Russia weighs in on Palestinian statehood

Sep 23, 2025 - 21:00
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Russia weighs in on Palestinian statehood

Moscow granted recognition long ago, without waiting for the Gaza “catastrophe,” the Foreign Ministry has said

Russia recognized Palestinian statehood many years ago, without waiting for the “monstrous catastrophe” that has killed thousands, Deputy Foreign Minister Sergey Vershinin has said, referring to Israel’s current offensive in Gaza and the toll it has taken on the enclave’s civilian population.

Speaking on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly on Tuesday, Vershinin said that while Russia condemns the Hamas October 7 attack that triggered Israel’s retaliation, it “cannot and must not be used as a pretext for collective punishment of millions of Palestinians.” According to Gaza’s health authorities, at least 65,000 people have been killed since Israel launched its offensive nearly two years ago.

Vershinin’s comments came after the recognition of Palestine by France, the UK, Portugal, Belgium, Canada, and Australia. Moscow noted that it had recognized Palestinian statehood back in 1988, soon after the Palestinian Declaration of Independence.

Russia maintains that a lasting Middle East settlement is only possible based on the UN Security Council formula entailing the creation of a Palestinian state within the armistice lines that existed before the 1967 Six-Day War and with East Jerusalem as its capital. The UNGA earlier this month overwhelmingly backed a resolution supporting a two-state solution, which was opposed only by the US, Israel, and a handful of Pacific island states.

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‘Recognition alone is not enough’: What must happen next for Palestinian statehood

The original UN plan for partition in 1947 envisioned separate Jewish and Arab states, but subsequent wars allowed Israel to seize most of the land, including West Jerusalem, which had been allocated to the Palestinians.

Western powers have long resisted recognizing a Palestinian state and have aligned with Washington and insisting it could only come as part of direct negotiations. However, after years of stalemate and the humanitarian disaster in Gaza since 2023, leaders in Paris, London and elsewhere are now calling recognition both a moral step and a diplomatic signal that the two-state solution remains the only path to peace.