Report: US Urging France to Delay UN Resolution Over Peace Process
Error: Contact form not found.
by Eliezer Sherman
The Obama administration has been urging France and other countries from pursuing measures at the U.N. Security Council meant to force Israel and the Palestinian Authority back into the peace process until after negotiations with Iran over its nuclear program have concluded, Foreign Policy magazine reported on Tuesday.
Perhaps attempting to have to deal with two highly contentious and politically polarizing Middle East conflicts at once, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry “appealed to his French counterpart to put the decision off until at least after the deadline for Iran talks wraps up at the end of June, or possibly even later,” according to the report.
The Obama administration wants to secure support for the Iran deal, which must pass congressional approval before the U.S. ratifies the agreement with the U.K., France, Germany, Russia, China and Iran.
The report comes just a few days after Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman intimated that the new Israeli government’s approach to the two-state solution and peace negotiations could affect U.S. support of Israel at the U.N. over such resolutions, which Israel finds distasteful.
“If the new Israeli government is seen as stepping back from its commitment to a two-state solution, something that all of you and a vast majority of American Jews supports, that makes our job in the international arena a lot tougher because our ability to push back on efforts to internationalize efforts to address Israeli-Palestinian issues has depended on our insistence that the best course in achieving a two-solution is through direct negotiation between the parties,” Sherman said.
In the run-up to Israeli elections earlier this year, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu drew the ire of the Obama administration when he made statements calling the peace process with the Palestinians “irrelevant” at the current time.
He said “Hamastan B” would not be created on his watch, referring to the terrorist group Hamas that rules the Gaza Strip and battled Israel over a 50-day war last summer.
Sherman meanwhile said the U.S. would be “watching very closely to see what happens after a new government is formed on this issue of working toward two states living side by side in peace and security.”
In addition, Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas has said since the Israeli elections that he would talk to the Israeli prime minister about the issues.
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius announced a few weeks ago that he would push for a resolution at the U.N. within a matter of weeks laying a framework and timetable for Israeli-Palestinian peace negotiations, which collapsed last year after a nine-month effort led by the U.S.
Hinting at the traditional U.S. veto umbrella over Israel at the U.N., Fabius said, “I hope that the partners who were reluctant will not be reluctant anymore.”
Russians Retreat as Al Qaeda-Linked Jihadists, Tuareg Separatists Kill Mali’s Defense Minister, Capture Key Town
New York Teacher Seeking to Unseat Ritchie Torres Calls for Socialism, Removal of All Pro-Israel Politicians
German Intelligence Warns of Rising Iran-Linked Terror Threat
Israel Condemns Venice Biennale Jury Decision to Ban Israeli Artist From Winning Top Awards
University of California Regent ‘Disgusted’ by UCLA Student Government for Condemning Israeli Hostage Event
King Charles Promotes US-UK Unity in Speech to Congress Amid Iran Tensions
UAE Leaves OPEC in Blow to Global Oil Producers’ Group
Trump, Unhappy With Latest Peace Proposal, Says Iran ‘Figuring Out Its Leadership’
UK Counterterrorism Police Investigate Arson at Jewish Memorial Wall
Ukraine in Diplomatic Tussle With Israel Over Grain Kyiv Says ‘Stolen’ by Russia






The Conspiracy Architecture Doesn’t Need Jews: It Just Prefers Them
‘Aliyah Buddies’: How Moving to Israel Helped Me Find My People, My Community, and My New Life
If It Can’t Build Nuclear Weapons, Iran Will Likely Ramp Up Its Chemical and Biological Weapons Capacities
When Assassination Attempts Stop Shocking Us
Trump, Unhappy With Latest Peace Proposal, Says Iran ‘Figuring Out Its Leadership’



