Israel’s ever-shifting borders reveal a deeper logic: the idea of Greater Israel. Drawing on historical Zionism, modern settlement policy and Islamic-prophetic interpretations advanced by Dr Israr Ahmed, this blog unpacks what lies ahead for Palestinians and the wider Middle East.
Introduction
Did you know that Israel has never fully defined its borders? Most nations show on official maps exactly where their sovereignty begins and ends—but Israel does not. Its borders with Egypt and Jordan were first drawn as armistice lines after the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, later formalised through peace treaties in 1979 and 1994. But its boundaries with Lebanon, Syria, Gaza, and the West Bank remain vague or unrecognised. Even within Israel itself, there is no official map showing clearly agreed national boundaries.
This ambiguity is not accidental. As long as Israel’s borders aren’t set in stone, they can continue to shift. This is the story of a borderless project—the Zionist vision of Greater Israel—and what it means not just for Palestinians, but for the entire region.
1. The Origins of the Idea
For more than a century, Zionist leaders have pressed for the establishment of a Jewish state that stretches far beyond the territory Israel controls today. In the late 1800s, early Zionist thinkers debated bold visions for a homeland.
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Theodor Herzl, the Austrian-Hungarian founder of modern Zionism, imagined borders stretching from the Euphrates in Iraq to the Nile in Egypt.
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Zeev Jabotinsky, a Russian-born ideologue tied to the Likud tradition, foresaw Israeli sovereignty on both sides of the Jordan River.
In 1947, Zionist leaders accepted the UN partition plan that proposed two states—one Palestinian, one Jewish—but this was a tactical move. David Ben‑Gurion, Israel’s first Prime Minister, emphasised that this was only a first step toward achieving control over all of what he envisioned as Greater Israel. His strategy: secure international recognition for part of the land, then build military strength to take the rest. And that is precisely what unfolded.
2. Expansion Through War and Facts on the Ground
In 1948, Israel expanded far beyond the UN partition lines during the Nakba: Zionist militias expelled over 750,000 Palestinians and destroyed or depopulated more than 400 villages.
In 1967, Israel seized the West Bank, Gaza, the Golan Heights, and the Sinai Peninsula. While it later returned the Sinai to Egypt after the 1973 war, the other territories remained under its control.
Since then, expansion has continued—not always through open war, but through “facts on the ground”: settlements, outposts, military zones across the West Bank that are illegal under international law but practically irreversible. The number of Israeli settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem has grown from a few thousand in 1967 to more than 800,000 today—and the past year marked the largest expansion yet.
3. From Fringe Vision to State Policy
For a long period, despite gradual expansion, most Israeli leaders publicly distanced themselves from the explicitly “Greater Israel” formula—so as not to provoke neighbouring Arab states with whom they sought normalization. But radical settler groups such as Gush Emunim (founded in the 1970s) never abandoned the vision—they tied settlement expansion to religious destiny.
Today, Israel’s government is widely considered the furthest-right in its history. Extremist ministers such as Itamar Ben‑Gvir and Bezalel Smotrich have placed territorial expansion at the heart of their platforms. Even Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has recently embraced the idea of his generation carrying forward a “historic and spiritual mission”. This alignment of ideology and state power means the idea of Greater Israel is no longer a fringe fantasy—it is entering the mainstream.
4. Dr Israr Ahmed’s Prophetic View
Dr Israr Ahmed, a prominent Pakistani Islamic scholar, offered a distinct angle rooted in Islamic eschatology: he argued that the pattern of expansion and control he observed in Israel corresponds with Hadith-predictions about the end-times.
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He links the movement of certain territories and their removal from Muslim hands to the narrative in Hadiths where specific lands will be reclaimed or lost in the lead-up to final days. (See his speeches “Greater Israel, The Jewish Plan for the Middle East!” and “The Greater Israel Plan? Pakistan’s Role”.) YouTube+3SoundCloud+3YouTube+3
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According to him, the ambiguous borders of Israel and its ability to redefine territorial control are signs of a bigger prophetic arc still unfolding.
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He warns that the Muslim world’s inaction in the face of settlement, occupation and expansion plays into this larger script of transition and transformation.
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For example, one lecture mentions: “All these countries are present in the Hadith that they will get out of the hands of the Muslims, whom the Jews include in Greater Israel, Syria…” facebook.com
While his reading is interpretative rather than universally accepted in the Islamic tradition, it offers a deeply felt lens from which many in South Asia apprehend the geopolitical shifts in Israel-Palestine.
5. Consequences and the Road Ahead
This convergence of ideology, strategy, and prophecy has real-world implications:
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Israeli soldiers have been photographed wearing “Greater Israel” patches in the war in Gaza.
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Senior Israeli politicians have publicly called for the removal of Gaza’s population and replacement with settlers.
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Some voices even invoke Nazi-Germany’s Lebensraum doctrine—“living space”—to justify expansion into southern Lebanon and Syria.
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In the West Bank, new settlement approvals are designed to cut the territory into non-contiguous fragments—effectively ruling out a viable future Palestinian state.
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Because Israel never formally defined its borders, every war, land-grab or bombing has the potential to redraw control — each “fact on the ground” inches Israel closer to turning Greater Israel from ideological ambition into reality.
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And every time the global community averts its gaze, permits violations, or fails to enforce international law, Israel’s leadership becomes more emboldened. History shows expansionist powers won’t stop unless compelled to.
6. Personal Reflection (Karachi-Voice)
Living in Karachi, hearing about these distant border shifts, it’s easy to feel removed—yet the ripples come our way too. The silence in global fora, the recalibrated alliances in the Gulf, the changing map of refugees and migration—all tie into this story of un-defined borders and expansive ambition. If peaceful borders are the foundation for sovereign states, then ambiguous borders are the foundation for ongoing conflict.
As a writer rooted in South Asia, I notice the same logic re-emerging in other contested zones: ambiguity, power-vacuum, incremental fact-making, and the silence that lets big ideas sneak into policy. The Gaza war is not just a local demand; it is being shaped by a vision of statehood, land, prophecy, and rhythm of history.
7. Call to Action
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Map-makers, policymakers and global institutions: ask who draws the lines when lines don’t exist?
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For Muslim thinkers and South Asian intellectuals: consider how prophetic readings like Dr Israr’s shape popular awareness and policy engagement.
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For civil society and global media: pay attention to “facts on the ground”, not just the cease-fires—because they prefigure the next map.
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And for readers: when borders blur, ask whose vision is being made real, and what human cost lies behind the lines we don’t see.
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