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Two tribes: How Israel and Iran became enemies

Two tribes: How Israel and Iran became enemies

Irish Times27-06-2025
Any understanding of
the conflict
that has shaken the Middle East for the past two weeks must take into account the shifting relationship between Israel and Iran and the complex politics of nuclear technology in the region, which have seen Israel consistently project its military and intelligence strengths to resist any attempt of the part of regional states to pose a nuclear threat to its existence.
Although it seems unimaginable today, the relationship between
Iran
and
Israel
has not always been antagonistic. From the pre-revolutionary period under the Shah to the early years of the Islamic Republic, relations between Israel and Iran, while never friendly, were pragmatic and based on shared geopolitical interests.
In the 1950s the Israeli prime minister David Ben-Gurion developed the so-called 'periphery' doctrine based on the view that Israel should develop close relations with non-Arab neighbours, such as Turkey, Iran and Ethiopia, to protect itself from hostile Arab states. The alliance was informal and consisted for the most part of secret and clandestine contacts. According to historian Avi Shlaim, Iran was 'the jewel in the crown of the alliance of the periphery'.
The non-Arab states shared, with Israel, a fear of the expanding influence of Egypt's charismatic president, Gamal Abdel Nasser, the leading figure in the pan-Arabist movement promoting Arab unity, and a supporter of the Palestinian cause. Iran and Israel also saw Iraq as a common threat and, by 1960, Israel was supporting Iraqi Kurds who were fighting the revolutionary regime in Baghdad.
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Israel's Mossad created an intelligence alliance with Iran and Turkey in 1958, while Tehran and Tel Aviv developed a close military relationship that lasted until the 1979 revolution in Iran. Unlikely as it might seem, the relationship between the two countries did not end in 1979. Initially, the foreign policy of revolutionary Iran was hostile to Israel but soon the Islamic Republic saw the benefit of an Israeli counterweight to its Arab neighbours, especially Iraq. The Israelis shared the Iranian view of Iraq, under Saddam Hussein, as a threat to security and a low-level relationship between the two developed.
At the beginning of the Iran-Iraq war, in early 1980, the then Israeli prime minister, Menachem Begin, approved the shipment of weapons and materials for the Iranian army. By the 1990s, co-operation between Israel and Iran had diminished significantly. Nonetheless, relations were not entirely hostile. The reformist Iranian president, Mohammed Khatami, made conciliatory moves towards Israel as part of his policy of greater engagement with the United States, including the suggestion that Iran would support a two-state solution to the Israel-Palestinian conflict.
But matters changed in the next decade. Ironically, the US-led wars in Afghanistan and Iraq led to the defeat of long-standing Iranian rivals and resulted in growing Iranian influence in the region, while Israel began to see Iran as the source of every regional conflict. The 2005 election of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to the Iranian presidency, with his virulent anti-Israel rhetoric and Holocaust denials, deepened Israeli fears of Iran, as relations between the two assumed the hostile nature that has largely characterised them ever since.
Israel's perception of its isolation in the region led to an early interest in the acquisition of nuclear capabilities. Ben Gurion launched Israel's nuclear project in the 1950s with the construction of a large complex at Dimona, a city in the Negev desert. The project was developed with particular assistance from France, which at this time was intent on holding on to its colonial possessions in North Africa and saw Israel as a potentially powerful ally in the region.
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Nuclear weapons have been in the Middle East for decades – not in Iran, but in Israel
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In 1960, Israel and France signed a series of agreements that saw the French provide Israel with a large reactor. In addition to this, they supplied Israel with enriched uranium and a plant for the extraction of plutonium. Israel undertook formally to use these only for civilian purposes, but both sides understood their true intent. Co-operation between the two states was kept secret and the US was initially unaware of these developments. Declassified documents reveal that the US repeatedly questioned what Israel was doing at Dimona. It is estimated that the first nuclear weapons were produced at Dimona in 1966-67. By the end of the 1960s, the US finally became aware of its true purpose and a deal was struck whereby the US would remain silent if Israel also kept quiet.
In 1986 a former nuclear technician, Mordechai Vanunu, revealed the extent of the nuclear weapons programme by offering details and pictures of the Dimona reactor to the Sunday Times newspaper. Before the article was published, Vanunu was kidnapped in Rome by Mossad and returned to Israel, where he was convicted of treason and sentenced to 18 years in prison, 11 of which were spent in solitary confinement.
Today it is estimated that Israel has about 90 nuclear warheads and has produced enough plutonium for 100-200 weapons. However, Israel neither acknowledges nor denies the existence of its nuclear weapons, is not a signatory to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT) and is not subject to inspections by the International Atomic Energy Agency.
Israel's nuclear ambitions extend beyond possessing weapons to a concern to ensure that no other state in the region should do so. The attacks on Iran over the past two weeks are the most severe in pursuit of this objective but certainly not the first.
