On False Hopes and Broken Promises: Behind the Scenes of the UN Statement on Palestine
by Ramzy
Baroud Posted on March 03, 2023
Rarely does the Palestinian ambassador to the United
Nations make an official remark expressing happiness over any UN proceeding
concerning the Israeli occupation of Palestine.
Indeed, the Palestinian Ambassador Riyad Mansour is
“very happy that there was a very strong united message from the Security
Council against the illegal, unilateral measure” undertaken by the Israeli
government.
The "measure" is a specific reference to a decision,
on February 12, by the far-right government of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu to construct 10,000 new housing units in nine illegal Jewish
settlements in the Occupied Palestinian West Bank.
Expectedly, Netanyahu was angered by the supposedly
"very strong united message" emanating from an institution that is
hardly known for its meaningful action regarding international conflicts,
especially in the Palestinian-Israeli case.
Mansour’s happiness may be justified from some
people’s perspective, especially as we seldom witness a strongly worded
position by the UNSC that is both critical of Israel and wholly embraced by the
United States. The latter has used the
veto power 53 times since 1972 – per UN count –
to block UNSC draft resolutions that are critical of Israel.
However, on examination of the context of the latest
UN statement on Israel and Palestine, there is little reason for Mansour’s
excitement. The UN statement in question is just that: a statement, with no
tangible value and no legal repercussions.
This statement could have been meaningful if the
language had remained unchanged from its original draft. Not a draft of the
statement itself, but of a binding UN resolution that was introduced on
February 15 by the UAE Ambassador.
Reuters revealed that
the draft resolution would have demanded that Israel “immediately and
completely cease all settlement activities in the Occupied Palestinian
Territory.” That resolution – and its strong language – was scrapped under
pressure from the US and was replaced by a mere statement that
“reiterates” the Security Council’s position that “continuing Israeli
settlement activities are dangerously imperiling the viability of the two-state
solution based on the 1967 lines.”
The statement also expressed “deep concern”, actually,
“dismay” with Israel’s February 12 announcement.
Netanyanu’s angry response was mostly intended for
public consumption in Israel, and to keep his far-right government allies in
check; after all, the conversion of the resolution into a statement, and the watering
down of the language were all carried out following a prior agreement among the
US, Israel and the PA. In fact, the Aqaba conference held on
February 26 is a confirmation that that agreement has indeed taken place.
Therefore, the statement should not have come as a surprise to the Israeli
prime minister.
Moreover, US media spoke openly
about a deal, which was mediated by US Secretary of State Antony Blinken. The
reason behind the deal, initially, was to avert a “potential crisis”, which
would have resulted from the US vetoing the resolution. According to the
Associated Press, such a veto “would have angered Palestinian supporters at a
time that the US and its western allies are trying to gain international
support against Russia.”
But there is another reason behind the Washington’s
sense of urgency. In December 2016, then US Ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, refrained from
vetoing a similar UNSC resolution that strongly condemned Israel’s illegal settlement
activities. This occurred less than a month before the end of Barack Obama’s
second term in the White House. For Palestinians, the resolution was too
little, too late. For Israel, it was an unforgivable betrayal. To appease Tel
Aviv, the Trump Administration gave the UN post to Nikki Haley, one of the most
ardent supporters of Israel.
Though another US veto would have raised a few
eyebrows, it would have presented a major opportunity for the strong
pro-Palestine camp at the UN to challenge US hegemony over the matter of the
Israeli occupation of Palestine; it would have also deferred the issue to the
UN General Assembly and other UN-related organizations.
Even more interesting, according to the
Blinken-mediated agreement –
reported by AP, Reuters, Axios, and others – Palestinians and Israelis would
have to refrain from unilateral actions. Israel would freeze all settlement
activities until August, and Palestinians would not “pursue action against
Israel at the UN and other international bodies such as the World Court, the
International Criminal Court and the UN Human Rights Council.” This was the
gist of the agreement at the US-sponsored Aqaba meeting as well.
While Palestinians are likely to abide by this
understanding – since they continue to seek US financial handouts and political
validation – Israel will most likely refuse; in fact, practically, they already
have.
Though the agreement had reportedly stipulated that
Israel would not stage major attacks on Palestinian cities, only two days
later, on February 22, Israel raided the West Bank city of Nablus. It killed 11
Palestinians and wounded 102 others, including two elderly men and a child.
A settlement freeze is almost impossible. Netanyahu’s
extremist government is mostly unified by their common understanding that settlements
must be kept in constant expansion. Any change to this understanding would
certainly mean a collapse of one of Israel’s most stable governments in years.
Therefore, why, then, is Mansour "very
happy"?
The answer stems from the fact that the PA’s credibility
among Palestinians is at an all-time low. Mistrust, if not outright disdain, of
Mahmoud Abbas and his Authority, is one of the main reasons behind the brewing
armed rebellion against the Israeli occupation. Decades of promises that
justice will eventually arrive through US-mediated talks have culminated in
nothing, thus Palestinians are developing their own alternative resistance
strategies.
The UN statement was marketed by PA-controlled media
in Palestine as a victory for Palestinian diplomacy. Thus, Mansour’s happiness.
But this euphoria was short-lived.
The Israeli massacre in Nablus left no doubt that
Netanyahu will not even respect a promise he made to his own benefactors in
Washington. This takes us back to square one: where Israel refuses to respect
international law, the US refuses to allow the international community to hold
Israel accountable, and where the PA claims another false victory in its
supposed quest for the liberation of Palestine.
Practically, this means that Palestinians are left
with no other option but to carry on with their resistance, indifferent – and
justifiably so – to the UN and its ‘watered-down’ statements.
Dr. Ramzy Baroud is a journalist, author and the
Editor of The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of
six books. His latest book, co-edited with Ilan Pappé, is Our Vision for Liberation:
Engaged Palestinian Leaders and Intellectuals Speak Out. His other books
include My Father was a Freedom Fighter and The Last
Earth. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior Research Fellow at the Center for
Islam and Global Affairs (CIGA). His website is www.ramzybaroud.net.
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