US seeks to head off new Palestinian UN status bid

I am not certain how recognition as a non-member status by the UN helps the PA legally. The international community already takes the position that the Fourth Geneva Convention applies. But what can possibly be the reason that the Obama administration wants to prevent it from happening.

Apparently, “Washington was working to try to bring the Israelis and Palestinians back to the negotiations.” They tried that for four years. What are they now offering the PA to encourage them to refrain. What does it intend to do to force Israel to make more concessions. Why do they believe negotiations will succeed?

Or does Obama prefer a world where the endless peace process is intact to one where the UNGA has granted the PA non-member status and there is no peace process. Ted Belman

YNET

State Department spokeswoman says Washington still believes only ‘realistic path’ for Palestinian statehood is through direct negotiations

The United States is trying to dissuade Palestinian president Mahmoud Abbas from seeking non-member status at the United Nations at top UN meetings later this month, an official said Monday.

“We continue to make clear that we believe that the only realistic path for the Palestinians to achieve statehood is through direct negotiations,” State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.

Abbas said on Saturday he will make a bid on September 27 to upgrade the Palestinians to non-member status before the annual UN General Assembly. The Palestinians currently only enjoy observer status.

In September 2011, Abbas made a high-profile effort to obtain full-member status at the UN, but the request was never put to a vote in the Security Council, where the United States had pledged to veto it.

“We are going to the UN to say that we are a state which applies the Fourth Geneva Convention (on the protection of civilians in time of war),” Abbas said in a televised address at the weekend.

“There are 133 countries that recognize us as a state with East Jerusalem as its capital and where we have embassies hoisting the Palestinian flag.”

Palestinians are virtually assured that their bid for non-member status at this month’s UN General Assembly is likely to pass, as the resolution only needs the support of more than half of the 194 UN member states.

Nuland said the United States was in touch with Abbas, and Washington was working to try to bring the Israelis and Palestinians back to the negotiations.

The Israeli-Palestinian peace process has stalled since September 2010, and efforts by the peacemaking Quartet – which groups the European Union, United Nations, United States and Russia — have failed to break the impasse.

“We are working intensively through the Quartet and directly with Israelis and Palestinians to continue to encourage them to come back to the table,” Nuland told reporters.

“All we can do is push them. We cannot force them. They’ve got to make the decision for peace. They’ve got to make the decision to come back to the table.”

September 11, 2012 | Comments »

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