The European Union’s standoff with Israel is a moment of truth for its long-cherished identity as a “normative power”—a global actor that seeks to shape international relations through its values and principles rather than military might. The sanctions proposal is the ultimate test of whether the EU is willing to enforce the norms it preaches.
For decades, the EU has promoted a world order based on international law, human rights, and democratic principles. The human rights clause (Article 2) in its trade agreements is a key instrument of this policy, intended to project these values abroad. However, critics have often argued that the EU fails to enforce these clauses against powerful partners.
The proposal to apply tariffs on Israel for violating Article 2 is a direct attempt to answer that criticism. It is a declaration that the EU’s normative commitments are not just empty words and that there are tangible costs for partners who deviate from them. The case is being made that failing to act in the face of the Gaza crisis would render the concept of normative power meaningless.
This puts the EU in a difficult position. Enforcing its norms risks a major diplomatic and economic clash with a key partner and its superpower ally, the United States. Not enforcing them risks a crisis of credibility, exposing the bloc as a “paper tiger” that is unwilling to stand up for its own foundational principles.
The internal EU debate over the sanctions is therefore a debate over the very nature of the European project. It will determine whether the EU is primarily a pragmatic trade bloc or a genuine normative power willing to accept political and economic risks in the defense of its values.