World Speaks: Arrest Warrants Isolate Israel Further

The world and Israeli press see the arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Galant as a major setback for Israel, a dramatic political and legal escalation with much repercussion and leading to its isolation as an occupying state with the imposition of restrictions on the travel of its officials to dozens of countries and weakening its international position.

In a historic precedent, the International Criminal Court issued arrest warrants, Thursday, against Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, and his dismissed Defense Minister Yoav Galant on charges of war crimes in the Gaza Strip.

The arrest warrants focused on the committal of the war crime of genocide, including starving an entire people and preventing them from accessing their right to the necessities of life.

Political storm

The ICC decision sparked an international political storm. While many EU countries confirmed their commitment to implementing the court’s order, attention turned to Israel and how it would deal with the decision, which many consider a slap in the face whose consequences unimaginable, even if the US administration rejects it on the grounds that the ICC does not have jurisdiction in this matter.

Netanyahu, who is in deep crisis and famous for his rhetorics, found no better way than to describe the decision but as a new “Dreyfus trial,” likening himself to the French Jewish officer who was tried in 1894 because he was Jewish. His description was a prelude to considering the ICC decision anti-Semitic, hostile to Jews and a dark day for the history of civilized peoples.

Months ago, Netanyahu described the request of the International Criminal Court’s prosecutor to issue arrest warrants as “ridiculous and false… and a distortion of reality,” while stressing “Israel’s right to defend itself” against barbarism and obscurantism, and those who seek to eliminate it.

A Haaretz article sees the issuing of ICC arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Galant as reflecting the lowest point of the Jewish state in its battle for legitimacy and international support.

According to the article, Israelis who felt supported by many world countries after Operation Aqsa Flood on 7 October, 2023, “wake up today, 13 months later, to find their country isolated, condemned and accused of committing war crimes.”

Dramatic escalation

The British Financial Times described the ICC decision as a dramatic escalation in legal proceedings against Israel over its war on Gaza, noting it is the first decision of its kind against Western-backed Israeli officials.

According to the newspaper, the decision will reinforce the feeling Israel is experiencing increasing international isolation due to its behavior in the war on Gaza.

Le Monde however, stated that it is the United States who would now face isolation after using its veto power against a resolution calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.

According to the French daily, negotiators expected the Biden administration to review its current position before the arrival of the strongly pro-Israel Donald Trump administration.

Potential implications

The New York Times highlighted three possible repercussions of the ICC arrest warrants, the first of which is world diplomatic isolation, especially among the ICC signatory countries and which may hinder diplomatic relations and military cooperation between Israel and many countries.

The New York-based newspaper believes the arrest warrants will put Israeli leaders back under the international legal microscope, making their travel outside Israel risky, in addition to weakening the Israeli position, adding the warrants increases international criticism of Israeli military operations, and weakens the support it receives from its allies, especially in Europe.

But the New York Times also quotes international law expert Philippe Sands as saying there are legal restrictions facing the International Criminal Court in implementing arrest warrants, “but the decision carries strong symbolism that reflects a change in the international position towards Israel,” noting the signatory countries are obligated to arrest “wanted persons if they enter their territory. This is a clear legal obligation.”

However, the newspaper’s adoption of precedents such as Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit to signatory countries without arresting him raises questions about the court’s ability to enforce its decisions in practice.

Embargo on arms supplies to Israel

An Israeli military analyst believes that the two international arrest warrants against Netanyahu and Galant open the door to imposing an arms embargo on the occupying state of Israel.

Amos Harel, an analyst in Haaretz, points out the ICC decision “could give a strong boost to the complaints and criminal investigations against IDF soldiers and commanders that are being conducted in many countries.”

Harel points out to the many implications of the decision, including the possibility of Netanyahu and Galant being arrested in more than 120 member states of the ICC if they reach them, adding the decision could create an opportunity for an arms embargo by additional Western countries, which have so far been content with “more moderate” measures against Israel.

 “This will give a strong boost to the many complaints and criminal investigations against Israeli soldiers and leaders taking place in many countries. It also serves as a reminder that there is another axis for criminal investigation, which is the events taking place in the West Bank, with a focus on settlements,” he added.

The warrants will also put pressure on lower-ranking Israeli officials as they can be brought into war crimes cases in national courts of individual countries they travel to.


“It sort of gives a stamp of quality to Israel’s isolation. This is not a protest at Columbia University. This is not a bunch of hooligans fighting each other on the streets of Amsterdam. This is the ICC,” said Alon Pinkas, a former senior Israeli diplomat pointed out.

This article was translated, edited by Dr Marwan Asmar from the Palestine Information Center and reprinted on crossfirearabia.com.

CrossFireArabia

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Dr. Marwan Asmar holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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A Gaza Horror Story – A Continual Nightmare

CROSSFIREARABIA – The Israeli occupation has violated the ceasefire in Gaza a mind-boggling 3338 times since it was announced on 10 October 2025 when US president Donald Trump boasted he has stopped the Israeli war on strip.

Since that time as well, Israel has killed 1027 civilians in the strip. And this is not to mention that over 3200 people have been injured. And these figures may well go up by the time this article is published. The ceasefire has given the Israeli army a carte blanche momentum to dominate the skies of Gaza and shoot at anything that moves; these are of course mostly civilians, mostly women and children.

Regardless of whether we like it or not, the Israeli army controls the major portions of the Gaza Strip. It started at 53 percent on the day of the ceasefire then slowly crept up to 55, 57, 60 percent and now it wants to move to 70 percent while squeezing the population there into smaller and smaller areas. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has been proud to announce this fact recently!

