Israel rebuked at United Nations. Will Security Council take action?
Israel is used to weathering criticism at the United Nations, particularly over settlement activity. But now, Palestinians and their supporters are threatening to seek Security Council intervention.
Washington
Israel鈥檚 approval last week of 238 new Jewish housing units in Arab East Jerusalem provoked widespread condemnation in a United Nations Security Council session Monday focused on the stalemated Israeli-Palestinian peace talks.
At least one country speaking at the meeting 鈥 Nigeria 鈥 bluntly characterized the resumption of settlement construction as 鈥渁 move to kill direct talks鈥 between the two parties, and it called on Israel to 鈥渞escind鈥 recent settlement approvals.
Egypt, representing the Non-Aligned Movement (which sets forth the interests of 118 developing countries), suggested that the time is quickly approaching when the international community will be left with no alternative but to impose the conditions of an Israeli-Palestinian settlement.
Israel is accustomed to weathering criticism in the Security Council, particularly over settlement activity that is illegal under international law. The UN鈥檚 assistant secretary-general for political affairs, Oscar Fernandez-Taranco, repeated this view of the illegality of Israel鈥檚 settlement activity in his report to the Council. He added, 鈥淚f the door to peace closes, it will be very hard to reopen.鈥
But Monday鈥檚 Security Council session on 鈥渢he Palestinian question鈥 drew particular interest because the Palestinians, and their supporters in the Arab League, are threatening to seek Security Council intervention if Israel does not pave the way for direct talks to resume through renewal of a settlement moratorium. Palestinians and others are even contemplating whether they could obtain Council approval of a unilateral Palestinian declaration of an independent state.
President Obama launched direct Israeli-Palestinian peace talks at the beginning of September, but they stalled after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu refused to extend a moratorium on settlement construction that ended Sept. 26. Since then, hundreds of new Jewish housing units have been either started or announced for the West Bank and East Jerusalem.
Neither the Palestinians nor Arab countries proposed specific Council action at Monday鈥檚 meeting. The Arab League, at a meeting earlier this month, voted to give US efforts to revive the talks a month, during which time it called on Palestinian leaders not to formally abandon the talks.
Still, several countries on Monday raised the prospect of far more divisive sessions in the Council 鈥 even a resumption of violence in the region 鈥 if the peace talks do not proceed.
Britain declared the options that surfaced at the Arab League meeting as 鈥渓ess than ideal,鈥 but added that they were bound to garner increasing attention if the two parties failed to find a way to 鈥済et the talks back on track.鈥
Egypt said that if Israel鈥檚 鈥渋llegal actions鈥 continue, it will be up to the Council to act. 鈥淭he international community should put forward a formula for a final settlement ... based on the well-known and internationally agreed parameters,鈥 the Egyptian permanent representative to the UN said.
The United States, which has become Israel鈥檚 chief supporter and protecting power on the Council, pointedly stated that it is 鈥渄isappointed鈥 by Israel鈥檚 approval of new housing in East Jerusalem. The Obama administration has offered the Israeli government a package of incentives for extending the settlement moratorium 鈥 if only for 60 days 鈥 that includes a commitment to veto any Security Council action against Israel in the coming year.
Monday鈥檚 Security Council meeting suggested that some UN action against Israel may be proposed. As South Africa said in its statement to the meeting, 鈥淭he Security Council has to shoulder its responsibility for ending the Israeli occupation and [for] ensuring the Palestinian people鈥檚 right to self-determination is met.鈥