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Mapped: The growing global support for Palestinian statehood

Mapped: The growing global support for Palestinian statehood

The Journal4 days ago
MOMENTUM IS BUILDING behind Palestinian statehood, as a growing number of Western powers signal their intent to formally recognise it.
France, the United Kingdom and Canada have all announced plans to recognise a Palestinian state, a major policy shift for the key US allies, joining more than 140 countries that already do.
Their decisions come amid worsening famine conditions in Gaza, as starvation is rampant across the territory.
While recognition of Palestine is not new among nations in Africa, Asia, and Latin America, these latest developments mark a significant shift within the West, particularly among G7 and NATO countries that have historically aligned with Israel.
Growing recognition mapped
Recognition by these major Western powers would mark the first such move by any member of the G7, and would increase pressure on others, including Germany, Italy and the United States, to reconsider their stance.
France plans to formalise recognition in September.
The UK has said it will proceed unless Israel agrees to a ceasefire. Canada has tied its decision to democratic reforms by the Palestinian Authority, including elections in the West Bank that exclude Hamas.
Israel and the United States have strongly opposed the announcements, arguing they 'reward Hamas' and undermine ceasefire efforts. US President Donald Trump warned Canada that its decision could threaten a future trade deal.
Palestinian statehood has long been recognised by much of the Global South, as well as by key G20 members including China, India, Brazil and South Africa.
In Europe, support has grown steadily over the past year.
Ireland, Spain and Norway formally recognised Palestine in May 2024 in a joint move, and Slovenia, Malta and others are signalling similar intentions.
Ireland is
among 15 nations that have called for the world to recognise a Palestinian state
and reiterated commitment for a two-state solution at the High-level International Conference which took place in New York this week.
The joint foreign ministers statement expressed the call for a ceasefire, concern over the high number of civilian casualties and humanitarian situation in Gaza, and calls on countries across the world to recognise the state of Palestine.
France's minister for foreign affairs, Jean-Noel Barrot, posted the letter to his X account alongside the message: 'In New York, along with 14 other countries, France is launching a collective appeal: we express our desire to recognise the State of Palestine and invite those who have not yet done so to join us.'
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The statement is backed by Ireland, Andorra, Australia, Canada, Finland, France, Iceland, Luxembourg, Malta, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, San Marino, Slovenia, and Spain.
Palestine state recognition
Palestine currently holds non-member observer status at the United Nations.
In 2024, a US veto at the Security Council blocked an attempt to grant full UN membership, despite 12 countries voting in favour.
Proponents of recognition argue that statehood is essential for advancing a credible two-state solution.
As one senior Egyptian official told the New York Times, 'The Israelis used to claim they had no partner for peace. The problem now is that there is no partner for peace in Israel.'
What does recognition mean?
Palestine exists, and does not. It has embassies, Olympic teams, and wide international support, but lacks the basic features of a fully functioning state: borders, sovereignty and control of its territory.
The Palestinian Authority has limited authority in parts of the West Bank under Israeli occupation.
In Gaza, also considered occupied, Israel is waging devastating attacks.
Palestinians continue to demand East Jerusalem as their capital, while Israel maintains control across the region.
In practical terms, recognising a Palestinian state changes little on the ground.
But symbolically, it matters.
After decades of stalled diplomacy, expanding Israeli settlements and cycles of violence, many now see recognition as a long-overdue statement, not a solution in itself, but a step towards one.
If the UK and France recognise a Palestinian state, it also means that four out of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council (France, the UK, Russia and China) will speak with a single voice on the issue.
This would effectively isolate the US and their support for Israel, in theory.
Lastly, there could be implications for the International Criminal Court (ICC), which issued warrants for the arrest of Netanyahu and former Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant in November for 'crimes against humanity and war crimes' in Gaza.
Netanyahu has called the charges 'outrageous' and the international court an 'enemy of humanity.'
Experts say the recognition of Palestine could have legal consequences in the context of the ICC jurisdiction.
However, France has said it would not arrest Netanyahu and Gallant because it would be incompatible with international legal obligations concerning immunities granted to states not party to the ICC, such as Israel.
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