
Recognising Palestine isn't a path to peace
It is Hamas which is responsible for the suffering in Gaza. The terrorist organisation has, for years, used its thugs to control international development assistance to enrich its leaders and subdue the population. Its murderous – indeed, genocidal – intent was made manifest on 7 October 2023 when it unleashed an assault on innocent Israelis which resulted in the biggest single loss of Jewish life since the Holocaust. In many cases, Hamas fighters sexually assaulted their victims and gleefully celebrated their deaths. The organisation's leadership exulted in the slaughter and declared that if they could, they would kill and kill again until they had eliminated the Zionist entity.
Since that attack, and the Israeli response, Hamas has demonstrated disdain not only for Jewish lives, but also Palestinian ones. By placing command posts in hospitals, putting children deliberately in harm's way and continuing to use food aid as a weapon against its own people, Hamas has shown they are not noble liberators but barbaric murderers.
And the West's response to this butcher's bill? To give Hamas the political victory of recognising a Palestinian state. This week the chair of parliament's foreign affairs select committee, Emily Thornberry, was the latest MP to call for British recognition of a Palestinian state. She reflects the views of dozens on the Labour benches – and, it is feared, even the instincts of the Prime Minister himself. Later this month, France and Saudi Arabia will co-chair a conference that aims to obtain recognition of a Palestinian state. Last year, Ireland, Norway and Spain joined more than 140 other members of the United Nations in formally recognising Palestine's statehood. According to Thornberry, it is 'just a question of when' Keir Starmer does so.
Before the Prime Minister contemplates any such step, he might do well to study the7 October Parliamentary Commission Report compiled by the UK-Israel All-Party Parliamentary Group chaired by Lord Roberts of Belgravia. To read it is to be reminded of who will cheer loudest if Hamas's atrocities are rewarded with diplomatic recognition. The people responsible for the indiscriminate massacre of 378 Israelis at the Nova musical festival, shot down as they were fleeing for their lives, will be jubilant once more. The terrorists who carried out the gang-rape and mutilation of female victims, filmed for the perpetrators' twisted glory, will rejoice again. The men who shot an unborn child in her mother's womb and murdered a 92-year-old Holocaust survivor before taking 250 men, women and children hostage will have new cause for celebration.
The answer to such evil should not be the granting of global respectability but a determination to prevent such atrocities from happening again. That is what Israel, almost alone, is seeking to achieve. Its military campaign is based on the far-from-unreasonable desire to liberate the hostages and permanently eliminate the death cult of Hamas. For its troubles, it enjoys not sympathy and support but a wilfully blind campaign of condemnation.
Recent reporting of Israel's continued distribution of food aid to Gaza has ignored the reality of aid distribution in the past, when Hamas would confiscate the support offered by the international community and use it to reward compliance and punish internal opponents. It is to the shame of some aid groups, and certainly of the United Nations' organisation UNRWA, that they made themselves the accomplices to this oppression. The reason Hamas has sought to disrupt, often violently, Israel's aid distribution is because it has been robbed of a tool of political control and a source of illicit finance.
Israel's defence forces have made errors in this conflict, sometimes grievous ones. But there is a world of difference between the citizen army of a rule-bound democracy fighting a counter-insurgency campaign while seeking to rescue hostages in urban settings and a terror group that regards every innocent life lost as another propaganda win.
Israel's actions in setting back Iran's nuclear weapons programme and obliterating Hezbollah's military structures have made the world safer. It has dismantled much, but not all, of the Hamas command structure. If it can further reduce the ability of Hamas to ever again conduct operations like 7 October, it will have also helped prepare the ground for a more sustainable future for the whole Middle East. A path to genuine peace relies not on the knee-jerk recognition of Palestine, but on the extension of the Abraham Accords. Saudi Arabian recognition of Israel and a broader partnership between pragmatic Arab states and Jerusalem would lay the ground for a future Palestinian state, guaranteed and supported by its Arab neighbours. If the leaders of the West truly want the best future for the Palestinian people, they will want Hamas defeated not garlanded. Choose the latter, and Islamists everywhere will know that in our hearts we are not prepared to defend democracy against barbarity.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

South Wales Argus
4 minutes ago
- South Wales Argus
Laura Anne Jones MS on defecting from Tories to Reform UK
Even when things have gone on too long, it's hard to leave, because there are still nice moments. When I decided to leave the Conservative Party, it was a plaster I knew I had to rip off. I had been a loyal member for 31 years. I had stuck by it through all its ups and downs. I'd won seats, helped win seats, lost seats, lost elections, but not for a moment did I consider leaving. Even when it became a party that I no longer recognised, I held onto my love for the members and the activists, and some brilliant colleagues whom I will always admire greatly. Many of them are steadfast in their traditional values and formed my political family that had given me the honour to represent them and where I live. But the fact is, many now feel that the Conservative Party has left them, much in the same way as it left me. It was time to face facts. The party that I had fallen in love with had changed beyond recognition, in thought, in word and deed. It was no longer listening to or respecting its members. Reform is the only party that now represents decent, hard-working people, with traditional, patriotic values. People who love their country and are as devastated as I am at the erosion of our beautiful country and its values, faith and traditions. Now, many in Wales and the UK are now turning to Reform. In Wales, the Labour Welsh Government can't define a woman and has refused to act on the landmark Supreme Court ruling on the definition of a woman. They have wasted taxpayers' money on the most egregious ideological projects like 20mph speed limits, tree-planting schemes in Africa, and a collection of unused overseas Welsh Government offices across the globe, despite foreign affairs not being devolved. With a cost-of-living crisis biting and with people in abject poverty in some of our communities, this is unjustifiable. I believe Reform is the only party committed to driving that waste out of government, putting the cash back into our frontline services, into health, education and into opening Wales back up for business. Our farmers are being sold down the river by a Welsh Government who are obsessed with tree-planting targets, instead of supporting our agricultural food-producing sector to create a sustainable Wales. They have been failed, and they need to once again be listened to and valued, for the invaluable role that they play in our country's fabric. In Wales, we have the worst educational outcomes, the worst health statistics, with the longest waits in the UK - with waiting lists under Welsh Labour on the rise again! Our economy, our pensioners, our farmers, and our most vulnerable keep getting a battering and immigration is out of control. Things cannot carry on in this direction. Real change in Wales is long overdue. There is so much to undo and put right, and Reform is the only party able to stop Labour and Plaid getting into bed together once again, which is inevitable, and taking our beautiful country into decline again. It's time to not be restrained by party politics, to find the real solutions to our problems here in Wales. I cannot wait to play my small part in that, in Reform, fighting for my constituents, my region and for my beloved Wales, and take people along with me. With Reform, I truly feel that I am now part of the solution, not the problem. Come and join us. It's time to make the Welsh Dragon roar again! Laura Anne Jones is Senedd member of Wales South East.


