Israel at center of international diplomatic storm as Vatican, FIFA, EU step up pressure

The international interference could end up backfiring and encouraging Palestinians to stay away from the negotiating table.
JPOST
The Palestinian decision to
internationalize their conflict with Israel seems to be paying off as
Israel is coming under diplomatic pressure on several fronts at the same
time. The Vatican decision to recognize “Palestine” as a state, an
expected French-sponsored resolution to the United Nations Security
Council, and the possible expulsion of Israel from FIFA, the international soccer federation, are creating the sense that Israel is losing the diplomatic battle.
“There is a sense of erosion,” a senior
Israeli official told The Media Line on condition of anonymity. “We see
more and more countries and organizations buying into the unilateral
logic of the Palestinians.”
But he warned, ultimately it will not be possible to create a Palestinian state without Israeli approval.
“No matter how much the Palestinians
obtain in declarations and international organizations it can’t replace
negotiations,” he said. “Palestinians have given up on negotiations and
we believe it’s a huge mistake.”
The latest decision by the Vatican to sign a treaty with the state of “Palestine”,
concerning the Holy See’s activities in the Palestinian Authority,
comes before a weekend meeting between the Pope and the President of the
Palestinian Authority, Mahmoud Abbas. It is an important symbolic move
by the leader of the world’s 1.2 billion Catholics. At the UN, the
Vatican and “Palestine” are both considered non-member observer states.
In a statement, PLO Executive Committee member Hanan Ashrawi welcomed
the decision.
“The significance of this decision goes
beyond the political and legal into the symbolic and moral domains and
sends a message to all people of conscience that the Palestinian people
deserve the right to self-determination, formal recognition, freedom,
and statehood,” she said in a statement.
Some Israeli analysts said the move by the Vatican, while purely symbolic, was nevertheless important.
“It’s a big deal because the Pope is the
spiritual leader of hundreds of millions of Christians,” Eytan Gilboa
of the Begin-Sadat Center for Strategic Studies at Bar Ilan University
told The Media Line. “Christians are being murdered all over the Middle
East but what is important for him is the particular recognition of
Palestine.”
But others said that Israel should be more concerned about its relationship with the US, then with the Vatican.
“This has basically been Vatican policy
all along,” Amiel Ungar, an Israeli commentator. “The big enchilada is
how much the Obama administration is behind the European moves.”
France is expected to soon present a new
resolution to the UN Security Council to recognize a Palestinian state.
In the past, the US has vetoed all such resolutions, but after the
election of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, the US has said it will
“reassess” that decision.
The guidelines of Netanyahu’s new
government does not include any mention of a Palestinian state, a change
from the previous government. A group of former European leaders and
diplomats has called for more pressure on Israel, and charges that EU
political and financial aid has achieved nothing but the “preservation
of the Israeli occupation of the West Bank and imprisonment of Gaza.”
At the same time, the Palestinians have
been campaigning in FIFA, the international football federation, to
suspend Israel’s membership or to level sanctions on Israel for limiting
the free movement of Palestinian soccer players and refusing them
permission to travel abroad. The 200 national leagues in FIFA are
expected to vote on the resolution in the coming weeks.
All of this is expected to lead to
growing international pressure on Israel, but it could also end up
backfiring and encouraging Palestinians to stay away from the
negotiating table.
“Israel has only three cards it can use
with the Palestinians – giving up territory, international recognition,
and the release of Palestinian prisoners,” Eytan Gilboa said. “But if
they get the recognition without any negotiations, what motivation do
they have to negotiate with Israel?”
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