White House Defends Voting ‘No’ on U.N.
Resolution Supporting Palestinian Statehood
The United States among a handful of holdouts on the
vote, which was widely seen as a rebuke of the Americans and Israel.
Erica L.
Green
By Erica L.
Green
Reporting
from Washington
May 10,
2024
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/05/10/world/middleeast/united-nations-us-palestinian-membership.html
A White
House spokesman on Friday defended the United States’ decision to oppose a U.N.
resolution declaring support for Palestinian statehood, saying that such a
measure should be negotiated in the Middle East.
The United
States was among a handful of holdouts as the United Nations General Assembly
overwhelmingly adopted a resolution declaring that Palestinians qualify for
full membership at the United Nations. The vote was widely seen as a rebuke of
Israel and the United States as global outrage mounts over the Israel-Hamas
war.
John F.
Kirby, a White House national security spokesman, said President Biden remained
“fully and firmly committed” to a Palestinian state, but the U.N. resolution
was not the way to establish it.
“We
continue to believe in the power and promise of a two-state solution, and an
independent state for the Palestinian people,” Mr. Kirby told reporters. “We
also believe that the best way to do that is through direct negotiations with
the parties and not through a vote of the U.N. of this kind.”
Friday’s
vote comes as the ties between the United States and Israel, its closest ally
in the Middle East, are tested over the war in Gaza. More than 34,000 people
have died in Gaza, including both combatants and civilians, and the director of
the World Food Program has said that parts of the Gaza Strip are experiencing a
“full-blown famine.”
The United
States is the biggest supplier of weapons to Israel, and Mr. Biden is hoping to
use that leverage to get Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel to forgo a
long-threatened invasion of Rafah, the southern Gaza city where more than one
million Palestinians have taken refuge.
Mr. Biden
has halted a shipment of bombs to Israel and said he would withhold artillery
as well if Israel moved forward in Rafah. But the Israelis maintain they need
to go into Rafah to finish destroying Hamas, which killed 1,200 people in the
Oct. 7 terrorist attack it led on Israel.
The U.N.
resolution does not establish a Palestinian state, but it does recognize
Palestine to qualify for full-member status at the United Nations. Its
membership will need to be approved by the U.N. Security Council, which
includes the United States.
The United
States has repeatedly wielded its veto power on the council to block U.N.
resolutions calling for a cease-fire in Gaza.
The U.N.
General Assembly took up Friday’s resolution after the United States vetoed in
April a resolution that came before the Security Council that would have
recognized full membership for a Palestinian state, which is considered a
“nonmember observer state.”
The
resolution that passed on Friday would extend to Palestinians new privileges,
such as sitting among member states in alphabetical order, speaking at meetings
on any topic instead of being limited to Palestinian affairs, and submitting
proposals and amendments.
The
resolution was prepared by the United Arab Emirates, the current chair of the
U.N. Arab Group, and sponsored by 70 countries. It declares that “the State of
Palestine is qualified for membership in the United Nations” under its charter
rules and recommends that the Security Council reconsider the matter with a
favorable outcome.”
The
resolution’s adoption prompted rousing applause.
Farnaz
Fassihi contributed reporting.
Erica L.
Green is a White House correspondent, covering President Biden and his
administration. More about Erica L. Green
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