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Macron takes risk with Palestinian statehood recognition
Macron takes risk with Palestinian statehood recognition
By Delphine Touitou and Francesco Fontemaggi
Paris (AFP) Sept 21, 2025

French President Emmanuel Macron scored a major diplomatic coup by declaring his intention to recognise a Palestinian state, but the move risks drawing bitter retaliation from Israel while not providing concrete benefits to the Palestinians, analysts and sources say.

Macron sent a shockwave through the international community with his pledge over the summer. His announcement, planned for Monday in a speech in New York at a conference on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly, is now to be matched by recognition by nine other states including Australia, Belgium, Canada and the UK, according to the Elysee.

The recognition marks the growing international frustration with Israel over its assault and aid blockades on the Gaza Strip launched in response to the October 7, 2023 attack on Israel by Palestinian militant group Hamas.

The implications are historic -- France and the UK would be the first permanent Western members of the UN Security Council to recognise a Palestinian state and, along with Canada, the first G7 members to do so.

"This recognition is not the end of our diplomatic efforts. It is not a symbolic recognition. It is part of a broader and very concrete action," said French foreign ministry spokesman Pascal Confavreux, pointing to the French-Saudi roadmap that is to accompany the recognition.

Defending the move on Israeli television this week, Macron said it was the "best way to isolate Hamas".

Reaching out to French Jews, whose community leaders believe this is the wrong moment to recognise a Palestinian state, Macron Saturday wrote on X that he had urged the judiciary to improve the response "to antisemitism and its new forms" in the wake of Hamas's October 7 attack.

Ahead of the recognition, France's interior ministry told mayor's offices not to fly the Palestinian flag, with Malakoff on the outskirts of Paris ordered to remove one by the courts on Saturday.

- 'Lot of noise' -

Diplomats from both sides, asking not to be named, expect reprisals from Israel, although they say the retaliation is not likely to extend to Israel cutting diplomatic relations with France.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu could shut down France's consulate in Jerusalem, which is intensively used by Palestinians, or defy international outrage by annexing part of the West Bank where Israel has expanded settlements, they said.

"There is going to be a lot of noise," said one diplomat, asking not to be named.

"The Israelis are prepared for anything, and the French response is likely to be quite limited," said Agnes Levallois, deputy president of the Paris-based Institute for Research and Study of the Mediterranean and Middle East.

"Ultimately, it is the Palestinians who have the most to lose in this crisis," she said, adding the move needed to be followed by sanctions against Israel to have any impact.

"The annexation of the West Bank is a clear red line," warned a French presidential official, asking not to be named. "It is obviously the worst possible violation of UN resolutions."

The United States also vehemently opposes the move and its ambassador to Paris, Charles Kushner, has made his feelings clear in a series of posts on X denouncing "unmet French conditions" for the recognition.

"From the beginning, we have made it clear that recognition of a Palestinian state by France, without any conditions, would complicate the situation on the ground rather than advance peace," Joshua Zarka, Israel's ambassador to France, told AFP.

But the Palestinian representative in France, Hala Abou Hassira, said France needed to go further, urging "concrete sanctions, such as an arms embargo on Israel, a severance of relations with Israel which includes the total termination of the association agreement between the European Union and Israel".

- 'Diplomatic lever' -

After months of wavering on the issue, Macron made the decision on the plane travelling from the Egyptian border point of El-Arish in April, where he met wounded Palestinians and witnessed the suffering caused by the blockade, people close to him said.

Politically embattled at home and failing despite intense efforts to end Russia's war on Ukraine, Macron has a chance to seal a concrete step in his legacy with the recognition.

But Macron sees the move "as a diplomatic lever to put pressure on Netanyahu", said a person close to him, asking not to be named.

For French former ambassador Michel Duclos, resident fellow at the Montaigne Institute, "this could become a success for France," in line with the French decision under late president Jacques Chirac to oppose the American invasion of Iraq in 2003.

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