Back to story
Perspective Shift

You read this story from where you sit.
Want to read it from somewhere else?

We'll re-present the same story as a thoughtful proponent of the international-law violation frame would. Not to convince you. To let you actually meet the argument.

Choose a vantage
Retold from the other vantage
Steelman · slot A
The settlements-as-war-crimes case
A human rights lawyer would argue —
The Fourth Geneva Convention is unambiguous: an occupying power may not transfer its civilian population into territory it occupies. A $334 million state plan to move thousands of Israeli civilians into the occupied Golan isn't a zoning dispute — it is the deliberate, budgeted execution of a grave breach of international humanitarian law, with the Israeli treasury underwriting the offense. That is why third-state conduct matters here. The EU and UK cannot keep extending preferential trade terms and letting settlement-linked firms operate freely while a treaty partner publicly finances population transfer; doing so makes them material participants in the wrong. Suspending the trade agreements and ring-fencing settlement commerce is the minimum the law of state responsibility demands.

If this read like a fair rendering of the argument — even when you disagree — it's doing its job. Steelmen aren't aimed at persuading you; they're aimed at what the other side actually believes when they're thinking clearly.