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Israel-Iran conflict: Does Israel have a secret nuclear programme?
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Over the past five decades, Israel has undertaken a variety of actions to stymie the nuclear ambitions of others in the region. From the 1970s onwards, Iraq under Saddam Hussein, pursued the acquisition of weapons of mass destruction, including nuclear capabilities in the belief that this would make his regime secure. The French were involved in this once more.
In 1976 Iraq bought a nuclear reactor from France together with a limited supply of enriched uranium and technical training. The Osiraq reactor, as it became known, was purchased under an agreement that it would be used for peaceful purposes and was also subject to
International Atomic Energy Agency
safeguards.
However, the Israeli leadership thought otherwise. On June 7th, 1981, Israel attacked and partially destroyed Iraq's nuclear research reactor, killing 10 Iraqi soldiers and one French engineer in the air strike. Before this, they had sabotaged equipment intended for delivery to the facility and in 1980 assassinated a leading scientist working on Iraq's nuclear programme. Afterwards, Israel claimed that the attack represented a big setback to Iraq's ambitions. Other observers argued that they simply convinced Saddam of the need to move faster and in greater secrecy to pursue nuclear weapons capability.
Twenty-six years after the attack on Iraq, the Israeli air force
destroyed a nuclear facility
that was being developed in Syria with the assistance of North Korea. In the early 1980s, the Syrian regime began to develop weapons of mass destruction in response to its recognition that its conventional military capacity was no match for Israel's forces.
To begin with, the focus was on developing chemical weapons such as Sarin nerve gas and a reliable 'delivery' system, in the form of Soviet-built Scud missiles. However, before his death in 2000, Hafez al-Assad entered into negotiations with North Korea to build a secret nuclear reactor in western Syria. Co-operation between the two regimes began in the late 1990s.
The Israelis identified the reactor for what it was in 2006, Mossad having gained access to the laptop computer of a senior Syrian government official while he was visiting London. However, US intelligence on the extent of Syria's nuclear capabilities was less than definitive and the then US secretary of state, Condoleezza Rice, adopted the view that to bomb the reactor in the face of uncertain intelligence was reckless, favouring a diplomatic route instead.
The then Israeli prime minister, Ehud Olmert, told US president George W Bush that a Syrian nuclear weapons program represented an existential issue for Israel, and, on September 6th, 2007, Israel launched a military strike that destroyed the reactor and maintained Israel's own nuclear monopoly in the Middle East.
Although it is strongly associated with the Islamic Republic, Iran's nuclear programme began under the Shah. In 1972 he announced that Iran would build a nuclear apparatus to generate 23,000 megawatts of power. Two years later the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran was established with a commitment to build 40 reactors.
Iran's nuclear programme drew on assistance from the US, West Germany, France and South Africa. From the outset, there was speculation that the ambition was to build a nuclear bomb in addition to the overt aim of civil power generation, given the Shah's broader objective of establishing Iran as a regional power. Following the 1979 revolution, the nuclear programme was initially cancelled by the Ayatollah Khomeini who regarded it as another ploy to make Iran dependent on the West. But it was revived during the 1980-1988 war with Iraq when it became clear that Saddam Hussein was moving forward with a nuclear weapons programme.
An Iranian woman holds a poster with portraits of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei and late supreme leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini as people celebrate a ceasefire between Iran and Israel in the capital Tehran. Photograph: Atta Kenare/AFP via Getty
Iran has been a signatory of the NPT since 1968 and has repeatedly declared its adherence to the provisions of the treaty, as well as its commitment solely to the civil application of nuclear power, and its position that nuclear weapons are contrary to Islam. While doubts about its intentions persisted, its religious stance against weapons of mass destruction has been consistently asserted since Khomeini's time.
There were negotiations on Iran's nuclear programme in the aftermath of the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq, but these were undermined by the hostile stance of the Bush administration and the subsequent election in 2005 of the hardline, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, to the Iranian presidency.
Twelve years later, Iran concluded a deal negotiated with the five permanent members of the UN Security Council plus Germany – the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action – under which Iran committed to enrich no uranium beyond 3.67 per cent and to limit its stockpile of uranium enriched to that level to a maximum of 300kg. In return Iran secured an easing of sanctions to the value of several billion dollars. The agreement was immediately attacked by Israel, Saudi Arabia and US Republicans in Congress. In July 2018, during Trump's first presidency, the US withdrew from the deal.
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Israel's ambition: Destroy the heart of Iran's nuclear programme
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The Israeli attacks on Iran's nuclear facilities that began two weeks ago represent the culmination of a series of efforts at disruption that go back decades and have taken a number of forms. In 2009, Israel and the US combined to mount a cyber attack by installing a computer virus, known as Stuxnet, on computers at the Iranian nuclear plant at Natanz. The virus caused about 1,000 of the roughly 7,000 centrifuges at the facility to fail, significantly impacting Iran's nuclear ambitions.
Between 2010 and 2012, a series of targeted assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists were carried out, responsibility for which is generally attributed to Mossad. In November 2020, Mohsen Fakhrizadeh, a scientist believed to be the key figure in Iran's nuclear programme, was
killed outside Tehran
. However, the bombing campaign that began on June 13th is by far the most significant attempt yet to deal with Iran's nuclear ambitions.
Netanyahu's ostensible motivation for the launch of hostilities was the release of an International Atomic Energy Agency report that found that Iran was in violation of its nuclear nonproliferation obligations for the first time in 20 years, prompting the Israeli leader to declare that Iran was taking steps to weaponise enriched uranium such that it represented an existential danger to Israel.
A satellite image of damage at the Fordo enrichment facility in Iran after the US strikes, June 22nd. Photograph: Maxar Technologies via The New York Times
The decision on the part of
Donald Trump
to join the Israeli assault is less straightforward to explain. In part it may have stemmed from divisions within his own administration over the merits of attacking Iran. It may also be a reflection of frustration with Iran's approach to the negotiations that the US had restarted on the nuclear issue and Trump's concluding that a show of force would push Tehran towards more far-reaching concessions in the event of a return to the negotiating table.
All of this raises the question of what exactly Israel and the US have, in fact, achieved. Netanyahu described Israel's objectives in terms of eliminating the two concrete threats to its existence: the nuclear threat and the ballistic missile threat. Trump, on the other hand, characteristically set out a number of possible outcomes of the US intervention from a limited operation to destroy Iran's nuclear enrichment capacity and an end to its nuclear threat, to the 'unconditional surrender' of Iran and
regime change
.
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If Netanyahu wants regime change in Iran, it is unlikely to end well
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Netanyahu has declared success on his terms, while Trump has spoken of the 'obliteration' of Iran's nuclear capabilities. However, all the early indicators are that the attacks may have accomplished no more than setting back Iran's nuclear programme by a matter of months. A widely leaked report by the US Defence Intelligence Agency (the intelligence arm of the Pentagon) concludes that key elements of that programme could be restarted within months, and, as has been widely speculated, that much of Iran's stockpile of enriched uranium had been moved before the attacks, most likely to other secret sites.
This is not to say that the Iranian regime has not been severely weakened by the attacks. Its effective inability to protect its own airspace and the loss of senior military and scientific personnel at Israeli hands represent both substantial losses and a blow to the already eroded legitimacy of the Islamic Republic for many Iranians. Nor did its erstwhile external allies offer any meaningful support.
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Did Iran move its uranium? Opinions split on fate of 400kg stockpile
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However, despite Netanyahu's calls on Iranians to rise up against the regime, there is no sign of this. Iranians are only too well aware of the regime's capacity for repression. Hundreds of thousands took to the streets in protest after the death in custody in 2022 of Mahsa Amini, whose offence was the incorrect wearing of her hijab. In response, the regime deployed the full force of its repressive apparatus. Women were blinded with acid and beaten by members of the Basij
militia that is part of the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC). Hundreds of protesters were
shot
.
In November 2022 there were reports of poison gas attacks on girls' schools where the students had supported the protest movement. There is some organised opposition to the regime. However, it is highly fractured, ranging from Kurdish groups to monarchists, from small nationalist and leftist groups to reformists within ruling structures. But there is little co-ordination between them and no real prospect of a coalition of opposition forces capable of acting on a national level.
The likeliest eventuality in the immediate aftermath of the attacks is of regime attempts at consolidation and control. Since June 13th there have been daily announcements of the arrest of those charged with 'spreading rumours' on social media. Iran has already executed a number of prisoners convicted of spying for Israel. A near total internet blackout is in place.
With the Islamic regime still in place in Tehran and the likelihood that much of its nuclear capabilities remain intact, it appears that, at great cost in terms of human lives and increased regional instability, the war which began on June 13th may have done little more than bring all the key actors back to positions similar to those in which they found themselves at its outset.
Dr Vincent Durac lectures in Middle East politics in the UCD school of politics and international relations
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Mood shifts on Israel-Gaza, but will it bring change?
Mood shifts on Israel-Gaza, but will it bring change?

