logo
26 Jun 2025 17:40 PM EU's 27 Countries Struggle to Find United Voice on Gaza

26 Jun 2025 17:40 PM EU's 27 Countries Struggle to Find United Voice on Gaza

MTV Lebanon8 hours ago

For the protesters waving Palestinian flags outside EU buildings in Brussels, it was the moment that everything might change.
An EU report presented to foreign ministers had found there were indications Israel had breached human rights obligations under the EU-Israel Association Agreement, ahead of Thursday's European Union leaders' summit.
The European Union is Israel's biggest trading partner, and the protesters were demanding that the EU suspend its 25-year-old trade accord over Israel's actions in Gaza.
But their hopes that EU leaders would agree to suspend the agreement with Israel were soon dashed, because despite the report deep divisions remain over the war in Gaza.
The protesters have been backed by more than 100 NGOs and charities.
In 20 months of Israeli military operations more than 55,000 Gazans have been killed, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. Another 1.9 million people have been displaced.
Israel also imposed a total blockade on humanitarian aid deliveries to Gaza at the start of March, which it partially eased after 11 weeks following pressure from US allies and warnings from global experts that half a million people were facing starvation.
Since then, the UN says more than 400 Palestinians are reported to have been killed by Israeli gunfire or shelling while trying to reach food distribution centres run by a US and Israeli-backed organisation. Another 90 have also reportedly been killed by Israeli forces while attempting to approach convoys of the UN and other aid groups.
"Every red line has been crossed in Gaza" Agnes Bertrand-Sanz from Oxfam told the BBC.
"Every rule has been breached. It really is high time that the European Union acts."
As the report was made public, it fell to foreign policy chief Kaja Kallas to explain what the European Union would do next.
The EU's first goal would be to "change the situation" on the ground in Gaza, she said. If that did not happen, "further measures" would be discussed next month on how to suspend the association agreement.
"We will contact Israel to, you know, present our finding," she stumbled in an uncharacteristically faltering manner. "Because that is the focus of the member states, to really, you know... be very, very sure about the feelings that we have here."
NGOs said the EU had missed an opportunity to take action and that the response was feeble.
The Israeli foreign ministry called the review "a complete moral and methodological failure."
For some of the EU's critics, the episode was a vivid example of how the EU can talk a good game about being the biggest global humanitarian aid donor to Gaza, but badly struggles to present any coherent or powerful voice to match it.
As the world's biggest market of 450 million people, the EU carries great economic weight but it is not translating into political clout.
"The fact that European countries and the UK are not doing more to put pressure on Israel and to enforce international humanitarian law, it makes it very difficult for these countries to be credible," said Olivier De Schutter, the UN's Special Rapporteur on human rights.
"War crimes are being committed at a very large scale In Gaza, there is debate about whether this amounts to genocide, but even if there's no genocide there is a duty to act."
De Schutter fears the EU's soft power is being lost and its inaction makes it much harder for it to persuade to countries in Africa, Asia in Latin America to back Europe on condemning Russia's war in Ukraine, for example.
Israel maintains it acts within international law and that its mission is to destroy Hamas and bring home the remaining hostages taken when Hamas attacked Israel on 7 October 2023. About 1,200 people were killed in the attack, which triggered Israel's offensive on Gaza.
As a union of 27 countries, the domestic political reality in Europe makes it unlikely that EU leaders will back the views of the majority of member states on Gaza.
Eleven EU countries have recognised Palestine as a state, and among them Ireland, Spain, Belgium, Slovenia and Sweden had pushed for the European Union's agreement with Israel to be suspended.
At the heart of the EU's foreign policy decision-making in Brussels is the fact that decisions have to be unanimous, and so just one dissenting voice can block the EU from taking action.
In this case Germany, Austria, Hungary, Slovakia and the Czech Republic are all opposed.
Austria hopes the EU's review will spark action, but not necessarily a suspension of the treaty with Israel.
"Everything I've heard in this regard will not help the people in Gaza," said Foreign Minister Beate Meinl-Reisinger. "What it would however cause is a deterioration, if not a complete breakdown of the dialogue we currently have with Israel."
Germany's position on Israel has often been shaped by its role in the Holocaust and World War Two.
Chancellor Friedrich Merz says the "current level of attacks on Gaza can no longer be justified by the fight against Hamas", but he has refused to consider suspending or terminating the agreement.
Slovakia and Hungary are considered more closely aligned politically to Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu than many other EU countries.
Among the key players advocating tougher measures against Netanyahu's government is Ireland.
Its foreign affairs minister, Simon Harris, condemned the EU's handling of the review.
"Our response in relation to Gaza has been much too slow and far too many people have been left to die as genocide has been carried out," he said.
Israel rejects the charge of genocide and when it closed its embassy in Dublin last December it accused Ireland of antisemitism.
Europe has recently found itself sidelined by Washington on big global issues, notably Ukraine and Iran - with President Donald Trump in favour of direct talks with Russia's Vladimir Putin and Israel's Benjamin Netanyahu.
The US may not be in listening mood, but on Gaza the EU has struggled to muster a unified voice on Gaza, let alone make it heard.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

