EU's calls for a Gaza cease-fire are rebuffed

With the U.S. applying scant pressure on Israel, Europe tries to step in to end the bloodshed. So far, little has been achieved.

Reporting from London — With the U.S. caught in limbo between two presidencies, Europe is trying to fill the diplomatic void by assuming a greater role in the international effort to end the bloodshed in the Gaza Strip.

But a series of high-level official forays appears to have achieved little and once again laid the European Union open to criticism that it punches far below its weight in the diplomatic arena, if only because it can't seem to decide who does the punching and how hard.

In the last few days, two separate European delegations descended on the Middle East. One was led by the Czech Republic, which assumed the rotating presidency of the EU last week, and the other by the man who reluctantly gave up that post, French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

Both delegations are urging a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas, the militant group that rules Gaza.

"Pressure should be exerted on all parties involved, including Hamas, in order for the guns to fall silent and peace to return," Sarkozy said Tuesday in Damascus after meeting with Syrian President Bashar Assad. "There is no military solution in Gaza."

But European calls for a cease-fire have been rebuffed, reinforcing the impression that the only real power broker in the conflict remains the United States, which has not demanded an immediate truce.

In Washington, President-elect Barack Obama has remained relatively silent on the conflict in Gaza, deferring to the Bush administration as still the government in charge. By contrast, Europe has been beset by a Babel of official voices, which have sown confusion as to what the EU's view of the crisis is and who speaks for the continent.

Before the delegations arrived in the Middle East, a Czech official described Israel's operation in Gaza as a "defensive" move in response rockets launched by Hamas into Israeli territory. But the Swedish foreign minister promptly contradicted that statement, blaming Israel for escalating the violence.

Likewise, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown called last weekend for an immediate cease-fire. But his Dutch counterpart suggested that the Israeli government was entitled to respond militarily as long as Hamas continued to fire rockets.

And Sarkozy, though respected in diplomatic circles as an energetic leader, has had to answer criticism that he is mounting a unilateral effort detrimental to the credibility of the EU as a unified body.


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