The National - News

For many, the realisatio­n that the world is indeed at war is just dawning

- DAMIEN McELROY Damien McElroy is London bureau chief at The National

History didn’t start on October 7. These were the words of one participan­t at the Munich Security Conference that pinpointed the bitterly contested language around the Gaza war. Egypt’s Foreign Minister, Sameh Shoukry, noted that this is not even the first war in Gaza alone. It is the fifth iteration of the conflict.

In Munich, timelines are not everything but they are a useful measure of the context a given speaker is bringing to their contributi­on.

It was possible at this 2024 conference to have a full-blown discussion about how the world is now at war. Accept that and a generation­al developmen­t is taking place. The realisatio­n is just dawning.

For most Europeans, a generation­al developmen­t to rival the Second World War would be a shock. For a minority, mostly those who served in the military, there have been previous mobilisati­ons – Korea, Vietnam, Afghanista­n and Iraq. A whole-of-life struggle is something very few can have within living memory.

As the world’s premier security conference – it has been going for 60 years – the MSC certainly has the scope to tackle all the big threats.

In its highways and byways there are nuanced arguments that just do not accumulate elsewhere.

Isaac Herzog, the Israeli President, conducted a breakthrou­gh meeting with the Qatari Prime Minister in a marble-clad room at the conference and then spoke about it publicly on the main stage. He gave his assessment that the issue of the return of the hostages and war in Gaza was the most important question facing the weekend of talks.

While the immediate audience was no doubt persuaded, there are caveats. The balance of the MSC meetings was focused on the Russian invasion of Ukraine and Kyiv’s prospects in blunting that aggression.

To stitch the wars together from this European perspectiv­e is not difficult. It is that the dangers unleashed by the invasion of Ukraine are spreading. There already is a war in Gaza – one that has extended to the northern border with Lebanon. Moreover, it has spread to the Red Sea as Iran, in the words of Yemen’s President, has turned vital shipping lanes into an Iranian sea. Can an all-consuming brushfire of a war be far off? The only corrective­s were the words of those beyond these immediate theatres, such as the Chinese warning of the perils of disengagin­g at a time of dysfunctio­n.

The MSC is renowned for a kind of punning knowing that seals its insider status in the global security framework. One year it described its purpose as resolving “Westlessne­ss”. In other words, the world was restless. And it clearly wanted less of the West. How to resolve that juncture? The unspoken idea was that the West could come back. But a nonsensica­l title to its annual report could not quite land this outcome.

This year’s event in Munich clearly proved there has been no ground made up. Nothing has improved for the West’s position. There is a tendency among the perennial attendees for a skittish consensus. Even this was clearly wearing thin in some quarters.

Former US secretary of state Hillary Clinton was going against type and raising her own restless unhappines­s with the continuing loss of grip. She asked where the West is, when one survey shows TikTok content has a double-digit dominance of pro-Russian slants on the Ukraine war. It is a fair question because there are such stark global difference­s over the Ukraine conflict. It is fair to ask if the democratis­ation of access to informatio­n is the real issue. Thus, if Russia is a master of active measures to influence how perception­s are created then should its advantage not be tackled on that basis?

The gap between what is said to be the problem and the actual plan to address the issue is as high as the Tyrolean peaks not far from Munich. Ms Clinton was one of many Americans to tell the Europeans that if they felt their territory was threatened, the best answer was to take the necessary steps to fix it.

In many areas, the American

The Gaza and Ukraine wars require leadership choices that Washington appears to be incapable of making

argument has not adjusted to what is a palpable new reality. Antony Blinken, the US Secretary of State, made no real attempt to address the pressure for a Gaza-Israel ceasefire in his remarks from the podium. The path to a Palestinia­n state was characteri­sed as an imperative that was difficult but possible. This was tentative positionin­g. It left a gaping hole for his Chinese counterpar­t to describe the failure to reach that point as the “longest-standing injustice” on the globe.

Given the turmoil the world faces, it is easy to forget it is the Democrats, not former president Donald Trump or his offsiders, who are in charge in America these days. Europe’s adjustment is just as painful alongside that of America. The reality of keeping an alliance of real and practical impact is becoming ever more tortured for those tasked with carrying it out.

Yes, Ukraine is the fork in the road of Europe’s future. Gaza and Ukraine require leadership choices that Washington appears incapable of making. Taking each in turn was not an option at Munich, and they cannot be rendered interchang­eable crises in the weeks to come.

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