
In 2015 Khamenei predicted the "Zionist regime" will be gone in 25 years. https://x.com/khamenei_ir/status/641520641724780544
In 2017 Iran started a countdown clock for August 5, 2040 if I have the numbers right: https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iran-al-quds-day-protest-clock-president-hassan-rouhani-a7806056.html
In case of a one-state solution, I would consider it to resolve YES, if that state doesn't have special provisions for Jewish people being able to immigrate (in which case I think it would no longer be Zionist). Any two-state solution would be NO. I consider the confederation model (https://www.2s1h.org/en) that still has a Jewish right of return for the Israel side to still be close enough to a two-state solution and would resolve NO.
If the Iran regime moves the countdown clock further into the future, I would consider that to resolve NO (if I have to fix the date because I mis-added, or the 2017 article was wrong, that's fine though).
What about a confederation model? This is gaining traction as the most viable solution.
While it would be technically a one-state solution, it would maintain separate Jewish and Palestinian provinces or districts which would allow each to maintain some autonomy while still under the banner of a joint federal government.
If rather than losing the Jewish Rite of return, they add a Palestinian right of return with caveats about what parts of the country each can immigrate to.... What does that mean?
@SammyB2g8lz I think that sounds close enough to the two-state solution. As long the Israel side still has Jewish right of return, I'd still count that as a Zionist regime surviving.