Spain asks EU to be firm with Israel to avoid losing credibility

Published on April 22, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs has made a forceful statement directed at the European Union. He urged the bloc to act with firmness and coherence in its stance towards Israel, pointing out that the EU's international credibility is at stake. This position marks a clear line in a complex debate that divides member states.

The Spanish minister speaking in front of EU flags, with a firm expression and a map of the Middle East in the background.

The architecture of foreign policy and the risk of fragmentation 🖥️

From a technical perspective, the EU's foreign policy operates as a distributed system where the national sovereignty of each member state is an independent node. Coherence requires a strict consensus protocol, similar to a transactional database. When a major node, such as a large country, applies contradictory policies, a 'fork' or bifurcation in the decision chain occurs, generating inconsistency and reducing the system's effectiveness against external actors.

Looking for the coherence button in Brussels ⚙️

The situation is reminiscent of trying to get twenty-seven devices with different operating systems to run the same application without errors. Someone in Brussels must be desperately looking for an instruction manual or a magic command, something like /unified_foreign_policy –force, to solve the problem. Meanwhile, the EU's credibility seems to be in beta testing mode, with critical updates pending all members accepting the terms and conditions.