It appears that this kind of public rhetoric from the Palestinian Authority President at the U.N. only concurs the sad disappointment that Israel does not have a truly viable partner in peace.
U.S. State Dept.
The final allegation was a gesture toward Abbas’s repeatedly leveled accusation that Israeli Jews are attempting to “Judaize” Jerusalem, a charge that Israeli leaders have harshly criticized as a particularly virulent and dangerous form of incitement. Other portions of Abbas’s speech included lines lashing out over “the third war waged by the racist occupying State in five years against Gaza” and insisting that “the colonial occupying Power [Israel] was preparing a new Nakba [disaster] against the Palestinian people.” Substantively the speech appeared to commit the PA to giving up negotiations and instead pursuing a strategy of international legal warfare against the Jewish state. Abbas seemed emphatic on the point: “it is impossible, and I repeat – it is impossible – to return to the cycle of negotiations.”
The full version of the speech as written was posted to the U.N.’s webpage, and New York Times United Nations journalist Somini Sengupta reported that Abbas received “sustained applause from the General Assembly hall.” Johnathan Schanzer, vice president for research at the Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), noted that “the PLO has been heading in this direction for several years now – using the international system as its chief negotiation leverage” and suggested that attention would now shift to whether the Obama administration would “help the PLO pursue its goals through the international system.” A statement sent to reporters by State Department Spokesperson Jen Psaki Friday night blasted Abbas’s speech for having “included offensive characterizations that were deeply disappointing and which we reject,” and described his remarks as ones that “[were] counterproductive and undermine[d] efforts to create a positive atmosphere and restore trust between the two parties.” Veteran Associated Press (AP) diplomatic correspondent Matt Lee posted the statement to Twitter after specifically emphasizing both the former and latter aspects of State’s position. The subsequent AP story conveying Psaki’s statement specifically emphasized Abbas’s war crimes accusation.