Netanyahu thanks U.S. for vetoing U.N. resolution
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu thanked the United States for
vetoing a United Nations Security Council resolution condemning Israel on settlements.
"Israel deeply appreciates this decision and we remain committed to advancing peace both with our neighbors in the region and with the Palestinians. I believe that the U.S. decision makes it clear that the only way to peace is direct negotiations and not through the actions of international bodies, which are designed to bypass direct negotiations," Netanyahu said Sunday at the start of the weekly Cabinet meeting.
The resolution, which called settlements illegal and condemned Israel for continuing to build in the West Bank, was vetoed Friday by the United States, though the 14 other members of the council supported the resolution. As one of five permanent members of the Security Council, the U.S. veto quashed the resolution.
Following the veto, U.S. consulate personnel in Israel were ordered to avoid travel in the West Bank.
The U.S. consulate in Jerusalem on Saturday ordered its staff to refrain from traveling to Jericho in the West Bank and through the West Bank to Jordan. U.S. staff memebrs are already limited in where they can travel in the West Bank.
In response to the veto, the Palestinians set Friday as a "Day of Rage." Fatah official Tawfik Tirawi, the former Palestinian intelligence head, told the Palestinian Ma'an News Agency that the day of rage will protest the American veto. Tirawi told Ma’an that the veto, which he called "blackmail," exposed the true face of America as well as the extent to which its role in the Middle East peace process harmed Palestinian interests.