INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE ARAB ISRAEL
CONFLICT
Extracts from
"Israel
and Palestine - Assault on the Law
of Nations"
by Julius Stone
Second Edition
with additional material and
commentary updated to 2003
CONTENTS
The Legal Status of the Territories Sovereignty in Jerusalem
The Legality of the Settlements
The Principle of Self-determination The Oslo
Accords and the Roadmap The Right of
Return
Appendix: Chronology and Maps
Editor: Ian Lacey
2
Jirlac Pty Limited
Bellevue Hill
NSW, Australia
Ian Lacey 2003
First edition 1990
Second Edition 2003
National Library of Australia
Cataloguing-in-Publication data
Stone, Julius, 1907-1985.
International Law and the Arab-Israel conflict:
extracts from Israel
and Palestine Assault on the Law of Nations by
Professor Julius Stone.
2nd ed.
ISBN 0 9751073 0 5
1. Jewish-Arab relations
1949-.
2.Israel
-
2.
International status.
3.Palestine
- International status.
3.
III. Title.
Includes additional material and commentary updated to 2003.
341.29095694
Printed by Dashing
3
INTERNATIONAL LAW AND THE ARAB-ISRAEL CONFLICT
Extracts from "Israel
and Palestine - Assault on the Law
of
Nations" by Julius Stone
Editor: Ian Lacey, B.A., LL.B.
The late Professor Julius Stone was recognised as one of the
twentieth century's leading
authorities on the Law of Nations. Israel
and Palestine , which appeared in
1980,
presented a detailed analysis of the central principles of
international law governing the
issues raised by the Arab-Israel conflict. This summary
provides a short outline of the
main points in the form of extracts from the original work.
Also included in this second
edition are extracts
from the subsequent
international documents, and
updated
commentary.
CONTENTS
The Legal Status of the Territories Sovereignty in Jerusalem
The Legality of the Settlements
The Principle of Self-determination The Oslo
Accords and the Roadmap The Right of
Return
Chronology and Maps
Jirlac Publications
4
JULIUS STONE (1907 - 1985)
One of the rare scholars to gain outstanding recognition in
more than one field,
Professor Stone was one of the world s best-known
authorities in both jurisprudence and international law.
From 1942 until 1972 he was the Challis Professor of
International Law and
Jurisprudence at the University
of Sydney . From 1972 until his
death in 1985
Professor Stone held concurrently with his appointment as
visiting Professor of Law at the University
of New South Wales the position of
Distinguished Professor of Jurisprudence and International Law at the Hastings
College of Law, University of California .
In 1956 he received the award of the American Society of International Law, and
in 1962 he was made an honorary life member of the society. In 1964 the Royal
Society of Arts named him as a recipient of the Swiney Prize for Jurisprudence. In 1965 he received the World Research Award
of the Washington Conference on World Peace through Law.
His 26 major works include the authoritative texts Legal
Controls of International Conflict, Aggression and World Order, The
International Court and World Crisis and the Province and Function of Law.
5
CONTENTS
Preface to the 2003 Edition
1
Part 1.
The Legal Status of the Territories 2
Part 2.
Sovereignty in Jerusalem 5
Part 3.
The Geneva Conventions and
the Legality of the Settlements
9
Part 4.
The Principle of Self-Determination 11
Part 5.
The Legal Effect of the Peace
Process 14
Part 6.
Arab Refugees and the Right of
Return 21
APPENDIX
Chronology
24
Maps
1. British Mandate 1920-1948
28
2. UN Partition Plan
1947
29
3. Armistice Lines 1949-1967
30
4. Ceasefire
Lines 1967-1982
31
5. Areas under Israel
s Jurisdiction 1982-1993 32
6. Interim Agreement
under the Oslo Accords 1995 33
6
PREFACE TO THE 2003 EDITION
short summary appeared in 1990. Since then the rights of the
parties have been
modified by agreement, and the optimism which followed the
various agreements has
been succeeded by violent conflict. This second edition
therefore appears in a climate
in which legal assertions are once again a central part of the
political discourse, a
context which has renewed the relevance of Professor Stone s
clear analysis of the
status under international law of the Territories which came
into Israel s
possession
in 1967.
