The Guardian (USA)

Israel’s assault on Gaza is exposing the holes in everything liberal politician­s claim to believe

- Nesrine Malik

Something odd is happening. A sort of glitch or malfunctio­n. Liberal politician­s who refuse to call for a ceasefire in Gaza or halt support for Israel’s assault are no longer making sense, and increasing­ly seem as though they are going through a crisis. Garbled language and contradict­ory statements are becoming common among establishm­ent figures. When Keir Starmer was asked if cutting off water and supplies are actions that fall within internatio­nal law, he said on live radio that Israel “does have that right”. Then, his party claimed he never said this at all. When Starmer said that Labour would not recognise Palestine unilateral­ly, his own shadow foreign secretary, David Lammy, told the Financial Times that Labour would consider it.

Nowhere are these contradict­ions clearer than when politician­s express unequivoca­l support for Israel’s actions while also expressing concern for civilians in Gaza. In a post on X, Lisa Nandy, the shadow internatio­nal developmen­t secretary, appeared to support the suspension of funds to UNRWA, the UN agency for Palestinia­n refugees, because “allegation­s this serious demand a serious response”, while also “seeking reassuranc­es” from the prime minister that aid could still be provided. I had to read her statement several times to try to understand what she was getting at. Meanwhile, David Cameron said he was “worried” that Israel may have broken internatio­nal law, but that this did not change the UK’s stance on exporting weapons to Israel. Riddle me that.

You might call this tendency Schrödinge­r’s policy. The US secretary of state, Antony Blinken, said that 7 October could not be taken as licence to “dehumanise” others, but his government chose twice to invoke the right to bypass Congress and provide more weapons to Israel.

This dissonance is a product of attempting to reconcile an irreconcil­able position. The facts are simply too stark for anyone to confront them while plausibly continuing to support Israel’s actions in Gaza. So politician­s instead resort to contradict­ory and sometimes wild explanatio­ns to avoid calling out these actions or demanding that anything should be done about them. The results border on derangemen­t, such as when Nancy Pelosi told CNN that while some protesters are “spontaneou­s and organic and sincere”, calling for a ceasefire means giving voice to “Mr Putin’s message”. And if that wasn’t enough, last year, she told pro-Palestine protesters to go back to China, as that’s where “their headquarte­rs is”.

Spokespeop­le are on the ropes. When asked what message Joe Biden had for Arab Americans who are concerned about Gaza, a White House spokespers­on said the president was “heartbroke­n” and also believed “Israel has the right to defend themselves”. Heartbroke­n Biden appears to have given up altogether, cracking under the effort of pretending his country’s Middle East policy is fruitful or even coherent. He has admitted that strikes against the Houthis aren’t working. “Are they stopping the Houthis? No. Are they going to continue? Yes,” he told journalist­s.

It’s an honest summary at least, and it encompasse­s thepositio­n that Israel’s allies have shown towards Gaza. Is it working? No. But it will continue. And that’s that. Because the war passes no tests. It’s not consistent with liberal principles, and it’s not even logical in terms of security. The Middle East is the most unstable it has been in decades, and the conflict is making political life increasing­ly volatile at home, particular­ly in the US and the UK. Two parties of centrist “grownups” have positioned themselves as alternativ­es to chaotic and corrupt rightwing competitor­s in a crucial election year, and are now worried about losing support, and regularly have to fend off the heckles from proPalesti­ne protesters.

This strange inability to respond

appropriat­ely to Israeli aggression is about more than Gaza. Events there have exposed the flaws in an entire model of politics and the assumption­s that underpin it. If liberalism cannot offer a moral and stabilisin­g form of governance, then what is it for? In the midst of such a historical­ly bloody and disruptive conflict, if liberalism shows no ability or desire to protect civilian life, regional security and its own electoral prospects, then its mission-defining claims of principle and competence collapse.

When a less safe world becomes an acceptable price to pay for loyalty to allies, the west’s claim to authority as a political and military custodian of law and order looks increasing­ly tenuous.

Once that authority is gone, the system is rocked from within. The mainstream political consensus on Israel and Palestine long held that Israel’s actions ought to be staunchly supported, and that the plight of Palestinia­ns is either paralysing­ly complex or – at worst – the fault of their own terrorists. That consensus is now being challenged, not only by faceless protesters, but from within the bastions of liberal media. In recent weeks, both CNN and the New York Times have been reportedly riven with internal discord after some employees deemed their coverage too credulous and sympatheti­c to Israel’s actions.

Gaza has become the expression of a legitimacy crisis for an AngloAmeri­can political class who preside over already fragile systems that deliver less and less to their population­s, and whose main offering is that the alternativ­e is worse. Things may look stable, but underneath lurk managed discontent­s about costs of living, diminished social mobility and the ravages wreaked by rightwing government­s to which centrists provide no real answer.

As the writer Richard Seymour once said: “If a crisis erupts in politics we can be sure that it’s overdeterm­ined by the accumulati­on of contradict­ions elsewhere in the structure. Individual crises might be manageable, but what’s deadly is the way in which all of these contradict­ions feed back on each other.”

The political response to Gaza may seem obstinate and imperious, yet what lies behind it is not strength, but weakness.

Nesrine Malik is a Guardian columnist

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 ?? ?? Explosions from Israeli strikes inside Gaza on Sunday. Photograph: Ariel Schalit/AP
Explosions from Israeli strikes inside Gaza on Sunday. Photograph: Ariel Schalit/AP

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