RTÉ News​

time2 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Mood shifts on Israel-Gaza, but will it bring change?

There's no doubt the mood has shifted on the Israel-Gaza war. In the past week, three powerful G7 nations - France, the UK and Canada – announced their intention to recognise the State of Palestine at the United Nations General Assembly in September. That means four of the five permanent members of the Security Council - the UN's highest decision-making body - will join the more than 140 member states that already recognise Palestine, leaving the United States diplomatically isolated on the issue. With pressure mounting over starvation in Gaza, the United Nations held a major conference this week aimed at reviving the "two-state solution" for Israel and Palestine, a decades-old idea favoured by most of the world, but largely written off as dead in the water - until now. Boycotting the two-day event, the Israeli ambassador called it "a circus" while the US State Department said it was "unproductive and untimely". But even here, in the US, where support for Israel has been an unshakeable article of faith across the political spectrum, but especially in the Republican Party, key allies of President Donald Trump have begun to dissent. Marjorie Taylor Greene, the MAGA congresswoman from Georgia, took to X to voice her opposition to American policy on Israel. "It's the most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct 7th in Israel was horrific and all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis, and starvation happening in Gaza," she wrote. That made her the first Republican in Congress to call Israel's actions in Gaza a genocide. A handful of Democrats have already used that term. Previously, Ms Taylor Greene introduced an amendment to cut funding for Israel's missile defence system – although that failed to garner any real support in Washington. But outside of Congress, fellow MAGA leaders - including the former White House strategist Steve Bannon and the right-wing podcaster Tucker Carlson - have been damning of US policy in the Middle East, seeing it at odds with their "America First" doctrine. Mr Bannon – though still a staunch supporter of Israel – has little time for the current prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, whom he once called a "bald-faced liar". Mr Carlson criticised US aid to Israel, arguing the money would be better spent at home to tackle the opioid epidemic, among other domestic crises. He also slammed the recent Israeli airstrike on a Catholic Church in Gaza City. "They're not allowed to use my tax dollars to bomb churches," he told a US podcast. "I'll put up with a lot of stuff, but I don't understand how any Christian leader in the United States can sit by and not say something about that," he said. Scepticism of American involvement in "forever wars" is certainly a hallmark of the MAGA movement. Indeed, last year, ahead of the election that returned Mr Trump to power, I reported from his rally at New York's iconic Madison Square Gardens. During an Israel-focused speech beamed onto the giant outdoor screen, a man in the crowd shouted, "why are you talking about Israel – what about America?". In another post on X this week, Ms Greene pressed that case. "Most Americans that I know don't hate Israel and we are not antisemitic at all," she wrote. "We are beyond fed up with being told that we have to fix the world's problems, pay for the world's problems, and fight all the world's wars while Americans are struggling to survive even though they work every day". Then there is President Trump himself, who this week made headlines when he contradicted Mr Netanyahu's denial of starvation in Gaza. Asked if he agreed with Mr Netanyahu's assessment, Mr Trump said: "Based on television, I would say not particularly, because those children look very hungry". "They have to get food and safety right now," he added. The following day, a UN-backed report found that the "worst-case" famine scenario was unfolding across Gaza. Mr Trump dispatched his Middle East special envoy Steve Witkoff and Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee to inspect aid distribution sites run by American contractors under the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF). The GHF sites, set up to replace UN aid distribution networks which the US and Israel said were hijacked by Hamas, have become the scene of near-daily mass killings of starving Palestinians, prompting international outrage. The French Foreign Minister, Jean-Noel Barrot, co-chairing this week's conference, called it a "bloodbath". Last weekend, a group of Democratic senators wrote to the US Secretary of State Marc Rubio urging him to "immediately cease" all US funding for GHF and resume support for UN-led operations, with increased oversight. Adding to the pressure, a former US contractor with GHF gave an interview to the BBC saying that in his entire career, he had "never witnessed the level of brutality and use of indiscriminate and unnecessary force against a civilian population, an unarmed, starving population". Anthony Aguilar, a United States Army veteran, dismissed by the GHF as a disgruntled ex-employee, continued to speak out on US and international media platforms. Gaza aid today, he said, was like The Hunger Games. 