State Department approves $30 million in funding for Gaza Humanitarian Foundation
State Department approves $30 million in funding for Gaza Humanitarian Foundation

MTV Lebanon

time2 hours ago

  • MTV Lebanon

State Department approves $30 million in funding for Gaza Humanitarian Foundation

The U.S. State Department has approved $30 million in funding for the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, the State Department said on Thursday, calling on other countries to also support the controversial group delivering aid in war-torn Gaza. "This support is simply the latest iteration of President Trump's and Secretary Rubio's pursuit of peace in the region," State Department deputy spokesperson Tommy Pigott told reporters at a regular news briefing. Reuters was first to report the move earlier this week. Washington has long backed the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation diplomatically, but this is the first known U.S. government financial contribution to the organization, which uses private for-profit U.S. military and logistics firms to transport aid into the Palestinian enclave for distribution at so-called secure sites. Since Israel lifted an 11-week aid blockade on Gaza on May 19, allowing limited U.N. deliveries to resume, the United Nations says more than 400 Palestinians have been killed seeking aid from both the U.N. and GHF operations. Earlier this month, GHF halted aid deliveries for a day as it pressed Israel to boost civilian safety near its distribution sites after dozens of Palestinians seeking aid were killed. It says there have been no incidents at its sites. The foundation's executive director, Johnnie Moore, an evangelical preacher who was a White House adviser in the first Trump administration, said in a post on X on Thursday that the group has delivered more than 46 million meals to Gazans since it began its operations in May. Some U.S. officials opposed giving any U.S. funds to the foundation over concerns about violence near aid distribution sites, the GHF's inexperience and the involvement of the for-profit U.S. logistics and private military firms, four sources told Reuters earlier this week. The United States could approve additional monthly grants of $30 million for the GHF, two sources said, all of whom spoke on condition of anonymity. In approving the U.S. funding for the GHF, the sources said the State Department exempted the foundation, which has not publicly disclosed its finances, from an audit usually required for groups receiving USAID grants for the first time. There is an acute shortage of food and other basic supplies after the nearly two-year military campaign by Israel that has displaced most of Gaza's two million inhabitants.

Iran says nuclear sites ‘badly damaged' by US and Israeli strikes
Iran says nuclear sites ‘badly damaged' by US and Israeli strikes

Ya Libnan

time4 hours ago

  • Ya Libnan

Iran says nuclear sites ‘badly damaged' by US and Israeli strikes

This satellite image provided by Maxar Technologies shows the Isfahan nuclear technology center in Iran after US strikes, Sunday, June 22, 2025. © Maxar Technologies via AP Iran's nuclear facilities were 'badly damaged' by US and Israeli strikes, foreign ministry spokesperson Esmaeil Baqaei told Al Jazeera English on Wednesday. The statement contradicted reports from the US media which on Tuesday had cited a classified US intelligence report that found the strikes had set Iran's nuclear programme back by only a matter of months. Read our blog to see how the day's events unfolded

Guterres says UN's founding principles under "unprecedented attack"
Guterres says UN's founding principles under "unprecedented attack"

MTV Lebanon

time5 hours ago

  • MTV Lebanon

Guterres says UN's founding principles under "unprecedented attack"

UN Secretary-General António Guterres on Thursday condemned unprecedented "attacks" on the principles of the United Nations, in a speech marking the 80th anniversary of the signing of the organization's founding charter. "Let us be clear: today, we are witnessing attacks on the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations on an unprecedented scale," Guterres told member states. He pointed to "the threat or use of force against sovereign states, violations of international law, including international humanitarian law and international human rights law, the targeting of civilians and civilian infrastructure, the exploitation of food and water, and the erosion of human rights," without naming any party responsible for these violations. Guterres continued, "We are also observing a familiar pattern: adhering to the Charter when it suits us, and ignoring it when it doesn't. The UN Charter is not optional. It is not an a la carte menu."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store