The resolution asks the President to recognize a Palestinian state that has no military and exists beside Israel. It would not change U.S. law on its own. It also calls for elections, aid to Gaza, hostage releases, and peace planning.
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A resolution calling on the President to recognize a demilitarized State of Palestine, as consistent with international law and the principles of a two-state solution, alongside a secure State of Israel. is a Senate bill in committee. The latest recorded action: Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S6740).
Latest action on S.Res. 410: Referred to the Committee on Foreign Relations. (text: CR S6740)
Who this affects: This resolution mainly affects U.S. foreign policy toward Israel and Palestinians. It could matter most to Palestinians, Israelis, the President, U.S. diplomats, Arab governments, and countries involved in peace talks. Because it is nonbinding, real changes would depend on later choices by the President, Congress, Israel, Palestinian leaders, and other countries.
Why this matters: This matters because it pushes the United States toward recognizing Palestine while still saying Israel must be secure. That would be a major foreign policy signal, even though the resolution does not change law by itself. If the President acted on it, it could affect U.S. ties with Israel, Palestinian leaders, Arab countries, and other allies. The results would depend on later decisions by those leaders and governments.
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