Can the offensive in Rafah be prevented?


Israel’s announced offensive in Rafah has triggered a wave of international concern. South Africa has once again filed an urgent request with the highest UN court to block the move. At the same time negotiations are underway in Cairo regarding a ceasefire and an exchange of hostages held by Hamas. Commentators discuss whether these measures can guarantee the security of the more than 1.3 million displaced persons in Rafah.


The Times (GB) /

An open trap

Israel cannot go on as before in Rafah, former Tory Foreign Secretary William Hague writes in The Times:

“Absolute victory can be attained over an army on a battlefield, but not over an insurgency that draws its strength from an idea, rooted in a population. To be victorious over that, wise politics has to accompany the application of force. To roll the Israel Defence Forces into Rafah with the same approach of recent months is to ignore such politics. ... It would be a terrible error for Israel to narrow further the space for a [long-term, peaceful] solution, unwittingly resigning itself to more wars that cannot be deterred and in which absolute victory is impossible. The trap lies open before it. The future of the Middle East might well depend on the fate of Rafah.”

William Hague
Corriere della Sera (IT) /

Washington’s words falling on deaf ears

US foreign policy in the region is having little success at the moment, notes Corriere della Sera:

“Joe Biden’s Middle East strategy is in serious trouble in all areas. Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s recent trip to the region has not changed the Israeli prime minister’s position. ... According to US media reports, the American president is on the verge of breaking ties with the Israeli government. That would be a dramatic rupture of historic proportions. But that is not the only risk in this area. According to reports, it appears that the meeting between Blinken and President Al-Sisi in Cairo on 7 February was also not so friendly.”

Giuseppe Sarcina
Le Soir (BE) /

Stop arms deliveries to Israel

Le Soir demands concrete action from the West:

“The Israeli prime minister has promised to spare civilians the worst. But they’ve already had very bitter experiences with such promises. And what is the world doing? Expressing its ‘concern’! And warning that such an offensive would lead to an ‘indescribable humanitarian catastrophe’, as EU foreign policy chief Josep Borrell put it. Joe Biden himself has said that ‘there are a lot of innocent people who are starving, a lot of innocent people who are in trouble and dying, and it’s gotta stop.’ The levers are there: stop supplying weapons to the Jewish state, as Josep Borrell himself suggests.”

Baudouin Loos
Index.hr (HR) /

Cairo fears a flood of refugees

Egypt has threatened to suspend its peace treaty with Israel if Israel attacks Rafah. Index looks at why:

“It wouldn’t be a big problem for Cairo if the Palestinians were to stay in the Sinai Peninsula and return to the Gaza Strip after some time has elapsed. But what will happen if all these people, many of them armed, move in the direction of Cairo? How are you supposed to stop a crowd of one or two million people? Moreover, the Palestinians have a bad reputation for instigating revolts and civil wars. [They participated in] the civil war in Jordan in 1970. ... So it’s not surprising that Egypt’s political and military leadership want to stop the influx of one million Palestinians at any cost. ... Even if it means an open war with Israel.”

Mario Galić

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