There has not been that significant a change inside the 193-member organization.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s foreign policy doctrine is based on a simple idea: Israel’s position in international organizations will improve as its bilateral relations with individual countries gets better.
This is something that he has repeatedly said will take a long time, but something that he believes is beginning to take place. Or, as he said just prior to Thursday’s UN vote where Israel and the US took a beating, “Attitudes toward Israel by many countries in the world, on all continents, are changing outside the walls of the UN, and in the end this will trickle down inside the walls of the UN building – the House of Lies.”
Thursday’s vote shows that this process might take longer than the decade he sanguinely predicts.
For instance, at a May meeting of the 58-member UNESCO Executive Board, only 38% of the states supported a resolution that watered down Israel’s connection to Jerusalem. By comparison, 66% of the countries in the General Assembly voted for Thursday’s resolution.
True, the 128 votes that the Palestinians were able to garner for this measure fell short of the 150 they hoped to round up, but this was still a stinging setback for Israel and the US, especially since President Donald Trump and Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley threatened that the US would retaliate by cutting aid to countries voting for the measure.
Netanyahu, after the vote, said that he appreciates “the fact that a growing number of countries refused to participate in this theater of the absurd.” But, when comparing this vote with the 2012 vote that granted the Palestinians nonmember observer status in the UN and the 2015 vote that gave them the right to fly their flag at the world body, there has not been that significant a change inside the 193-member organization.
For instance, this time 128 countries voted against Israel, compared to 138 in 2012, and 119 in 2015. This time 38 countries abstained, while 41 abstained in 2012, and 45 abstained in 2015.
The biggest difference was in those countries that did not participate, with 21 this time around, the same as in 2015, compared to only five in 2012.
Guatemala is moving its embassy to Israel to Jerusalem.
65 nations either voted against, abstained or didn’t show up.
http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/239662
Bull.
Europe, the cradle of antisemitism has no intention to amend.
interesting all the following states give their citizens the right to an early death. Turkey, Venezuela, Pakistan, Indonesia, Cuba, Iran, Malaysia and North Korea
guess they know how to control old age security and pension payments. every new born receives a Begging Cup at birth.