‘Trump has already emboldened Israel’s far-right. Labour must act’

By Richard Burden & Phyllis Starkey

Originally published by Labour List, November 16, 2024

You always think things cannot get any worse for the Palestinians. But every year they do. It is fifteen years since Israel last allowed a UK parliamentary delegation into the Gaza Strip through the border crossing it controlled. The worst military assault yet experienced by the people of Gaza had ended just a month or so before. The devastation it had left made those of us on the delegation think that what we saw was as bad as it gets. We were wrong. It came nowhere near the horrors that Gaza has been going through for the past year.

Can it really get even worse in 2025? All the signs are that, with Trump’s victory in the USA emboldening the most extreme right-wing government in Israel’s history, the answer is yes. The question for the rest of the international community, and particularly, Britain’s Labour government, is whether they are willing to do anything in practice to stop it.

Just this week, Bezalel Smotrich, the Netanyahu Cabinet’s Finance Minister, declared that, following Trump’s elections, he has ordered officials to prepare to convert Israel’s 57-year occupation of the West Bank into full annexation during 2025.

“I intend, with God’s help, to lead a government decision that says that the government of Israel will work with the new administration of President Trump and the international community to apply Israeli sovereignty over Judea and Samaria,” he said.

The Geneva Conventions and successive UN Security Council resolutions have confirmed that military occupation places legal obligations on occupying powers, including prohibitions on declarations of sovereignty and colonization by civilians from the occupying power. As recently as July this year, the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the most senior court in the world, ruled that the policies and methods used by Israel have rendered unlawful its entire occupation of the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, along with its associated settlement regime, annexation and use of natural resources.

Why, then, is Smotrich so confident that Israel will get the green light from Washington for the blatant breach of international law that he threatened this week?

For the answer, just take a look at the team President-elect Trump has put in charge of his Middle East Desk.

Appointed to be US Ambassador to Israel is former Arkansas Governor, Mike Huckabee, a figure on the evangelical Christian Right of the Republican Party who has declared:

“There is no such thing as the West Bank – it’s Judea and Samaria…There is no such thing as settlements – they’re communities, they’re neighbourhoods, they’re cities. There is no such thing as an occupation.”

Trump’s choice for Secretary of State, meanwhile, is Senator Marco Rubio, who has explicitly rejected calls for a ceasefire in Gaza and backed Israel’s decision earlier this year to attack Rafah where over a million displaced Palestinian civilians were taking refuge. Indeed, he even compared President Biden’s opposition to an attack on Rafah to asking allied forces to stay out of Berlin in World War Two.

US Ambassador designate to the UN, Elise Stefanik, and Trump’s nominated “special envoy” to the Middle East, Steven C Witkoff, are also known to have hawkishly pro-Israel views.

If the second Trump presidency means either tacit or explicit endorsement of some of the most extreme actions yet seen in Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians, how should Britain’s Labour government respond?

To his credit, Middle East minister Hamish Falconer this week condemned Smotrich’s threat to annex the West Bank and both the Prime Minister and Foreign Secretary continue to insist that international law must be an enduring bedrock for UK foreign policy under Labour.

But words are not enough and it can no longer be business as usual. While President Biden has been in the White House, Britain’s incoming Labour government has more or less followed US leadership in Middle East policy.

Even though the Biden administration’s calls for restraint have been routinely ignored by Netanyahu over the past year, Keir Starmer appears to have taken the view that acting in lock step with the US administration was still Britain’s best chance of having any influence over the course of events.

All those bets are now off. If the USA no longer even pays lip service to respect for international law, Britain and like-minded allies have a responsibility to uphold the law themselves without fear or favour, with demonstrable consequences for those who flout it.

And international law is clear about what our responsibilities are.

In ruling that Israel must end its occupation within twelve months, the ICJ has also declared that all UN member states have “an obligation not to recognize as legal the situation arising from the unlawful presence of Israel in the Occupied Palestinian Territory” and “not to render aid or assistance in maintaining the situation created by Israel’s illegal presence…”

The UK government says it accepts the central findings of the ICJ ruling, so that must be reflected in its actions. Banning UK trade with settlements and other commercial complicity with the occupation – as Ireland is currently considering – would be an obvious first step and a clear demonstration that we are serious.

Similarly, in endorsing Hamish Falconer’s condemnation of Israel’s threat to annex the West Bank as illegal under international law, Britain should make clear that our commitment to Palestinian self-determination is no less resolute than our commitment to the right of the people of Israel to self-determination and sovereignty within Israel’s internationally recognized borders.

We can demonstrate our respect for Palestinian sovereignty on land illegally occupied by Israel since 1967 by recognizing the State of Palestine. In doing so we would join the majority of UN member states – and most recently Ireland, Norway and Spain. The time to do it is now.

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Richard Burden

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I was Labour Member of Parliament for Birmingham Northfield between 1992 and 2019 and a former Shadow Transport Minister. I now chair Healthwatch in Birmingham and Solihull, and the West Midlands Board of Remembering Srebrenica. I also work as a public affairs consultant. I am an effective community advocate and stakeholder alliance builder with a passion for human rights. I am a trustee of the Balfour Project charity and of Citizens Advice Birmingham, and a former Chair of Medical Aid for Palestinians.

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You can reach me by email at richard@richardburden.com or use the form on the Contact page to send me a message.