NEWS:
The US and Israel are trying to limit the impact of the PLO's mission
status upgrade at the UN. Palestinians are certain of victory in
today's vote, and will get support from at least 13 European states.
Surprisingly, Germany and Australia indicate both will probably
abstain rather than voting no. Israeli officials are quoted as saying,
"we lost Europe." PM Netanyahu says the vote will make it more
difficult for Palestinians to achieve statehood. Former PM Olmert says
is no reason for Israel to oppose the resolution. Settlers call for
massive annexation of occupied territories in "retaliation."
Republican senators issue language calling for further aid cuts to the
PA in "retaliation." Hamas revives calls for a restructured PLO in
which it can play a leading role. Israeli naval forces seize to
fishing vessels off the coast of Gaza, throwing claims of eased
fishing limitations into doubt. Palestinians executed as
"collaborators" with Israel during the recent conflict were reportedly
in custody before the violence began. Pro-Israel advocates are facing
new setbacks at several American universities.
COMMENTARY:
ATFP executive director Ghaith Al-Omari and David Makovsky of WINEP
analyze the repercussions of the PLO UN bid. The New York Times says
it won't bring Palestinians any closer to statehood and resumption of
negotiations is urgently required. The Washington Post says
Palestinians may achieve an empty triumph at the UN. Nabil Sha'ath
appeals to the international community to support the Palestinian
initiative. Hanan Ashrawi says a vote for the resolution is a vote for
peace. The Guardian says the resolution gives the UN a chance for a
fresh start. Israeli Amb. Oren says Hamas deliberately tries to
maximize civilian casualties. J.J. Goldberg says the Palestinians are
sounding increasingly reasonable but Israel isn't. Leonard Fein says
the resolution defends the two-state solution and should be supported
by Jews. The National says the UN bid shows Israel increasingly
isolated. Ephraim Sneh says the initiative is good for Israel and the
United States. Mark Leon Goldberg says Israel needn't fear charges
against its officials at the ICC.
UNITED NATIONS —The Palestinians are certain to win U.N. recognition as a state Thursday but success could exact a high price: Israel and the United States warn it could delay hopes of achieving an independent Palestinian state through peace talks with Israel.
The United States, Israel's closest ally, mounted an aggressive campaign to head off the General Assembly vote. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu defiantly declared Thursday that the Palestinians would have to back down from long-held positions if they ever hope to gain independence.
UNITED NATIONS, Nov 28 (Reuters) - A Palestinian bid for indirect U.N. recognition of statehood received vows of support from more than a dozen European nations as of Wednesday, and diplomats said this backing may deter Israel from harsh retaliation against the Palestinian Authority for seeking to upgrade its U.N. status.
BERLIN (Reuters) -- Germany said it would abstain in a vote on Thursday at the UN General Assembly on changing the Palestinian Authority's diplomatic status, citing fears that it could be counterproductive to the peace process.
"We did not take this decision lightly. Germany shares the goal of a Palestinian state ... but the decisive steps towards real statehood can only be the result of negotiations between Israelis and Palestinians," Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in a statement.
Germany backtracks on Palestinian bid; Israeli official: 'We lost Europe'
Article Author(s):
Barak Ravid
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas and the Palestinian people are enjoying sweeping support in the lead up to Thursday night's vote at the UN General Assembly over whether to upgrade the Palestinians' standing to non-member observer status. By Thursday morning Israel time, that support had turned into a full-on landslide, as more European nations decided to alter their positions, essentially leaving Israel to fend for itself.
Abbas to address UN ahead of upgrade vote
Media Outlet:
Ma'an News Agency
BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- President Mahmoud Abbas will address the UN General Assembly in New York before it votes on upgrading the PLO's status on Thursday, a Foreign Ministry official said Wednesday.
Omar Awadallah, who heads the ministry's UN department, told Ma'an the vote was expected at around midnight Jerusalem time.
Representatives of some member states will also address the assembly before voting to explain their positions, Awadallah said.
Rival Palestinian groups show support for UN bid
Article Author(s):
Amy Teibel
Media Outlet:
Associated Press
JERUSALEM —Israel's leader, having failed to block the Palestinians from taking their quest for a state to the U.N., defiantly declared Thursday that they would have to back down from long-held positions if they ever hope to gain independence.
