The United States could have killed a key United Nations
resolution that condemned Israel for its West Bank settlements by voting
against it rather than abstaining, former U.S.
Ambassador John Bolton said Friday night, but he thinks President Barack Obama
took the action to "box the incoming Trump administration in."
"This was a stab in the back against the Israelis,"
Bolton told Fox
News' "Hannity" show Friday night. "It was entirely
predictable. I would say this for people in the pro-Israel community in the
United States who defended Obama's Middle East policy over these last eight
years: You should have seen this coming and this is what you get for supporting
Barack Obama."
Obama has had a contentious relationship with Israel Prime Minister
Benjamin Netanyahu over the years, Bolton conceded, but he thinks the
administration's decision to abstain from the UN vote on Friday goes deeper
than that.
"I think this was an effort to box the in-coming Trump
administration in, and it violates nearly 50 years of American bipartisan
policy on the Middle East, going back to the iconic resolution 242 after the
1967 war."
The proposed resolution says Israel's occupation is
"illegitimate," said Bolton, and "therefore it has no land to
give back in exchange for peace. Contrary to what the Obama administration has
said, this puts a huge thumb on the scale against Israel."
Further, Bolton said, the consequences of the revolution will be
felt for many years in negative ways for both Israel and the United States.
There has been a great deal of bipartisan pushback against the
decision to abstain from the resolution, but Bolton said it was "entirely
foreseeable" that Obama took the action he did.
And even with the resolution, there is "not a chance"
Israel will quit developing in the West Bank region, and "nor should
they,"s aid Bolton.
"I do think, contrary to what Obama says, this is the death
now of the two-state solution," Bolton said. "It shows once again
it's fundamentally unworkable, and I think Netanyahu and a nearly unanimous
Israeli opinion will support him on that."
When it come to the United States, he continued, "it's time
to stand up for principle."
"I've certainly advocated for a long time, which is votes in
the united nations should have consequences," said Bolton. "We've got
two issues here, the 14 countries that voted in favor of the resolution and the
United Nations as a whole."
Bolton continued that he'd recommend that Trump call the
resolution "illegitimate" and say the United States will try to
repeal it, and if that fails, cut the U.S. contribution to the UN.
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