.

And that is something neither Israelis nor Palestinians benefit from.

 

Monday, March 23, 2026

EVALUATING STATEHOOD - Israel (1948)

 


EVALUATING STATEHOOD - Israel (1948)


1. Executive Summary

This report evaluates the establishment of Israel in 1948 using a structured framework designed to assess claims of self-determination in a consistent and transparent way [1].

The framework was developed to address a recurring problem in debates about statehood—especially in the case of Israel and Palestine. Discussions often become polarized between moral argument and counter-accusations of bias, including claims of antisemitism, without a shared standard for judgement. This model instead applies the same criteria to all cases, on the principle that all peoples are to be evaluated equally.

Using this approach, the analysis separates:

  • the real and urgent need for Jewish self-determination, particularly after the Holocaust,
  • from the question of whether the specific statehood claim meets the threshold required for justification under consistent criteria,
  • and from the means and consequences through which that claim was implemented.

Applied to Israel in 1948, the model finds:

  • Ex ante (at the time): overall unjustified
  • Ex post (outcome): mixed
  • Key insight: the decisive issue is not whether Jewish need was real, but whether the specific statehood claim meets a consistent threshold of necessity, justice, proportionality, and stability

The purpose of this report is not to resolve the historical debate, but to provide a neutral and consistent evaluative framework through which it can be examined.


2. Why This Case Matters

The creation of Israel is one of the most contested cases of self-determination in modern history. It combines:

  • severe historical persecution of Jews,
  • a highly organized national movement,
  • an already inhabited territory,
  • a state-building process that produced both durable institutions and long-term conflict

Debates about this case often extend beyond facts into disputes about the legitimacy of criticism itself. A structured framework helps separate:

  • recognition of Jewish history and need,
  • from evaluation of a specific political claim,
  • without relying on identity-based argument or accusation


3. Historical Snapshot

By the late Mandate period, Zionism had developed into a highly organized movement advocating Jewish self-determination in Palestine. The Jewish community in Palestine had established strong political, administrative, and defense institutions, while Jewish displaced persons in Europe created significant humanitarian urgency after World War II.

In 1947, the United Nations proposed partitioning Mandatory Palestine into separate Jewish and Arab states [2]. Jewish leadership accepted the plan; Arab leadership rejected it.

Following the end of British rule in May 1948, Israel declared independence, and war followed [3].

The result was:

  • the establishment of Israel
  • the non-establishment of a Palestinian state at that time
  • the displacement of a large portion of the Palestinian Arab population [4]

Two enduring narratives emerged:

  • a narrative of justified refuge and national self-determination
  • a narrative of dispossession and exclusion

This report does not attempt to resolve these narratives, but to evaluate the case using a shared set of criteria.


4. Model Verdict

  • Ex ante:
    → Overall unjustified
  • Ex post:
    → Mixed outcome
  • Decision context:
    → High influence of geopolitical and institutional factors

5. Key Drivers of the Result

5.1 Necessity and threshold justification

The model recognizes a severe and legitimate need for Jewish self-determination in the 1940s. It evaluates whether the specific territorial statehood claim meets the required threshold of necessity under a universal standard.

The conclusion is that:

The claim does not meet the required threshold once scale of impact and consequences for the existing population are taken into account.

This does not imply that a specific alternative solution is identified or preferred. It reflects that the evaluated claim does not reach the level of necessity required for justification under consistent criteria.


5.2 Territorial anchoring

The Jewish community in Palestine had:

  • a substantial population presence
  • strong institutional development
  • and a clear territorial foothold

However, it did not constitute a majority of the total population, and settlement patterns were mixed. The model therefore assesses territorial anchoring as moderate rather than decisive.


5.3 Exclusion and displacement (intent and outcome)

The model distinguishes between:

  • unintended consequences
  • and outcomes that were at least partly foreseeable or accepted

It finds that:

Within significant parts of the movement, exclusionary outcomes were considered and discussed as part of achieving sovereignty.

This did not apply uniformly across all actors, but it is sufficiently present to affect the evaluation.

Combined with the actual displacement that followed, this becomes a major factor in the negative ex-ante assessment.


6. Score Overview

Profile

Score

Interpretation

Charter-International

-9.0

Strongly unjustified

Liberal-Remedial

-7.0

Clearly unjustified

Order-Stability

-8.5

Strongly unjustified

All profiles produce a negative result, though they differ in emphasis.


7. Interpretation

The model clarifies three distinct questions that are often treated as one::

1. Was there a real and urgent Jewish need?

→ Yes

2. Does that need automatically justify this specific statehood claim?

→ No

3. Do intent and foreseeable consequences matter in evaluating the claim?

→ Yes

This allows a position that is often difficult to articulate in polarized debate:

  • acknowledging Jewish history and need
  • while still critically evaluating the justification of the specific territorial claim

Importantly:

A negative result in this framework does not prescribe an alternative solution. It indicates that the evaluated claim does not meet the required threshold for justification under consistent criteria.


