
A significant diplomatic shift is underway in Europe. In a matter of weeks, two of the continent's most influential powers — France and the UK — have signalled their intent to formally recognise the State of Palestine. Besides, 14 other Western nations have called on countries worldwide to move to recognise a Palestinian state. While such recognition has long been demanded by a majority of the world's nations, its adoption by Western powers marks a notable departure from the decades-old policy. Belated as it may be, this shift could have far-reaching implications for the Palestinians' pursuit of justice and statehood.
French President Emmanuel Macron has stated that France will recognise Palestine at the UN General Assembly in September. Just days later, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer added urgency to the matter, telling his cabinet that the UK would follow suit — unless Israel takes "substantive steps" to end its war on Gaza. Starmer was also careful to reaffirm that "there is no equivalence between Israel and Hamas" and reiterated the UK's demands of Hamas: that it must release all hostages, sign a ceasefire, disarm, and accept that it will play no role in the future governance of Gaza. Both the French and British announcements, as well as the recognition call from 14 other Western nations, come amid deepening tensions.
The war has already killed tens of thousands, displaced millions and left Gaza's civilian infrastructure in ruins. Aid convoys have been attacked, and access to food and medicine remains dangerously limited. That such developments have also drawn criticism from Israel's traditional allies points to a growing disillusionment with a conflict that has long been treated as an intractable exception to international norms.
Recognition, in itself, does not bring peace. It does not end occupation or stop military aggression. But it does serve as a powerful political statement - that the international community can no longer justify its inaction with platitudes about timing and negotiations.
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