Arab League weighs in on US 1967 resolution, Jerusalem is a 'red line' says League

Abdel-Rahman Hussein
3 Min Read

CAIRO: The Arab League has weighed in on the US Congress resolution congratulating Israel on the 40th anniversary of the reunification of Jerusalem, denouncing it as a violation of UN accords.

Commemorating the fortieth anniversary of the 1967 war which saw Israel annex the old city of Jerusalem (an annexation not recognized by the international community), the American Congress passed a resolution which “congratulates the residents of Jerusalem and the people of Israel on the 40th anniversary of the reunification of that historic city.

The League s Deputy Secretary General Mohammed Sobeih told journalists Sunday that the resolution is “a violation of all accords the American administration has signed concerning Jerusalem and the Palestinians … and of Security Council resolutions.

Additionally, the resolution called on President George W. Bush to move the American embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The resolution has not yet been adopted by the US Senate House.

Concerning the status of Jerusalem, Sobeih said it was “a red line. This position goes against American interests and the peace process.

Egypt had also reacted angrily to the resolution, describing it as “unacceptable in form and content.

The Foreign Minister’s spokesman Alaa Al Hadidi released a statement Saturday describing the resolution as “unacceptable in form and content.

According to Hadidi, it “not only contradicts international law and [UN] Security Council resolutions on Jerusalem, but also the position of the US administration itself over East Jerusalem.

Additionally, there is “no room for arguing against East Jerusalem as being occupied Arab land, Hadidi said, and he asked “all parties to refrain from taking positions that further complicate the situation and that do not serve peace between the Israeli and Palestinian people.

The Congress resolution also stated that it “commends those former combatant states of the Six-Day War, Egypt and Jordan, who in subsequent years had the wisdom and courage to embrace a vision of peace and coexistence with Israel.

Israel passed a law in 1980 declaring Jerusalem to be “the unified and eternal capital of Israel. UN Security Council resolutions have often condemned Israeli actions in the city, and one passed in 1980 saw 13 foreign embassies moved from Jerusalem to Tel Aviv.

Foreign Minister Ahmed Aboul Gheit told parliament last week that the Arab-Israeli conflict will not end until East Jerusalem is returned.

Forty years ago, Israel conducted a preemptive strike against Arab air forces on the ground, destroying 400 planes. This was the first strike in what came to be known as the Six-Day War.

Israel wrestled the old city of Jerusalem from Jordanian hands on June 7 1967. Arabs consider East Jerusalem to be occupied Palestinian land and want it to be the future capital of a Palestinian state.

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