The Security Council took its first official step Wednesday to consider the Palestinians' request for UN membership. Lebanese Ambassador Nawaf Salam, who holds this month's rotating council presidency, announced that he was forwarding the Palestinians' request to the committee on new admissions, which includes all 15 member states on the council. The step is required by council rules of procedure. The committee will meet to consider the request for membership Friday. Palestinian UN envoy Riyad Mansour thanked the council for quickly and unanimously agreeing to act on the Palestinian application. “We hope this process not to take too long before we see positive action,” he told reporters. The process could take weeks before it comes to a final vote in the council, where the United States has vowed to veto the measure should it receive the necessary nine of 15 council votes in favor of membership for Palestine. Mansour did not address US opposition, but said instead: “As you see, the process is moving forward step by step and we hope that the Security Council will shoulder its responsibility and approve our application.” The US didn't believe it was necessary to block the procedural step, even though it opposes the Palestinian request, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said. The United States has said the only way to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian question is through direct negotiations. “If you care about getting to Palestinian statehood, the place to do this is not in New York, but at the negotiating table,” said Nuland. Israel joins the United States in opposing the Palestinians unilateral declaration of statehood and bid for UN membership and its ambassador to the world body restated that position Wednesday.