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These sanctions are a political stunt dressed up as accountability, driven in part by France's effort to regain relevance after being sidelined by the U.S. on regional diplomacy. Israel is right that these measures impose a political position on Jewish settlement rights while overlooking Palestinian Authority payments to convicted militants. Policies like these do little to advance peace and risk deepening polarization while fueling antisemitism.
Six Western nations did the right thing by sanctioning violent settlers and banning extremist ministers like Smotrich, who openly advocates West Bank annexation and renewed Israeli settlements in Gaza. Settlement expansion is illegal under international law, and the networks enabling attacks on Palestinians should face consequences. If Israel is unwilling to hold violent settlers accountable, the international community has every right to act.
Far from marking a real policy shift, the sanctions expose the double standards and timidity of the so-called international community toward Israel. While Western governments sanction a handful of settlers and politicians, Israel continues expanding settlements with little consequence. Tel Aviv remains largely shielded from the economic and diplomatic pressure routinely applied to other states, making these measures more symbolic than substantive.