It Seems Chuck Schumer Knew the Graham Platner Rape Allegation Was Coming
Democrats on the Brink as Socialist Candidate Battles Establishment in Michigan
Southern Poverty Law Center Has Been Indoctrinating Our Teachers
Iran Is Losing This Key Piece of Leverage Over the Rest of the...
Abdul El-Sayed's HQ Account Thought Slamming Haley Stevens for Honoring Charlie Kirk Was...
The Dodgers' White House Visit Has This Sportswriter Whining
Democrats Will Never Stop Trying to Abolish ICE
New Jersey's Prison System Just Got Slapped With a Lawsuit
Guess Why Gretchen Whitmer Just Pardoned a Convicted Murder
These Lies About Susan Collins Are Why Democrats Climbed in Bed With Graham...
The DSA Spells Out Their Plan to Take Down America
It Turns Out Young MAGA Wants American Strength—Not Isolation
Here's What the DSA's Platform Reveals About Democratic Socialism and Their War Against...
Sixty-Six Percent of Republicans Support Rent-Control—No Wonder There's An Appetite For So...
There's a Major Update in the Foiled Sniper-Style UFC Terror Plot
OPINION

Abbas Should Have Been Jeered, Not Applauded, at the UN

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Abbas Should Have Been Jeered, Not Applauded, at the UN

MAHMOUD ABBAS addressed the United Nations General Assembly on Wednesday in his capacity as "President of State of Palestine," or so the official text posted on the UN website identifies him.

Advertisement

In reality, Abbas is no more the lawful president of Palestine than George W. Bush is the lawful president of the United States. Both were sworn in for four-year terms in January 2005. Those terms expired more than six years ago. If Bush had appeared before the UN plenum this week and presumed to announce a change in American policy, he would have been thought delusional and jeered off the podium. That is the reaction that Abbas deserved when he traveled to UN headquarters in New York and proclaimed that the Palestinian Authority will no longer be bound by agreements signed with Israel.

But in what is by now a long-established charade, the world body pretended to accept Abbas's political legitimacy. Delegates listened courteously as he declared that the kleptocratic and dictatorial Palestinian Authority is committed to "the rule of law and transparency as a democratic and modern state." They didn't burst into laughter — though they should have — when he assured them that he and the Palestinian leadership are "spreading the culture of peace and coexistence" with Israel. Or when he accused the Jewish state — the only Middle East government that scrupulously protects the full religious freedom of its minorities — of using "brutal force to ... undermine the Islamic and Christian sanctities in Jerusalem."

Advertisement

To speak for the Palestinian Authority at the UN is to be indulged in any claim, however dishonest. Abbas's speech was replete with falsehoods, but the most egregious were his pieties about the "two-state solution." Like Yasser Arafat before him, Abbas has no intention of ever accepting the legitimacy of a Jewish state of Israel alongside an Arab state of Palestine. Incitement against Israel and the demonization of Jewish sovereignty has been a staple of Palestinian Authority rhetoric for years; one more speech at the UN changed nothing. It merely prolonged the disgraceful sham of treating a Palestinian strongman's hate-filled lies as if they were respectable truths, and thereby ensuring the continuation of a conflict that could have ended two generations ago.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement