Posted: 10th February 2025
The USA is essential to a just resolution in Israel/Palestine. But it has long been clear that Washington is not an honest broker. Instead, it consistently clears its initiatives first with the Government of Israel, then tells Palestinian leaders to take it or leave it.
Now a US President has gone much further, openly supporting the ethnic cleansing of 2.2 million Gazan Palestinians. The Balfour Project believes that under President Trump no US-backed “peace initiative” or proposed solution to the conflict will be consistent with international law; the rule of law which the British Government has pledged to uphold. Nor is it likely that Palestinians will be able to exercise their fundamental rights to self-determination and an end to occupation if the US is allowed to act alone.
The United Kingdom played a leading role in setting up the International Criminal Court (ICC) in 1998, to investigate credible evidence of war crimes and hold to account those individuals found to have committed serious breaches of international law. It has acted, for example, against President Putin for his actions in Ukraine.
In relation to Israel and Palestine, however, far from respecting the independence of the Court, the US has imposed sanctions on its Chief Prosecutor and those who provide evidence. Trump’s punitive action against Karim Khan, a distinguished British lawyer, has not evoked even mild protest from the UK Government.
Israel’s 58-year settlement enterprise in East Jerusalem and the rest of the West Bank has long been condemned as illegal by Trump’s predecessors in office and by the UN Security Council. UN Security Council Resolution 2334 (December 2016), which Britain helped draft, obliges all UN member states, including the USA, “to distinguish in their relevant dealings between the territory of the State of Israel and the territories occupied since 1967.”
The International Court of Justice (World Court) Advisory Opinion last year went further, finding the 1967 occupation to be unlawful and specifying a set of concrete actions all states should take to end it.
Comments by President Trump himself and senior officials in his administration however suggest that, within weeks, he is likely to give explicit US endorsement to Israel’s continued unlawful occupation, and even annexation, of the West Bank. For the next four years, he will seek to preserve Israel’s impunity and exceptional treatment, preventing the Security Council from even voicing disapproval of Israel’s actions.
What should our Government do in response?
Our Government is fully aware of these facts and is struggling to reconcile its principles with the wish to appease its most powerful ally; an impossible task. It should acknowledge that dilemma and act accordingly – upholding universal values and promoting British interests, not least our country’s standing in the rest of the world.
The UK should make common cause with like-minded governments in Europe, the Middle East, the Global South and the Commonwealth to adopt policies which uphold international law and offer the prospect of peaceful coexistence between Palestinians and Israelis, based on the right of both to self-determination with mutual security.
Specifically, our Government should now: