How Canada’s relationship with Israel went from ‘best friend’ to breakdown
Warning: This story consists of an archival picture of lifeless our bodies.Canada's relationship with Israel has travelled a good distance since 2015, when prime minister Stephen Harper and aspiring rival Justin Trudeau competed to assert the title of finest pal of the Jewish state.After successful his majority in 2011, Harper realigned Canada's votes on the …
Warning: This story consists of an archival picture of lifeless our bodies.
Canada’s relationship with Israel has travelled a good distance since 2015, when prime minister Stephen Harper and aspiring rival Justin Trudeau competed to assert the title of finest pal of the Jewish state.
After successful his majority in 2011, Harper realigned Canada’s votes on the United Nations, becoming a member of a firmly pro-Israel bloc comprised of the U.S. and a gaggle of Pacific island microstates that usually observe Washington’s lead.
That bloc would typically be joined by a wider circle of pro-Israel nations; on essentially the most controversial issues, nevertheless, its core members voted alone with Israel towards overwhelming majorities.
From 2011, Canada opposed nearly all motions favouring Palestinians or criticizing Israel — a near-reversal of its votes on the identical annual Israel-Palestine motions 15 years earlier.
Harper additionally developed a private friendship with Israel’s eternally returning prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu, even serenading him on the piano in 2014. (Harper stays a well-liked determine in Israel right this moment.)
And but Justin Trudeau’s chief fundraiser Stephen Bronfman claimed the Liberal was a fair higher pal of Israel, mentioning that he, not like Harper, had truly visited the nation (a deficiency Harper has since made up for a number of instances).
WATCH | Carney says Canada will examine IDF firing at diplomats in West Financial institution:
Carney requires investigation into IDF photographs fired close to Canadian diplomats in West Financial institution
Prime Minister Mark Carney is looking for a ‘full investigation’ and an ‘rapid clarification’ after the Israel Defence Forces fired photographs at at a diplomatic delegation in Jenin that included 4 Canadians. The tour was assessing the humanitarian scenario within the West Financial institution metropolis. Senior officers at International Affairs Canada say embassy employees are shaken up, however are receiving assist from the division.
Canada “should at all times be a powerful, true pal of Israel,” Trudeau stated throughout the 2015 marketing campaign, and for a number of years afterward, Israel had no motive to doubt that sentiment.
The Harper authorities took the place that Israel was being “singled out” unfairly on the UN, and instructed Canadian diplomats to oppose even these motions that upheld Canada’s personal official positions on the battle. Trudeau continued that method.
Then-prime minister Stephen Harper, left, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at a joint press convention in Jerusalem in January 2014. The 2 developed an in depth friendship. (Sean Kilpatrick/The Canadian Press)
For instance, Canada underneath Trudeau continued to vote towards making use of the Fourth Geneva Conference to the Occupied Territories (particularly East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip, the West Financial institution and the Golan Heights), though the International Affairs web site explaining Canada’s place on the battle states that “the Fourth Geneva Conference applies within the occupied territories.”
The Trudeau authorities was prepared to simply accept being diplomatically remoted for supporting Israel, as in December 2016, when it joined Israel, the U.S., Micronesia, Palau and the Marshall Islands in opposing a UN decision guaranteeing the protections of the Geneva Conference to Palestinian civilians within the occupied territories, whereas Britain, France, Germany, and 167 different nations lined up on the opposite aspect.
Then-prime minister Justin Trudeau pauses whereas talking concerning the Israel-Hamas struggle throughout a information convention in Maple Ridge, B.C., on Nov. 14, 2023. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)
2019: The votes begin to shift
Canada’s place started to shift in 2019, after Netanyahu shaped his fifth (and fourth consecutive) Israeli authorities.
Following a 12 months of violent assaults by Jewish settlers within the West Financial institution, Canada voted for a UN movement affirming the Palestinians’ proper to self-determination, and the core pro-Israel bloc shrank to only the U.S., Israel, the Marshall Islands, Nauru and the Federated States of Micronesia.
U.S President Donald Trump, left, welcomes Netanyahu on the entrance of the White Home on Feb. 4, 2025. The U.S. stays a staunch ally of Israel and has not joined Canada and different nations in criticizing its current actions in Gaza. (Leah Millis/Reuters)
The vote change was roundly condemned by pro-Israel teams in Canada. The Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs known as it “a dramatic departure from a 10-year report” of assist for Israel on the UN.
Nonetheless, Canada continued to largely observe the voting sample established by Harper. Trudeau once more confronted criticism from former ministers and diplomats in 2020 over his perceived passivity within the face of Israeli plans to annex elements of the West Financial institution.
