Palestinians Fail to Win UN Support on Peace Talks with Israel

The United Nations Security Council discusses a resolution on Palestinian statehood, in New York, Dec. 30, 2014. (AFP PHOTO/UNITED NATIONS/EVAN SCHNEIDER)

Palestinian leaders have failed in their effort to gain support in the United Nations Security Council for a resolution calling for a peace deal with Israel within a year. They also wanted an end within three years of the Israeli occupation of Palestinian territories.

Israel’s closest ally, the United States, had said it opposed the resolution and would veto it if necessary. But the 15-member council did not pass the resolution. Eight countries supported it: Russia, China, France, Argentina, Chad, Chile, Jordan and Luxembourg. The United States and Australia voted against it. Five countries did not vote: Britain, South Korea, Lithuania, Nigeria and Rwanda. Nine votes were needed for passage.

The Guardian newspaper reports that Nigeria was expected to support the resolution. This would have forced the United States to use its veto power. But Nigerian officials decided not to vote. The Guardian reports American officials persuaded Nigeria not to vote. It says Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry spoke with Nigerian president Goodluck Jonathan on the telephone, asking him not to support the resolution.

Riyad Mansour is the Palestinian representative to the United Nations. He criticized the vote and said the council is not meeting its responsibilities.

In his words, the council “has once again failed to uphold its charter duties to address these crises and to meaningfully contribute to a peaceful and lasting solution in accordance with its own resolutions.”

Saeb Erekat is a Palestinian negotiator. Before the vote, he said the Israeli government has been, in his word, “stalling” in peace talks for more than 20 years. He said this has kept negotiators from making progress.

Jeff Rathke is a spokesman for the U.S. State Department. Before the vote took place on Tuesday, he criticized the resolution.

“We don’t think this resolution is constructive. We think it sets arbitrary deadlines for reaching a peace agreement and for Israel’s withdrawal from the West Bank.”

American officials have been trying to help Israel and the Palestinians reach a peace agreement. But negotiators stopped meeting in April. However Secretary Kerry has met with officials on both sides since then to try to persuade them to restart talks.

Neri Zilber is an expert at the research group, Washington Institute for Near East Policy. He said before the vote that not much will change even if the U.N. Security Council approved the resolution.

“They'll (Palestinians) still have to go back and meet with the Israelis face-to- face.”

Mr. Zilber said the Palestinians may have wanted to use the resolution to force Israel to act.

“My sense, just from my meetings with the Palestinian officials, is that they view this more as a pressure tactic on Israel than as a real mechanism to bring about a Palestinian state in the foreseeable future.”

After the vote in the Security Council, Palestinian leaders said they will try to join the International Criminal Court and try to bring charges of possible war crimes against Israel.

I’m Christopher Cruise.

VOA State Department Correspondent Pam Dockins reported this story from Washington. Christopher Cruise wrote it for VOA Learning English. Caty Weaver edited the story.


Words in This Story

stallingv. to avoid doing something or to delay someone in a deliberate way because you need more time or do not want to do something

constructiveadj. helping to develop or improve something; helpful to someone instead of upsetting and negative

arbitraryadj. not planned or chosen for a particular reason; not based on reason or evidence; done without concern for what is fair or right

tacticn. an action or method that is planned and used to meet a particular goal

mechanismn. a process or system that is used to produce a particular result

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