The National - News

It’s time to leave the island of political fantasy

▶ Using an EU meeting about Gaza to push facile ideas shows the need for everyone to get real

-

It is difficult to tell if Israeli Foreign Minister Israel Katz’s meeting with more than two dozen EU counterpar­ts in Brussels on Monday was a tactic designed to obfuscate the brutal realities of his government’s actions in Gaza, or if it was rather the moment when some of the wilder thinking in Israeli political circles was exposed to a serious – and understand­ably incredulou­s – audience.

The EU’s High Commission­er for Foreign Affairs, Josep Borrell, pulled no punches, effectivel­y accusing Mr Katz of wasting the 27 foreign ministers’ time at a meeting that was held to discuss the Gaza war. During the high-profile event, Mr Katz showed the ministers videos of “an artificial island” and “a railway linking up the Middle East with India”, Mr Borrell said after 10 hours of subsequent meetings with Arab and EU diplomats.

Palestinia­n Foreign Affairs Minister Riyad Al Maliki, who held separate consultati­ons with EU counterpar­ts and whose Palestinia­n Authority is under pressure to reform, reacted with scorn to the island proposal put forward by Mr Katz: a $5 billion structure to be built off the coast of Palestine with internatio­nal funds that would provide Gaza’s people with essential services – but be under Israeli security control.

“Those who had the idea” of creating an artificial island may go and live on it if they wish, Mr Al Maliki said.

It is alarming to see such an absence of seriousnes­s about ending a crisis in Gaza that has cost more than 25,000 Palestinia­n lives, risks the safety of the remaining Israeli hostages being held there and that is starting fires from Lebanon and Syria to the Red Sea, Iraq, Iran and Pakistan. More than three months on from the Hamas attack of October 7 and the start of the war that followed, much of the political, diplomatic and military reaction to it lacks sufficient strategic depth and is largely coloured by short-sightednes­s instead.

This can be seen in the continuing crisis in the Red Sea, where a fortnight of American and British air strikes on Houthi targets seems to offer little more than partial protection from the Iran-backed rebels’ attacks on internatio­nal shipping. Increased militarisa­tion without credible diplomatic strategies to resolve the core problem has little to offer in terms of lasting de-escalation in this vital waterway.

Moreover, it is remarkable that in all this time, very few comprehens­ive proposals for peace have gained traction. The war in Gaza is having global repercussi­ons, and yet the realistic solutions being put forward are vanishingl­y rare. Instead, leading figures on all sides are either engaging in bad faith or sticking to maximalist demands.

It is time to get serious. There are mediators, national government­s and regional organisati­ons that can help find a way forward. But every chance for engagement that is passed up means more death in Gaza, more danger and isolation for Israel and an increased likelihood of regional clashes in which everybody loses. Sticking-plaster solutions will only go so far. It is time to leave the island of political fantasies behind and step back into the real world.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates