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Moral vacuum
The Guardian Weekly
|June 27, 2025
Western leaders call for 'diplomacy', but won't name this war's cause
Since the war on Gaza started, the defining dynamic has been of unprecedented anger, panic and alarm from the public. The feeble response from mainstream liberal parties is entirely dissonant with the gravity of the moment.
As the US joins Israel in attacking Iran, and the Middle East heads toward a calamitous unravelling, their inertness is even more disorienting. They are passengers in Israel's war, either resigned to the consequences or unwilling to question its wisdom. As reality screams at western politicians, they reheat old rhetoric, all while deferring to an Israel and a White House that have long taken leave of their senses.
At a time of extreme geopolitical risk, the centre presents itself as the wise party in the fracas, but is entirely incapable of addressing or challenging the root cause. Some are afraid to even name it. Israel has disappeared from the account, leaving only a regrettable crisis and a menacing Iran. The British prime minister, Keir Starmer, has called for de-escalation. But he referred to the very escalation he wishes to avoid - the US's involvement - as an alleviation of the "grave threat" posed by Iran.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der June 27, 2025-Ausgabe von The Guardian Weekly.
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