A new section has been added which deals with the effect on
the legal status of the Territories of the Oslo Accords, the Israel-Jordan
Peace Treaty and the Roadmap , in the
form of documentary extracts.
There is also a further section comprising extracts from the
international instruments relating to the revived Palestinian claim to a right of return .
The writer is grateful for the suggestions of David D.
Knoll, author of The Impact of Security Concerns upon International Economic
Law and Peter J. Wertheim, author of Unlawful Coercion and the Law of Treaties:
the case of Syria
and Lebanon .
This booklet is, of course, a mere description of the legal
position, and it charts no course for the future. However it is hoped that this
summary will contribute to a more general understanding of the basic issues.
Ian Lacey
7
Part 1
THE LEGAL STATUS OF THE TERRITORIES LIBERATED BY ISRAEL
Julius Stone examines the principles governing legal title
to the Territories known as the Gaza Strip and the West Bank , which are
part of the territory which came into Israel
s possession during the war of 1967.
In his analysis Stone draws upon the writings of
Professor Stephen Schwebel, the former Chief Judge of the International Court
of Justice.
Since Stone wrote, the legal status of the Territories has
been affected by the
agreements implementing the Oslo Accords of 1993, which
provide for a sharing
of governmental powers in the Territories with the
Palestinian Authority, with
specified security powers reserved to Israel
(See Part 5). However those
agreements are on an interim basis, pending and subject to
the negotiation of a
permanent status agreement , and they leave the underlying
legal title intact.
Also the peace treaty of 1994 now sets the international
boundary between Israel
and Jordan at
the centre of the Jordan river , without prejudice to the status of [the]
Territories
The Self-Defence Principle
The basic precept of international law concerning the rights
of a state victim of aggression, which has lawfully occupied the attacking state
s territory in the course of self-defence, is clear. And it is still
international law after the Charter, which gave to the UN General Assembly no power to amend this
law. This precept is that a lawful occupant such as Israel
is entitled to remain in control of
the territory involved
pending negotiation of a treaty
of peace.
Both Resolution 242 (1967) and Resolution 338 (1973),
adopted by the Security Council after respective wars of those years, expressed this
requirement for settlement by negotiations between the parties, the latter
in those words.
Conversely both the Security Council and the General
Assembly in 1967 resisted heavy Soviet and Arab pressures demanding automatic Israeli
withdrawal to the pre-1967 frontiers. Through the decade 1967-1977, Egypt
and her Arab allies compounded the illegality of their continued hostilities by
proclaiming the slogan No
recognition! No Peace! No negotiation!
thus blocking the regular process of international
law for post-war
pacification and settlement Israel 's
territorial rights after 1967 are best seen by contrasting them with Jordan 's
lack of such rights in Jerusalem
and the West Bank after the Arab invasion of Palestine
in 1948. The presence of Jordan
in Jerusalem and
8
elsewhere in cis-Jordan from 1948 to 1967 was only by virtue
of her illegal entry in 1948. Under the international law principle ex iniuria
non oritur ius she acquired no legal title there. Egypt
itself denied Jordanian sovereignty; and Egypt
never tried to claim Gaza as
Egyptian territory.
By contrast, Israel 's
presence in all these areas pending negotiation of new borders is entirely lawful, since Israel
entered them lawfully in self-defence.
International law forbids acquisition by unlawful force, but
not where, as in the case of Israel 's
self-defence in 1967, the entry on the territory was lawful. It does not so forbid it, in particular, when the force is used to
stop an aggressor, for the effect of such prohibition would be to guarantee to all
potential aggressors that,
even if their aggression failed, all territory lost in the
attempt would be automatically returned to them. Such a rule would be absurd
to the point of lunacy.
