The Guardian (USA)

US vetoes Arab-backed UN resolution demanding ceasefire in Gaza

- Julian Borger in Washington

The US has vetoed a UN security council resolution calling for an immediate ceasefire in Gaza for the third time, arguing that it would undermine negotiatio­ns over a hostage deal.

The US was the lone vote against a ceasefire resolution put forward on Tuesday by Algeria. The UK was the sole abstention, with 13 votes in support, including those of close allies of Washington who insisted the humanitari­an needs of Palestinia­ns outweighed any reservatio­ns over the Algerian text.

Washington was widely lambasted for using its veto again at a time when nearly 30,000 Palestinia­ns have been killed and more than 2 million people are under threat of famine.

“A vote in favour of this draft resolution is a support for the Palestinia­ns right to life,” the Algerian envoy to the UN, Amar Bendjama, told the council. “Conversely, voting against it implies an endorsemen­t of the brutal violence and collective punishment inflicted upon them.”

The Algerian resolution also called for the implementa­tion of provisiona­l measures ordered in January by the internatio­nal court of justice (ICJ) in The Hague, which instructed Israel to mitigate its offensive to protect civilians, lift impediment­s on the flow of aid into Gaza, and take action against Israeli politician­s using genocidal language.

“Almost one month after the ICJ [ruling] signs of hope are still absent for improvemen­t of the situation in Gaza,” Bendjama said. “Silence … is not a viable option. Now is the time for action and the time for truth.”

Zhang Jun, the Chinese ambassador, said: “The continued passive avoidance of an immediate ceasefire is no different from giving a green light to the continued slaughter.”

The US has drafted an alternativ­e resolution, which calls for a temporary ceasefire “as soon as practicabl­e”, and calls on Israel not to proceed with a planned offensive on Rafah, the southernmo­st Gazan city where more than a million Palestinia­ns have sought refuge.

However, the US resolution is not likely to go to a vote for several days at least, and the timing of its third ceasefire veto is embarrassi­ng for the US as Washington seeks to build internatio­nal solidarity in condemnati­on of Russia on the second anniversar­y later this week of its full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

Explaining the veto, the US envoy, Linda Thomas-Greenfield, said that Joe Biden was in the midst of negotiatio­ns with Israel, Egypt and Qatar aimed at clinching a comprehens­ive hostage deal.

“Any action this council takes right now should help, not hinder these sensitive and ongoing negotiatio­ns, and we believe that the resolution on the table right now would in fact negatively impact those negotiatio­ns,” Thomas-Greenfield argued.

“Demanding an immediate unconditio­nal ceasefire without an agreement requiring Hamas to release the hostages will not bring about durable peace. Instead, it could extend the fighting between Hamas and Israel,” she added, later denouncing the 13 to one vote for the Algerian resolution as “wishful and irresponsi­ble”.

Thomas-Greenfield looked on stony-faced as a series of Washington allies including France, Slovenia and Switzerlan­d explained their reasons for voting for the resolution, despite sharing the US’s reservatio­n that it did not include any condemnati­on of Hamas, something the security council has so far failed to do. They all argued the humanitari­an disaster in Gaza was so dire that stopping the fighting took precedence over such concerns.

Nicolas de Rivière, the French envoy, said Paris regretted that “the resolution was not adopted given the disastrous situation on the ground”.

The only vote sparing the US from total isolation was the British abstention. The ambassador, Barbara Woodward, said the UK position was to call for an “immediate suspension in fighting to get aid in and hostages out leading to a permanent sustainabl­e ceasefire”.

But Woodward echoed ThomasGree­nfield’s arguments in adding: “Simply calling for a ceasefire, as this resolution does, will not make it happen. Indeed, it could endanger the hostage negotiatio­ns. It could actually make a ceasefire less likely.”

The US showed its alternativ­e draft to other council members before Tuesday’s vote. This unusual step was intended, one western diplomat suggested, to avoid giving the impression that the US veto implied a green light for the Israeli attack on Rafah.

The inclusion in the US text of a clause specifical­ly calling on Israel not to mount such an attack, rather than to limit such an appeal to bilateral channels, is widely seen in the UN as a signal of Biden’s growing impatience with Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, and frustratio­n at the US president’s failure to rein in the relentless Gaza offensive, now in its fifth month. No date has yet been set for the start of formal deliberati­ons on the US draft resolution, however.

“It is awfully embarrassi­ng for the Americans,” Richard Gowan, the UN director of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group, said. “They’ve had to use a veto just days before the security council meeting commemorat­ing Russia’s allout assault on Ukraine. That will simply fuel talk about US double standards.”

 ?? Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters ?? Linda Thomas-Greenfield, center, the US ambassador to the UN, casts a veto vote at the UN headquarte­rs in New York on 20 February.
Photograph: Mike Segar/Reuters Linda Thomas-Greenfield, center, the US ambassador to the UN, casts a veto vote at the UN headquarte­rs in New York on 20 February.

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