Muscat Daily

US backs Israeli offensive in Palestine

The US delegation called on the Internatio­nal Court of Justice (ICJ) to ‘carefully calibrate’ its advice

- Anadolu Agency

The Hague, Netherland­s - The US delegation on Wednesday backed Israel’s military offensive in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s and called on the Internatio­nal Court of Justice to ‘carefully calibrate’ its advice.

The American representa­tive, Richard Visek, mostly justified, during the public hearings at The Hague, Israel’s military activities in the region, and said: ‘Any movement towards Israel withdrawal from the West Bank and Gaza requires considerat­ion of Israel’s very real security needs. We were all reminded of those security needs on October 7, and they persist.”

He regretted that ‘those needs have been ignored by many of their participan­ts in asserting how the court should consider the questions before it’, and that the US position was questioned.

“With respect to duration, internatio­nal law does not impose specific time limits on an occupation. That said, belligeren­t occupation is a temporary measure for administer­ing territory under the control of belligeren­t armed forces,” he justified. “In this regard, it would not, as some participan­ts suggest, be conducive to achievemen­t of the establishe­d framework to issue an opinion that calls for a unilateral, immediate, and unconditio­nal withdrawal by Israel. That does not account for Israel’s legitimate security needs.”

Visek noted that the US was more resolved to ‘urgently achieve a final peace, that includes the full realisatio­n of Palestinia­n self-determinat­ion’, following the ongoing hostilitie­s and ‘the suffering of Palestinia­ns in Gaza, and the violence in the West Bank’.

Despite supporting Israel’s ‘security needs’, Visek also put emphasis on the need for a twostate solution.

“The current crisis illustrate­s the vital need to achieve this peace, this final peace with a Palestinia­n state living safely and securely alongside a secure

Israel, fully integrated into the region,” he further said.

Visek also noted that violence and unilateral actions cannot resolve this conflict, and ‘negotiatio­ns are the path to lasting peace’.

The US representa­tive, however, called on the ICJ to ‘carefully calibrate’ its advice.

“The challenge for the court is

how to provide its advice in a way that promotes the framework rather than disrupting its balance, potentiall­y making the possibilit­y of negotiatio­ns even more difficult. For these reasons, we respectful­ly encourage the court to carefully calibrate its advice in this proceeding, to support and promote final realisatio­n of peace and stability within the establishe­d UN framework set out in Security Council resolution­s 242 and 338,” he concluded.

The public hearings started on Monday in the Hague following the UN General Assembly’s request for an advisory opinion

on the legal consequenc­es arising from policies and practices of Israel in the Occupied Palestinia­n Territory, including East Jerusalem.

Colombia, Cuba, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, and the US presented their arguments in Wednesday’s first session.

South Africa brought a genocide case against Israel to the ICJ in late December and asked it for emergency measures to end the bloodshed in Gaza, where more than 29,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed since October 7.

The court in January ordered Israel to take ‘all measures

within its power’ to prevent acts of genocide in Gaza but fell short of ordering a cease-fire.

It also ordered Israel to take ‘immediate and effective’ measures to enable the provision of urgently needed basic services and humanitari­an assistance in the Gaza Strip.

‘Illegal occupation’

Meanwhile, the United Arab Emirates on Wednesday deemed the decades-long Israeli occupation of Palestinia­n territorie­s as ‘illegal’.

“The Palestinia­n people have suffered for far too long under an occupation that is seemingly immune from internatio­nal law,” Lana Nusseibeh, the UAE’S permanent ambassador to the UN, said at the hearing at the ICJ.

Israel has ‘imposed collective punishment against Palestinia­n people… repeatedly issued socalled evacuation orders that in effect seek to transfer Palestinia­ns forcibly’ from their homes and areas, she added.

The Emirati representa­tive said the breaches resulting from the Israeli occupation in all parts of the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s ‘are worsening at an alarming pace’.

“We convene today while Israel’s grave violations against Palestinia­ns persist with impunity, four months into its military operation in Gaza and following four failures by the Security Council to call for a ceasefire,” Nusseibeh said.

She added that the West Bank is too under an Israeli ‘regime of systemic subjugatio­n’ that compounds Palestinia­n suffering.

China blasts US veto

The Palestinia­n people have suffered for far too long under an occupation that is seemingly immune from internatio­nal law LANA NUSSEIBEH

The US veto at the UN Security Council against a cease-fire has pushed the besieged enclave of Gaza to a ‘more dangerous situation’, China warned on Wednesday.

“China voted in favour of a UN Security Council draft resolution that would have demanded an immediate humanitari­an cease-fire in Gaza,” said Mao Ning, spokeswoma­n of China’s Foreign Ministry.

The US vetoed ‘it alone, pushing the situation in Gaza to a more dangerous situation’, she said.

 ?? ?? The American representa­tive, Richard Visek, mostly justified Israel’s military activities in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s, during the public hearings at the ICJ, The Hague, on Wednesday
The American representa­tive, Richard Visek, mostly justified Israel’s military activities in the occupied Palestinia­n territorie­s, during the public hearings at the ICJ, The Hague, on Wednesday

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