US Veto Protects Peace Talks, Demands Hamas Disarmament Before Gaza Ceasefire
United States: In a stark display of global divide, the United States has exercised its veto power to obstruct a United Nations Security Council resolution that sought to instate an absolute and irrevocable ceasefire in the besieged Gaza Strip.
Despite overwhelming consensus—14 of the 15 council members cast votes in favor—the US stood isolated, dismissing the measure on grounds it could dismantle ongoing diplomatic navigation. The proposal also pressed for unhindered humanitarian access and the immediate emancipation of all hostages.
Dorothy Shea, the US envoy to the UN, justified the lone opposition, asserting the draft sidestepped unequivocal condemnation of Hamas and failed to demand the group’s disarmament and departure from Gaza. Shea stressed, “Backing a resolution that omits recognition of Hamas as a terror outfit, as labeled by Washington, London, and Brussels, would unravel progress on the ground.”
This veto lands at a precarious juncture. Over two million civilians in Gaza, already treading the brink of famine, are enduring the aftershocks of an 11-week total blockade enforced by Israel, halting all aid deliveries. In response, a new entity—the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation (GHF)—with backing from both Israel and the US, has assumed control of aid distribution, effectively supplanting roles traditionally held by UN agencies and other NGOs