Ahead of Thursday's vote, thousands of Palestinians from rival factions celebrated in the streets of the West Bank. In a departure from its previous opposition, the Hamas rulers of the Gaza Strip said they would not interfere with the U.N. bid, and its supporters joined some of the celebrations.
Former Israeli PM Olmert Supports Palestine U.N. Bid
Article Author(s):
Bernard Avishai
Media Outlet:
The Daily Beast
Tomorrow, Mahmoud Abbas stands before the U.N. General Assembly and presents a resolution to upgrade Palestine’s membership to the status of an “observer-state.” The Obama administration has signaled that it will oppose this resolution, as it vetoed a Security Council condemnation of settlements last year—putatively to emphasize the need for direct negotiations between the parties.
Settlers: Annex Area C in response to PA's UN bid
Article Author(s):
Tovah Lazaroff
Media Outlet:
The Jerusalem Post
Settlers and right-wing activists called on Israel to annex Area C and threatened to burn the Palestinian flag, in response to Palestinian plans to Thursday to ask the UN General Assembly to grant it the status of non-member state.
Left-wing Israelis, in turn, planned to rally in Tel Aviv in support of the Palestinian move, which constitutes a de facto UN recognition of Palestinian statehood.
Settlers argued that now was the moment to strengthen Israel’s hold on the West Bank, particularly since the Palestinian bid was an abrogation of the 1993 Oslo Accord.
GOP senators introduce proposed penalties for enhanced Palestinian status
Media Outlet:
Jewish Telegraphic Agency (JTA)
WASHINGTON (JTA) -- Republican U.S. senators introduced the first efforts to penalize the Palestinians and the United Nations should the body affirm enhanced Palestinian status.
Language proposed this week as an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act would cut assistance to the Palestinians by 50 percent and U.S. fees to the United Nations by the same amount should the effort by the Palestinians to gain recognition as a non-member observer state succeed in the General Assembly. It would also cut by 20 percent U.S. aid to any country voting to approve.
Hamas Chief Revives Talk of Reuniting With P.L.O.
Article Author(s):
Anne Barnard
Media Outlet:
The New York Times
BEIRUT, Lebanon — On the eve of the United Nations vote on whether to declare the Palestinian Authority a nonmember state, the leader of Hamas revived a long-percolating proposal for his militant party to join the Palestine Liberation Organization, the group that, with Israel, signed the Oslo Accord, which Hamas has long derided.
Israel Seizes 2 Gaza Boats Near New Offshore Limit
Article Author(s):
Fares Akram
Article Author(s):
Jodi Rudoren
Media Outlet:
The New York Times
GAZA — Despite an Israeli concession to permit Gazans to fish up to six nautical miles from shore rather than three, Israeli forces detained a Palestinian fisherman and seized two boats as their crews tried to venture farther into the Mediterranean Sea.
Hamas, the militant faction that controls Gaza, denounced the action as a threat to the week-old cease-fire agreement that ended eight days of cross-border violence.
Executed Gaza 'collaborators' were in custody before war
Media Outlet:
Ma'an News Agency
BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Seven Palestinians who were accused of spying for Israel and publicly executed during the latest assault on Gaza were already in jail when the war started, and several had been held for more than a year.
Masked gunmen shot the alleged collaborators in two public attacks at the height of Israel's eight-day bombardment of Gaza, killing one person on Nov. 16 and another six people on Nov. 20.
Pro-Israel Strategy Faces Campus Setbacks
Article Author(s):
Seth Berkman
Media Outlet:
The Jewish Daily Forward
When the student government legislature at the University of California, Irvine voted unanimously for an anti-Israel divestment measure recently, the vote was not just a setback to the pro-Israel cause — it appeared to throw into question a broad new approach that some pro-Israel advocates have been promoting to move discourse on Israel, as they put it, “beyond the conflict.”
How Will the Palestinian UN Move Impact Prospects for Mideast Peace?
MARGARET WARNER: For more on the Palestinian bid for greater recognition at the United Nations, I'm joined by David Makovsky of the Washington Institute For Near East Policy, and Ghaith Al-Omari, executive director of the American Task Force on Palestine.
Welcome back to both of you.