Canada’s place was shifting by inches, nevertheless. Again in 2012, Canada had voted and campaigned towards Palestine receiving observer standing on the UN. However when Palestine’s supporters pushed in 2021 to raise that standing in a number of important methods, Canada abstained (and the movement handed).
2022: Israel’s radical settlers take energy
On the finish of 2022, an election stalemate signalled bother forward for Israel’s worldwide relations.
Netanyahu had gained a sixth mandate after a short interregnum, however his conventional coalition companions refused to cope with him, and he needed to flip to events beforehand on the perimeter of Israeli politics to type a authorities.
The ensuing coalition deal noticed a few of the most excessive figures in Israeli politics enter key cupboard posts, together with Bezalel Smotrich, who has finished a lot to worsen relations with Canada and different allies, and who’s seen by many Israelis as the person stopping Netanyahu from reaching a ceasefire in Gaza.
Israeli troopers react as settlers collect throughout a scuffle with Palestinians in Hebron, within the Israeli-occupied West Financial institution, in November 2022. Settlers joined the political mainstream that 12 months when Netanyahu turned to them to assist prop up his coalition authorities. (Mussa Qawasma/Reuters)
Violent West Financial institution settlers took the brand new authorities as a sign to extend their assaults, and the brand new Netanyahu authorities quickly discovered itself at odds with allies, to various levels, over increasing settlements, displacements and land confiscations.
However as has occurred up to now, what lastly triggered a rift was Israeli conduct in struggle.
The Oct. 7 bloodbath
The present struggle was triggered by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023, when the Palestinian group and allied militants invaded Israeli territory and massacred lots of of Israeli civilians of their properties, automobiles and workplaces, and at a music competition.
Israel’s allies have been united in outrage on the atrocities. As they identified in a joint assertion as just lately as this week, the Canadian, French and British governments all gave Israel robust assist.
Israeli troopers examine the burnt automobiles of festival-goers at one of many websites of the Oct. 7, 2023, assaults on Israel led by Hamas. (Amir Cohen/Reuters)
Together with the U.S. and Germany, the three have been Israel’s strongest historic supporters. Britain’s Balfour Declaration in 1917 gave the Nice Energy seal of approval to a Jewish homeland in Palestine within the first place. And it was largely French-supplied arms corresponding to Dassault plane and AMX tanks — not American arms — that defended the Jewish state in its childhood after independence in 1948.
However over the 12 months and a half because the Oct. 7 bloodbath, the destruction of hospitals, colleges, energy crops and water therapy crops within the Gaza Strip — typically in demolitions that aren’t a part of fight operations — in addition to the repeated killings of docs and paramedics, help staff and journalists have been options of Israeli warfare that Western allies have discovered more and more tough to elucidate or excuse.
‘I instructed him to cease’
The Israel Defence Forces’ perceived disregard for civilian life has plagued the nation’s relationship with its closest allies for many years.
In August 1982, Ronald Reagan grew livid with prime minister Menachem Start over the IDF’s conduct throughout the first Israeli invasion of Lebanon.
“I used to be offended,” Reagan wrote in his official diary. “I instructed him it needed to cease or our whole future relationship was endangered. I used the phrase ‘holocaust’ intentionally & stated the image of his struggle was turning into an image of a 7 month previous child with its arms blown off …. Twenty minutes. later he known as to inform me he’d ordered an finish to the barrage and plead for our continued friendship.”
The next month, the IDF invaded West Beirut in violation of a dedication Start had given Reagan. IDF commander common Ariel Sharon’s forces surrounded Palestinian refugee camps and allowed a Lebanese militia underneath his management to execute lots of of males, ladies and kids.
Our bodies of a few of the victims of the 1982 bloodbath carried out by an Israeli-backed Lebanese militia on the Sabra and Shatila Palestinian refugee camps in Beirut. (Ali Jarekji/AJ/CLH/Reuters)
A “horrified” Reagan, declaring that “all individuals of decency should share our outrage and revulsion over the murders,” publicly demanded Israeli forces go away Beirut — a requirement Start couldn’t afford to disregard.
Greater than 40 years later, Israel’s method to struggle continues to alienate overseas allies.
Arrest warrants and ceasefire talks
Because the civilian demise toll rocketed within the early months of the present struggle in Gaza, the Trudeau authorities discovered itself torn between its longstanding assist for the Worldwide Prison Courtroom and its longstanding need to not see the ICC go after Israel — which it had communicated greater than as soon as with the implied menace that Canadian funding for the ICC was at stake.
Confusion about Canada’s place on ICC struggle crimes warrants towards Netanyahu final spring was made worse by poor communication, muddled due to Trudeau’s need to not upset supporters of both aspect.
Canadian officers felt that they had been performed by Israel after they have been pressured to chop funding to the UN Refugee Works Company based mostly on allegations its employees had colluded with Hamas within the Oct. 7 assaults. Canada was promised intelligence that may again up these claims, however did not obtain it, and as a substitute confronted an Israeli strain marketing campaign carried out by means of the media. In March 2024, two months after suspending funding to UNRWA, Canada restored it.
A Palestinian boy sits beside an help field offered by UNRWA in Khan Younis, within the southern Gaza Strip, in February 2025. Canada briefly suspended funding for UNRWA after Israel accused a few of its employees of colluding with Hamas within the Oct. 7 assaults. (Hatem Khaled/Reuters)
The Trudeau authorities’s intuition to again Israel nonetheless held when Israeli settlers within the West Financial institution responded to Oct. 7 by escalating their assaults on Palestinian farms and houses, with impunity from the Israeli authorities and in more and more open collusion with native IDF models.
Canada initially held again at the same time as allies in Europe and Washington sanctioned the settlers. When the violence finally pressured Ottawa to announce sanctions, it dragged its toes about truly making use of them.
There have been rising indicators of dissent throughout the Liberal caucus, particularly because the demise toll of kids in Gaza soared. Polls revealed that youthful Canadians specifically have been turning towards Israel.
In July 2024, with one thing like 40,000 lifeless in Gaza, Trudeau joined with the prime ministers of Australia and New Zealand to name for a ceasefire.
3 assaults that stay unexplained
Three inflection factors in a deteriorating relationship between Israel and its allies have concerned assaults on humanitarian and medical staff.
In January 2024, the killing of five-year-old Hind Rajab, who had spent days alone in a bullet-riddled automotive with the our bodies of her lifeless household, adopted by the killing of the paramedics who tried to rescue her, broken the IDF’s picture. Investigations by the Washington Publish and Sky Information shredded its denials of involvement.
A lethal assault on an help convoy of the NGO World Central Kitchen in April 2024, which killed help employee and Canadian Military veteran Jacob Flickinger, marked the start of the tip of the Canadian authorities’s unconditional assist for Israel’s Gaza marketing campaign.
Palestinians mourn medics who got here underneath Israeli fireplace whereas on a rescue mission, after their our bodies have been recovered, in accordance with the Crimson Crescent, at Nasser Hospital in Khan Younis, within the southern Gaza Strip, on March 31, 2025. (Hatem Khaled/Reuters)
European opinion was additional alienated in March of this 12 months (North People have been distracted by different occasions) when Israeli forces broke a two-month ceasefire and, 5 days later, attacked a convoy of ambulances in Gaza, killing 15 paramedics and help staff. When the our bodies have been found in a shallow grave days later, the IDF claimed that they had approached a checkpoint with lights out, and the deaths have been the results of a tragic confusion.
The IDF was pressured to alter its story after it was contradicted by a video on a cell phone recovered from a first responder’s physique that left little doubt that the troopers knew whom they have been attacking.
The ultimate straw: starvation as a weapon
Whereas Canada, the U.Okay. and France have all made calls for and urged restraint on Israel up to now, the joint assertion they issued on Monday may be very completely different in tone and content material from something they’ve stated earlier than.
What seems to have lastly pushed Canada, Britain and France to say sufficient is sufficient was using meals as a weapon of struggle.
The speech to the U.Okay. Parliament by British Overseas Minister David Lammy this week revealed the extent of the injury finished to relationships.
WATCH | U.Okay. suspends commerce talks with Israel over Gaza operations:
U.Okay. suspends free commerce talks with Israel over Gaza offensive
The U.Okay. has paused free commerce talks with Israel, summoned its ambassador and introduced additional sanctions towards West Financial institution settlers as Overseas Minister David Lammy condemned a ‘monstrous’ navy escalation in Gaza.
Calling Israel’s proposed “Gideon’s Chariots” operation — an open-ended plan to seize all of Gaza — “merciless and indefensible,” Lammy took direct purpose at Netanyahu for saying he meant to proceed to make use of starvation as a strain level.
“That is abominable. Civilians in Gaza going through hunger, homelessness and trauma, determined for this struggle to finish, now confront renewed bombardment, displacement and struggling,” Lammy instructed the Home.
“Israel has repeatedly struck hospitals, and three extra in northern Gaza ceased operations this weekend. But extra help staff and medical staff have been killed, after final 12 months proved the deadliest 12 months on report for humanitarian personnel.”
Palestinians wait to obtain meals cooked by a charity kitchen in Jabalia, within the northern Gaza Strip, on Might 14, 2025. The UN World Meals Program stated the inhabitants was susceptible to famine after help was blocked from coming into the territory for greater than two months. Israel eased the blockade this week. (Mahmoud Issa/Reuters)
Lammy then regarded forward.
