The Europe-Israel Alliance:
Where Politics and Economics Do Not Meet

Introduction
Europe & Middle East
Israel & EU: Economic Allies
European Platforms on Arab-Israeli Peace
Economic Sanctions
EU & Current Peacemaking
Conclusion

e-mail to friendE-Mail This Report
Printable VersionPrintable Version
Support ADL and its Commitment to Israel

Contribute to ADL
Israel and the EU: Political History
Economic Sanctions

In addition to prejudging the outcome of the Arab-Israeli conflict and calling upon Israel to negotiate with the PLO when it was still engaged in terrorist activities against Israel, the Europeans also displayed their partiality by imposing economic sanctions when they disagreed with Israeli policy. Economic sanctions provide the EU with long sought-after political leverage, as a British member of the European Parliament disclosed in October 1988:

"Although my group does not favor using trade agreements to achieve political objectives, we have discovered what a powerful weapon for achieving objectives Parliament has at its disposal in its dealings with those countries with which we have trade protocols?"

Israel’s invasion of Lebanon in 1982 provided the Europeans with their first opportunity to employ economic sanctions for political pressure. At the time, the EC Council of Ministers put the 1975 trade agreement on hold and delayed for one year the signing of a financial protocol with Israel that had already been initialed.

The Palestinian uprising, or intifada, served to highlight Europe’s one-sided approach toward the Arab-Israeli conflict.
"...the Europeans also displayed their partiality by imposing economic sanctions when they disagreed with Israeli policy."
Refraining from criticism of Palestinian violence and terrorism, the various organs of the European Union repeatedly condemned Israel and imposed sanctions on the Jewish State. In March 1988, the European Parliament delayed approving three trade and financial agreements because of Israel’s alleged repression of the intifada and its obstruction of Palestinian exports.

The protocols were later ratified in October 1988, only after Israel granted trade concessions to the Palestinians, agreeing to permit Palestinian products to transit Israeli ports en route to Europe with no Israeli processing or change in certificates of origin.

In December 1989, the European Parliament adopted a resolution condemning "the continuous ban on teaching for the Palestinian population of the West Bank" and calling for a suspension of cultural ties with Israel.

On the basis of alleged Israeli disrespect for human rights, the European Commission suspended the meeting of the Joint Scientific Committee in February 1990, thereby suspending examination of 15 new proposed projects. The Commission also postponed the signing of a cooperation agreement in the field of energy and delayed the visit of a senior European Commission official to Israel.

Finally, since the late 1980s, Israel had been seeking a new trade pact with the Europeans to replace the outdated 1975 accord. Europe kept delaying negotiations with Israel because of the lack of progress on the peacemaking front. Negotiations were finally launched after the Oslo breakthrough and an agreement was reached in November 1995.

Next: EU & Current Peacemaking


This report was published in August 1998

ADL Home Page | International Affairs Home Page
Search | About ADL | Contact ADL | Privacy Policy

© 2001 Anti-Defamation League