A just and lasting solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict has eluded the world for more than a half century. United Nations resolutions have either been vetoed or passed without implementation. Three generations of Israelis and Palestinians now generally view each other only as “enemy”. The parties involved are uncompromising while the threat of terrorism and nuclear war is ever-present. As a labor-relations major in university back in the 1970s, the author was introduced to the method of “final-offer arbitration” as an effective means of settling labor disputes. Almost 20 years after the signing of the Oslo Accords in 1993, he asks: “Should not final-offer arbitration be utilized as a means of settling this dispute?” Acknowledging the unwillingness of certain individuals and groups to endorse such a method, the author presents his case and challenges others to consider using it.