“We at the moment are coming into a darkish new part on this battle. Netanyahu’s authorities plans to drive Gazans from their properties right into a nook of the strip to the south and allow them a fraction of the help that they want. Yesterday, Minister Smotrich even spoke of Israeli forces ‘cleaning’ Gaza, of ‘destroying what’s left’ and of resident Palestinians being ‘relocated to 3rd nations.’ We should name this what it’s: it’s extremism, it’s harmful, it’s repellent, it’s monstrous and I condemn it within the strongest doable phrases.”
It was telling that, even whereas giving one of many strongest condemnations of Israel ever heard from a significant Western authorities, Lammy was heckled by MPs who wished him to go additional and declare the struggle on Gaza a genocide.
Pictures fired in Jenin
The day after the joint Canada-U.Okay.-France assertion, diplomats from a number of Western governments that had condemned the Netanyahu authorities got here underneath fireplace from Israeli troopers whereas visiting the West Financial institution metropolis of Jenin.
The IDF claimed to have fired warning photographs within the air after diplomats strayed from an agreed route, though video footage from the scene confirmed troopers aiming their rifles in a horizontal course. 4 Canadian embassy employees, together with head of mission Graham Datells, have been amongst these pressured to hunt cowl.
Prime Minister Mark Carney described the capturing as “completely unacceptable: it is one in all many issues which might be completely unacceptable occurring within the area.”
Prime Minister Mark Carney speaks throughout a press convention outdoors Rideau Corridor in Ottawa earlier this month. Carney earned the ire of Netanyahu in current days by becoming a member of the U.Okay. and France in condemning a few of Israel’s actions in Gaza. (Blair Gable/Reuters)
Shortly after Lammy lambasted the IDF for bombing and shelling hospitals, Israeli forces launched new assaults on the Al-Awda Hospital in Jabaliya in northern Gaza.
In the meantime, Netanyahu verbally attacked Carney, Starmer and Macron.
“By asking Israel to finish a defensive struggle for our survival earlier than Hamas terrorists on our border are destroyed and by demanding a Palestinian state, the leaders in London, Ottowa [sic] and Paris are providing an enormous prize for the genocidal assault on Israel on October 7 whereas inviting extra such atrocities,” he posted on X.
Two days later, following the capturing deaths of two younger Israeli Embassy staffers in Washington, D.C., by a pro-Palestinian assailant, Netanyahu went additional by seeming responsible the three Western leaders.
In a video assertion, Netanyahu accused Carney, Macron and Starmer of getting “purchased into Hamas’s propaganda that claims Israel is ravenous Palestinian kids,” and charged that “these three leaders successfully stated they need Hamas to stay in energy” and repeat the Oct. 7 bloodbath “repeatedly and once more.”
WATCH | Netanyahu criticizes Carney for ’emboldening Hamas’:
Netanyahu accuses Carney of ’emboldening Hamas’ after D.C. capturing
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu attacked Canada, France and the U.Okay. in his response to the killing of two Israeli Embassy staffers in Washington, saying that ‘when mass murderers, rapists, child killers and kidnappers thanks, you are on the flawed aspect of justice.’ Israel’s Ambassador to Canada Iddo Moed responds to the nations’ joint warning of sanctions over Israel’s enlargement of the struggle in Gaza, telling Energy & Politics that ‘Israel has the potential of conquering Gaza in half a day.’ Plus, NDP interim chief Don Davies addresses a letter from three of the get together’s seven MPs calling out his choice as chief.
Netanyahu’s isolation
On Thursday evening on CBC’s Energy & Politics, Israeli ambassador Iddo Moed criticized Carney for signing the joint assertion.
“When the selection of a brand new authorities is instantly to step out within the open and to return out with formal accusations and formal summons and so forth, the response from Prime Minister Netanyahu may be very clear that this isn’t the best way.”
Israeli Ambassador to Canada Iddo Moed met with Overseas Affairs officers to debate Israeli troopers firing warning photographs close to a diplomatic tour within the West Financial institution this week that included 4 Canadians. (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press)
However there was little signal that such admonishments would trigger the British, French or Canadian governments to return to positions they held per week in the past.
Whereas Britain has already taken measures, together with the suspension of free commerce talks with Israel, Carney has refused to specify what “concrete actions” Canada will take if its calls for aren’t met.
For Benjamin Netanyahu, this week portends a tough future. He’s nonetheless welcome in Trump’s Washington, nevertheless it’s tough to think about him ever considering of visiting Ottawa, London or Paris once more with a struggle crimes warrant hanging over his head and David Lammy’s damning phrases ringing in his ears.
But if his previous is any information, Netanyahu’s rising isolation might solely improve his legendary dedication to hold onto energy.