'Turning point' With the mood apparently shifting in Washington and across the world, diplomats gathered for the UN's two-state solution conference this week feeling like the momentum was behind them. "It can and must serve as a decisive turning point," the UN Secretary General António Guterres said in his opening remarks. "One that catalyses irreversible progress towards ending the occupation and realising our shared aspiration for a viable two-state solution," he said. The sentiment was echoed over the following two days and the conference's final declaration won more support than diplomats initially expected. The ambitious seven-page document called for an immediate ceasefire, the release of Israeli hostages and Palestinian prisoners, recognition of Palestine by countries that have not yet done so, normalisation of relations with Israel, the disarmament of Hamas, and a commitment to a political solution with the Palestinian Authority, subject to major reforms in control of Gaza and the West Bank. Significantly, it was the first time a UN document, signed by Arab nations, officially condemned the Hamas-led attacks on Israel on 7 October, 2023. But two critical players – Israel and the United States – were not there. In their absence, was this a case of the UN shouting into the void? I asked Mary Robinson, former president and UN High Commissioner for Human Rights at a news conference on Monday. She said that she felt real pressure in the conference room that the world had to move forward. "I think that can't be ignored, even by a powerful United States supporting Israel, the current Israeli government," she said, adding, "they particularly can't ignore the widespread sense now of an unfolding genocide and the starvation of children, of women, pregnant women". This could be the point of realisation, she said, that the US "is becoming complicit in a genocide". "That could be enough," she said. It is certainly true that Americans' support for Israel's military campaign has waned. A recent Gallup poll showed just a third of US citizens polled backed Israel's actions in Gaza – the lowest since November 2023. It is also worth noting, as an aside, that New York could be on the brink of electing as mayor Zohran Mamdani – an outspoken critic of Israel's military assault on Gaza, who has said he would arrest Mr Netanyahu were he to come to the city. On Monday, the UN conference's co-chair Faisal bin Farhan Al Saud, Foreign Minister of Saudi Arabia, was upbeat about the prospects of finding common ground with the White House. After all, it was Mr Trump who brokered the Abraham Accords during his first term – a deal to normalise relations between Israel and the Arab states of United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Morocco. "I think we've all heard President Trump statements on many occasions that he is a man of peace, that he is someone who opposes war, and he is a humanitarian," Mr bin Farhan Al Saud told reporters at the conference. He said he believed US engagement, especially the engagement of President Trump, could be a "catalyst for an end to the immediate crisis in Gaza and potentially a resolution of the Palestinian Israeli conflict In the long term". Saudi Arabia's eventual sign-up to the accords was always the big prize for Mr Trump. But the Saudi foreign minister made it clear this week that there would be no negotiation on the matter, without an end to the war and the establishment of a Palestinian State. The Saudis certainly have a good deal of leverage in Washington. But then, so does Mr Netanyahu. Some experts remain sceptical that the shift in mood will yield any real change. "I think we've reached a turning point in terms of perceptions of the war, and I think a tipping point in the coverage of the catastrophe," Michael Hanna, US Programme Director at the International Crisis Group, an NGO aimed at conflict prevention. "I'm not yet sure that that is going to fully translate into a change in policy," he added. He said there was always a gulf between public opinion and the political class in the US. "That gap is shrinking in some respects - we see a rise in criticism," he said. "Again, criticism is not the same as policy shift". Ms Greene, for example, was largely alone in Congress on the Republican side, he said. Indeed, while the week started with Mr Trump sympathising with the plight of hungry Palestinians, by Thursday, he was issuing barely veiled threats against Canada over its intention to recognise a Palestinian State. The State Department also announced sanctions against the Palestinian Authority and Palestinian Liberation Organisation on Thursday, which means members will be unable to travel to the US for the UN General Assembly in September. As for diplomatic isolation at the UN, that is something the US is prepared to bear, Mr Hanna told RTÉ News. "It is notable when the isolation also encompasses other Western members of the permanent five, UK and France, so maybe it's magnified isolation. "But the US has been willing to endure that isolation for a very long time, so it's not clear that that is particularly uncomfortable," he said. A lot hinges on President Trump's own views of course, and it is anyone's guess what he will decide next. His approach to the Middle East has been "all over the map," Mr Hanna said. There have been moments of tension between Mr Trump and Mr Netanyahu, he added. "There were direct contacts with Hamas, which I think shocked the Israelis," he said, "then the U-turn on the Yemen campaign". Mr Trump abruptly declared an end to the bombing of Houthi rebel group positions in May. "And then, of course, then another big shift on intervention in Iran," he said in reference to the US joining Israel's bombing campaign of Iran's nuclear sites in a surprise move in June. The flip-flopping continued this week, when President Trump initially said he had "no view" on the matter, when the British Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced the UK's intention to recognise the State of Palestine. But within hours, Mr Trump had labelled recognition "a reward for Hamas". Amid all the rhetoric and noise, Mr Hanna said, the point is that there is "still no ceasefire in Gaza".

