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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Opinion -> 
US stance hinders Mideast peace
    2024-04-22  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

THE vote in the United Nations Security Council on Palestine’s full membership Thursday highlights the enduring, but unfortunately unsuccessful, quest of the Palestinian people for statehood. It also exposes the United States, which vetoed the widely backed U.N. resolution that would have facilitated the full membership of Palestine, as the biggest obstacle to the Palestinian people’s legitimate pursuit of their rights. So much for the self-proclaimed leader of the free world.

It was in 2011 that the Palestinian Authority first applied to join the world body as a member. That attempt failed because the Palestinians didn’t get the required minimum support of nine of the 15 U.N. Security Council members.

But this time, 12 of the 15 Security Council members, including U.S. allies France, Japan and the Republic of Korea, voted in favor of the resolution, with the United Kingdom and Switzerland abstaining.

The overwhelming support Palestine received reflects the increasing number of U.N. members recognizing its statehood as well as the global support for the Palestinian people facing a humanitarian crisis because of the incessant attacks by Israeli forces.

By vetoing the U.N. resolution Thursday, after having vetoed four previous resolutions calling for a cease-fire in Gaza, the U.S. has positioned itself against the international community. It has not only prevented the Palestinian people from fulfilling their aspirations, but also prompted scrutiny of its self claim of being the biggest “protector of human rights.”

U.S. Alternate Representative for Special Political Affairs in the U.N. Robert Wood has been reported as saying that Palestine’s U.N. membership “needs to be the outcome of the negotiation between Israel and the Palestinians,” as well as “something that would flow from the result of those negotiations.”

The U.S.’ blind support of Israel has eroded the basis for a two-state solution — which is the only path toward lasting peace.

The U.S. has long called for direct talks between Israel and Palestine to resolve the Palestinian issue, but by doing so, it overlooks the shifting dynamics within the region, including Israel’s reluctance to accept a two-state solution. The expanding Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian lands in the West Bank have significantly reduced the territory of the Palestine state since it first applied to join the U.N. in 2011.

On Friday morning, within hours of the veto, U.S. officials confirmed that an Israeli missile had hit an Iranian site while explosions were reported near the Iranian city of Isfahan, leading to flights across several areas including Teheran and Isfahan being suspended. By insisting on direct negotiations between Israel and the countries with which it has disputes, the U.S. is only making the situation in the Middle East more volatile.

The Palestinian death toll in Gaza already nears 34,000, with the majority of them being women and children. Currently, 1.4 million Palestinians are seeking temporary shelter in Rafah, away from Israeli attacks in central and northern Gaza. As an attack on Rafah is possible, and the Palestine-Israel conflict could spread to the rest of the Middle East, the U.S. should align itself with the right course of history to uphold justice and peace.(China Daily)

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