Last Opportunity to End Unprecedented Genocide in Palestine (original) (raw)
Related papers
Fragile hopes [for peace in Gaza]
The News, 2024
The acceptance and execution of the three-tier peace plan [for Gaza] depends on the political will of the Biden administration. It is a Catch-22 situation for the US president. If he is able to get the peace plan implemented in the coming weeks, his ratings may improve; in case he fails to make peace between Palestine and Israel, his chances to win against a belligerent Trump will suffer a setback.
Resolving the Israel-Palestine Conundrum - A New Era
FOGGS Papers (Foundation for Global Governance & Sustainability, Brussels), 2024
America, and perforce the world, is entering a new political era, faced not just with Trump 2.0, but Trumpism as a broad movement now with democratic legitimacy entrenched by unprecedented electoral strength, and with a “magafied” Supreme Court, and probably some Project 2025 influence, likely to alter the fundamentals of American politics – and much of the West - for decades to come, perhaps a generation. Ironically, this is heralded as we marked the 35th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall on 9 November. But this is a November of many other anniversaries: the Balfour Declaration in 1917, and the suspension of the UN Trusteeship system in November 1994. So rather than assume full-scale isolationism by the incoming Trump régime, we should address this new self-centered conservatism with strategic thinking, and fast, starting with resolving the Israel-Palestine challenge. The way forward should be locked-in now, both for the sake of the lives of Israelis and Palestinians, peace in the region, effective multilateralism, and perhaps even the legitimacy and survival of the United Nations, and its Pact for the Future, and the generations to come. There is a way forward. Carpe diem!
CHARTING A NEW COURSE Overcoming the stalemate in Gaza
This report was initiated by members of the Association of International Development Agencies (AIDA). Signatories to this report include AIDA members and members of other regional coordination networks. Suleiman built a small one-room shelter for his family using the rubble of his house, which was bombed in August 2014. 'This was the only solution for us. Life is getting even more unbearable. We are hoping for one thing: reconstruction. But honestly, I don't know if I should keep In 2014, after unprecedented destruction and suffering in Gaza, international donors pledged $3.5bn and a change in approach. Six months later, reconstruction and recovery have barely begun, there has been no accountability for violations of international law, and Gaza remains cut off from the West Bank. This paper outlines an achievable course of action to address the root causes of the recurrent conflict and put international engagement with Gaza on the right course.
Xavier Pons Rafols, 2024
The purpose of this essay/editorial - closed on 8 January 2024 - is to formulate as fully as possible, although necessarily provisional, an approach from the perspective of International Law to the war in Gaza that began a little over three months ago, and more generally to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict that has lasted at least seventy-five years, with the creation of the state of Israel, the first Arab-Israeli war and the Nakba to which the Palestinian people have been condemned. In other words, this is a brief international legal approach to a moment of crisis and intensification of a historic conflict that, in these months, has been a real turning point in the endless cycle of violence that has plagued the region for decades. To this end, this essay addresses various issues of international legal relevance in relation to the current war in Gaza, such as the conceptualisation of international terrorism; the justification of legitimate self-defence used by Israel and, in particular, the conditions required by International Law for its exercise; as well as the possible commission of serious crimes of international concern - war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide -, the applicability of International Humanitarian Law and the call for individual criminal responsibility in this context. This essay also analyses the response of the international community organized in the United Nations to the current war in Gaza, highlighting the insufficient action of the Security Council during these months of acute crisis, the majority reaction of the General Assembly calling for a cessation of hostilities, and the repeated and futile humanitarian appeals made by its Secretary-General. In order to place the current crisis in the perspective of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, there are also briefly discussed the historical and political context, in particular the results of the occupation of territories in the Six-Day War of 1967, the consistent position of the General Assembly on the Palestinian question, the United Nations action on human rights in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, as well as the Security Council’s action on these Territories and the proposed peace initiatives, in particular with regard to the two-State solution. The essay concludes with concluding remarks and an epilogue where, in view of the current humanitarian catastrophe and the protracted nature of the conflict, calling for an immediate cessation of hostilities and the release of hostages, and for the current phase of the conflict to become a genuine turning point that can be grasped as an opportunity for peace in the region.
The threshold of intent: Closing in on a 'final solution' in Gaza
Canadian Dimension, 2025
The impending famine in Gaza is the result of deliberate, conscious, informed choices, and nobody in the Israeli or American governments can be in any doubt as to where they are leading. We are on the threshold of a ‘final solution’ to the Palestinian problem. Ladies and gentlemen, this way for your ambient genocide.
2006
The victory of Hamas, coming after the demise of the two historical protagonists in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict ―Arafat and Sharon― marks, in all probability, the beginning of a critical and possibly final phase in the Palestinian problem. However, to form a comprehensive view of the situation in the Middle East as it develops today, we have to refer to the three main parameters of the Palestinian problem which will determine its final outcome: the transnational elite, the Zionist movement and the Palestinian national liberation movement.
The Middle East Conflict after the Gaza War
2009
The strategic effects of the Gaza War have been remarkably small. Israel’s strategy of isolating Hamas continues to aim at short-term conflict management and fails to open up new prospects for resolving the Middle East conflict. While the Palestinians are striving to overcome their division, they will find it very difficult to formulate and implement a common strategy towards Israel. The US and the EU have also contributed to the convoluted political situation in the Middle East, but have so far not been able to agree on a new course in their relations with Hamas.