Israel slams EU’s Kallas for ‘apartheid’ comment: Are ties unravelling?
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said this week he would suspend contact with the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, over reports that she compared Israel’s treatment of Palestini
Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said this week he would suspend contact with the European Union’s foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, over reports
Read Full Story at Al Jazeera →The escalating row between Israel and the European Union over remarks attributed to its foreign policy chief, Kaja Kallas, underscores a deeper fracture in one of the world’s most consequential diplomatic relationships. While the immediate trigger is the allegation that Kallas invoked the term "apartheid" to describe Israel’s policies toward Palestinians, the dispute reflects broader tensions that have simmered for years. Israel’s threat to suspend contacts with Kallas—a move that would further isolate it on the global stage—signals a hardening stance by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, which has increasingly dismissed European criticism as motivated by bias rather than legitimate concern. For the EU, long a vocal advocate for a two-state solution and a vocal critic of settlement expansion, the episode highlights the limits of its influence in a region where geopolitical alignments are shifting rapidly. The background to this clash is decades in the making. The EU has consistently condemned Israeli policies in the West Bank and Gaza, often framing them as violations of international law, while Israel has accused Brussels of applying a double standard. Yet the rhetoric has grown sharper under Netanyahu’s current coalition, which includes far-right factions openly skeptical of Palestinian statehood. Kallas, a former Estonian prime minister known for her hawkish stance on Russia, has emerged as a particularly vocal critic, aligning with a growing cohort of European leaders who argue that Israel’s actions risk making a two-state solution impossible. Her comments, if confirmed, would align her with a chorus of human rights organizations and even some Israeli critics who warn of creeping annexation and systemic discrimination. What happens next remains uncertain. Israel’s suspension of ties with Kallas could be a symbolic gesture, but it also risks alienating a key partner at a time when Netanyahu is already facing international isolation over his government’s judicial overhaul and settlement policies. The EU, meanwhile, may retaliate with symbolic measures of its own, further straining an already fraught relationship. More broadly, this episode fits into a wider trend of deteriorating Israel-EU relations, with Brussels increasingly viewing Israel as a state moving away from democratic norms. The question now is whether this dispute accelerates a broader realignment—or whether pragmatism ultimately prevails.
