An alternative interpretation of the European Union’s sanctions proposal is to view it as a piece of political theater, where the primary goal is not to force a change in Israeli policy but to send a powerful message to multiple audiences, both internal and external.
For the internal European audience, the proposal is a message of action. It shows a public increasingly horrified by the war in Gaza that the EU is not standing idly by. It is a way for Brussels and national leaders to demonstrate that they are responding to the moral and political demands of their citizens, regardless of the ultimate outcome.
For the international audience, particularly the Arab world and the Global South, it is a message of balance and credibility. It signals a shift away from a perceived pro-Israel bias and an attempt to position the EU as a more neutral and principled global actor, enhancing its soft power.
In this view, the actual economic impact on Israel is a secondary concern. The true purpose is the act of proposing and debating the sanctions itself. This act changes the narrative, puts Israel on the defensive, and solidifies a new, more critical European position, even if the measures are never fully implemented.
This doesn’t mean the sanctions have no real-world intent, but it suggests that their communicative and symbolic value may be just as important to the EU as their coercive effect. It is a high-stakes performance on the world stage, designed to reshape perceptions of the EU itself.
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