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Toxic Allegations
The Statesman Siliguri
|May 27, 2025
In the tangled web of Sudan's civil war, new allegations of chemical weapons' use have emerged, casting a long and troubling shadow over a conflict that has already claimed over 150,000 lives.
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In times of war, the moral clarity of leaders is often sharpened or shattered. The escalating confrontation in Gaza has not only laid bare the horrors of modern warfare but also the dangerous fractures emerging among long-standing allies. When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu denounces counterparts in allied democracies for being on the "wrong side of history," we are not witnessing routine diplomatic sparring. We are witnessing the crumbling of a post-WWII consensus on the conduct of war, the value of civilian life, and the limits of alliance. The allegation that condemnation of disproportionate military actions is equivalent to siding with terrorists is deeply troubling. The war against Hamas, which committed unspeakable atrocities during its 2023 attacks on Israel, is rooted in a legitimate national security imperative. But the means by which this war is prosecuted matter. When a response crosses the line into collective punishment, it ceases to be self-defence and begins to mirror the very inhumanity it claims to oppose. Western leaders are now walking a tight-rope – balancing the moral necessity to oppose terrorism with the ethical imperative to prevent humanitarian catastrophe. UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer, once careful to support Israel's security needs, has shifted his stance under public and political pressure. His decision to suspend arms sales while calling for restraint was not an abandonment of Israel, but a reassertion of accountability – a concept Mr Netanyahu seems unwilling to entertain. What complicates this already combustible scenario is the shooting of two young Israelis working in their country's Washington embassy, a horrific act that must be universally condemned. But to draw a direct line from humanitarian concern to terrorist sympathies is to poison the well of
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