Russia Counters U.S. Plan for Gaza With Its Own Proposal at U.N. Security Council ,


Russia Counters U.S. Plan for Gaza With Its Own Proposal at U.N. Security Council ,

The Trump administration wants the Security Council to adopt a resolution that has the 20-point U.S. plan annexed, effectively making it international law.

Russia, as one of the five veto-holding powers of the Security Council, could block the U.S. resolution. Its counteraction suggested that the Council could be heading to another showdown and stalemate over Gaza. The 10-point Russian resolution, among other points, calls for Palestinian statehood and does not mention the stabilization forces and the governing structure favored by the United States.

China, another veto-holding power, informed the United States and the Council that its position aligned with Russia’s, according to diplomats who asked not to be named because they were discussing sensitive negotiations.

Anticipating the Russian move, the U.S. mission to the United Nations issued a statement on Thursday saying, “Attempts to sow discord now — when agreement on this resolution is under active negotiation — has grave, tangible and entirely avoidable consequences for Palestinians in Gaza.”

Anticipating the Russian move, the U.S. mission to the United Nations issued a statement on Thursday saying, “Attempts to sow discord now — when agreement on this resolution is under active negotiation — has grave, tangible and entirely avoidable consequences for Palestinians in Gaza.”

Tensions have been brewing all week between the United States and the 14 other members of the Council, including European allies and Algeria, the only Arab member, as proposed changes to the U.S. resolution volleyed back and forth in negotiations. The United States had sought to add its entire 20-point plan to the draft U.N. resolution.

Among the major sticking points, according to four diplomats: China said it wanted the entire Trump peace plan removed from the resolution; Russia, Algeria and France, among others, wanted clear language supporting Palestinian statehood; and China, Russia and several European countries asked for clarity on the composition and functions of the governing entity, called the Board of Peace, responsible for carrying out Mr. Trump’s peace plan.

Many members also said the resolution should define the role for the Palestinian Authority in Gaza’s transitional rule.

The United States made minimal changes to its resolution, deferring most of the major questions on statehood and the Palestinian Authority to language in Mr. Trump’s peace plan. In its third revised draft, the United States added that conditions for a “pathway to Palestinian self-determination and statehood” might be possible after the Palestinian Authority completely reformed.

It also included a new mandate for reporting on progress to the Council every six months, according to copies of the revised resolutions seen by The New York Times.

The references to the Board of Peace still remains vague, and a U.S. official who spoke anonymously in order to discuss sensitive issues said it would not be possible to add details before the resolution was put to a vote.

On Friday evening, the United States told Council members that it had finalized the resolution and there would be no more revisions. It asked for a vote to be scheduled no later than Monday afternoon.

“What is confusing the Council members is the U.S. rushing through the text, a nod to the Council but actually cutting them out,” said Richard Gowan, the U.N. director of the International Crisis Group, which works to prevent conflicts.

He added that Russia, China, Algeria and the members of the U.N.’s Arab Group wanted “cast-iron guarantees” that the Council retains authority over the situation in Gaza.

Russia’s counterresolution does not mention the Board of Peace or the stabilization forces, according to a copy seen by The Times. It also welcomes the initiatives in Mr. Trump’s peace plan and asks the U.N. secretary general to identify provisions to carry it out.

On Palestinian statehood, Moscow’s plan goes beyond the American resolution, saying that the Council reiterates “its unwavering commitment to the vision of the two-State solution where two democratic States, Israel and Palestine, live side by side,” and calls for the unity of the West Bank and Gaza.

In a statement on Friday, Russia’s mission to the United Nations said it “felt obliged” to propose an alternative resolution on Gaza because the American one did not give due regard to international frameworks, namely the two-state solution for settling the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Russia said that its initiative did not contradict the American one and that the objective of its version was “to amend the U.S. concept so as to bring it into full conformity with longstanding and previously agreed decisions of the U.N.S.C.”

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