UN Security Council Votes to End Israeli Settlements After Trump Called for Veto

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Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images(NEW YORK) — The United Nations Security Council has passed a previously postponed vote to end Israeli settlements after the U.S. abstained from voting.

U.S. ambassador to the U.N. Samantha Power gave a statement after the vote saying that the U.S. chose not to vote on the resolution “because the resolution is too narrowly focused on settlements.” She began her statement in the Security Council with the words of Ronald Reagan in 1985 that settlements are “in no way necessary for the security of Israel” and “only diminishes the confidence of Arabs.”

The Obama administration vetoed a very similar resolution in 2011, but Power said Friday that the circumstances have changed dramatically because the growth of settlements has accelerated and efforts to pursue peace have failed.

The controversial vote occurred a day after President-elect Donald Trump called for the resolution in question to be vetoed and after he had a call with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El Sisi.

Egypt had previously sponsored the resolution but are no longer one of the sponsors.

The meeting was listed on the revised Security Council schedule as being about “the situation in the Middle East, including the Palestinian question.”

Israel is against the resolution. Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the U.N., made it clear before the vote took place that he did not want it to pass.

“This resolution is a Palestinian initiative which is intended to harm Israel,” Danon, who has in the past supported groups raising money for settlements, said in a statement after the announcement was made that the vote was back on.

“We call on the United States to stand by us and we expect our greatest ally to continue with its long-standing policy and to veto this resolution,” Danon said in the statement.

For his part, Trump has made it clear that he thinks it should be vetoed.

“As the United States has long maintained, peace between the Israelis and the Palestinians will only come through direct negotiations between the parties, and not through the imposition of terms by the United Nations. This puts Israel in a very poor negotiating position and is extremely unfair to all Israelis,” Trump said in a statement on Thursday.

His call to El Sisi also touched on the subject.

“They agreed on the need to allow the new U.S. administration to deal in a comprehensive manner with all aspects of the Palestinian issue so as to achieve a comprehensive and final settlement for this issue,” El Sisi’s office said in a statement about the call.

Trump tweeted about the vote on Friday, saying that things will be different when he is president.

 

The U.S. abstention was condemned by politicians from both sides. House Speaker Paul Ryan called the abstention “shameful” and the vote “a blow to peace that sets a dangerous precedent for further diplomatic efforts to isolate and demonize Israel.” He vowed to work to “reverse the damage done by this administration, and rebuild our alliance with Israel.”

The senior Democrat in the Senate, Chuck Schumer called it “extremely frustrating, disappointing and confounding that the administration has failed to veto this resolution.”

“Whatever one’s views are on settlements, the U.N. is the wrong forum to settle these issues,” Schumer said. “The U.N. has been a fervently anti-Israel body since the days of ‘Zionism is racism’ and, unfortunately, that fervor has never diminished.”

Oregon Democrat Ron Wyden said he too was “disappointed that the administration set aside longstanding U.S. policy to allow such a one-sided resolution to pass.”

Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., called President Obama “personally responsible for this anti-Israel resolution,” and alleges that Obama’s diplomats “secretly coordinated the vote, yet he doesn’t even have the courage of his own convictions to vote for it.”

“This cowardly, disgraceful action cements President Obama’s richly deserved legacy as the most anti-Israel president in American history.”

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