Hello and As-Salaam-Alaikum to each of you. We are now the #2 trending news platform on all of Substack, but we are ranked 13th in paid members. To continue our work, please consider chipping in and becoming a monthly or annual member, OK? π₯ Europe Cracks: Dutch Foreign Minister Resigns Over Israel’s Genocide, Shaking His Government ApartCaspar Veldkamp demanded sanctions and a boycott of settlement goods. When blocked, he chose conscience over complicity.ππ½ Friends, this is why The North Star matters. CNN won’t tell you this story like it is. The New York Times will bury it in euphemisms. But here, we call things by their name: genocide, complicity, resignation. If you want to keep this work alive, I need you to join us. π₯ A Crack in the Wall of Silence On this past Friday, something extraordinary happened in Europe — something almost unthinkable in the United States. And it’s a huge deal. π³π± Caspar Veldkamp, the Dutch Foreign Minister (pictured above), resigned from his post rather than continue serving in a government that refused to sanction Israel for its war crimes in Gaza and the West Bank. Within hours, his entire party — the New Social Contract (NSC), including four other ministers — followed him out the door. This is not a small symbolic gesture. Veldkamp is not some junior bureaucrat. He is a seasoned diplomat, a former ambassador to Israel itself. Few men in Europe know Israel better. And he chose conscience over complicity. He told reporters:
Read that again. A sitting European foreign minister just quit because his own government tied his hands while famine rages in Gaza and illegal settlements carve up the West Bank. π₯ Why This Matters Caspar Veldkamp’s resignation matters for three reasons: First, it is a direct admission that Western governments are complicit. They know what Israel is doing. They know it violates international law. And yet, they choose paralysis. Veldkamp said it out loud: he could not “act responsibly” under those conditions. Second, this was not a man ignorant of Israel. He was their friend. Their ambassador. Their partner. His entire career proves he is not hostile or naΓ―ve. Which makes his resignation even more damning. And third, this was not just one man. It was an entire political party — the NSC — withdrawing from the government. In a fragile caretaker coalition already battered by infighting, this collapse signals something deeper: The genocide in Gaza is now destabilizing European politics itself. π₯ What Sparked It The immediate trigger was a cabinet debate over whether to impose a boycott on products from Israel’s illegal West Bank settlements. Veldkamp pushed for it. He argued the Netherlands could not pretend to condemn settlements while continuing to buy their goods. But his coalition partners — the center-right VVD and the populist Farmer-Citizen Movement — blocked him. They insisted such a boycott should only happen “at the European level.” Others flatly opposed any new measures. A day earlier, parliament had also voted down a proposal to halt Israeli-linked arms sales for the Dutch military. Veldkamp’s own government refused even that. So he walked. π₯ The Shadow of Gaza This resignation didn’t happen in a vacuum. It came just as UN-backed experts declared that Gaza City and surrounding areas are in the grip of a man-made famine — one of only four famines officially declared by the IPC in the past 20 years. Deaths are already mounting. The famine is expected to accelerate. And it comes after nearly two years of war, siege, and deliberate starvation. Israel’s policies have left children skeletal, mothers too malnourished to breastfeed, families clawing at crumbs. The famine was not a natural disaster. It was engineered. When Veldkamp said he was “insufficiently able to take meaningful additional measures,” he was talking about famine. He was talking about genocide. He was talking about a cabinet unwilling to treat mass starvation as reason enough to act. π₯ The Pressure From Below There is another force in this story: the people. Between 100,000 and 150,000 Dutch citizens marched in The Hague in June — the largest protest in the Netherlands in two decades. They demanded sanctions, accountability, and an end to complicity in genocide. It worked. Politicians felt the ground shifting under their feet. Veldkamp himself acknowledged the protests shaped his decision-making. This is what we mean when we say protest matters. It cannot always stop bombs, but it can make governments crack. It can make a man in high office decide he will not betray his conscience. π₯ Europe vs. America Compare this to Washington. Here in the United States, Democrats and Republicans alike vote again and again to supply Israel with billions in military aid, block ceasefire resolutions at the UN, and treat Israel’s leaders as honored guests. Donald Trump promises to go even further, openly bragging about letting Israel “finish the job” in Gaza. No member of Congress or a single cabinet member has resigned over complicity. No one in Biden’s cabinet has said, “I cannot act responsibly if I’m restricted from doing what’s necessary.” The silence is total. The complicity is bipartisan. And that is why this Dutch resignation is so important. It shows the wall of silence can crack. It shows that Western leaders can, under enough pressure, admit the truth: Israel is committing genocide, and to refuse to act is to share in the crime. π₯ A Former Ambassador Breaks Ranks Don’t miss this point: Veldkamp was once ambassador to Israel. He is not an outsider. He is an insider. That makes his break more powerful. He has walked their halls, dined with their ministers, shaken hands with their generals. He cannot be smeared as antisemitic or ignorant. When he says Israel is violating international law, he speaks as someone who has been part of the relationship. When he resigns, he takes that credibility with him. And when he says he cannot serve under these conditions, it is not a partisan gesture. It is a moral line. It’s also no small point that The Netherlands is not only a member nation of the International Criminal Court… it is LOCATED THERE! π₯ The Lesson of History The last time European politicians resigned over Israel’s actions was almost never. Words, yes. Symbolic condemnations, yes. But resignations? Almost unheard of. Which is why this moment belongs in history. Years from now, when we look back at the famine in Gaza, at the genocide that starved tens of thousands, the question will be asked: who spoke? Who resigned? Who refused complicity? Caspar Veldkamp’s name will be one of the answers. π₯ Why This Story Matters Friends, this is not just about Dutch politics. It is about the cracks appearing in the West’s unconditional defense of Israel. It is about what happens when famine is no longer deniable. It is about how ordinary people — 150,000 marching in The Hague — can force the conscience of a minister. And it is about how the United States stands alone, still pretending that genocide is “self-defense,” still sending bombs while Europe begins to fracture. This is why you must never underestimate your voice, your protest, your ability to shift history. The famine is real. The genocide is ongoing. But silence is not permanent. π₯ Breaking the Silence Together Caspar Veldkamp said the truth out loud: Israel is violating international law. His government refused to act. So he walked. It is now on us — citizens, readers, activists — to walk too. To walk away from complicity. To walk toward courage. To walk into the streets, into our communities, into our own history books as the people who said: not in our name. ππ½ If you value this work — this voice that tells you what CNN won’t — please support it. Click here to subscribe today. Each new member makes us stronger, more independent, more fearless. Love and appreciate each of you. Here are some big articles I’ve published this past week! |





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