8. Technical Section

This section provides the full technical detail underlying the assessment. A complete description of the model—its ambition, structure, validation approach, and alignment with existing scholarly frameworks—is available in a separate document [link]. For transparency and reproducibility, the full scoring, sub-component evaluations, and index calculations for this case are set out below.


8.1 Territorial Anchoring

Component

Score

Notes

T1 Demographic presence

3

Significant Jewish population but not a majority

T2 Spatial continuity

2

Mixed settlement patterns

T3 Institutional embeddedness

4

Strong local institutional structures

T4 Historical-territorial link

3

Strong historical connection with discontinuity

T = 3.0 → Moderate anchoring


8.2 Necessity

Component

Score

Notes

N1 Structural necessity

3

Severe crisis but not structurally exclusive

N2 Constructed necessity

4

Strong ideological narrowing toward territorial statehood

Calculation:
N_effective = N1 − (N2 / 2) = 3 − 2 = 1
N_transformed = 1 − 2 = -1


8.3 Other Criteria

Criterion

Raw

Transformed

Justice

1

-1

Equality

2

0

Proportionality

2

0

Stability

0

-2


8.4 Calculation Trace  (All Profiles)

The following calculations apply the transformed scores to each weighting profile. All scores are based on the same underlying inputs; only the weights differ.


Charter–International Profile

Weights: N 2.0 | J 2.0 | E 2.0 | Pr 1.0 | S 2.5

  • N: -1 × 2.0 = -2.0
  • J: -1 × 2.0 = -2.0
  • E: 0 × 2.0 = 0
  • Pr: 0 × 1.0 = 0
  • S: -2 × 2.5 = -5.0

Total = -9.0

Interpretation:
The negative result is driven primarily by the high weight on stability and justice, both of which score negatively. From this perspective, the anticipated and actual conflict risk, combined with the impact on the existing population, outweigh the underlying necessity.


Liberal–Remedial Profile

Weights: N 2.5 | J 2.5 | E 1.5 | Pr 1.0 | S 1.0

  • N: -1 × 2.5 = -2.5
  • J: -1 × 2.5 = -2.5
  • E: 0 × 1.5 = 0
  • Pr: 0 × 1.0 = 0
  • S: -2 × 1.0 = -2.0

Total = -7.0

Interpretation:
Even with strong emphasis on necessity and justice, the result remains negative. This reflects the model’s finding that, once structural and constructed necessity are distinguished, the claim does not reach the required threshold. Justice-related impacts remain a decisive factor.


Order–Stability Profile

Weights: N 1.0 | J 1.5 | E 1.0 | Pr 1.0 | S 3.0

  • N: -1 × 1.0 = -1.0
  • J: -1 × 1.5 = -1.5
  • E: 0 × 1.0 = 0
  • Pr: 0 × 1.0 = 0
  • S: -2 × 3.0 = -6.0

Total = -8.5

Interpretation:
The result is strongly negative due to the dominant weight on stability. From this perspective, the high likelihood and realization of conflict is sufficient to outweigh other considerations.


Cross-Profile Comparison

Profile

Score

Primary driver

Charter–International

-9.0

Stability + Justice

Liberal–Remedial

-7.0

Justice + moderated Necessity

Order–Stability

-8.5

Stability

Summary

  • All three profiles produce negative results, indicating robust convergence across normative perspectives.
  • Differences in scores reflect variation in emphasis, not disagreement on direction.
  • The case is therefore not highly sensitive to weighting assumptions, strengthening confidence in the overall conclusion.


Interpretation note

The convergence across profiles suggests that the outcome is not driven by a particular normative stance, but by structural features of the case—particularly the combination of limited necessity, significant displacement, and high conflict risk.

 


8.5 Means, Inclusion, Displacement

Component

Score

Interpretation

M1 (intent)

3

Exclusionary outcomes present in significant factions

M2 (implementation)

3

War and coercive dynamics

Inclusion

3

Weak inclusion of existing population

Displacement

4

Large-scale and structurally significant

These execution-related factors do not enter the base weighted score directly but reinforce the overall negative assessment by indicating that key constraints on justified implementation were not met.


9. Final Judgement

Ex ante

The establishment of Israel in 1948 does not meet the threshold for justification under a consistent and universal evaluative standard.

Ex post

The outcome is mixed:

  • strong institutional development
  • persistent conflict and unresolved displacement

Decision context

The case was shaped by:

  • geopolitical alignment
  • humanitarian urgency
  • institutional constraints


10. What This Report Does—and Does Not Do

This report does not:

  • deny Jewish identity, history, or suffering
  • treat all actors as holding identical positions
  • reduce the case to a single narrative

It does:

  • distinguish need from justification
  • distinguish intent from outcome
  • apply the same criteria across all cases

The aim is to enable structured evaluation without relying on accusation or identity-based argument.


