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Tuesday, October 31, 2023

BBC What China wants from Israel-Hamas war Published 12 hours ago

 BBC 

What China wants from Israel-Hamas war

Published

12 hours ago

Israel-Gaza war

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken shakes hands with Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi prior to meetings at the State Department in Washington, DC, October 26, 2023.


Mr Wang flew to Washington to discuss the conflict with Antony Blinken

By Tessa Wong

Asia Digital Reporter, BBC News

As the conflict between Israel and Hamas intensifies, an unlikely development has emerged - China playing the part of peace broker. But there are limits to what it can achieve.

China's top diplomat, Wang Yi, discussed the conflict with officials in Washington at the weekend amid fears of a bigger regional war. The US has pledged it would work with China on trying to find a resolution.

Mr Wang has also spoken to his Israeli and Palestinian counterparts after China's Middle East special envoy Zhai Jun flew to the region to meet Arab leaders. It has also been one of the most vocal proponents of a ceasefire in UN meetings.

There are hopes China could tap into its close relationship with Iran, which backs Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon, to de-escalate the situation. US officials apparently pressed Mr Wang to "urge calm" with the Iranians, reported the Financial Times.

China is Iran's biggest trade partner, and earlier this year Beijing brokered a rare détente between Iran and Saudi Arabia. Tehran says it "stands ready to strengthen communication with China" on resolving the situation in Gaza.

As the Chinese government has had a relatively balanced relationship with all actors in the conflict, they could be perceived as an honest broker, said Dawn Murphy, an associate professor who studies Chinese foreign policy at the National War College under the US Department of Defense.

In particular, China has positive relations with the Palestinians, Arabs, Turkey and Iran, she said. "Together with the US which has good relations with Israel, they could bring all of the players to the table."

But other observers point out that China remains a minor player in Middle East politics.

"China is not a serious actor on this issue. Talking to people around the region, nobody expects China to contribute to the solution," said Jonathan Fulton, a non-resident senior fellow with the Atlantic Council who specialises in China's relations with the Middle East.

Reporting on Gaza: 'Sometimes from behind camera I just stand and cry'

Explained: What is happening in Israel and Gaza, and why now?

History behind the story: The Israel-Palestinian conflict

line

China's first statement on the conflict angered Israel which expressed "deep disappointment" that China did not condemn Hamas nor mention Israel's right to defend itself.


Hamas gunmen launched an unprecedented assault on Israel from the Gaza Strip on 7 October, killing more than 1,400 people and taking at least 239 hostages.

Since then, Israel has been carrying out retaliatory strikes on Gaza, in which more than 8,000 people have been killed, according to the Hamas-run health ministry. Israel has now also sent troops and tanks into the territory.

After the furore over its first statement, Mr Wang later told Israel that "all countries have the right to self-defence" - but he also said elsewhere that Israel's actions have gone "beyond the scope of self-defence".

China faces a difficult balancing act because it has long openly sympathised with the Palestinian cause.


It stretches back to Chinese Communist Party founder Mao Zedong, who sent weapons to Palestinians in support for so-called "national liberation" movements around the world. Mao even compared Israel to Taiwan - both backed by the US - as bases of Western imperialism.


China has in the past sided with the Palestinian cause

In later decades China opened up economically and normalised relations with Israel, with whom it now has a billion-dollar trade relationship.

But China has made it clear it continues to support the Palestinians. In their remarks on the latest conflict, Chinese officials and even President Xi Jinping have stressed the need for an independent Palestinian state.

One side effect is an uptick in antisemitism online, fanned by nationalist bloggers. Some on Chinese social media have equated Israel's actions to Nazism by accusing them of carrying out a genocide on Palestinians, prompting a rebuke from the German embassy in Beijing.

The stabbing of a family member of an Israeli embassy employee in Beijing has also added to the unease.

All this may not be a good look for China when it's trying to engage the Israeli government.

Given the uncertainties, why is China getting involved?

One reason is its economic interests in the Middle East, which would be endangered if the conflict widens.

Beijing is now heavily dependent on foreign imports for oil, and analysts estimate about half of that comes from the Gulf. Middle Eastern countries have increasingly become important players in China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), a cornerstone of its foreign and economic policy.


Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas (2 L) is welcomed by President of China Xi Jinping (L) with a welcoming ceremony during his official visit in Beijing, China on July 18, 2017

IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES

Image caption,

Chinese President Xi Jinping welcomed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in 2017


But another reason is the conflict presents a golden opportunity for Beijing to burnish its reputation.


China believes that "standing up for the Palestinians resonates with Arab countries, Muslim-majority countries and large portions of the Global South", pointed out Dr Murphy.


The war has erupted at a time when China is presenting itself as a better suitor for the world than the US. Since the start of the year, it has promoted a vision of a Chinese-led world order while criticising what it sees as the failures of US "hegemonic" leadership.


How far would US go to defend Israel?

Belt and Road: Is China's trillion-dollar gamble worth it?

Officially, China has refrained from attacking the US for its support of Israel. But at the same time state media is "ginning up the nationalist response… tying what's happening in the Middle East with the US support of Israel," noted Dr Murphy.


Chinese military newspaper PLA Daily accused the US of "adding fuel to the fire" - the same rhetoric Beijing has used to criticise Washington for helping Kyiv in the Ukraine war. The state-run, English language newspaper The Global Times published a cartoon of Uncle Sam with bloodstained hands.


One view among observers is that Beijing is contrasting its position against the US so it can lower its Western rival's global standing. But by not explicitly condemning Hamas, China also risks undermining its own position.


There are challenges China faces in its long-term ambitions.


One is how it can square its diplomatic position with its own track record. While it expresses solidarity with Muslim-majority nations and opposes Israel's occupation of Palestinian territories, Beijing remains accused of committing rights abuses and genocide of the Uyghur Muslim minority, as well as forced assimilation in Tibet.


Observers say that this would probably not be an issue for the Arab world, given the strong relations China has built with them.


The bigger problem is Beijing risks being seen as superficial in its engagement, or even worse, capitalising on the Israel-Hamas conflict to advance its own interests.


China assumes that "by saying you support Palestine you'll score points with Arab countries, and that is a cookie-cutter approach," said Dr Fulton, noting there is not some unified voice among Arab states on the highly divisive issue.


Mr Wang has claimed China only seeks peace for the Middle East and has "no selfish interests on the Palestinian question".


The challenge will be to convince the world this is true.


Additional reporting by BBC Monitoring.

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EURONEWS EU divisions on Gaza risk weakening it on the foreign policy stage - 31 October 2023

 EURONEWS 

EU divisions on Gaza risk weakening it on the foreign policy stage

Josep Borrell, the EU's High Representative, at a meeting of foreign ministers in Luxembourg on October 23, 2023.
By Shona Murray
Published on 31/10/2023 - 18:42•Updated 19:39
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The EU was late to clarify that Israel had an obligation to minimise casualties while the country was bombing and cutting off fuel, water and medical supplies to a civilian population.

The EU's response to Hamas's horrific terrorist attack in Israel earlier this month cast a shadow on the bloc's ability to agree cohesive statement on deeply consequential foreign policy matters, despite having managed to stay aligned for nearly two years on Ukraine.

At an EU summit last week, member states spent hours debating whether the bloc should call for a ceasefire to allow vital humanitarian aid into Gaza.

In the end, they coalesced around the idea of "humanitarian pauses" - intermittent moments to allow unfettered access for goods to go into Gaza.

They also reiterated that Israel has the right to defend itself, and should abide by international humanitarian law - the rules of conduct during an armed conflict that are designed to minimise casualties and not cause unnecessary suffering to civilians.

But the statement to Israel to respect the rights of civilians came late, despite the besieged population in Gaza being cut off from food, water, fuel, and crucial medical supplies, and the ever-increasing death toll of women, children, men.

The EU's partners in the region including King Abdullah of Jordan condemned the late and lackluster pronouncement to protect Palestinians.

“The message the Arab world is hearing is loud and clear: Palestinian lives matter less than Israeli ones. Our lives matter less than other lives. The application of international law is optional. And human rights have boundaries - they stop at borders, they stop at races, and they stop at religions," King Abdullah said at a conference in Cairo on October 23.

