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version below transcribed directly from audio]
*Thank you, Mr.
President.
For decades,* the United
States has worked to help achieve a comprehensive end to the long
and tragic Arab-Israeli conflict. We have always been clear that
only through direct negotiations between the parties can the
Palestinians and Israelis achieve the peace that both deserve:
two
states for two peoples, with a sovereign, viable, and independent
Palestine living side by side in peace and security with a Jewish
and democratic Israel.
That remains our goal,
and we therefore measure any proposed action against that clear
yardstick. Will it bring the parties closer to peace or push them
further apart? Will it help Israelis and Palestinians return to
negotiations or hinder their efforts to reach a mutually acceptable
agreement? Today’s unfortunate and counterproductive
resolution
places further obstacles in the path to peace. That is why the
United States voted against it.
The backers of today’s
resolution say they seek a functioning, independent Palestinian
state at peace with Israel. So do we.
But we have long been
clear that the only way to establish such a Palestinian state and
resolve all permanent-status issues is through the crucial, if
painful, work of direct negotiations between the parties. This is
not just a bedrock commitment of the United States. Israel and the
Palestinians have repeatedly affirmed their own obligations under
existing agreements to resolve all issues through direct
negotiations, which have been endorsed frequently by the
international community. The United States agrees -- strongly.
Today’s grand
pronouncements will soon fade. And the Palestinian people will wake
up tomorrow and find that little about their lives has changed, save
that the prospects of a durable peace have only receded.
The United States
therefore calls upon both the parties to resume direct talks without
preconditions on all the issues that divide them. And we pledge that
the United States will be there to support the parties vigorously in
such efforts.
The United States will
continue to urge all parties to avoid any further provocative
actions -- in the region, in New York, or elsewhere.
We will continue to
oppose firmly any and all unilateral actions in international bodies
or treaties that circumvent or prejudge the very outcomes that can
only be negotiated, including Palestinian statehood. And we will
continue to stand up to every effort that seeks to delegitimize
Israel or undermine its security.
Progress towards a just
and lasting two-state solution cannot be made by pressing a green
voting button here in this hall. Nor does passing any resolution
create a state where none indeed exists or change the reality on the
ground.
For this reason, today’s
vote should not be misconstrued by any as constituting eligibility
for U.N. membership. It does not. This
resolution does not establish
that Palestine is a state.
The United States
believes the current resolution should not and cannot be read as
establishing terms of reference. In many respects, the resolution
prejudges the very issues it says are to be resolved through
negotiation, particularly with respect to territory. At the same
time, it virtually ignores other core questions such as security,
which must be solved for any viable agreement to be achieved.
President Obama has been
clear in stating what the United States believes is a realistic
basis for successful negotiations, and we will continue to base our
efforts on that approach.
The recent conflict in
Gaza is just the latest reminder that the absence of peace risks the
presence of war.1 We urge those who share our hopes for peace between
a sovereign Palestine and a secure Israel to join us in supporting
negotiations, not encouraging further distractions. There simply are
no short cuts.
Long after the votes
have been cast, long after the speeches have been forgotten, it is
the Palestinians and the Israelis who must still talk to each other, and listen to each other, and find a way to live side by side
in the land they share.
Thank you, Mr.
President.