Recognition of a Palestinian state has become a punishment for Israel, says its former prime minister
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Irish Times

time19 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Recognition of a Palestinian state has become a punishment for Israel, says its former prime minister

In declaring that they intend to recognise a Palestinian state , Britain , France and Canada have moved closer to a step that Palestinians have sought for decades. But their announcements leave unanswered a crucial question: in the gritty context of today's conflict – with Israel waging war in a shattered Gaza Strip , threatening to annex the occupied West Bank and administering East Jerusalem as part of its own capital – what is left of Palestine to recognise? They also upend the sequence of the now-moribund Middle East peace process, in which detailed talks between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organisation (PLO) were intended to be followed by international recognition of whatever Palestinian state emerged from those discussions. Former Israeli prime minister Ehud Olmert said the gesture by Israel's western allies of recognising Palestine had taken on a different meaning. READ MORE What was intended to be a reward for Palestinians – a celebration for successfully ending more than eight decades of conflict – had in 2025 become a punishment for Israel . Ehud Olmert was the last Israeli prime minister to truly address the complexities of a two-state solution. Photograph: Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images It was a reflection of 'the real desperation of losing trust', said Olmert, whose premiership between 2006 and 2009 was the last time an Israeli leader seriously tussled with the complexities of a two-state solution. To Olmert, it is as if they are saying to his successor, prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu: 'You didn't listen to us, to anything we are trying to do – so what else do we have but to use this, something you are so opposed to.' Olmert said the promised recognitions amount to a threat to dismantle the legacy of Israel's longest-serving premier, who has spent his nearly two decades in power blocking a Palestinian state from taking shape. Netanyahu's governments have expanded settlements, taken more land into Israeli state control and demonised the internationally accepted Palestinian Authority (PA) as supporters of terrorism akin to Hamas, the militant group that wrested Gaza from the PA in 2007. Netanyahu has lambasted the British and French proposals as a reward for Hamas, which triggered the current war with its cross-border attacks on southern Israel on October 7th, 2023. Now Netanyahu, who refuses to take responsibility for the scale of civilian suffering that Israel has wrought on Gaza, faces the prospect of four out of five permanent UN Security Council members recognising the state of Palestine. China and Russia have already done so. This would deepen Israel's diplomatic isolation as it fights accusations of genocide at the International Court of Justice, the UN's highest court, and as the premier himself faces charges of war crimes at the International Criminal Court. The pledges by three G7 nations to recognise a Palestinian state ahead of the UN General Assembly in September all come with conditions. Mahmoud Abbas, Palestinian Authority president, speaks during the United Nations General Assembly in New York last year. Photograph: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg via Getty Images UK prime minister Keir Starmer's hinge on Netanyahu ending the crisis in Gaza, while Canada is demanding that the PA, run by the ageing and unpopular president Mahmoud Abbas, enacts serious reforms and hold its first elections in nearly two decades. The announcements have been met with deep hostility from Netanyahu's far-right coalition, which is propped up by parties seeking to annex the West Bank. The last time Netanyahu – reluctantly – engaged with the peace process was in 2014, under great pressure from the Obama administration. The process of recognising a Palestinian state would also run up against the limits of international law: the 1933 Montevideo Convention sets out minimum criteria for a state, which include a permanent population, defined borders and a government. Two-year-old Yazan Abu Foul, held by his mother Naima, is suffering from severe malnutrition as a result of Israel's campaign in Gaza. Photograph: Haitham Imad That is one reason that Canadian prime minister Mark Carney has insisted that the PA – a semi-autonomous body set up by the Oslo Accords in the 1990s – commit to reforms that would restore a measure of democratic legitimacy to Abbas's government, said a Canadian diplomat briefed on the matter. Palestinian statehood also faces practical difficulties as formidable today as it did in 1988, when PLO chair Yasser Arafat first set out a formal claim to a Palestinian nation that mingled the poetry of Mahmoud Darwish with the prose of UN resolutions. He created a government in exile, based in Algiers. Most crucially, Israel controls all the borders and occupies the land on which any Palestinian state could be built. World powers have largely supported Palestinians governing an area that roughly aligns with the 1967 armistice line, which includes the West Bank, East Jerusalem and the Gaza Strip – territories wrested from Jordan and Egypt by Israel. Israel's defence minister Israel Katz, whose government in May announced plans to build 22 new West Bank settlements , has said of the push for recognition: 'They will recognise a Palestinian state on paper – and we will build the Jewish-Israeli state on the ground.' Yet even if western recognition would bring little change in the territory, Palestinians say it would buoy morale and add weight to the beleaguered PLO's claim to statehood. Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu with US president Donald Trump at the White House. Photograph: Haiyun Jiang/The New York Times 'It would still be very useful because it confirms the right of self-determination for the Palestinian people, which Israel is trying to eliminate,' said Mustafa Barghouti, a member of the Palestinian Legislative Council and regular interlocutor with western diplomats. 'The issue of recognition is a political matter – admitting into law what these countries always speak about, the two-state solution.' Palestinian delegations to the UK, France or Canada would also become fully fledged embassies, getting diplomatic rights and immunities, and able to sign treaties as a state. 'States have allies, allies have responsibilities,' said a Palestinian diplomat based in the UK. 'Until then, all we have as Palestinians are friends.' These recognitions would undermine Israel's traditional argument that it is not alone in opposing unilateral Palestinian statehood, said Victor Kattan, who has served as a legal adviser to the Palestinian Negotiations Affairs Department in Ramallah. Some 147 countries already recognise a Palestinian state, but the addition of the UK, France and Canada would represent a significant shift on the part of powerful western states traditionally seen as Israel's unflinching allies. That shift is especially resonant on the part of the UK, the colonial power that administered Mandate Palestine after the first World War, issuing the Balfour Declaration that paved the way for a Jewish state to take shape on Palestinian land and fuelling a conflict that rages decades later. 'The Israelis had always had a strong 'moral minority' argument, that so long as some of the major western states . . . still don't recognise Palestine, there will always be a question mark over its claims to statehood and sovereignty,' said Kattan, who now teaches international law at the University of Nottingham. Protesters hold a banner showing starving Palestinian children during a rally in solidarity with the Palestinian people, at Sana'a University in Yemen. Photograph: Yahya Arhab/EPA 'But now that that's crumbling – it looks like nearly everybody is going to recognise Palestine, except for the United States – it greatly strengthens Palestinian claims to statehood.' The moves by the UK, France and Canada have infuriated the White House, with US president Donald Trump saying they pose a threat to trade talks with Canada. The US's long-standing policy has been to resist attempts by supporters of Palestine to assume some of the markers of statehood. On Thursday, the state department imposed sanctions on the PLO, for among other things 'taking actions to internationalise its conflict with Israel such as through the International Criminal Court and the International Court of Justice'. Other diplomatic efforts to upgrade Palestinian claims to statehood are also under way, said western diplomats based in Jerusalem, including an attempt to upgrade the fledgling state of Palestine's UN 'observer status' to full membership. The US has twice vetoed those attempts, most recently in April 2024. One of the diplomats said: 'They will undoubtedly veto again – but this time, they will be running against a large wave of international opinion, not just a technical vote that is ignored as a matter of course.' – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2025 International recognition of Palestinian statehood