This is a “very, very dangerous message, as the consequences of continued international apathy and inaction will be catastrophic—on us all," he added.

Yet the growing humanitarian disaster and the intensity of Israel's military campaign are unlikely to change the EU's position, according to Mujtaba Rahman, managing director for Europe at the Eurasia Group.

"I think Germany may even be more pro-Israeli in its stance and articulation of Israel's right to defend itself than the United States. And I don't think that position within Germany - which commands support across the coalition is likely to change in the short to medium term, regardless of how the ground invasion progresses in Gaza and the civilian casualties and the devastation we're all now likely to see," he told Euronews.

As the war escalates so can divisions within the EU, which could further delegitimize the bloc as a foreign policy actor.

It's "clearly going to open up a rift within the European Council between those countries that have a slightly different position and perspective on the conflict."

"And that, again, will subtract from European legitimacy", especially as the divisions among member states "are only going to get worse," Rahman also said. 

Last week, the EU committed to supporting - alongside regional partners - an International Peace Forum aimed at resuscitating long-lost hope of a two-state solution between Israel and Palestinians.

Pierre Vimont, a former head of the EU's External Action Service - the EU's foreign office - also believes the impact of Brussels's ambivalence over the rights of Palestinians has diminished it in the eyes of other parts of the world. Still, he insists, the EU has a role to play.

"It has now to deal with a kind of handicap with regard to Arab countries and more globally, more generally, with many partners in the South that have lost somewhat their confidence in the European Union diplomacy. So we have to rebuild that. We have to reach out to all of them," he told Euronews.

"Never forget that it was the European Union that came up with the idea of a two-state solution, the need for self-determination for the Palestinians, the support for the PLO (Palestine Liberation Organization) as the representative of the Palestinian people." 

"These were breakthroughs that were done by the European Union and that were followed afterward by the US, who took over, who took up some of the European ideas," he said.

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The New York Times . Israel - Hamas War Briefing October 31, 2023

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Israel-Hamas War Briefing: Israel strikes a Gaza neighborhood

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Israel-Hamas War Briefing

October 31, 2023

Palestinians searching for casualties today after an explosion at the Jabaliya refugee camp in Gaza.Reuters

Israel hits a densely populated neighborhood in Gaza

An Israeli strike aimed at Hamas militants hit the densely populated Jabaliya neighborhood of Gaza today, leaving a large crater and causing widespread damage.

The Gaza Health Ministry, which is controlled by Hamas, said the Israeli strikes killed and wounded “hundreds” of people in Jabaliya, a statement that could not be immediately verified. A doctor at a nearby hospital said the facility was receiving hundreds of injured and that dozens were dead.

The Israeli military said its strike had killed Hamas militants, including Ibrahim Biari, a commander who it said had helped plan the attacks in Israel on Oct. 7. It also said that “underground terror infrastructure” beneath the buildings had collapsed following the strike.

Photographs showed shattered apartment blocks and piles of rubble around at least one large crater in the neighborhood. A later photograph, published by Reuters, showed white sheets wrapped around what appeared to be more than 30 bodies laid on the ground.

Residents searching for survivors and recovering bodies today in the Jabaliya neighborhood of Gaza.Abad Sabah/Reuters

Jabaliya, north of Gaza City, is home to the largest of the Gaza Strip’s eight refugee camps. The camp is populated with people who were displaced in the 1940s from what is now Israel, and their descendants.

Earlier this year, there were more than 116,000 people registered with the U.N. at the camp, though it was unclear how many had left in recent weeks.

Israel has conducted thousands of bombings in Gaza in retaliation for the Oct. 7 attacks. More than 8,500 people have been killed, including more than 3,500 children, according to the Gaza Health Ministry.

Israeli ground troops and tanks continued pushing deeper into the Gaza Strip today, edging closer to Gaza City, local authorities said. Humanitarian officials warned that two million Palestinian civilians in Gaza faced a growing catastrophe.

— Reporting by Hiba Yazbek, Matthew Mpoke Bigg and Aaron Boxerman

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