An Open Letter to the Governments of the United States of America, the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia and all EU member states and EU institutions on Israel/Palestine and the Gaza crisis

Oct 24

As a group of researchers, policy analysts, and experts with deep commitments to and expertise on the Middle East and North Africa, we have always worked side-by-side to advance policies based on shared universal values. Today, we find much of the government-led responses to the Gaza war to be in grave violation of these values and principles. After the horrific slaughter of civilians by Hamas in Israel on October 7, the world correctly and justifiably reacted with condemnation and solidarity; a response we are in complete alignment with. An accumulated legacy of dehumanisation of Palestinians has resulted in far too many western governments uncritically condoning the campaign of collective punishment against millions of innocent Palestinians that Israel launched in retaliation. When Russia bombed critical civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, or Assad held Aleppo under siege, western governments loudly and rightly condemned these attacks and called for immediate humanitarian ceasefires. Many wonder why they won’t do the same here. We have reached a point where there is virtual consensus among rights groups that war crimes were committed by Hamas on October 7 where over a thousand Israeli civilians were killed, and that war crimes have been committed by Israel since its aerial bombardment campaign against Gaza began which has killed more than five thousand civilians so far. To make matters worse, incitements to ethnic cleansing removing the distinction between civilians and combatants has been broadcast from the most senior levels of the Israeli establishment. The facts make for an ominous forecast and averting it should be our collective priority and is our collective responsibility. Western capitals pride themselves on solidarity with allies, and are demonstrating this again with Israel. But to achieve long-term security for Israel and the broader region, there is a moral and strategic obligation to ensure that Israel’s self-defence is characterised by international humanitarian law and leads to an end to the occupation; Western governments have not sufficiently emphasised that obligation, despite the situation demanding it. UN experts have also raised the need to restrain Israel from international law violations. But rhetoric is not enough. Using diplomatic leverage to pressure both Israel and Hamas, who are holding hundreds of hostages, towards adhering to international law is one of our key tools for de-escalation. One that is currently being discarded. Western governments should be advancing attempts to de-escalate, rather than give the impression that ‘might is right’. Given the power asymmetry between Israel and

Palestinians, this has enabled collective punishment in Gaza, and fast-tracked illegal
settlement expansion in the West Bank, where reports indicate that Palestinians are
being dispossessed, killed, or placed in ‘administrative detention’ in their hundreds.
This path, rather than ensuring security for Israelis, deepens the cycle of violence
and only makes the conflict’s regionalisation more likely.
The lack of strategic focus and failure to pressure collective adherence to
international law, denigrates the West’s global moral standing. It isolates it from
swathes of the world, deepening divisions at a time of great power competition and
shared challenges to our climate, collective security, and the world economy. It also
creates a precedent that imperils small states and fatally undermines any semblance
of a global rules-based order.
We are mandated to respond to this challenge by foregrounding our common
universal values, and we should be forewarned that our response is nothing less
than a civilisational litmus test, which will catalyse either the spread or retreat of
these values in the world.
We, the undersigned, call on western governments and our colleagues across the
policy-making world to centre those core values, upholding the equal humanity of
Palestinians and Israelis, rejecting anti-Semitism, anti-Arab and anti-Muslim bigotry,
at home and abroad.
Above all, in this crisis, we advocate for an immediate ceasefire, the provision of
humanitarian aid to all in need, and the return to political processes that can facilitate
just and fair resolutions to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
If we fail to do this, and instead enable the worst, then we condemn this region to the
tumult of war, deepen global divisions, and put an indelible stain on our collective
conscience.

To add your signature to this letter please email: OpenLetterIP@gmail.com

All signatories are signing in their personal capacity so as not to imply any
institutional positions. However, the following signatories are associated with a broad
variety of noted institutions in the policy arena, including but not exclusively, the
International Crisis Group, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Chatham
House, the European Council on Foreign Relations, Cambridge University, the Middle
East Institute, King’s College London, the Atlantic Council, the Tahrir Institute for
Middle East Policy, and others.

  1. Comfort Ero, Institute Director
  2. Marwan Muasher, former Foreign Minister
  3. Yair Wallach, Reader
  4. Yezid Sayigh, Senior Fellow
  5. Lara Friedman, Foundation President
  6. Maha Yahya, Center Director
  7. Michelle Dunne, Institute Director
  8. Nathalie Tocci, Institute Director
  9. Hugh Lovatt, Senior Policy Fellow
  10. Mohanad Hage Ali, Deputy Director for Research
  11. Jonathan Portes, Professor
  12. H.A. Hellyer, Senior Fellow & Professor
  13. Joost Hiltermann, Programme Director
  14. Adel Abdel-Ghafar, Programme Director
  15. Alessia Melcangi, Associate Professor
  16. Mai el Sadany, Institute Director
  17. Kelly Petillo, Programme Manager
  18. Johan Schaar, Researcher
  19. Emad Badi, Senior Research Fellow
  20. Eduard Soler I Lecha, Assistant Professor
  21. Hafsa Halawa, Independent Consultant
  22. Zuri Linetsky, Research Fellow
  23. Zaha Hassan, Human Rights Attorney
  24. Gerd Nonneman, Professor
  25. Timothy Kaldas, Institute Deputy-Director
  26. Virginie Collombier, Programme Deputy Director
  27. Dalia Ghanem, Programme Director
  28. Beverley Milton-Edwards, Professor
  29. Tarik Yusuf, Institute Director
  30. Haizam Amirah-Fernandez, Senior Analyst
  31. Riccardo Fabiani, Project Director
  32. Intissar Fakir, Programme Director
  33. Wolfram Lacher, Senior Associate
  34. Elham Fakhro, Research Fellow
  35. Cinzia Bianco, Senior Policy Fellow
  36. Noha el Mikawy, Dean
  37. David Butter, Analyst
  38. Sami Nader, Institute Director
  39. Marc Owen Jones, Professor
  40. Noha Aboueldahab, Assistant Professor
  41. Sarah Yerkes, Senior Fellow
  42. Assad al-Achi, Institute Director
  43. Shahram Akbarzadeh, Professor
  44. Abdullah Baabood, Professor
  45. Karim Emile Bitar, Professor
  46. Galip Dalay, Senior Research Fellow
  47. Ishac Diwan, Director of Research
  48. Aziz al-Ghashian, Researcher
  49. Karim Haggag, Professor
  50. Adel Hamaizia, Institute Director
  51. Asma Khalifa, Institute Director
  52. Tarek Megrisi, Senior Policy Fellow
  53. Kholood Khair, Institute Director
  54. Khaled Mansour, Writer
  55. Renad Mansour, Senior Research Fellow
  56. Karim Mezran, Senior Fellow
  57. Ahmed Morsy, Senior Researcher
  58. Farea al-Muslimi, Senior Research Fellow
  59. Tariq al-Olaimy, Institute Director
  60. Rouzbeh Parsi, Programme Director
  61. Randa Slim, Programme Director
  62. Andreas Kreig, Professor

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.