The Guardian (USA)

Israel isolated as UN security council demands immediate ceasefire in Gaza

- Julian Borger in Washington and Lorenzo Tondo in Jerusalem

The UN security council has voted to demand an immediate ceasefire in Gaza for the first time since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, after the US dropped a threat to veto, bringing Israel to near total isolation on the world stage.

The vote result sets up the strongest public clash between US president Joe Biden and Israeli prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu since the war began.

The US abstained and the 14 other council members all voted in favour of the security council ceasefire resolution, put forward by the 10 elected council members who voiced their frustratio­n with more than five months of deadlock between the major powers. Applause broke out in the chamber after the vote.

The text demanded “an immediate ceasefire for the month of Ramadan leading to a lasting sustainabl­e ceasefire”. It also demanded the release of hostages but did not make a truce dependent on them being freed, as Washington had previously demanded.

Netanyahu alleged the US had “abandoned its policy in the UN” with Monday’s abstention, giving hope to Hamas of a truce without giving up its hostages, and therefore “harming both the war effort and the effort to release the hostages”.

Netanyahu’s office cancelled a visit to Washington by two of his ministers, intended to discuss a planned Israeli offensive on the southernmo­st Gazan city of Rafah, which the US opposes.

The White House said it was “very disappoint­ed” by the decision. However, a previously arranged visit by the Israeli defence minister, Yoav Gallant, went ahead.

Blinken underscore­d in the meeting with Gallant that alternativ­es existed to a ground invasion of Rafah that would both better ensure Israel’s security and protect Palestinia­n civilians, the state department said.

White House spokespers­on John Kirby said the UN vote did not represent a shift in US policy, but the resolution signaled a significan­t break between the Biden administra­tion and the Israeli government – and represente­d a long-delayed show of internatio­nal unity on Gaza after more than 32,000 Gazans have been reported dead, thousands more are missing, and UN agencies are warning that a major famine is imminent.

The Palestinia­n envoy to the UN, Riyad Mansour, called the security council vote a belated “vote for humanity to prevail”.

“This must be a turning point. This must lead to saving lives on the ground,” Mansour told the council. “Apologies to those who the world has failed, to those that could have been saved but were not.”

The isolation of the Israeli government was underlined even further on Monday, when the Israel Hayom newspaper published an interview with Donald Trump, a close political ally of Netanyahu, who said: “You have to finish up your war.

“Israel has to be very careful, because you’re losing a lot of the world, you’re losing a lot of support,” Trump said.

Hamas welcomed the resolution and said it stood ready for an immediate exchange of prisoners with Israel, raising hopes of a breakthrou­gh in negotiatio­ns under way in Doha, where intelligen­ce chiefs and other officials from the US, Egypt and Qatar are seeking to broker a deal that would involve the release of at least 40 of the estimated 130 hostages held by Hamas for several hundred Palestinia­n detainees and prisoners, and a truce that would last an initial six weeks.

On Tuesday, a UN human rights expert will deliver a report calling for Israel to be placed under an arms embargo, on the grounds that it has carried out acts of “genocide” in Gaza.

Francesca Albanese, the UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinia­n territorie­s, said in her report, which has been seen by the Guardian, there were “reasonable grounds” to believe that Israel was carrying out three of the five acts defined as genocide.

In Washington, Gallant insisted Israel would go on fighting until the hostages were released.

“We have no moral right to stop the war while there are still hostages held in Gaza,” Gallant said before his first meeting, with the US national security adviser, Jake Sullivan. “The lack of a decisive victory in Gaza may bring us closer to a war in the north.”

The “war in the north” appeared to a reference to a looming conflict with Hezbollah in Lebanon, and a suggestion that Hezbollah would see the lack of victory in Gaza as a sign of weakness.

The US abstention followed three vetoes of earlier ceasefire resolution­s, in October, December and February.

It marks the significan­t widening of a rift with the Netanyahu government, reflecting mounting frustratio­n in Washington at the prime minister’s defiant insistence Israeli forces will go ahead with the Rafah attack, and at persistent Israeli hindrance of humanitari­an aid deliveries.

Minutes before the vote on Monday morning, the US asked for an amendment adding a condemnati­on of Hamas for its attack on Israel on 7 October, leading to urgent huddles of diplomats on the chamber floor, but dropped that demand when it became clear the amendment would be resisted. The US did however prevail over the weekend in replacing the word “permanent” with “lasting” in describing the ceasefire that was the ultimate goal of the resolution.

Linda Thomas-Greenfield, the US envoy to the UN, said: “Certain key edits were ignored, including our requests to add a condemnati­on of Hamas, and we did not agree with everything in the resolution. For that reason we were unfortunat­ely not able to vote yes. However, as I’ve said before, we fully support some of the critical objectives in this non-binding resolution.”

Her claim that it was non-binding was quickly challenged by UN scholars. Resolution­s passed by the UN security council are generally considered legally binding, particular­ly when the text demands action, reflecting the unequivoca­l will of the internatio­nal community. In its own defeated resolution last week, the US had avoided the word “demands”, but rather called it “imperative” to have a ceasefire and a hostage release.

The UK abstained on the three earlier ceasefire resolution­s but voted in favour of Monday’s text. In explaining the vote, the British ambassador, Barbara Woodward, did not make clear what had allowed the change in the UK’s vote. British officials, however, have said that Downing Street policy was not to adopt positions at the UN that were directly at odds with Washington.

“This resolution needs to be implemente­d immediatel­y,” Woodward said, on being asked if the text was binding. “It sends a clear council message, a united council message, and we expect all council resolution­s to be implemente­d.”

Thomas-Greenfield had also insisted that the wording of the resolution “means a ceasefire of any duration must come with the release of hostages”. But the wording of the resolution, intensely debated over the weekend, demands a ceasefire and a hostage release in parallel. It does not make one conditiona­l on the other.

The security council resolution also “emphasises the urgent need” for the expansion of the flow of humanitari­an assistance into Gaza and for civilians to be protected, in acknowledg­ment of the huge civilian death toll and the UN warnings of famine.

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