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why are so called civilised states frightened to act?.....Across Australia, around the globe, millions of people have been outraged by Israeli slaughter in Gaza and on the West Bank, their outrage compounded by despair that Israel has been given a blank cheque to ignore international law, to do what it likes. Millions want intervention to stop Israeli slaughter of Palestinians
People are asking, “How does this happen?”, “Why is the UN impotent?”, “Why are so called civilised states frightened to act?” An answer to the last question includes an international relations history of perceiving Israel as exceptional, as being above the law. But faced with the Israeli abominations in Gaza, a few world powers have, at last, ceased treating Israel as exceptional. Canada, France and the UK have threatened concrete actions against Israel, including sanctions, unless it halts military offensives and lifts aid restrictions in Gaza. These countries have called on Israel to stop its “egregious” expansion of operations in the strip. In a campaign for life and justice for the Palestinians, it would be wise to anticipate the Israeli accusations that criticising their policies serves to support their enemies. Israel says its military policy only aims to destroy Hamas, never to harm civilians, hence the claim that countries who dare to oppose Israel are supporting terrorism. Demystifying Hamas To save Palestinian lives by intervening against the Israeli military, the argument that Hamas represents international terrorism has to be buried, or at least set alongside other evidence. For the past 70 years, in spite of Palestinians being murdered by Israeli terrorist gangs and the IDF, an ill-informed, or perhaps indifferent, mainstream media has ignored these decades of Israeli violence and oppression. In response to that ignorance, the late Stéphane Hessel, French diplomat and human rights activist, wrote that in relation to decades of cruelty to Palestinians, “If you are not outraged by injustice, you lose touch with your own humanity.” Given that history depends somewhat on who tells the best stories, be prepared for Israeli and diaspora Zionist claims, “We are innocent. This is all about Hamas.” No, it is about ethnic cleansing. Israeli Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich says Gaza is to be totally destroyed and the remaining population “concentrated” in a small area. In response to his insistence that Israel would “apply sovereignty” in the West Bank within the lifetime of the current government, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has praised Smotrich for his plans to “conquer and cleanse”. The nature of intervention Respect for state sovereignty makes politicians and their media supporters nervous to even mention intervention, let alone in the affairs of a supposed ally. Yet, at this moment, the moral grounds for intervention to save 14,000 Gaza babies, reported by the UN to be likely to die if aid does not reach them, should be glaringly obvious. When faced with threats of death to innocent infants, even the most distant observers must feel slightly obliged to intervene. Even the neglected “Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principles” provide Australia with the grounds for condemning Israeli depravities and intervening against them. Passed by the UN General Assembly in 2005, it challenged governments to prevent genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity, but meeting that challenge requires courage plus a belief that protecting human life is more important than respect for state sovereignty. If a government feels squeamish about intervention against Israeli slaughter, it could be reassured by the judgment of former UN secretary-general Kofi Annan. When explaining moral arguments for military intervention, he said that if such initiatives pursue the positive humanitarian goals of the UN Charter, they are more justifiable than inactivity in the face of gross injustice. If moral arguments for intervention don’t make an impression, legal grounds are not difficult to find. The International Court of Justice ruling of July 2024 concluded that Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands is illegal and must end “as rapidly as possible”. It added that all states are obliged not to assist Israel to continue its presence in the Occupied Palestinian Territory; hence standing by, watching, doing nothing amounts to complicity in Israeli illegalities. In addition, the Genocide Convention reminds us that a country like Australia must “take all reasonable measures to ensure Israel allows aid into Gaza and to achieve an immediate ceasefire”. What would intervention look like? An “Australians for Humanity” statement hand delivered to the prime minister’s electoral office includes a proposal that a naval force from Western governments escort humanitarian aid boats to the shores of Gaza. It calls on the UN Security Council to dispatch an international peace force to support the distribution of humanitarian aid and to prevent Israel’s annexation of Gaza and the West Bank. In common with the deliberations of Canadian, French and UK governments, that proposal also calls on the Australian Government to impose sanctions against Israel. Imposing sanctions Although Australia has ignored the Palestinian, non-violent, internationally widespread Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement to realise a people’s rights to self-determination, on the basis of policy consistency, the case for sanctions against Israel must appear easy to justify. Australia has a long record of using sanctions to deter countries from illegal, oppressive acts by, among other initiatives, imposing restrictions on the export and supply of weapons and ammunition. The record includes sanctions against Russia, Libya, Iraq, Syria the Democratic Republic of the Congo, North Korea, South Sudan and Myanmar. In the last case, Australia has claimed that sanctions were aimed at “promoting peace, stability, security and to promote respect for democracy and the rule of law”. Those praiseworthy goals should be applied to Israel. Or, must that country stay beyond reproach despite having committed what a group of more than 30 UN experts have called “one of the most ostentatious and merciless manifestations of the desecration of human life and dignity”?’ Responding to public outrage Australia has joined a coalition of 23 countries demanding the full resumption of humanitarian aid into Gaza, but it has not condemned Israeli brutalities, neither has it joined Canada, France and the UK in imposing sanctions and taking concrete action to prevent Netanyahu from taking full control of what is left of the Gaza Strip. In defence of a common humanity, as a response to the outrage of millions of citizens, the Australian Government must surely break its silence and act. If the government finds that appeal insufficient, how about another: please pity the children, save them and, for God’s sake, don’t be afraid!
