Britain could officially recognize a Palestinian state without waiting for the result of potentially yearslong talks for a peace deal with Israel, the top British diplomat said Thursday.
Foreign Secretary David Cameron, speaking to The Associated Press during a visit Thursday to Lebanon intended to tamp down regional tensions, said no recognition could come while Hamas remained in Gaza, but that it could take place while Israeli negotiations with Palestinian leaders were continuing.
U.K. recognition of an independent state of Palestine, including in the United Nations, "can’t come at the start of the process, but it doesn’t have to be the very end of the process," said Cameron, a former British prime minister.
"It could be something that we consider as this process, as this advance to a solution, becomes more real," Cameron said. "What we need to do is give the Palestinian people a horizon towards a better future, the future of having a state of their own."
That prospect is "absolutely vital for the long-term peace and security of the region," he said.
Britain, the U.S. and other Western countries have supported the idea of an independent Palestine existing alongside Israel as a solution to the region’s most intractable conflict, but have said Palestinian independence should come as part of a negotiated settlement. There have been no substantive negotiations since 2009.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, for his part, has publicly rejected the creation of an independent Palestinian state after the war, and has even boasted in recent weeks that he was instrumental in preventing Palestinian statehood.
A move by some of Israel’s key allies to recognize a Palestinian state without Israel’s buy-in could isolate Israel and put pressure on it to come to the table.
Cameron said the first step must be a "pause in the fighting" in Gaza that would eventually turn into "a permanent, sustainable cease-fire."
He added that in order for his country to recognize a Palestinian state, the leaders of Hamas would need to leave Gaza "because you can’t have a two-state solution with Gaza still controlled by the people responsible for Oct. 7," referring to the Hamas attack on Israel that triggered the war in Gaza.
Hamas has so far taken the position that its leaders would not leave the enclave as part of a cease-fire deal.
Cameron said his country is also proposing a plan to deescalate tensions on the Lebanon-Israel border, where the Lebanese group Hezbollah and Israeli forces have been trading fire near-daily for the past four months, sparking fears of a wider war.
The plan would include Britain training Lebanese army forces to carry out more security work in the border region, he said.