France to recognise Palestinian statehood defying US-Israel backlash
In a contraversial diplomatic move, French President Emmanuel Macron announced Thursday that France will formally recognise the state of Palestine this September at the United Nations General Assembly.
Sharing the news via social media platform X, Macron described the step as part of France's historic commitment to a 'just and lasting peace' in the Middle East.
'I have decided that France will recognise the state of Palestine,' Macron wrote in a letter to Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas, which he also made public.
'I will make this solemn announcement at the United Nations General Assembly next September.'
Israel's war and settlements a strategy to block Palestinian state: legal expert
Backlash from Israel, US
This declaration positions France as the first major Western power to take such a step – potentially setting the stage for a broader shift in international recognition.
Until now, most countries that have recognised Palestine tended to be smaller nations with more critical stances on Israeli policy – including Ireland, Spain and Norway
Unsurprisingly, the move has triggered sharp backlash from both Israel and the United States.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu condemned the decision, calling it a 'reward for terror' and warning that a Palestinian state under current conditions would threaten Israel's existence.
Israeli Defence Minister Israel Katz went further, branding the decision 'a disgrace' and vowing to resist any efforts to establish a Palestinian state that could compromise Israeli security.
Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Marco Rubio echoed similar concerns. Labeling Macron's decision 'reckless,' he said it bolstered Hamas and undermined hopes for peace.
'It is a slap in the face to the victims of October 7th,' he said in his own statement on X.
Israel slams French plan to recognise Palestinian state as a 'prize for terror'
Push for a two-state solution
However, Macron appears undeterred. French officials have indicated that the announcement is designed to give fresh impetus to the long-stalled two-state solution, and to galvanise other nations into action.
About 40 foreign ministers are expected in New York next week for a diplomatic conference aimed at discussing the way forward.
France hopes its position will provide a framework for those countries that are on the fence about recognition.
The path to this announcement hasn't been smooth. A planned UN conference co-hosted by France and Saudi Arabia in June was postponed under US pressure, especially after regional tensions spiked during the brief Israel-Iran air war.
The event has since been rescheduled as a ministerial gathering in late July, with another high-level meeting planned for the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in September.
In thanking France, Palestinian Authority Vice President Hussein Al Sheikh said Macron's move 'reflects France's commitment to international law and its support for the Palestinian people's rights to self-determination.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
18 minutes ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Stanford Daily sues Trump administration over deportation threats
Stanford's student newspaper sued the Trump administration on Wednesday for threatening to deport any noncitizen who criticizes Israel or U.S. foreign policy, saying the government is violating freedom of speech and intimidating campus journalists into censoring their own articles. 'In the United States of America, no one should fear a midnight knock on the door for voicing the wrong opinion,' lawyers for the Stanford Daily, the university's independent 133-year-old publication, wrote in a lawsuit filed in federal court in San Jose. They said staff writers holding legal U.S. visas 'are declining assignments related to the conflict in the Middle East, worried that even reporting on the conflict will endanger their immigration status.' One editor resigned from the newspaper, another editor and present and former reporters have asked to have their articles removed from the website and 'international students have also largely stopped talking to Stanford Daily journalists,' the suit said. It was filed a day after Stanford officials announced that they might lay off 363 non-teaching employees this fall because of a $750 million tax increase imposed by President Donald Trump's budget bill. The lawsuit is among multiple legal challenges to the Trump administration's attacks on pro-Palestinian protesters and their universities. A central issue, cited by the newspaper's lawyers, is Secretary of State Marco Rubio's claim that he can order deportation of any noncitizen for statements he considers 'anti-American' or 'anti-Israel.' Rubio cited a provision of the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 that allows the secretary of state to revoke a noncitizen's legal status if the secretary decides the person's 'beliefs, statements or associations … compromise a compelling United States foreign policy interest.' He invoked that provision against Mahmoud Khalil, a legal U.S. resident and pro-Palestinian activist at Columbia University who was arrested in March and held in a Louisiana jail for 104 days before a federal judge ordered his release. Other campus activists have also been jailed, and Stanford reported that the visas of six students were revoked less than two weeks after Rubio's announcement in March. The lawsuit said Rubio's claim that a student's criticism of Israel harms a 'compelling United States foreign policy interest' is questionable — but regardless, his actions violate the Constitution's First Amendment, which protects noncitizens under a 1945 Supreme Court ruling. 'The First Amendment cements America's promise that the government may not subject a speaker to disfavored treatment because those in power do not like his or her message,' wrote the attorneys, Marc Van Der Hout of San Francisco and Conor Fitzpatrick of the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. They asked a federal judge for an injunction that would halt the threats of deportation against critics of Israel or U.S. foreign policy. Tricia McLaughlin, spokesperson for the Department of Homeland Security in the Trump administration, called the suit 'baseless.' 'DHS takes its role in removing threats to the public and our communities seriously, and the idea that enforcing federal law in that regard constitutes some kind of prior restraint on speech is laughable,' McLaughlin said in a statement. She said the United States has 'no room' for 'the rest of the world's terrorist sympathizers.'


Chicago Tribune
18 minutes ago
- Chicago Tribune
Stanford paper sues Trump administration over deportation fears
Stanford University's independent student newspaper sued Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem, citing fears of deportation for noncitizen reporters at the Stanford Daily. Two of the Stanford Daily's writers, who are international students, say that they have refrained from reporting on campus protests, vigils and other events related to Israel's war against Hamas in Gaza out of fears that their visas would be revoked. The students, who are not identified, say that creates a chilling effect on their free speech rights. 'Writers present on student visas are declining assignments related to the conflict in the Middle East, worried that even reporting on the conflict will endanger their lawful immigration status,' according to the lawsuit, filed by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression in federal court in San Jose, California. The Departments of State and Homeland Security didn't immediately respond to requests to comment. The lawsuit challenges a section of immigration law that the government has said allows it to deport noncitizens if the Secretary of State determines them to pose a threat to U.S. foreign policy. That's the same law that the government is using as it attempts to deport several students who participated in pro-Palestinian protests on US campuses, including Columbia graduate Mahmoud Khalil. 'Secretary of State Marco Rubio and the Trump administration are trying to turn the inalienable human right of free speech into a privilege contingent upon the whims of a federal bureaucrat, triggering deportation proceedings against noncitizens residing lawfully in this country for their protected political speech regarding American and Israeli foreign policy,' the complaint argues. The case is Stanford Daily v. Rubio, Case No. 25-cv-06618, US District Court, Northern District of California (San Jose). More stories like this are available on

Wall Street Journal
19 minutes ago
- Wall Street Journal
WSJ Opinion: Israel Considers Reoccupying Gaza as the Humanitarian Crisis Continues
Israel contemplates reoccupying Gaza, but the move could lead to being responsible for millions of Palestinian lives and the possibility of Hamas returning to power. How can Benjamin Netanyahu raise the pressure on Hamas to accept a deal? Photo: Monica Espitia