My point is that many people were forcibly incorporated into nation-states in the 19th century in particular. If you ask them before/after, their points of view change. Looking at the nation-states as a monolith is rather simplistic. Most of the Jewish people in Germany in the 1920s would have called themselves German first, same even in Russian territories - they were Russian.
I had a girlfriend whose ancestor was transported along with a couple hundred other Jewish kids from modern-day White Russia (pre-1914) to South Africa. Their nationality was complicated, but ethnically every one of them was very much Slavic like the peoples around them for hundreds of years before they made the trip. Once they landed there, they became South African and still identify as such, even now that some of them have emigrated to the US.
Regardless of that, the Zionist project ran smack dab into the then-current inhabitants there. Expecting revanchism to go away was shortsighted. As in the Crusades, the Muslims only have to win once, the Jews have to win every time, and as in the states of Outremer, the residents get soft or leave when the resistance toughens up. Long memories there. I really don't see this ending well.