The Herald Scotland
4 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Trump rejects Netanyahu's claim of no starvation in Gaza
Trump made the remarks ahead of a bilateral meeting with United Kingdom Prime Minister Keir Starmer in Turnberry, Scotland, where the second-term U.S. president arrived July 25 for a four-day trip. More: One meal a day. $20 for an egg. Choosing which kid gets fed. Starvation stalks Gaza As images of starved children in Gaza have alarmed the world, Netanyahu denied that Israel is conducting a starvation campaign, calling such accusations a "bold-faced lie" and even rejecting that starvation is occurring. "There is no policy of starvation in Gaza and there is no starvation in Gaza," Netanyahu said on July 27 More: Israel pauses some military action in Gaza as starvation spreads: What to know The Gaza health ministry said on July 28 that at least 14 people had died in the past 24 hours of starvation and malnutrition, bringing the war's death toll from hunger to 147, including 89 children, most in just the last few weeks. To help get additional food into Gaza, Israel on July 27 announced a halt in military operations for 10 hours a day in parts of Gaza and the creation of new aid corridors as Jordan and the United Arab Emirates airdropped supplies into the enclave. Trump, speaking alongside Starmer at his golf resort, said the United States had provided $60 million for humanitarian aid, and other nations would have to step up. Trump said he discussed the issue with European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen on July 27, and she told him European countries would ramp up their assistance very substantially. Starmer called the mounting starvation in Gaza a "humanitarian crisis" and an "absolute catastrophe," adding that "the people in Britain are revolted by what they're seeing on their screens." More: More than 100 aid, rights groups call for action as hunger spreads in Gaza Israel cut off all supplies to Gaza from the start of March, reopening the territory with new restrictions in May. Israel says it abides by international law but must prevent aid from being diverted by militants, and blames Hamas for the suffering of Gaza's people. "You have a lot of starving people," Trump said, later criticizing the Hamas militant group for not agreeing to release more Israeli hostages, living and dead. Trump said he told Netanyahu that Israel's approach would likely have to change. "I told Bibi that you have to maybe do it a different way," Trump said. Contributing: Reuters Reach Joey Garrison on X @joeygarrison.


Daily Mail
5 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Anthony Albanese slams Israel's denial of starvation reports in Gaza ‘beyond comprehension'
Anthony Albanese has strongly rejected Israel 's claims that there's no starvation in Gaza as 'beyond comprehension'. The prime minister was responding to statements made by his counterpart Benjamin Netanyahu, and Israel's deputy ambassador to Australia, during a Labor caucus meeting on Tuesday. 'While there is a caveat on any health information which is provided by Hamas, it is Israel that has prevented journalists from getting in,' he told the meeting in Canberra. It comes after Mr Albanese on Friday declared Israel's retaliation in Gaza following the October 7 attack on the nation state by Hamas had 'gone beyond the world's worst fears'. Then on Sunday, he warned Israel had 'quite clearly' breached international law by limiting food deliveries to starving civilians in Gaza, escalating his criticism of the Jewish state. The prime minister spoke of his emotional response to images of gaunt and dying children in the Palestinian territory, while acknowledging increased airdrops of aid by Israel was 'a start'. 'It just breaks your heart,' he told ABC's Insiders on Sunday. Overnight on Monday, US President Donald Trump contradicted the Israeli prime minister by stating many people were starving in the Gaza Strip and suggested more could be done to improve humanitarian access. Mr Netanyahu has said 'there is no starvation in Gaza, no policy of starvation in Gaza ...' Israel's deputy ambassador to Australia Amir Meron told journalists on Monday 'we don't recognise any famine or any starvation in the Gaza Strip'. The number of Palestinians believed to have been killed is nearing 60,000 people, according to local health authorities. While air drops of aid have been carried out into Gaza, humanitarian agencies say they aren't enough to deal with worsening levels of starvation in the area. At the caucus meeting, Mr Albanese was also asked about Palestinian statehood. He referenced a Nelson Mandela quote, saying 'it always seems impossible until it's done'. The prime minister has previously said any resolution on the issue would need to guarantee that Hamas, the de facto ruling authority in Gaza, which Australia has designated a terrorist group, plays no part in the future nation. There would also need to be agreements on the rebuilding of Gaza and the West Bank, and a resolution of issues over the expansion of Israeli settlements. Recognition of Palestinian statehood has been part of Labor's national platform since 2018. Labor is facing intensifying pressure to follow France in recognising a Palestinian state at a United Nations General Assembly meeting in September. The Greens are calling on the government to impose the same sanctions on Israel as it had done so for Russia. The minor party is also seeking a ban on buying items that can help fund the war, pointing to sanctions on pearls and truffles for Russia.