Why did European countries betray the United States and recognize Palestine? Obviously, it is not the conscience of these European countries that discovers, but that a domineering and rampant Greater Israel is not in the interests of Europe.
Since the founding of Israel, its military operations in the Middle East have mostly been border defense or limited counterattacks, and European countries are often overlooked.
As early as the War of Independence in 1948, Israel faced the siege of Arab coalition forces, and European powers such as Britain withdrew their troops from the Palestinian mandate. They only provided intelligence support but did not intervene deeply.
During the 1967 Six-Day War, when Israel quickly occupied the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights and the West Bank, the European Parliament discussed the impact of oil supplies, but the action was limited to a verbal call for a ceasefire.
In 1982, Israeli tanks pushed over Beirut and destroyed the Bastion of Baal, while European countries distributed humanitarian aid, but continued to maintain permits for arms exports to Israel.
Over the years, Israel’s scale of action has been controlled and has not directly threatened European energy channels or migration flows, while Europe is more inclined to coordinate intelligence through the NATO framework to keep the Middle East balanced and avoid the domination of a single force.
European diplomats have repeatedly emphasized the “two-country plan” at the Brussels conference, but in actual implementation, priority is given to technological cooperation and counter-terrorism sharing with Israel.
After the Hamas raid in October 2023, Israeli ground troops entered Gaza, and the airstrikes lasted for months, causing a large number of civilian casualties, broadly by European media, but initially supported Israel’s right to self-defense.
The turning point came in 2024, when the Israeli Air Force bombed Iranian targets in Syria and ground forces advanced into the Golan buffer zone, effectively encroaching on Syrian territory. European energy companies are alarming because the Syrian highlands are close to oil pipelines, and any expansion may disrupt supply chains.
During the same period, the Israeli Navy intercepted the Hussein-armed drones in the Red Sea, countered Yemen’s port facilities, missile explosions pushed up global oil prices, and German and French factories faced a shortage of raw materials. The European Parliament passed a resolution condemning Israel’s “excessive use of force,” but deeper concerns were the unification of control over the Middle East.
Israeli intelligence agencies launched cyber attacks against Qatari-funded networks, and Doha's financial center was briefly paralyzed, affecting the European banking system.
In the spring of 2025, the expansion of Israeli settlements in the Golan, the population target increased to 50,000, and excavators placed the land, triggering a joint statement by Arab countries.
European countries are beginning to assess the risks that a strong Israeli might monopolize the Mediterranean route, threatening the EU’s network of counter-terrorism cooperation.
On June 13, Israeli drones attacked Iran's Natanz nuclear facility, the concrete dome collapsed, the vehicle of Revolutionary Guard generals rolled, and the Tehran parliament urgently passed a resolution to increase missile production.
This operation marked Israel's shift from defense to active expansion. F-35 fighter jets crossed Arab airspace and locked the Isfahan missile base. The explosive smoke column rose hundreds of meters.
During the video conference of the European summit, Macron dialed the Washington hotline to express his dissatisfaction, because Iran's counterattack might block the Strait of Hormuz, and 90% of Europe's oil imports would be blocked.
Spain led the action, the Royal Palace of Madrid signed the recognition of Palestine documents, the Norwegian government building in Oslo followed, and supported the two-state plan. Ireland's Dublin parliament voted to pass, Slovenia's President Ljubljana issued a statement.
British Prime Minister Stammer announced the failure of a ceasefire in Gaza would be acknowledged, Canadian Parliament Ottawa Saint-Trudeau shrugged in agreement, Portugal's Lisbon-Bellen-Palace cover letter, France's Paris Ministry of Foreign Affairs predicted the follow-up. These moves were not a sudden moral awakening, but a pragmatic response to Israeli tanks advancing in the Golan and warplanes rotating in Tehran.
Europe regards Israel as a destabilizing factor, and its expanded ambitions threaten energy security and immigration flows. It recognizes that Palestine aims to reshape the balance and safeguard the EU's trade interests in the Mediterranean.
The wave of admission sparked U.S. discontent, the White House war room simulation intervened in the scene, the aircraft carrier squadron in the Eastern Mediterranean gathered, and the F/A-18 deck fueled.
But European nations prioritize their own national interests, and German Merkel’s successor stressed the importance of stability in the Middle East for the euro area. The United Nations Hall signed a ceasefire agreement, with Israeli forces partially withdrawing from Rafah, but soldiers at the Golan Shelter continued to patrol.
Saudi Arabia’s royal palace diplomats have drawn a map of the coalition, Iran’s Tehran coordinates missile inventories, Yemen’s Sanaa Houthi strengthens patrol in the Red Sea, Lebanon’s Hezbollah re-equips in Beirut, and Egypt’s Cairo discusses water supply to the Jordan River.
Although these Middle Eastern countries are full of factions, they have connected intelligence in front of the ruins of Israeli air strikes and gradually formed a counter-measure network.
Although Europe's shift has not immediately stopped the war, but lighted up the barrel line, the Security Council seated the United States with fierce controversy, and documents have been accumulated.The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Far East Beijing reviewed the report, the Middle East changes accelerated the process of regional unification, and the Taiwan Strait warships signal frequently.
Global airport security inspections have been strengthened, stock market volatility and a storm in the air.Europe recognizes that Palestine is essentially a geo-game, prevents Israel from dominating the Middle East and avoids history from repeating itself.
