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Backing Palestinian sovereignty now would reward and strengthen Hamas

To help build peace, the UK should focus on fostering Palestinian reforms: ending incitement and ‘pay-for-slay’ and replacing the cult of ‘resistance’ with a culture of coexistence

May 14, 2025 08:55
Masked Palestinian militants GettyImages-2199971616
Masked Palestinian militants stand next to one of the coffins on stage, with an altered portrait of Israeli Premier Benjamin Netanyahu in the background, before handing over the bodies of four Israeli hostages to the Red Cross in Khan Yunis in the southern Gaza on February 20, 2025. Hamas handed over on February 20 coffins believed to contain the bodies of four Israeli hostages, including those of the Bibas family who became symbols of the ordeal that has gripped Israel since the Gaza war began. The transfer of the bodies is the first by Hamas since its October 7, 2023 attack on Israel triggered the war, and is taking place under a fragile ceasefire that has seen living hostages exchanged for Palestinians held in Israeli prisons. (Photo by Eyad BABA / AFP) (Photo by EYAD BABA/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

Before October 7, few serious voices in Europe called for recognising a Palestinian state. There was a quiet consensus that doing so would be reckless, given the division, corruption and radicalisation of the current Palestinian leadership. Then, Hamas carried out the most gruesome mass murder of Jews since the Holocaust – and the response in some European capitals has been to reward it with exactly what they wanted, recognition.

Spain, Ireland and Norway – among Europe’s most reflexively anti-Israel governments – recognised Palestine a mere seven months after the massacres. French President Emmanuel Macron floated the idea last month. Some Labour MPs, including foreign affairs committee chair Emily Thornberry, urged the UK to follow suit. Even a group of Conservative MPs has joined the chorus.

Recognising a Palestinian state after October 7 would be a moral and strategic blunder. It would push peace and a real two-state solution further out of reach. It would strengthen Hamas – still the most popular faction among the Palestinians – undermine moderate Palestinian voices and send the grotesque message that the more brutal the violence, the more urgent the international support. It would betray not only Israel, but every peace-minded Palestinian as well as every liberal value Europe claims to uphold. This is not peacebuilding, it is incentivising bloodshed.

The call for recognition rests on a fiction about the core of the conflict: that Palestinians are innocent victims without agency, perpetually denied a state by Israeli intransigence. History says otherwise. Palestinian leaders have rejected every serious offer of statehood, the 1937 Peel Plan, the 1947 UN Partition Plan, Camp David in 2000 and former Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert’s offer in 2008. Each time, the answer was no, usually followed by violence.