There is no such rule
International law, therefore, gives a triple underpinning to
Israel 's claim
that she is under no obligation to hand back automatically the West
Bank and Gaza to Jordan or anyone else. In the first place, these lands never
legally belonged to Jordan .
Second, even if they had, Israel 's
own present control is lawful, and she is entitled to negotiate the extent and the terms of her
withdrawal. Third,
international law would not in such circumstances require
the automatic handing back of territory even to an aggressor who was the former
sovereign. It requires the extent and conditions of the handing back to be
negotiated between the parties.
Competing Claims to Title
Because the Jordanian entry onto the West Bank
and East Jerusalem in 1948 was an unlawful invasion and
an aggression, the principle ex iniuria non oritur ius beclouded even Jordan 's
limited status of belligerent occupant. Her purported annexation was invalid on
that account, as well as because it violated the freezing provisions of the
Armistice Agreement. Conversely Israel 's
standing in East Jerusalem after her lawful entry in the
course of self-defence certainly displaced Jordan 's
unlawful possession.
Once this position is reached, and it is remembered that
neither Jordan nor any other state is a sovereign reversioner entitled to re-enter
the West Bank , the legal standing of Israel
takes on new aspects. She becomes then a state in lawful control of territory in respect of which no other state can
show better (or, indeed, any) legal title. The general principles of international
law applicable to such a situation, moreover, are well-established. The International
Court of Justice, when called upon to adjudicate in territorial disputes, for
instance in the Minquires and Echrehos
case between the United Kingdom and France , proceeded to appraise
the relative strength
of the opposing
claims to
9
sovereignty . Since title to territory is thus based on a
claim not of absolute but only of relative validity, the result seems decisive in East
Jerusalem . No other state having a legal claim even equal to that of Israel
under the unconditional cease-fire agreement of 1967
and the rule of uti possidetis, this relative superiority of title
would seem to
assimilate Israel's possession
under international law to an absolute title, valid erga omnes...
The most succinct statement of this position is in Professor
Stephen Schwebel's.
What Weight to
Conquest? published in 1970,
before he entered
U.S. government service. He points out that the answer to that
question in terms of international law, after the Charter's prohibitions of the
use of force, makes necessary a vital
distinction between aggressive
conquest and defensive
conquest, between the taking of territory legally held and
the taking of territory illegally held :
Those distinctions may be summarized as follows:
a) A state acting in lawful exercise of its right of
self-defence may seize and occupy foreign territory as long as such seizure and
occupation are necessary to its self-defence.
b) As a condition of its withdrawal from such territory,
that state may require the institution of security measures reasonably
designed to ensure that that territory shall not again be used to mount a
threat or use force against it of such a nature as to justify exercise of
self-defence.
c) Where the prior holder of the territory had seized that
territory
unlawfully, the state which subsequently takes that
territory in the lawful exercise of self-defense has, against that prior
holder, better title.
Note:
The issues discussed in this section have continuing
relevance in the context of current assertions that Israeli presence in the Territories
constitutes an illegal occupation. Such assertions ignore
both Israel
s underlying right
to lawful possession of the Territories as outlined by Stone, and the
specific rights reserved to
As Stone remarks a state victim of aggression is entitled to
protect itself by retaining lawful possession of territory taken in self-defence from a
defeated aggressor.
The dismemberment ofGermany
after two world wars, as a protection against any repeated aggression, is a classic example of the operation
of the customary law.
The dismemberment of
The legal principle is reflected in Article 75 of the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties, which declares that the provisions of the
Convention governing the validity
10
of treaties are are
without prejudice to any obligation
which may arise for an aggressor State
in consequence of measures taken by the victim of the aggression in
lawful self-defence.
In the case of the Territories the relevant historical
background includes the Arab invasion of Israel
in 1948, continuing armed incursions by irregular forces after the armistice agreements of 1949, and the naval blockade and the
massing of the armed
forces of Egypt ,
Jordan , Syria
and Iraq in
preparation for a further invasion in 1967.