One effect of this is to establish even wider control of the Gaza Strip under the euphemism of yellow zones where it’s prohibited for people to live in and are declared security zones for the Israeli army to roam in as they please. Another insidious aspect of this is to take ‘potshots’ at the civilian population whenever they feel like it and which is on a daily rota of albeit controlled killing and injury. The Israeli army can’t get at the Hamas operatives because they are not embedded in the population. They are of course nowhere near finished but lie in wait for the appropriate time to continue their war against Israel.

And in between all this, Gazan life – in between destruction, torn-down buildings and mayhem – continues. A case in point is the recent recovery of the remains of the 40 martyrs killed by the Israelis during their genocidal campaign on Gaza in the post-7 October, 2023 butchery. These remains were found by the Gaza civil defense teams after much searching of the grounds of the Sheikh Al Radwan Cemetery in Gaza City. 

The cemetery, or to be fair to the Israeli soldiers, they bulldozed and desecrated the cemetery multiple times in the past two years going on a rampage of willful destruction, as if bodies are going to get up from the graves and attack them. The effect of the bulldozing and mutilation of the graves was horrific, mixing the remains of the bodies of the Palestinian killed with the earth and other remains, creating a gory story of unbelievable horrors. In this war, Israeli soldiers made the digging up cemeteries their favorite past-time, a macaber practice made all over Gaza – and this was done for no known, sane, reasonable reason anybody could think of.

In the latest recovery however, Palestinian civil defense officials say the remains are now being transported to local forensic scientists with the hope they would be identified for their families and relatives who would at least know what happened to them.

 This is going to be a complex task because of the fact that nearly all of the health system  in Gaza stands decimated, not to mention there is very little equipment and medicines in the down-torn hospitals today. And the fact that Israel still tightly controls what goes into Gaza through a blanket embargo it imposed on the enclave since 2006. So the fate of the remains of the bodies will remain in doubt at least for the time-being. Israel will stand accused for its abomination.

The Israeli genocide with people like Netanyahu gleefully watching, and indeed ordering for more blood to be shed, ripped Gazan society apart while dehumanizing its social formation. Latest statistics show today that mass Israeli bombs thrown on the Strip created at least 28,000 Palestinian widows. 

Over the past two and a half years, they lost their husbands, their fathers, mothers, uncles and cousins reducing Gaza into hollowed gorges of ruined concrete. These widows become overnight breadwinners for their young children and babies regardless of the fact that Gaza today is in a starvation-mode with no jobs available. 

These are just a few of the social changes Gazan are trying to grapple with inbetween the daily Israeli onslaughts of rising deaths and a too unwilling international community to tell Israel to stop and afraid of the black sheep.

Dr. Marwan Asmar who is currently the editor of crossfirearabia.com holds a PhD from Leeds University and is a freelance writer specializing on the Middle East. He has worked as a journalist since the early 1990s in Jordan and the Gulf countries, and been widely published, including at Albawaba, Gulf News, Al Ghad, World Press Review and others.

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Israel Killed Raghad on The Way to School

17-year-old Raghad Hussein Ashour left her home, Monday morning, carrying her books and dreams, heading to an educational center in the Rimal neighborhood of Gaza City. She was preparing for her secondary school exams and clinging to her right to education despite the war, displacement, and destruction that has affected schools and all aspects of life in the Gaza Strip.

But her path to knowledge was cut short. Raghad was killed in an Israeli airstrike that targeted a vehicle in the Rimal neighborhood as she was passing near the site of the attack on her way to the educational center. Her academic dreams turned into a new tragedy reflecting the reality for thousands of students in Gaza.

According to her mother, Raghad was an outstanding student and one of the top performers in her studies. She refused to let the war sever her connection to education.

Read also: Student killed while on her way to take her Tawjihi exam in a bombing in Gaza.

After the destruction of schools and the disruption of the educational process, she had become accustomed to moving between the streets of Gaza and cafes in search of electricity and internet access to continue her studies and complete her assignments.

From Beit Hanoun to Displacement

Raghad comes from the town of Beit Hanoun in the northern Gaza Strip, but she and her mother were forced to flee to Gaza City to escape the relentless bombardment there. They settled in a displacement camp near the Saraya area in the Rimal neighborhood, where the young woman continued her studies amidst extremely difficult humanitarian conditions.

Raghad’s suffering wasn’t solely due to the war; she had been orphaned since childhood, losing her father when she was just two years old. She was raised by her mother, who dedicated her life to her upbringing and care.

As the years passed, the only daughter became her mother’s support and companion in facing life’s burdens and losses.

“Who will replace her?”

Standing before her daughter’s body, the grieving mother was unable to comprehend the magnitude of the tragedy. Her words, heavy with anguish, uttered, “My daughter was my only child… my rose was taken from me in an instant. Who will ever replace her?”

She added bitterly, “I used to move her from place to place during the war so she wouldn’t be taken from me. We slept together on the same pillow.”

The mother recounted years of fear for her only daughter, how she tried to protect her from death during repeated displacements and the harsh days of war, before losing her on her way to school.

In poignant scenes captured in widely circulated videos, the mother embraced her daughter’s body, weeping for dreams unfulfilled. She spoke of the joy of success that awaited her, and the future she had envisioned for her despite all the hardships, before those dreams were extinguished by the bombing.

Her death sparked widespread grief and reactions on social media, where many saw in her story a poignant illustration of the suffering of Gaza’s students who cling to education despite displacement, destruction, and the lack of basic necessities. For some, their books have become the final testament to dreams that were never meant to be fulfilled.

The Israeli occupation forces continue to violate the ceasefire agreement and the end of the war of aggression on the Gaza Strip for the 256th consecutive day. This agreement was signed on October 10, 2015, in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, under Arab and American mediation. Sanad news agency

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  • June 24, 2026
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Israel Violates Gaza Ceasefire 3338 Times, Kills 1027