I'm sorry. I was waiting for the translation there.
Yes, there are a number of conditions under the Montevideo convention of 1933 in terms of the conditions of statehood. You don't have to meet all of them. Some of the other conditions—a permanent population, a government, the ability to conduct international affairs—are already being met, and you don't need to meet all of these conditions to satisfy the qualifications for statehood.
The issue of the lack of definition of territory is somewhat resolved if we look again to the ICJ decision, which explicitly states that East Jerusalem, Gaza and the West Bank are a territory that does not belong to Israel. That presumably would be the basis of recognition, and then any final eventual borders could be negotiated down the line between two equal parties, rather than between an occupying power and an occupied population.