The Palestinians’ U.N. Bid
Media Outlet:
The New York Times
On Thursday, a week after the Gaza cease-fire between Hamas and Israel, the Palestinian Authority, which controls parts of the West Bank, is scheduled to ask the United Nations General Assembly to upgrade the Palestinian status to nonmember observer state.
What will Palestinians do after the U.N. vote?
Media Outlet:
The Washington Post
THE PALESTINIAN AUTHORITY will almost certainly win a vote Thursday in the U.N. General Assembly granting observer status to a state of Palestine. But it will be a pale triumph for President Mahmoud Abbas and his West Bank-based Fatah movement.
The time is now: Support Palestine’s UN bid
Article Author(s):
Nabeel Shaath
Today, Palestine will ask the UN General Assembly to vote on a resolution to enhance its status to that of Observer State. This step will be a milestone in realigning international efforts to achieve peace in the region, within the framework of international law and the values embodied in the UN Charter. There should be no doubt: Supporting this initiative will create a new, positive, and effective momentum for a just path to peace in our region.
Supporting Palestine at the UN today is a vote for peace in the Middle East
Article Author(s):
Hanan Ashrawi
Media Outlet:
The Guardian
It might seem stating the obvious that Palestinians and Israelis find solutions only through negotiation, until you look at the record. It is a story in which one side makes proposals for nothing in return; one side makes agreements that the other side breaks; and one side keeps commitments that the other side ignores.
Palestine: theatricals at the UN
Media Outlet:
The Guardian
A "crashing wave of applause" filled the hall in which the general assembly was meeting in Flushing Meadow Park, the temporary headquarters of the new United Nations, when the French representative voted for the resolution which partitioned Palestine. The French vote was taken as a signal that the resolution would prevail. "The chamber," wrote Alistair Cooke, our correspondent, "was crackling with currents of elation and despair."
Falling for Hamas’s media manipulation
Article Author(s):
Michael B. Oren
Media Outlet:
The Washington Post
What makes better headlines? Is it numbing figures such as the 8,000 Palestinian rockets fired at Israel since it unilaterally withdrew from Gaza in 2005, and the 42.5 percent of Israeli children living near the Gaza border who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder? Or is it high-resolution images of bombed-out buildings in Gaza and emotional stories of bereaved Palestinians? The last, obviously, as demonstrated by much of the media coverage of Israel’s recent operation against Hamas.
Who Stands Against Peace?
Article Author(s):
J.J. Goldberg
Media Outlet:
The Jewish Daily Forward
The last days of November 2012 were an awkward time for Israel in the international arena. After years of presenting itself as the reasonable party in the conflict, saddled with a Palestinian negotiating partner that won’t negotiate, its ruling Likud party wound up a two-day Knesset primary vote on November 26 by choosing a slate of candidates dominated by hard-line rightists who oppose Israeli-Palestinian compromise and reject Palestinian statehood.
Why Jews Should Back Palestinian U.N. Bid
Article Author(s):
Leonard Fein
Media Outlet:
The Jewish Daily Forward
I rather doubt that more than a few of those whose knees have jerked in opposition to the planned request by the PLO that its status at the United Nations be upgraded have actually read the resolution. Instead, they rely on Israel’s bitter opposition and on America’s predictable opposition.
Palestinians' UN bid confirms Israel's isolation
Media Outlet:
The National
Today in New York, the United Nations General Assembly is scheduled to vote on upgrading the status of Palestine at the international body. The numbers look good and short of an unexpected upset, Palestinians will probably be granted "observer" status at the world body, similar to the Vatican.
State of Confusion
Article Author(s):
Ephraim Sneh
Media Outlet:
Foreign Policy
The Israel-Hamas war has refocused international attention on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and increased the stakes surrounding U.S. President Barack Obama's handling of the Palestinian bid for recognition at the United Nations as a non-member state. Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas intends to submit that bid on November 29th -- the 65th anniversary of the U.N.
Who's Afraid Of The ICC?
Article Author(s):
Mark Leon Goldberg
Media Outlet:
The Daily Beast
Tomorrow, the United Nations General Assembly will vote overwhelmingly to upgrade Palestine’s status from “Permanent Observer Entity” to “Non-Member State Permanent Observer.” This seemingly banal change in nomenclature may have profound consequences in the West Bank and Israel, but it will not make much of a noticeable difference at the U.N. itself.