Israel has made history -- and not the kind any democracy should be proud of. The Knesset has voted to approve a death penalty law that applies specifically to Palestinians convicted of carrying out lethal attacks against Israelis. No other country in the 21st century has introduced capital punishment into its legal code. Israel is the first. And the law does not apply to its own citizens.

Let that sink in. A nation that claims to be the "only democracy in the Middle East" has codified a law that explicitly targets one ethnic group for the ultimate punishment while exempting another. There is a word for that. The word is apartheid.

The legislation, backed by far-right coalition members who have long pushed for harsher measures against Palestinians, passed with a comfortable majority. Supporters argued the law would serve as a deterrent against attacks on Israeli civilians. National Security Minister Itamar Ben Gvir, who has openly called for the expulsion of Palestinians, celebrated the vote as a "historic day for Israeli security."

But deterrence is not what this law is about. If deterrence worked, the decades of military occupation, blockades, home demolitions, and extrajudicial killings would have ended Palestinian resistance long ago. This law is about punishment -- collective, racialized punishment enshrined in the legal code of a state that receives billions in military aid from the United States.

Under international humanitarian law, an occupying power imposing the death penalty on a protected population is a grave violation of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Article 68 explicitly prohibits an occupying power from pronouncing death sentences on inhabitants of occupied territory for offenses committed after the occupation began -- unless those offenses involved espionage or serious acts of sabotage against the military, and only if the occupied territory's own laws already included such penalties before occupation.

Palestinian law does not carry a functioning death penalty. Israel's own domestic law effectively abolished the death penalty decades ago, reserving it only for extraordinary cases like genocide under the "Nazi and Nazi Collaborators Punishment Law." The new legislation creates a carve-out -- not for genocide perpetrators, but for Palestinians.

Human rights organizations were swift to condemn the move. Amnesty International called it "a deeply disturbing escalation that formalizes the discriminatory legal framework governing Palestinians under Israeli control." B'Tselem, the Israeli human rights group, was blunter: "This is what apartheid looks like when it stops pretending."

Where is the international outrage? Where are the emergency UN sessions? Where are the sanctions? If any other country on earth passed a death penalty law targeting a specific ethnic group, the condemnation would be deafening. Imagine if Nigeria passed a law allowing execution of one ethnic group but not another. The Western press would run it for weeks. Editorials would flow. Ambassadors would be recalled.

But Israel operates under a different set of rules. The United States, which lectures the world on human rights, has said virtually nothing. The European Union, which prides itself on abolishing capital punishment across its member states, issued a tepid statement of "concern." Concern. A country just legalized ethnic-specific execution and Europe is "concerned."

This is the double standard that has defined the Palestinian question for decades. International law applies to everyone -- except when it does not. Human rights are universal -- except when they are inconvenient. Democracy means equality before the law -- except when the law is written to exclude you by birth.

The danger of this legislation extends far beyond Palestine. It sets a precedent. If a country can introduce the death penalty for one group and not another in 2026 and face no meaningful consequences, what stops the next government from doing the same? What stops the erosion of legal equality in countries already teetering on the edge of authoritarianism?

For Palestinians, the law changes little in practical terms. Israel has killed thousands of Palestinians without trials, without charges, and without consequence. The bombs do not wait for a court verdict. But symbolically, this law matters enormously. It takes what was already happening in practice -- the devaluation of Palestinian life -- and writes it into the statute books for the world to see.

Israel has told the world exactly what it is. The question now is whether the world will keep pretending it did not hear.