g88ner wrote:
So again, I go back to Egypt and Jordan reluctatantly taking back Gaza and West Bank. Is that even practical???

The Egyptians wold not take back Gaza.
They ruled it with an iron fist before, and were loathed by the Gazans.
The moderate Islamic government in Egypt does not want 1.2M Palestinians on their hands, especially when 35% - 50% of them support Hamas! The Egyptian government has enough to worry about with the radical Islamic Brotherhood trying to overthrow it.
Jordanians might want the West Bank to become part of Jordan, but the Jordanian ruling royal family would not.
The rulers of Jordan are Hashemite Arabians, yet their population is about 53% Palestinian.
In 1972, the PLO were very active in Jordan.
So much so, that King Hussein feared a coup.
So he killed 10,000 PLO men in one month, hence the name "Black September".
The PLO fled to Lebanon after that.
There are also now about 250,000 Israelis living in the West Bank.
They would not want to be part of Jordan, so something would have to be done to adjust borders to take that situation into account.
Which takes me to the suggestion of Rabbi Lau, the former Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi of Israel, that the
Palestinians trade the West Bank and Gaza in return for an independent state in the Sinai peninsula.
Egypt would have to give up the Sinai, in return for a more peaceful border and trade concessions.
Israel would pay a lot of money to the Palestinians, as would the Arab gulf oil states.
The new country would use all the Abu Dabi and Dubai hydroponic technology to build a planned modern state from scratch.
It would have a cross peninsula railway, motorway and air ports, plus harbours on the Mediterranean and Red Seas..giving it major trading potential between Europe, Africa and Asia.
The climate is also conducive to tourism, seaside resorts could be built.
Bedouin could conduct desert safaris.
Mount Sinai and St Catherine's monastery would provide a historical tourism attraction too.