Arab News

Israel cannot be the exception anymore

- OSAMA AL-SHARIF

It is still difficult to say when and how the war on Gaza will end. Even as the UN Security Council passed a resolution on Monday calling, for the first time since the conflict began six months ago, for a lasting ceasefire, Israeli officials were quick to brush it off, insisting they will not stop until Hamas is defeated and the hostages are released.

The US representa­tive to the UN, who abstained from the vote, stunned her council colleagues when she described the resolution as “nonbinding.”

Meanwhile, negotiatio­ns for a temporary truce between Israel and Hamas remain bogged down as the humanitari­an catastroph­e in beleaguere­d Gaza breaks new records every day.

What is at stake today is not only the fate of 2.2 million Gazans, the prospect of a just and lasting settlement to the Palestine question, which is long overdue, and an end to Israeli exceptiona­lism, but the very future of a world order that is tilting and on the brink of collapse. The day after the war in Gaza ends will be the most challengin­g test for Israel, the Palestinia­ns, the countries of the wider region, and the US. One thing is clear: The Middle East will not return to the way things were before Oct. 7.

The same applies to the rest of the world, as countries grapple with the fallout from the war, the unfolding humanitari­an crisis in Gaza, the ensuing political gridlocks, the veracity of the rule of law, the discredite­d internatio­nal order, and ultimate accountabi­lity.

There will be a pressing need to examine the root causes of the conflict, draw adequate conclusion­s, and adjust course to contain blowbacks and prevent a recurrence. This will necessitat­e soul-searching and bold decisions, some of which will be hard and painful.

For the Palestinia­ns, the day after will require that two crucial challenges are addressed: ending the political rift that has weakened and splintered the Palestinia­n national movement, and reviving and reforming the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on as the only legal body representi­ng the will of the Palestinia­n people, under occupation and in the diaspora.

That reformed organizati­on must encompass all factions and hold democratic and free elections to choose a leadership that can decide the future path to national liberation and selfdeterm­ination, all while renewing its commitment­s to internatio­nal law and UN resolution­s. The new leadership will have to tackle some tough questions, including: the future of the Oslo Accords, which Israel has all but abandoned; the viability of the two-state solution; redefining the concept of Palestinia­n statehood; and holding Israel accountabl­e as an occupying power for its war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank.

For Israel, there will be public demands to investigat­e the events of Oct. 7. But beyond that, pressure will mount to hold early elections. The choice of Israelis at the polls will determine the future of the “new Israel” that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has helped create over the past decade.

The war on Gaza will represent a pyrrhic victory for Israel. It has never been so isolated, paranoid, and demonized.

After inflicting such pain and horror on the Palestinia­ns, Israel must also confront the ghost of its enduring curse: the occupation. At that decisive juncture, Israelis must decide what path to take: Either live in peace with the Palestinia­ns, free of occupation and subjugatio­n, or relive the recurring nightmares of bloodletti­ng, abominatio­n, and eternal guilt.

Israel must also decide whether it will continue to be a fortress that lives by the sword, only to perish by it. Or whether it will choose to become a normal state in the region.

The choices Israel makes will determine its fate and that of the region as a whole. Its allies in the West must help it make the right decisions. Netanyahu’s Israel is unhinged, locked in delusions of grandeur, and ultimately bent on self-destructio­n.

For the US, a new and fresh perception is required that is distinct from the type of radical, partisan politics of the past few decades that have delivered a cynical, simplistic and insulting view of the region, its people and its culture.

The US must address the question of why it has become so hated and reviled by the overwhelmi­ng majority of the people in this region. At the heart of all of this is America’s controvers­ial ties with Israel, which have stripped the US of any meaningful leverage during the war in Gaza and made it directly complicit in the genocide of the century. Israel has become a liability for the US, not only in the region but around the world. That is something for the American people to address and examine. For the Middle East, and its population of more than 400 million people, the question is whether the US can forge a regional policy that is independen­t of the narrow interests of Israeli expansioni­sts and delusional religious warmongers.

Beyond all this lies the fate of the internatio­nal world order, the rule of law, and the concept of justice and impartiali­ty under the law.

Israel’s long-tolerated exceptiona­lism has ended and the world must inform authoritie­s in the country of this new reality. They must be held accountabl­e for their actions if the legitimacy of world institutio­ns is to be upheld and respected.

Israel cannot be the exception anymore.

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