Opinion | Israel-Gaza war: peace can only be achieved if we all pull together

That is nearly 1 per cent of the territory’s pre-war population. About 70 per cent of those killed have been women and children. Over half a million people in Gaza – a quarter of the population – are starving, according to the UN, and the risk of famine is increasing due to insufficient aid entering Gaza.

I could barely watch the news of the displaced and all the civilian deaths, especially of babies. Since I became a mother, any bad news about children makes me extremely uncomfortable. I wish only to see children, no matter where they are, grow up in love and peace with abundant choices of food, toys; everything.

But the brutal reality in Gaza is a head-on blow, a reminder that this remains a wish. Premature babies are dying without incubators, children are having limbs amputated without anaesthesia … One of the most frequent words heard in interviews of Gaza residents is “numb”. Tired of being afraid, they have grown numb to the seemingly endless conflicts, which stretch back decades.

Numbness. It’s a word that also aptly describes the attitudes of many in the world outside the miserable reality of that land. I grew up with news of Israeli-Palestinian conflicts, which never seemed to be absent from international news coverage. Somehow, it faded into the background of daily life. People got used to it.

But it seems different this time. Israel’s latest military operation in Gaza sits among the deadliest and most destructive in recent history. The international community’s calls for a ceasefire grow stronger. Everybody knows how to ease the humanitarian crisis – stop the attacks and let the aid in.

But it just cannot be achieved. There has been no resolution passed by the UN Security Council with clear wording on stopping the conflict since it broke out in October. Why? The US has become the biggest obstacle.
It claims to support Israel’s right to self-defence against Hamas, and has twice vetoed resolutions calling for a ceasefire, on the grounds that it may allow Hamas to regroup and attack Israel again. But as what even US President Joe Biden describes as Israel’s “ indiscriminate bombing” goes on, America finds itself increasingly isolated, even at odds with traditional allies that support a Gaza ceasefire.

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Premature babies evacuated from al-Shifa after Israeli troops seize Gaza’s biggest hospital

Premature babies evacuated from al-Shifa after Israeli troops seize Gaza’s biggest hospital

After many delays, the UN Security Council finally passed a resolution on December 22 seeking “ urgent steps” to expand aid in Gaza, voting 13-0 with the United States and Russia abstaining. It is a watered-down version of a draft that pleaded for an “urgent suspension of hostilities” between Israel and Hamas. Russia wanted to keep the stronger language; the US did not.

The resolution is a result of compromise. Although it lacks unanimous support for an immediate pause to the fighting, I’d still like to consider it a step forward, a glimmer of hope, as the US abstained instead of vetoing for a third time.

During the voting process, there was a dramatic scene. The US representative to the United Nations, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, initially raised her hand in favour of the resolution but was immediately nudged by a staff member behind her. She lowered her hand and raised it later for the abstention.

I’d like to believe it was an instinct that caused her to raise her hand to support the resolution. Maybe at that moment, she followed her heart, not her head.

At a press briefing shortly after, UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres expressed hope that the resolution paved the way for a humanitarian ceasefire, which is “the only way to begin to meet the desperate needs of people in Gaza and end their ongoing nightmare”. He also upheld the two-state solution for Israelis and Palestinians as “the only path to sustainable peace”.

The international community should speak with one voice for a commitment to the two-state solution – and back it with action.

Back to my son’s favourite story, Pulling the Radish. Among the different versions, I like this one the most: a little rabbit finds a radish that’s too big to pull out. It asks other animals for help. Along comes a bear, strong and arrogant.

The bear thought it would be easy to pull the radish out all by itself, so it dismissed the other animals and started to pull. But the bear failed. The animals driven away came back and, together, they succeeded in pulling the radish out.

If sustainable peace between the Israelis and Palestinians is the radish, then although there is a bear making the process more complicated than it needs to be, I still believe that, with a united effort, the radish can be got. After all, that is the plain truth every child knows: unity brings more strength.

Wei Wei is the former chief correspondent of the Eurasian bureau based in Moscow of China Central Television

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