YOURDEMOCRACY.NET RECORDS HISTORY AS IT SHOULD BE — NOT AS THE WESTERN MEDIA WRONGLY REPORTS IT.
Gus Leonisky POLITICAL CARTOONIST SINCE 1951.
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Jonathan Lis, Liza Rozovsky
Diplomatic tsunami on PalestineEurope begins to act against Israel’s “complete madness” in Gaza, in the wake of a wave of diplomatic incidents.
The wave of diplomatic incidents involving Israel throughout Tuesday (20 May) has been exceptional by any standard.
“The situation in Gaza is unbearable,” a foreign diplomat familiar with the international efforts against Israel told Haaretz. “It’s time to stop. Images of children scrambling for a plate of rice, reports of real hunger, and the fact that Israel isn’t doing enough to facilitate humanitarian aid make it impossible for us to stand by any longer,” he added.
Since Monday, crisis has followed crisis: the leaders of France, the UK and Canada announced they may consider sanctions against Israel; 25 Western countries issued a joint statement expressing concern over Gaza; the UK Government suspended talks on a free trade agreement with Israel; British Foreign Secretary David Lammy announced sanctions on Israeli settlers and summoned Israeli Ambassador Tzipi Hotovely for a formal reprimand.
At the same time, Swedish Foreign Minister Maria Malmer Stenergard declared her intent to promote sanctions against Israeli ministers – a move that was later blocked. French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot said on Tuesday that he supports reconsidering the EU-Israel Association Agreement. Just hours later, at the initiative of the Dutch foreign minister, EU foreign ministers gathered in Brussels to discuss suspending the agreement.
Seventeen of the EU’s 27 member states voted to re-examine the legal basis of the EU-Israel Association Agreement. While full cancellation would require consensus and is considered unlikely, a qualified majority could suspend specific parts, such as the free trade deal that exempts Israeli exports from tariffs, or the Horizon program, which allows Israeli participation in European science and technology projects.
Israeli officials took comfort in Germany, Italy, and Greece’s support, which voted alongside Israel at the EU Commission. The Israeli Foreign Ministry doubts that the agreement will be revoked altogether, but acknowledges that the decision to review it is a serious diplomatic warning.
A senior Israeli official told Haaretz the developments were expected. “The statement from Kaja Kallas was unfortunate, but it could have been worse,” he said of the chief EU diplomat’s comments. “The past 24 hours were all part of a planned ambush we knew about. This was a co-ordinated sequence of moves ahead of the EU meeting in Brussels, and thanks to joint efforts by our ambassadors and the foreign minister, we managed to moderate the outcome,” the official said.
“The bullet has left the barrel,” said Maya Sion-Tzidkiyahu, director of the Israel-Europe Relations Program at the Mitvim Institute and lecturer at the Hebrew University’s European Forum. “There’s no telling where this will lead or how the legal review will conclude. This step further isolates Israel as a pariah state, losing some of its closest friends in Europe.”
According to her, “This shift happened fast, in just two weeks, and the decision may trigger a diplomatic tsunami.”
“This is a very clear message to Israel: we’ve had enough of a senseless war. You’re increasingly seen as a country whose values no longer align with those of the European Union,” Sion-Tzidkiyahu added.
Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar has held talks in recent days with about 10 European foreign ministers and heard strong criticism from them. At Sunday’s cabinet meeting, he warned ministers that European criticism could soon be accompanied by concrete actions. Israeli army officials confirmed that Israeli monitoring systems also show the humanitarian situation in Gaza nearing a red line, with immediate aid needed.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu approved the entry of aid into Gaza without delay in co-ordination with the US. As trucks began to move, Israeli officials quickly informed counterparts that Israel was indeed acting to alleviate hunger and was not relying on declarations alone. A source familiar with the details said Netanyahu plans to issue a formal statement in response to the Western measures.
Still, Israel’s sudden response did little to satisfy the international community. Several European countries criticised the new aid distribution plan, set to begin in two weeks.
“It’s complete madness,” a European diplomat told Haaretz. “There’s no way this will work. Israel is shutting down 400 food distribution points in Gaza and replacing them with four or five. That means 6000 people at each point. I desperately hope they don’t go through with this – it would be a disaster.”
Sion-Tzidkiyahu estimated that the very fact that the EU is now debating Israeli violations of international law sends a strong signal not only to international courts, but possibly even to people in Trump’s orbit, who may be attuned to these messages.
Looking ahead, Israeli officials are already bracing for the next flashpoint. France and Saudi Arabia are expected to convene a conference in New York in June to announce recognition of a Palestinian state. According to sources, the initiative is primarily Saudi, designed to deliver a symbolic diplomatic achievement reflecting concern for the Palestinian people. However, officials now believe the organisers are working to expand the number of countries backing the move.
President Isaac Herzog, who attended the pope’s inauguration in the Vatican on Sunday, made an unannounced stop in Paris for a meeting with President Emmanuel Macron. Herzog, who often carries out quiet diplomatic missions, reportedly raised both the hostage issue and Israel’s concern about the French-Saudi initiative. Israeli officials believe it will be difficult to stop the recognition plan, which is expected to move forward as planned.
Republished from Haaretz, 21 May 2025
https://johnmenadue.com/post/2025/05/diplomatic-tsunami-on-palestine/