As President Gamal Abdel Nasser declared to the Egyptian
parliament at the time:
The problem before the Arab countries is not whether the port
of Eilat should be blockaded or how
to blockade it but how totally to
exterminate the State of Israel for all time.
It is thus the historical context itself which makes it
inconceivable that the Israeli presence in the Territories could be characterized as illegal. If this were so, then Israel
would be bound to withdraw unilaterally from the whole of the Territories, and without any peace agreement, security guarantees or border
adjustments. As Stone points out, this would then negate the whole basis for the
negotiation of a peaceful settlement with
secure and recognized boundaries
as contemplated by UNSC Resolution 242.
11
Part 2
SOVEREIGNTY IN JERUSALEM
The Partition Plan of 1947 envisaged an international Jerusalem ,
separated from both Israel
and the then proposed Palestinian State .
During the 1948 war, East Jerusalem (which includes the
holy places of Judaism, Christianity and Islam in the old city) came into Jordanian hands; and Jordan
claimed sovereignty.
In 1967, after Jordan
launched an attack on West Jerusalem , the whole of Jerusalem came under Israeli rule; and Israel
claimed sovereignty over a united Jerusalem .
Professor Stone examines the legal principles which apply,
and considers the analysis of Professor Elihu Lauterpacht, the distinguished
editor of the authoritative Oppenheim's International Law .
The agreements implementing the Oslo Accords provide that Jerusalem
is one of the issues to be considered in the permanent status negotiations, and
failure to reach agreement on the sharing of administration in Jerusalem
was one of the reasons for the failure to conclude a permanent status agreement
at Camp David II and at Taba in 2000.
In the absence of such agreement, however, sovereignty
over Jerusalem under international
law remains as described by Stone, under Israel.
The Effect of the Partition Plan
Elihu Lauterpacht concludes, correctly that the 1947
partition resolution had no legislative character to vest territorial rights in
either Jews or Arabs. Any binding force of it would have had to arise from the
principle pacta sunt servanda, that is, from the agreement of the parties
concerned to the proposed plan. Such an agreement, however, was frustrated ab
initio by the Arab rejection, a rejection underlined by armed invasion of Palestine
by the forces of Egypt ,
Iraq , Lebanon ,
Syria and Saudi
Arabia , timed for the British withdrawal on May 14, 1948 , and aimed at destroying
Israel and at
ending even the merely hortatory value of the plan.
The State of Israel is thus not legally derived from the
partition plan, but rests (as do most other states in the world) on assertion of independence
by its people and government, on the vindication of that independence by arms
against assault by other states, and on the establishment of orderly government
within territory under its
stable control. At most, as Israel 's
Declaration of Independence expressed it, the General Assembly resolution was a recognition of the natural
and historic right of the Jewish people in Palestine .
The immediate recognition of Israel
by the United States and other states was in no way predicated on its creation by
the partition resolution, nor was its
admission in 1949 to
membership in the
United Nations.
12
As a mere resolution of the General Assembly, Resolution
181(11) lacked binding force ab initio. It would have acquired the force under
the principle pacta sunt servanda if the parties at variance had accepted it.
While the state of Israel
did for her part express willingness to accept it, the other states concerned
both rejected it and took up arms unlawfully against it. The Partition
Resolution thus never became operative either in law or in fact, either as to
the proposed Jerusalem corpus
separatum or other territorial dispositions in Palestine .
The Corpus Separatum
Concept
We venture to agree with the results of the careful
examination of the corpus separatum proposal by E. Lauterpacht in his monograph Jerusalem
and the Holy Places:
(1) During the critical period of the changeover of power in
Palestine from British to Israeli
and Arab hands, the UN did nothing effectively to implement the idea of the
internationalization of Jerusalem .
(2) In the five years 1948-1952 inclusive, the UN sought to
develop the concept as a theoretical exercise in the face of a gradual
realization that it was acceptable neither to Israel nor to Jordan and could
never be enforced. Eventually the idea was allowed quietly to drop.
