Interviewed by BBC Arabic this weekend, Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas denied reports that he would seek UN Security Council approval for unilaterally declaring a Palestinian state. Rather, he said, "We will turn to the United Nations and the Security Council to strengthen what has been agreed on in the road map and approved by the Security Council, a two-state solution based on the June 4, 1967 borders."
That may sound innocuous. But in fact, Security Council acquiescence to this proposal would both radically alter the current international position and demolish the already faltering principle that the talks' outcome should not be prejudiced by unilateral action.
While most of the world already believes the 1967 lines should be the final border, the formal basis for the talks remains Security Council Resolution 242, which says no such thing. This resolution purposefully required an Israeli withdrawal only from "territories" captured in 1967, not "the territories" or "all the territories." As Lord Caradon, the British UN ambassador who drafted 242, explained, "It would have been wrong to demand that
Formally, therefore, the final border is subject to negotiations: The Palestinians can seek the 1967 lines, but
Ironically, this could force
In contrast, had the world really treated the border as negotiable rather than openly backed the Palestinian position,
An escalating war of unilateral moves and countermoves would not be conducive to any agreement. That might not disturb Abbas, who has repeatedly demonstrated a preference for dictated rather than negotiated solutions. But it ought to disturb all those Security Council members who claim to view an Israeli-Palestinian agreement as top priority.
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