“Israeli politicians have already said that they’re going to ignore the ICJ order,” Mark Lattimer, the executive director of Ceasefire Centre for Civilian Rights, told Al Jazeera. “It is much harder for, particularly, the US and European states including the UK, to ignore the order because they have a much stronger record of holding or supporting the International Court of Justice.”

“The ICJ ruling puts a lot more pressure on the US and other Western allies to move on a ceasefire resolution,” Zaha Hassan, a human rights lawyer and a fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, told Al Jazeera. “It makes it a lot harder for the US, along with Israel, to make the case to Western governments that are still very much concerned with international legitimacy, to maintain the idea that Israel is acting within the constraints of international law in Gaza and that it’s acting in self-defence.”

Some evidence suggests that Israel knows this, too. Soon after South Africa announced that it would bring a case before the ICJ, Israel’s tactics on the ground started to change, experts said.

There was “a rush to wipe out any possibility for a Palestinian return to the north of Gaza”, Hassan said, pointing to controlled bombings of universities and hospitals. “Once you have hospitals taken out, you make it impossible for people in war to stay. That’s a part of a strategy to force Palestinian population transfer and permanent displacement.”

  • 100_percent_a_bot@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    International pressure was not a major reason for the undoing of the Apartheid, massive sanctions were. And there’s no way major sanctions will come upon Israel any time soon since everyone pretty much agrees that Hamas has to be removed, even if they don’t want to say it out loud.

    • Keeponstalin@lemmy.worldOP
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      10 months ago

      We’ll have to see what happens with how the international community reacts to the ICJ ruling. I consider sanctions a form of international pressure.

      Hamas should get tried for their war crimes, same for Israeli officials. But unless statehood is addressed I don’t see that happening yet. With the massive amount of settlers swiss cheesing the West Bank, I don’t see any practical two-state solution. A one-state solution is what I think needs to happen but the realities of creating that would be quite complicated and require a lot of international pressure

      • 100_percent_a_bot@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        One state is delusional and neither party wants that… Well maybe the Palestinians want it to gain the population majority and vote for a bunch of anti jew legislation or simply pogrom them out of existence.

        Two states with less shitty borders would be a bit more realistic, maybe the 1967 parameters or so. But currently both Palestinians and Israeli want to keep fighting because they both think it will help them reach their goals - and one of them is correct, guess who.

      • 100_percent_a_bot@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        Sure all sanctions are international pressure but not all international pressure is in the form of sanctions. The pressure we are seeing right now is mainly in the form of strongly worded letters and I don’t expect that to change unless Israel dramatically escalates its war efforts or annexes areas.