(3) In the meantime, both Israel
and Jordan
demonstrated that each was capable of ensuring the security of the Holy Places
and maintaining access to and free worship at them - with the exception, on the
part of Jordan ,
that the Jews were not allowed access to Jewish Holy places in the area of
Jordanian control.
(4) The UN by its concern with the idea of territorial
internationalization, as demonstrated from 1952 to the present date (1968)
effectively acquiesced in the demise of the concept. The event of 1967 and 1968 have not
led to its revival.
(5) Nonetheless there began to emerge, as long ago as 1950,
the idea of functional internationalization of the Holy Places in
contradistinction to the territorial internationalization of Jerusalem .
This means that there should be an element of international government of the
City, but only a measure of international interest in and concern with the Holy
Places. This idea has been propounded by Israel
and has been said to be acceptable to her. Jordan
has not subscribed to it.
Even if no notion of a corpus separatum had ever floated on
the international seas, serious questions about the legal status of Jerusalem
would have arisen after the 1967 War. Did it have the status of territory that came under
belligerent occupation in the
course of active hostilities, for which international law
prescribes a detailed regime of powers granted to the occupying power or withheld it from in
the interest of the ousted reversionary sovereign? Or was this status qualified
in Israel 's
favour by virtue
13
of the fact that the ousted power, in this case, Jordan ,
itself had occupied the city in the course of an unlawful aggression and therefore could
not, under principle of ex iniuria non oritur ius, be regarded as an ousted
reversioner? Or was Jerusalem , as
we will see that a distinguished authority thought at the time,
in the legal status of res nullius modo juridico? That is, was it a territory to which
by reason of the copies of international instruments, and their lacunae, together with
the above vice in the Jordanian title, no other state than Israel
could have sovereign title? The consequence
of this could be to make the legal status of Jerusalem
that of subjection to Israel sovereignty.
Acquisition of Sovereignty
This analysis, based on the sovereignty vacuum, affords a
common legal frame for the legal positions of both West and East
Jerusalem after both the 1948-49 and the 1967 wars. In 1967, Israel 's
entry into Jerusalem was by way
lawful self-defence, confirmed in the Security Council and General Assembly by
the defeat of Soviet and Arab-sponsored resolutions demanding her withdrawal
Lauterpacht has offered a cogent legal analysis leading to
the conclusion that sovereignty over Jerusalem
has already vested in Israel .
His view is that when the partition proposals were immediately rejected and aborted by
Arab armed aggression,
those proposals could not, both because of their inherent
nature and because of the terms in which they were framed, operate as an effective
legal re-disposition of the sovereign title. They might (he thinks) have been
transformed by agreement of the parties concerned into a consensual root of title, but this
never happened. And he points out that the idea that some kind of title remained in
the United Nations is quite at odds, both with the absence of any evidence of vesting,
and with complete United Nations silence on this aspect of the matter from 1950 to
1967?
In these circumstances, that writer is led to the view that
there was, following the British withdrawal and the abortion of the partition
proposals, a lapse or vacancy or vacuum of sovereignty.
In this situation
of sovereignty vacuum,
he thinks, sovereignty could be forthwith acquired by any state that
was in a position to assert
effective and stable control without resort to unlawful
means. On the merely political and commonsense level, there is also ground for greater
tolerance towards Israel 's position, not only because of the historic centrality of Jerusalem
to Judaism for 3,000 years, but also because in modern times Jews have always
exceeded Arabs in
14
Part 3
THE GENEVA
CONVENTIONS AND THE LEGALITY OF
THE SETTLEMENTS
Middle East , often under great
hardship and oppression. And, of course, millions of others were compelled to move to other parts of the world
where too often, as in
September 13, 1993
2. In
redeploying its military forces, Israel
will be guided by the principle that its
October 26, 1994
Jordan
incorporated a renunciation by Jordan
of its former claim to sovereignty over
Israel .
2. a .
There will be a complete redeployment of Israeli military forces from Area B.
Israel
will transfer to the Council and the Council will assume responsibility for
It is often claimed that settlement by Jews in the
administered territories is in breach of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Professor Stone was the
author of the treatise Legal Controls of International Conflict , which included an
extensive commentary on the Geneva
Conventions. Here he discusses their applicability in the Territories.
