by Nadezhda Romanenko
Political analyst
December 10, 2024
from
RT Website
FILE PHOTO:
Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
© Sarah
Silbiger / Getty Images
Netanyahu's reasoning
for his latest land grab
lays bare the stark hypocrisy
of his Western supporters...
This week, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu
announced that following the fall of Bashar Assad, the 1974
separation of forces agreement between his country and Damascus is
"no longer valid."
This deal, brokered by
the United Nations,
prohibited military deployments in the buffer
zone of the Golan Heights, a region legally recognized as Syrian
territory but occupied by the Jewish state since 1967.
Netanyahu's reasoning?
Since Syria's internationally recognized
government no longer exists after Assad's departure, he no
longer considers prior treaties with Damascus binding.
According to this interpretation,
Israel is justified in bombing
Syrian airfields, seizing ports, and even expanding its territorial
occupation... all under the guise of ensuring its national
security.
The US State Department immediately endorsed this position, calling
West Jerusalem's actions a "necessary security measure" in a
volatile region.
Washington, ever eager to back its Middle
Eastern ally, showed no hesitation in adapting its "rules-based
order" to fit its strategic goals.
But here's where the double standard becomes glaring.
In 2014, when Ukraine's elected president,
Viktor Yanukovich, was ousted
in a violent coup supported by Western powers, Russia took a
strikingly similar legal position.
Moscow argued that,
with the collapse of Kiev's legitimate
government, the country's constitutional framework collapsed.
Crimea held a referendum, reuniting with
Russia, while eastern regions in the Donbass sought autonomy.
Washington's response?
Furious condemnation...
The US declared that despite the
coup, Ukraine's sovereignty and borders remained intact, insisting
that all pre-existing agreements still applied.
Moscow's
actions were labeled an,
"illegal annexation" and "imperialist
expansion."
This starkly contrasts with Washington's current
endorsement of Israel's seizure of Syrian territory under nearly
identical legal reasoning.
A Double Standard Dressed as
Policy
The hypocrisy couldn't be more obvious.
In Syria, Israel's territorial ambitions are
labeled "security-driven" and legally defensible, despite clear
violations of international law.
In Ukraine, Russia's security concerns were
dismissed as "imperial aggression," regardless of
NATO's relentless eastward
expansion threatening its borders.
Both Moscow and West Jerusalem justified their
actions by citing urgent national security concerns,
yet only Israel's reasoning was embraced as
legitimate by Washington, while Russia's was dismissed as
imperialist aggression.
And resulted in sanctions and condemnation.
The US approach reveals a deeper truth: the so-called "rules-based
international order" is not based on rules at all - at least not in
any consistent sense.
It is a system where,
the parameters are invented, reinterpreted,
or ignored entirely, depending on whether an ally or an
adversary is involved.
The US justifies Israel's actions by framing them
as "defensive," despite the country bombing Syria with impunity for
years, long before Assad's government fell.
Meanwhile, when Russia invoked the same principle
of self-defense and historical legitimacy in Crimea, it
faced,
unprecedented sanctions, diplomatic
isolation, and accusations of violating the "rules-based" global
order...
Who Writes the Rules?
This selective enforcement exposes the fundamental lie underpinning
American foreign policy. International law is applied strictly to
adversaries, while allies are given a free pass.
If treaties are void when governments collapse,
as Washington now claims in Syria,
why did the same logic not apply after the
2014
Maidan coup in Ukraine?
The reason is simple:
the US does not care about international law
or consistent principles.
It only cares about advancing its strategic
interests while pretending to uphold the moral high ground.
This isn't diplomacy... it's raw power politics
dressed up as "defending democracy"...
The Future of the Middle East and
Beyond
Netanyahu's declaration sets a dangerous precedent.
If international agreements can be discarded
whenever a government changes due to force,
what remains of global stability?
If the US is willing to let Israel redraw Middle
Eastern borders at will,
how can it object when Russia seeks to
protect its own security in Eastern Europe?
Israel's actions will likely escalate violence in
Syria and provoke further regional instability.
Moscow, meanwhile, will undoubtedly see this,
as confirmation that the West's legal
arguments against Russia's role in Ukraine were always hollow...
The lesson here is that,
power, not law,
defines the modern international order - and Washington's
selective memory is proof enough...
By endorsing Israel's territorial seizures while
condemning Russia's moves in Ukraine, the US has obliterated any
remaining credibility it might have had on the international stage.
The "rules-based" international order has long
been a convenient fiction - now, even the pretense is
gone...
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