
EU hardens tone on Israel
WITH reports of acute suffering in Gaza flooding the airwaves, European Union leaders have toughened their tone on Israel — but the bloc will need to bridge deep divisions to move from rhetoric to a real-world impact on the conflict.
The shift has been most noticeable from key power Germany, one of Israel's staunchest allies in the world, its loyalty rooted in the trauma of the Holocaust.
After an Israeli strike killed dozens, including many children, in a Gaza school-turned-shelter on Monday, German Chancellor Friedrich Merz declared he "no longer understands" Israel's objectives in the war-ravaged Palestinian enclave.
The way in which the civilian population has been affected... can no longer be justified by a fight against Hamas , he said.
Berlin's stern new tone found an echo on Tuesday in Brussels, where the German head of the European Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, denounced as "abhorrent" and "disproportionate" the past days' attacks on civilian infrastructure in Gaza.
An EU diplomat called such language both "strong and unheard of" coming from the commission chief, among the first to rally to Israel's side in the wake of the Oct 7, 2023 Hamas attacks that triggered the Gaza war.
The explanation? "Merz has moved the dial" in Brussels, said one EU official.
"There's been a very notable shift over recent weeks," agreed Julien Barnes-Dacey, head of the Middle East programme at the European Council on Foreign Relations — arguing it reflects a "sea change of European public opinion".
Translating talk into action is another matter, however.
Germany, the main supplier of weapons to Israel after the United States, this week rebuffed calls to cut arms sales to Israel.
On Tuesday however, in a barely veiled threat, its foreign minister warned Israel against crossing a line.
"We defend the rule of law everywhere and also international humanitarian law," said Johann Wadephul.
"Where we see that it is being violated, we will of course intervene and certainly not supply weapons that would enable further violations."
The EU has long struggled to have an impact on the Mideast conflict due to long-standing divisions between countries that back Israel and those seen as more pro-Palestinian.
Last week, in a milestone of sorts, the bloc launched a review to determine whether Israel is complying with human rights principles laid out in its association agreement with the EU — a move backed by 17 of 27 member states.
EU top diplomat Kaja Kallas said on Wednesday she hoped to present options on the next steps to foreign ministers at a June 23 meeting in Brussels.
Suspending the EU-Israel accord would require unanimity among member states — seen by diplomats as virtually unthinkable.
Berlin was among the EU capitals that opposed even reviewing the deal, as did fellow economic heavyweight Italy.
But Barnes-Dacey sees "the possibility of a qualified majority of states imposing some restrictions" under the trade component of the agreement.
The EU is Israel's biggest commercial partner, with €42.6 billion traded in goods last year. Trade in services reached €25.6 billion in 2023.
For Kristina Kausch, a Middle East expert at the German Marshall Fund think tank, it is too soon to speak of a European policy shift.
"Even the review of the association agreement is only a review," she said.
"What counts is the action."
Momentum to ramp up pressure is growing by the day, however, spearheaded by the most vocal critics of Israel's assault, such as Spain, Belgium and Ireland.
"My personal view is that it very much looks like genocide," said Belgium Foreign Minister Maxime Prevot.
"I don't know what further horrors need to take place before we dare use the word."
Accusations that Israel is committing "genocide" in Gaza have been levelled by rights groups, United Nations officials and a growing number of countries.
One tangible next step could be the broader recognition of Palestinian statehood — with France seeking to move forward on the matter ahead of a UN conference in June.
"Will that have an immediate impact? Probably not," said Barnes-Dacey.
"But I do think it will have an impact if Israel knows that it no longer has the free path that it's had for so long."
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