Is the White House ready to demand an end to Netanyahu's campaign of starvation in Gaza?
Is the White House ready to demand an end to Netanyahu's campaign of starvation in Gaza?

Irish Times

time19 hours ago

  • Irish Times

Is the White House ready to demand an end to Netanyahu's campaign of starvation in Gaza?

Throughout June, CNN offered previews of its deep-dive documentary of the 40th anniversary of Live Aid. The first part was broadcast on July 13th and in the weeks since, the retrospective has been accompanied with disturbing contemporary reportage and footage of the horrific scenes of starvation and mass hunger afflicting people in bombed-out Gaza . This was the first week that the humanitarian crisis, and the shocking realisation that thousands of children are starving and dying while food and aid languishes nearby, has become a dominant news story in the United States. Since Donald Trump took office, Israel's prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu has been welcomed and feted in the White House three times. The change in policy, ideology and energy between the Biden and Trump administrations is day and night. Yet both administrations share, to this point, a willingness to bend to Netanyahu's every whim and to ignore his state-sponsored atrocities. Israeli prime minister Binyamin Netanyahu recently presented US president Donald Trump with a copy of a letter he sent to the Nobel committee recommending Trump for the peace prize. Photograph: Andrew Caballero-Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images Just weeks ago, in a theatrical gesture much of the world found stomach-churning, Netanyahu, sitting across from president Trump ahead of dinner, presented his host with a copy of a letter he sent to the Nobel committee recommending Trump for the peace prize. READ MORE But this week, Trump broke with Netanyahu's conviction that there is no starvation in Gaza and that Hamas are issuing misleading reports. 'Based on television. . . those children look very hungry,' Trump said. 'But we're giving a lot of money and a lot of food, and other nations are now stepping up. Some of those kids are – that's real starvation stuff. I see it and you can't fake that.' It is tempting to believe that Trump, an avid consumer of television news shows, was exposed to much stronger and disturbing reports on Gaza during his five-day visit to Scotland than he had previously absorbed while flicking through the news networks in the White House. Belatedly, Trump seems to have realised, like Biden before him, that he has been played by Israel's prime minister, who has repeatedly demonstrated little interest in ending the conflict. If Russian president Vladimir Putin has proven hostile towards Trump's wish – and election campaign vow – of a swift resolution to the war with Ukraine, Netanyahu has been in turns ingratiating and contemptuous, taking unflagging US support for granted. On Wednesday, Trump dispatched Steve Witkoff , his diplomatic envoy, to Israel to pressurise Netanyahu on what is now being described as a famine. Trump returned to Washington from Scotland to find political representatives on the hard right and left are speaking in chorus. A demonstrator participates in a solidarity rally for Gaza in Paris on Thursday. Photograph: Mohammed Badra/EPA The Independent senator Bernie Sanders forced a set of resolutions to block the $675 million sale of bombs and guidance kits and automatic rifles to the Israeli government. 'Course he's lying,' Sanders said of Netanyahu's denials on CNN during the week. 'He's a disgusting liar. Israel had a right to defend itself from the terrible Hamas attack , but I think everyone understands that in the last two and a half years they have been waging a brutal, horrific, almost unprecedented type of war not just against Hamas but against the Palestinian people,' he said, citing the Gaza health ministry figures of 60,000 dead and 140,00 injured, most of whom he said, are 'women, children and the elderly'. 'We cannot continue providing military aid to the extremist racist Netanyahu government that is starving the children of Gaza.' But Sanders stopped short of agreeing that the word 'genocide' is applicable to the failure to deliver the emergency food and aid to Gazans. Instead, it was Marjorie Taylor Greene, one of the Maga Republicans' most strident, conservative voices, who used that phrase. She was responding to Randy Fine, the recently elected Florida Republican congressman who last year labelled Ireland as an 'anti-Semitic country' over its support of the Palestinian people. Samah Matar holds her six-year-old son Yousef, who is suffering from severe malnutrition due to Israel's blockade of food into Gaza. Photograph: Saher Alghorra/The New York Times 'I can only imagine how Florida's 6th district feels now that their Representative, that they were told to vote for, openly calls for starving innocent people and children,' Taylor-Greene wrote. 