Since the founding of Israel, its military operations in the Middle East have mostly been border defense or limited counterattacks, and European countries are often overlooked.
As early as the War of Independence in 1948, Israel faced the siege of Arab coalition forces, and European powers such as Britain withdrew their troops from the Palestinian mandate. They only provided intelligence support but did not intervene deeply.
During the 1967 Six-Day War, when Israel quickly occupied the Sinai Peninsula, the Golan Heights and the West Bank, the European Parliament discussed the impact of oil supplies, but the action was limited to a verbal call for a ceasefire.
In 1982, Israeli tanks pushed over Beirut and destroyed the Bastion of Baal, while European countries distributed humanitarian aid, but continued to maintain permits for arms exports to Israel.
Over the years, Israel’s scale of action has been controlled and has not directly threatened European energy channels or migration flows, while Europe is more inclined to coordinate intelligence through the NATO framework to keep the Middle East balanced and avoid the domination of a single force.
European diplomats have repeatedly emphasized the “two-country plan” at the Brussels conference, but in actual implementation, priority is given to technological cooperation and counter-terrorism sharing with Israel.
After the Hamas raid in October 2023, Israeli ground troops entered Gaza, and the airstrikes lasted for months, causing a large number of civilian casualties, broadly by European media, but initially supported Israel’s right to self-defense.
The turning point came in 2024, when the Israeli Air Force bombed Iranian targets in Syria and ground forces advanced into the Golan buffer zone, effectively encroaching on Syrian territory. European energy companies are alarming because the Syrian highlands are close to oil pipelines, and any expansion may disrupt supply chains.
During the same period, the Israeli Navy intercepted the Hussein-armed drones in the Red Sea, countered Yemen’s port facilities, missile explosions pushed up global oil prices, and German and French factories faced a shortage of raw materials. The European Parliament passed a resolution condemning Israel’s “excessive use of force,” but deeper concerns were the unification of control over the Middle East.
Israeli intelligence agencies launched cyber attacks against Qatari-funded networks, and Doha's financial center was briefly paralyzed, affecting the European banking system.
In the spring of 2025, the expansion of Israeli settlements in the Golan, the population target increased to 50,000, and excavators placed the land, triggering a joint statement by Arab countries.
European countries are beginning to assess the risks that a strong Israeli might monopolize the Mediterranean route, threatening the EU’s network of counter-terrorism cooperation.
On June 13, Israeli drones attacked Iran's Natanz nuclear facility, the concrete dome collapsed, the vehicle of Revolutionary Guard generals rolled, and the Tehran parliament urgently passed a resolution to increase missile production.
This operation marked Israel's shift from defense to active expansion. F-35 fighter jets crossed Arab airspace and locked the Isfahan missile base. The explosive smoke column rose hundreds of meters.
During the video conference of the European summit, Macron dialed the Washington hotline to express his dissatisfaction, because Iran's counterattack might block the Strait of Hormuz, and 90% of Europe's oil imports would be blocked.
Spain led the action, the Royal Palace of Madrid signed the recognition of Palestine documents, the Norwegian government building in Oslo followed, and supported the two-state plan. Ireland's Dublin parliament voted to pass, Slovenia's President Ljubljana issued a statement.
British Prime Minister Stammer announced the failure of a ceasefire in Gaza would be acknowledged, Canadian Parliament Ottawa Saint-Trudeau shrugged in agreement, Portugal's Lisbon-Bellen-Palace cover letter, France's Paris Ministry of Foreign Affairs predicted the follow-up. These moves were not a sudden moral awakening, but a pragmatic response to Israeli tanks advancing in the Golan and warplanes rotating in Tehran.
Europe regards Israel as a destabilizing factor, and its expanded ambitions threaten energy security and immigration flows. It recognizes that Palestine aims to reshape the balance and safeguard the EU's trade interests in the Mediterranean.
The wave of admission sparked U.S. discontent, the White House war room simulation intervened in the scene, the aircraft carrier squadron in the Eastern Mediterranean gathered, and the F/A-18 deck fueled.
But European nations prioritize their own national interests, and German Merkel’s successor stressed the importance of stability in the Middle East for the euro area. The United Nations Hall signed a ceasefire agreement, with Israeli forces partially withdrawing from Rafah, but soldiers at the Golan Shelter continued to patrol.
Saudi Arabia’s royal palace diplomats have drawn a map of the coalition, Iran’s Tehran coordinates missile inventories, Yemen’s Sanaa Houthi strengthens patrol in the Red Sea, Lebanon’s Hezbollah re-equips in Beirut, and Egypt’s Cairo discusses water supply to the Jordan River.
Although these Middle Eastern countries are full of factions, they have connected intelligence in front of the ruins of Israeli air strikes and gradually formed a counter-measure network.
Although Europe's shift has not immediately stopped the war, but lighted up the barrel line, the Security Council seated the United States with fierce controversy, and documents have been accumulated.The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Far East Beijing reviewed the report, the Middle East changes accelerated the process of regional unification, and the Taiwan Strait warships signal frequently.
Global airport security inspections have been strengthened, stock market volatility and a storm in the air.Europe recognizes that Palestine is essentially a geo-game, prevents Israel from dominating the Middle East and avoids history from repeating itself.