“A time comes when silence is betrayal.”
-Martin Luther King Jr.’s words during the Vietnam War resonate powerfully with the EU’s paralysis and complicity.
Twenty-five countries, including UK, France, call for immediate end to Gaza war
Europe's Middle East Paralysis: A Union Divided, Dealing with Criminals in Power
By Adaptation Guide – Disaster Files: Geopolitics Edition
The European Union proudly calls itself more than the sum of its parts. In Brussels, it is hailed as a compromise engine, a supra-national alliance that transforms 27 states’ divergent ideas into collective policy.
But that noble vision crumbles when it reaches the powder keg of the Middle East. There, Europe is not a union — it is a scattered field of irreconcilable historical guilt, selective empathy, geopolitical impotence, and moral failure.
United in Words, Paralyzed in Action
When Hamas launched a brutal terror attack in autumn 2023 and Israel responded with relentless bombings in Gaza, EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell criticized the indiscriminate Israeli bombardments.
In response, some diplomats from Germany and Austria simply shrugged: “Well, he’s Spanish.”
Spain, after all, is seen as naturally sympathetic to the Palestinian cause — a nation whose post-colonial identity still echoes with anti-imperialist tones.
Meanwhile, German Commission President Ursula von der Leyen rushed to express unconditional solidarity with Israel.
Not just Germany, but also Austria, Hungary, and Romania — countries historically complicit in the Holocaust — view support for Israel not as policy, but as Staatsräson (reason of state).
This is not diplomacy. This is inherited guilt masquerading as moral clarity.
Meanwhile, nations like Ireland, Sweden, and Slovenia — shaped more by their struggles against colonialism than by complicity in genocide — express solidarity with stateless Palestinians.
Most of the EU remains awkwardly wedged between these camps, paralyzed by consensus rules that demand unanimity where none exists.
Ideals vs Interests
But here’s the thing: the EU’s Middle East dilemma isn’t just moral or historical. It’s strategic.
The conflicts in Gaza and Iran directly threaten EU interests. Red Sea shipping is under siege by Iran-backed militias. A collapse of the Iranian state could unleash another refugee wave towards Europe.
And for over a year, Gaza’s agony has stoked both antisemitism and Islamophobia across European cities — eroding the social fabric of nations already struggling with polarization.
And yet, for all this, the EU remains a bystander. Sweden proposes sanctions on Israeli far-right ministers Bezalel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir — men who have openly called for Gaza’s destruction and Palestinian expulsion. But such sanctions won’t happen.
Why? Because EU sanctions require unanimity, and countries like Hungary block them reflexively. Even suspending the EU-Israel Association Agreement — due to blatant violations of human rights clauses — is dead on arrival.
Empty Declarations, Zero Power
When Iran was attacked by Israel in a shadow war, and when Iran’s nuclear program once again emerged as an existential threat, EU foreign ministers gathered for a video conference. They declared that Iran must never acquire nuclear weapons and that diplomacy is the only answer. But diplomacy without leverage is fantasy.
Estonian Foreign Minister Kaja Kallas spoke fine words, but the EU has no teeth to back them. No enforcement mechanism. No cohesive strategy. No political will. Just a bureaucratic echo chamber of “statements” and “concerns.”
Contrast this with the Ukraine war. Painful, slow, and riddled with contradictions — yes. But in that case, Europe managed to act, to send aid, to form a stance. On Israel-Palestine? Nothing. The EU is not a geopolitical actor. It is a geopolitical commentator.
And Then There’s Netanyahu
Let’s cut through the polite fiction: one of the central actors in this Middle Eastern drama — Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu — is not just controversial. He is an indicted criminal, still on trial for bribery, fraud, and breach of trust.
Since 2017, Netanyahu has been investigated in Case 1000 and Case 2000 for accepting lavish gifts and attempting to manipulate media coverage through corrupt legislative deals. In 2019, he became the first sitting Israeli prime minister to be formally indicted. If convicted, he faces a decade in prison. Yet this is the man the EU cannot bring itself to criticize in action.
The irony is chilling: Europe, for all its talk of democratic values, is effectively shielding a man under active criminal prosecution — whose government includes ministers calling for ethnic cleansing — while wagging fingers at less friendly regimes.
Democracy Doesn't Excuse Criminality
This isn’t just about Netanyahu. Across the globe, democratically elected leaders — from Modi in India to Erdoğan in Turkey, Orban in Hungary, Trump in the U.S., and Netanyahu in Israel — are weaponizing democracy to shield autocracy. Elections alone do not confer legitimacy. Criminals can win ballots, too.
Netanyahu is not just a man with legal problems. He is the architect of a hardline, increasingly illiberal regime in Israel. His far-right allies openly call for apartheid policies, and his government is presiding over a campaign in Gaza that even European officials privately describe as “collective punishment.” Yet there will be no sanctions, no accountability, and no leverage — just more EU handwringing while the region burns.
Conclusion: A Union of Spectators
The EU is not neutral. It is inert. Its inaction is not diplomacy; it is complicity. Its indecision is not balance; it is paralysis.
As Gaza starves and burns, as Iran teeters, as antisemitism and Islamophobia rise at home, the EU remains a geopolitical toddler — full of opinions, short on action, and terrified of offending any member state’s ghosts.
It is time for Europe to confront an uncomfortable truth: you cannot export stability by appeasing instability. You cannot claim moral high ground while tolerating impunity. And you cannot build peace while protecting politicians whose hands are dirty with both corruption and blood.
This isn’t just about Israel or Palestine. This is about whether Europe can ever be more than a broken mirror — fractured by its past, reflecting nothing but its fear of its own reflection.
Sources:
-
EU Foreign Affairs Council statements, 2023–2025
-
Haaretz, Times of Israel, and Al Jazeera reporting on Netanyahu’s trial
-
Amnesty International & Human Rights Watch reports on Gaza
-
European Council voting records
-
European Parliament debates and resolutions on Israel-Palestine
No comments:
Post a Comment