REFERENCES

1.       https://europe-is-us.blogspot.com/2026/03/self-determination-statehood-evaluation.html

2.       United Nations. Resolution 181 (II): Future government of Palestine. 1947.

3.       Encyclopaedia Britannica. Israel: History. 2023.

4.       Encyclopaedia Britannica. Palestinian refugees. 2023.


Appendix A — Demographic and Movement Estimates (c. 1946–1948)


A1. Purpose of this appendix

This appendix provides approximate population and movement estimates relevant to the evaluation of the 1948 statehood claim.

The purpose is not to establish exact figures, but to give a transparent order-of-magnitude view of:

  • the size of the Jewish population already present in Palestine
  • the scale of external support for Zionism
  • the subset of that support associated with actual willingness to settle in Palestine
  • the relative size of the existing non-Jewish population

These estimates inform:

  • Territorial Anchoring (presence and embeddedness)
  • Necessity (scale and nature of demand for relocation or self-determination)


A2. Territorial scope

All figures refer to Mandatory Palestine (British Mandate borders, 1920–1948), which is the relevant territorial unit at the time of decision.


A3. Population in Palestine (c. 1946–1947)

Group

Estimated population

Jews

~600,000–630,000

Arabs (Muslim + Christian)

~1,200,000–1,300,000

Total

~1.8–1.9 million

Observations

  • Jews constituted roughly one-third of the population
  • Arabs constituted roughly two-thirds
  • The territory was demographically mixed, not empty or majority-Jewish


A4. Jewish population in Palestine — support for statehood

Within the Jewish community (the Yishuv):

  • Political participation and institutional alignment indicate broad support for Zionist statehood
  • Some groups (e.g. certain ultra-Orthodox communities) did not support political Zionism

Working estimate

~500,000–550,000 individuals in Palestine can be considered active or passive supporters of the statehood claim

This reflects a large and organized territorial base, but not a majority of the total population.


A5. Zionist support outside Palestine

Organized support (late 1930s baseline)

  • Approximately ~870,000 registered members in the World Zionist Organization
  • Broader ideological support likely exceeded this figure

Working estimate (mid-1940s)

~1.0–1.2 million individuals worldwide broadly aligned with Zionist aims

This represents political and ideological support, not migration intent.


A6. Willingness to settle in Palestine

Support for Zionism did not automatically imply willingness to emigrate. This distinction is critical.

A. Jewish displaced persons (post-WWII Europe)

  • Estimated population: ~200,000–250,000
  • Large majority expressed preference for Palestine

Working estimate

~150,000–220,000 individuals with strong and immediate willingness to settle


B. Non-displaced Zionist populations (US, UK, etc.)

  • Significant political and financial support
  • Low historical migration rates

Working estimate

~50,000–150,000 individuals plausibly willing to settle


Combined estimate (external migration potential)

~200,000–350,000 individuals outside Palestine with realistic willingness to immigrate


A7. Population and movement overview

Category

Estimated number

Jews in Palestine supporting statehood

~500,000–550,000

Jews outside willing to settle

~200,000–350,000

Total Zionist-aligned (practical)

~700,000–900,000

Arab population in Palestine

~1,200,000–1,300,000


A8. Interpretation for the model

1. Territorial Anchoring

  • A substantial and organized Jewish population was already present
  • Institutional embeddedness was strong
  • However:
    • Jews were not a majority
    • settlement patterns were mixed

➡️ Supports a moderate (not decisive) anchoring score


2. Necessity

  • The number of people with urgent need for relocation (especially displaced persons) was significant
  • However:
    • it was smaller than the total population of the territory
    • not all supporters intended to relocate

➡️ Supports:

  • real but limited structural necessity (N1)
  • high constructed necessity (N2)


3. Key structural insight

The statehood claim combined:

  • a strong territorial and institutional base
  • a limited but urgent migration demand
  • broad global political support

But these elements were not equivalent in scale, and should not be treated as such.


A9. Limitations

These figures are estimates based on historical reconstructions and proxies, including:

  • census data
  • organizational membership records
  • migration statistics
  • post-war surveys

They should be interpreted as order-of-magnitude approximations, not precise counts.


A10. Conclusion

This appendix supports a central finding of the report:

The Zionist movement combined a significant territorial presence with a real but limited migration-driven necessity, within a territory that was already predominantly inhabited by another population.

This empirical balance is directly reflected in the model’s scoring of:

  • Territorial Anchoring (moderate)
  • Necessity (moderate but reduced after accounting for political amplification)