UN-ilateral politics...
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=339966
JAMAL KANJ
Thursday, October 18,
2012
Frustrated with the circuitous peace process and absence of
a universal enforceable framework, Palestinians decided last year
to turn to
the United Nations (UN) to seek full state membership at the international
body.
Their hopes were buoyed in 2010 by US President Barack
Obama's speech at the UN declaring: "When we come back next year,
we can
have an agreement that will lead to a new member of the United Nations, an
independent, sovereign state of Palestine."
That vision was thwarted by Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu, who pursued instead the building of Jewish-only settlements
on
occupied Palestinian land.
Lack of political will on the part of the US and European
Union to end Israel's violation of the Oslo Accord left Palestinians with no
option
but to seek UN recognition of a state on only 22 per cent of historical
Palestine.
Negating the president's speech, the US successfully led an
Israeli proxy campaign last year to block a Security Council vote on the
application
for full UN membership.
Thereafter, the Palestinian leadership shelved their plans -
even offering to forgo UN membership if only the US and Middle East Peace
Quartet
would set a reciprocal binding framework for peace negotiation.
In the absence of serious international efforts, Palestine
President Mahmoud Abbas declared at the opening of the UN General Assembly
session
last month his intention to bypass the Council and pursue instead
non-member observer status at the UN under "Uniting for Peace" rules.
This was first invoked by the US in 1950 in response to a
Council impasse over the situation in Korea.
The rule stipulates that in case the Council "fails to
exercise its primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace
and security",
the matter can be brought directly to the General Assembly.
For 20 years, the US and the EU have failed to force
succeeding Israeli government to accept a vision for an independent Palestinian
state.
In fact, over the same period Israel has more than doubled
its illegal settlement population on occupied Palestinian land.
Peace requires two willing parties.
The current Israeli government was elected on a platform
that pledged to reject "the establishment of a Palestinian Arab state west
of the
Jordan river" and ensure "the Jordan river will be permanent
eastern border of the State of Israel".
The US and EU have long ago forced the Palestinians to
cancel their national charter and have isolated Hamas for refusing to change
its platform.
It is high time the US and Europeans took similar action
against Israel's governing parties.
As for the US role, the Palestinian leadership must stop
deluding itself. The peculiar US policy in the Middle East is dictated by a
small number
of unchecked Israeli "firsters".
Thomas Mooerer, a former chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of
Staff, once summed up this relation stating: "I've never seen a president
stand
up to them. They (Israelis) always get what they want. If the American
people understood what a grip those people have got on our government,
they
would rise up in arms."
Until they "rise up", the US economy is
struggling, American taxpayers are footing Israel's occupation bill, while
Israelis are enjoying a prosperous
economy under a de facto status quo.
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