“Palestine is the defining question of justice in West Asia and beyond. It is the strategic and moral compass of our region.
It is a test of whether international law has meaning, whether human rights have universal value, and whether global institutions exist to protect the weak or merely to rationalize the power of the strong.
For generations, the Palestinian crisis was understood primarily as the consequence of an illegal occupation and the denial of an inalienable right, the right of a people to self-determination.
But today, we must recognize that the crisis has moved far beyond the parameters of occupation alone.
What we are witnessing in Gaza is not merely war. It is not a conflict between equal parties. It is not an unfortunate byproduct of security measures.
It is the deliberate destruction of civilian life on a massive scale. It is genocide. The human cost of Israel’s atrocities in Gaza has wounded the conscience of humanity.
It has torn open the heart of the Muslim world, and it has also shaken millions beyond it—Christians, Jews, and people of all kinds and all faiths who still believe that the life of a child is not a bargaining chip, that starvation is not a weapon, that hospitals are not battlefields, and that the killing of families is not self-defense.
The Israeli regime’s conduct in Palestine and the impunity granted to it have deeply damaged the international legal order.
The world is moving toward a condition where international law is no longer respected and governs international relations.
What is perhaps most dangerous is the precedent being established that if a state has sufficient political cover and protection, it may bomb civilians, besiege populations, target infrastructures, assassinate individuals across borders, and still demand to be regarded as lawful.
This is not merely a Palestinian problem. It is a global problem. We are witnessing not only the tragedy of Palestine, but the transformation of the world into a place where the law is replaced by force.
Israel’s expansionist project has had a direct and destabilizing impact on the security of all countries in the region. The Israeli regime now openly violates borders. It breaches sovereignties.
It assassinates official dignitaries. It conducts terrorist operations. It expands its reach in multiple theaters.
And it does so not discreetly, but with a sense of entitlement, because it has learned that international accountability will not come.
If the Gaza issue is settled through destruction and forced displacement, if that becomes the model, then the West Bank will be next.
Annexation will become policy. This is the essence of what has long been called “Greater Israel.”
Israel’s expansionist project requires that neighboring countries be weakened militarily, technologically, economically, and socially so that the Israeli regime permanently enjoys the upper hand.
Under this project, Israel is free to expand its military arsenal without limits, including weapons of mass destruction that remain outside any inspection regime.
Yet, other countries are demanded to disarm. Others are pressured to reduce defensive capacity. Others are punished for scientific progress. Others are sanctioned for building resilience.
This is not arms control. It is not non-proliferation. It is not security. It is the enforcement of permanent inequality.
The Palestinian question is not only a humanitarian issue. It is a strategic issue. It is not only about Gaza and the West Bank.
It is about the future of our region and the rules of the world. So what must be done? It is not enough to express concern. It is not enough to issue a statement. It is not enough to mourn.
We need a coordinated strategy of action, legal, diplomatic, economic, and security-based, rooted in the principles of international law and collective responsibility.
We call for comprehensive and targeted sanctions against Israel, including an immediate arms embargo, the suspension of military and intelligence cooperation, restrictions on officials, and banning trade.
We need a credible political horizon grounded in law. The international community must affirm the end of occupation, the right of return and compensation in accordance with international law, and the establishment of a unified and independent Palestinian state, with al-Quds al-Sharif (Jerusalem) as its capital.
This is not about confrontation. It is about preventing the region from being reshaped by force.
Let no one miscalculate. A region cannot be kept stable by allowing one actor to act above the law. The doctrine of impunity will not produce peace. It will produce wider conflict.
The path to stability is clear. Justice for Palestine. Accountability for crimes. An end to occupation and apartheid. And a regional order built on sovereignty, equality, and cooperation.”








