Malcolm Armsteen wrote: ↑Fri Feb 23, 2024 1:12 pm
I think we can safely assume that the SNP's actions were motivated by the chance of getting an advantage over Labour in Scotland. Their subsequent behaviour highlights that.
And the point that the UN has not accused Israel of war crimes is substantial, and current. It can't be waved away because we feel like it.
Plus of course, it isn’t only that. Keir Starmer expects to be Prime Minister before the year is out. As PM, he will be expected to engage in diplomatic relations at the highest level with (among others) the Israeli regime. It really won’t help, to put it mildly, his endeavours in that regard if only months previously, he has permitted MPs from his party to vote for a resolution that unambiguously accuses Israel of actual war crimes. Had the SNP resolution omitted the reference to collective punishment of the Palestinian people, which is defined expressly as a war crime under international law, from the resolution, there would have been no issue, and Labour MPs could conceivably have voted for the SNPs resolution. With it there, absolutely no chance. Which is
precisely why the SNP included the wording in their opposition day resolution.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.