'It's the most truthful and easiest thing to say that Oct 7th in Israel was horrific and all hostages must be returned, but so is the genocide, humanitarian crisis, and starvation happening in Gaza. But a Jewish US Representative calling for the continued starvation of innocent people and children is disgraceful. His awful statement will actually cause more antisemitism.' Taylor-Greene's sharp criticism has been echoed elsewhere within the Maga movement, not least through the podcast megaphones of Tucker Carlson and Steve Bannon. Their perspective has not gone unnoticed in Israel, with an opinion piece written in June by Dr Judah Isseroff in the Israeli daily publication, Haaretz, noting that 'while Carlson's stances on immigration, vaccines and Russia are core elements of an emergent right-wing coalition, the criticism of Israel that he amplifies on his podcast has a level of cross-over potential that far outstrips the appeal of mass deportations or Covid revisionism. 'That is because Carlson's views coincide with those of increasingly large numbers of American Jews. According to two surveys last year, nearly a third of American Jews – and more than 40 per cent of American Jewish teens – agreed that Israel is committing a genocide in Gaza. In light of Israel's escalating activity in the Strip, those numbers are likely higher today than they were in 2024. It is clear that Binyamin Netanyahu takes the support of Donald Trump and the US completely for granted. Photograph:'As I see it, Carlson's real significance is actually more theological than political. I don't think we're likely to soon find Carlson marching arm-in-arm with Gaza campus activists at Columbia University. Instead, Carlson's platforming of Israel-critical Jews actually augurs a serious scrambling of relations between Jews and Christians in the United States.' Perhaps, but at congressional level, there is little to suggest that Netanyahu has any immediate cause for alarm about a suspension of arms and support or a sea-change in baseline support. A significant minority may be experiencing nausea at the sudden proliferation of images of starving Gazans. Still, the vote on Sanders's resolution- the third such motion he has brought – failed in the Senate by 27-70. It was significant increase on support among Democratic senators without ever threatening the status quo. Over a year has passed since Chuck Schumer, the Democratic senate minority leader and highest ranking Jewish political leader in US history, gave a speech warning that Israel was at the risk of becoming a 'pariah' under Netanyahu's leadership, and he called for an election of new officials there. But this week, Schumer voted to continue to supply artillery to Israel: the protection of the state cannot, for Schumer, be compromised by objections to Netanyahu. Nor can the atrocities inflicted by Hamas militants on innocent Israelis on October 7th, 2023, be forgotten. When Netanyahu gave his address after a bipartisan invitation from Congress last week, at least 38 elected Democratic representatives announced they would boycott it. A few empty seats, then, but Netanyahu, basking in the afterglow of the successful joint Israel-US strikes on Iran nuclear facilities, still enjoyed a prolonged standing ovation before House speaker Mike Johnson acknowledged the 'distinct honour' of introducing the guest. 'For the forces of civilisation to triumph,' Netanyahu told them, 'America and Israel must stand together', provoking another standing ovation. He knew he was among friends – from both sides of the House – and had every reason to believe, in that moment, that the historical alliance will withstand whatever moral queasiness US politicians may feel about the images of dying Palestinian children. And while president Trump has voiced his unease at the images of malnourished and starving children, on Thursday morning he posted on Truth Social his stated position that the 'fastest way to end the humanitarian crisis in Gaza is for Hamas to surrender and release the hostages'. A man carries the body of a child, killed in an Israeli strike, ahead of a funeral procession in Gaza City. Photograph: Majdi Fathi/NurPhoto via Getty Images Asked during his meeting with Britain's prime minister, Keir Starmer, if he supported Britain's pledge to recognise Palestinian statehood unless a ceasefire is in place by September, Trump said that he saw the plan as 'rewarding Hamas'. On Thursday, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt described Witkoff's meeting with Netanyahu as 'very productive' and she confirmed that he would spend Friday inspecting the food distribution sites and speaking with Gazans living through what has become a ceaseless nightmare. He will then brief president Trump on advised next steps. 'President Trump is a humanitarian with a big heart and that's why he sent special envoy Witkoff to the region, in an effort to save lives and end this crisis,' Leavitt said. With Hamas refusing to negotiate a path towards a ceasefire until the unfolding food shortage stand-off is resolved, and Israel's leader remaining unrepentant, many lives may hinge of the persuasive power of Witkoff's report to Trump. It remains to be seen whether the sudden prominence of the Gaza plight in US news coverage is just a temporary conscience salver which will, in a week or a fortnight, become obscured by domestic and economic issues again. Or whether the White House, and Trump, is at last ready to demand an end to Binyamin Netanyahu's clear-eyed campaign of death by one means or another.

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