Palestine’s state hope fades

Palestine’s state hope fades

RAMALLAH - The Associated Press

A Palestinian displays the Palestinian flag during clashes with Israeli forces at Qalandia checkpoint in Ramallah in this file photo. Officials say Palestinian’s dream of getting state status will likely collapse. AP photo

he Palestinians are resigned to defeat in their quest for full membership at the United Nations, officials say, and have started work on their backup plan, seeking an upgraded observer status that would give them access to key international organizations.
Officials said Nov. 9 they are already lobbying foreign governments, especially in western Europe, in hopes of rallying support for this alternate strategy. The officials said this new campaign in the General Assembly, dominated by developing countries normally sympathetic to the Palestinians, could be harder than anticipated because of expected opposition by the U.S.
The Palestinian campaign, launched with a dramatic speech by President Mahmoud Abbas at U.N. headquarters in September, has fallen onto hard times in recent weeks. While the speech was warmly received, the Palestinians have struggled to muster the nine votes needed in the 15-member Security Council to approve their bid for membership as a state.
The U.S., as a permanent member of the council, pledged to veto the request. The Palestinians had hoped to muster the nine-vote majority needed to trigger the veto, a scenario that would embarrass the U.S. by putting it odds with the rest of the world.
A draft report circulating in the Security Council shows deep divisions over the Palestinian application for membership. The council’s admissions committee is expected to endorse the report today. It remains unclear when the council will actually vote on the issue.
On Nov. 9, Britain, another permanent member of the council, announced it would abstain in a vote, following a similar statement by France the previous day. Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad Malki conceded the Palestinians would not be able to gain enough support in the council.
“We knew that the Security Council would not be a picnic. But the most important thing here is who is going to win in the final round,” he said. “There will be other rounds, and we will never despair.” The Palestinians turned to the United Nations after a three-year deadlock in peace talks.
The Palestinians have said that if they failed to win full U.N. membership, they would seek “nonmember state” observer status in the world body. They hope that this enhanced status would qualify them for membership on key international bodies where they could push for action against Israel. Last month the Palestinians won membership in the U.N.’s cultural agency, UNESCO.
A Palestinian official said Nov. 9 that the Palestinians have begun lobbying key European countries, particularly France, for support. In Paris, French Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero confirmed his government is open to the Palestinian request, saying nonmember status “still seems the best path to us.” Israel, with backing from the U.S., has fiercely opposed the entire Palestinian strategy, saying it is trying to make unilateral gains while avoiding peace talks.