  US Ambassador to the UN John Bolton (front C) 
 vetoes a resolution before the UN Security Council condemning Israel for 
 incursions in the Gaza Strip, at the United Nations in New York July 13, 
 2006. Ten of the 15 member nations voted in support of the resolution, 
 four abstained and the US vetoed. [Reuters] | 
The 
United States blocked an Arab-backed resolution Thursday that would have 
demanded Israel halt its military offensive in the Gaza Strip, in the first UN 
Security Council veto in nearly two years. (Click to see Middle East Conflict Full Coverage 
 
 ) 
The draft, sponsored by Qatar on behalf of other Arab nations, accused Israel 
of a "disproportionate use of force" that endangered Palestinian civilians, and 
demanded Israel withdraw its troops from Gaza. 
The United States was alone in voting against the resolution. Ten of the 15 
Security Council nations voted in favor, while Britain, Denmark, Peru and 
Slovakia abstained. 
The US has periodically used its veto to block resolutions critical of 
Israel. The last council veto, in October 2004, was cast when the United States 
blocked a resolution condemning another Israeli operation in Gaza. 
The draft was reworked repeatedly to address concerns that it was too biased 
against Israel. Language was added calling for the release of an abducted 
soldier and urging the Palestinians to stop firing rockets at Israel. 
Nonetheless, US Ambassador John Bolton said it was still unacceptable because 
it had been overtaken by events in the region, including the capture of two 
Israeli soldiers by Hezbollah militants on Wednesday, and was "unbalanced." 
"It placed demands on one side in the Middle East conflict but not the 
other," Bolton said. "This draft resolution would have exacerbated tensions in 
the region." 
Israel launched the operation two weeks ago in response to the June 25 
capture of an Israeli soldier, 19-year-old Cpl. Gilad Shalit. 
The resolution called on Israel and the Palestinians to "take immediate steps 
to create the necessary condition for the resumption of negotiation and 
restarting the peace process." It urged all parties to help alleviate the "dire 
humanitarian situation" faced by Palestinians. 
The United States sought a text that said the Israeli actions were in direct 
response to rocket attacks against Israel and Shalit's capture. 
Bolton said the United States remains "gravely concerned" at the escalation 
of the conflict and believes the best way to calm the situation is for Hamas to 
release Shalit. 
The draft also demanded Israel release the Palestinian officials it has 
arrested. 
The Palestinian observer to the UN, Riyad Mansour, said he was disappointed 
with the council's "continued inability to act while innocent Palestinian 
civilians continue to be brutally killed by the Israeli occupying forces." 
Referring to past US practice of vetoing similar resolutions, Mansour said 
the council is failing the Palestinians. In Gaza, the Palestinian Foreign 
Ministry spokesman, Taher al-Nunu, said the United States must bear some 
responsibility for Israel's attacks. 
"The veto is a political cover for the crimes of the occupation, and 
regrettably, instead of putting war criminals of this government that lost its 
mind on trial, they are giving a political cover to carry out more of these 
crimes," al-Nunu said. 
In a speech to the council immediately following Mansour, Israel's UN 
Ambassador Dan Gillerman thanked the US for its "bold stand." He defended 
Israel's actions and put the blame for attacks against Israel squarely on Iran 
and Syria. 
"What we are seeing are the actions of Hamas and Hezbollah, but they are 
merely the fingers of the bloodstained hands and the executioners of the twisted 
minds of the leaders of the world's most ominous axis of terror, Syria and 
Iran," he said. 
Eight of the last nine vetoes in the council have been cast by the United 
States. Of those, seven concerned the Israel-Palestinian 
conflict.