Perhaps the central current criticism against the government
of Israel in
relation to its administration of the territories occupied after the 1967
War concerns its alleged infractions of the final paragraph (6) of Article 49, of the
Fourth Geneva Convention
Relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of
War, of August 12, 1949 .
The preceding paragraphs deal with deportation or transfer
of a population out of the occupied territory. The final paragraph (6) reads as
follows. "The occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian
population into territory it occupies."
It has been shown that there are solid grounds in
international law for denying any sovereign title to Jordan
in the West Bank , and therefore any rights as
reversioner state under the law of belligerent occupation [Note: By the Peace Treaty of 1994 Jordan
relinquished any claim to such sovereignty, and the argument which follows therefore
applies a fortiori.]
Not only does Jordan
lack any legal title to the territories concerned, but the Convention itself does not by its terms apply to these
territories. For, under Article 2, the Convention applies
to cases of occupation of the territory of a High Contracting Party, by another such Party . Insofar as the West
Bank at present held by Israel
does not belong to any other State, the Convention would not seem to apply to
it at all. This is a technical, though rather decisive, legal point.
It is also important to observe, however, that even if that
point is set aside, the claim that Article 49 of the convention forbids the
settlement of Jews in the West Bank is difficult to
sustain.
It is clear that in the drafting history, Article 49 as a
whole was directed against the heinous practice of the Nazi regime during the Nazi
occupation of Europe in World War II, of forcibly transporting populations of which it
wished to rid itself, into or out
of occupied territories for the purpose of liquidating them
with minimum disturbance
15
of its metropolitan territory, or to provide slave labour or
for other inhumane purposes. The genocidal objectives, of which Article 49 was
concerned to prevent future
repetitions against other peoples, were in
part conceived by
the Nazi authorities as a means
of ridding their Nazi occupant's metropolitan territory of Jews - of making it, in Nazi terms, judenrein. Such practices were,
of course, prominent among the offences tried by war crimes tribunals after
World War II.
If and insofar, therefore, as Israel's position in Judea and
Samaria (the West Bank) is merely that of an occupying power, Article 49 would
forbid deportation or transfer of its own population onto the West Bank
whenever this action has consequence of serving as a means of either
(1) impairment of
the economic situation or racial integrity of
the native population of the occupied territory; or
(2) inhuman
treatment of its own population.
Impairment of Racial Integrity of the Native Population of
the Occupied Territory.
The prominence of the question of legality of Jewish settlements
on the West Bank reflects the tension
of the peace
process, rather than
the magnitude of any demographic movement. Despite vociferous political warfare
pronouncements on both sides, it seems clear, therefore, that no serious
dilution (much less extinction) of
the separate racial existence of the native population has
either taken place or is in prospect. Nor do well-known facts of dramatic improvement in
the economic situation of the inhabitants since 1967 permit any
suggestion that the situation has been worsened or impaired.
Inhuman treatment of its own population
On that issue, the terms of Article 49(6) however they are
interpreted, are submitted to be totally irrelevant. To render them relevant, we would
have to say that the effect of Article 49(6) is to impose an obligation on the state of Israel
to ensure (by force if
necessary) that these areas, despite their millennial
association with Jewish life, shall be forever judenrein. Irony would thus be pushed to the
absurdity of claiming thatArticle 49(6) designed to prevent repetition of Nazi-type
genocidal policies of rendering Nazi metropolitan territories judenrein, has now
come to mean that Judea and Samaria the West
Bank must be made judenrein and must be so maintained, if necessary by the use of force by the government of Israel
against its own inhabitants.
16
Part 4
THE PRINCIPLE OF SELF-DETERMINATION
It is sometimes asserted that the principle of
self-determination creates a legal obligation for Israel
to give back the Territories to the Palestinians. Here
Stone examines the applicability of the doctrine of self-determination to the conflict.
Whether the doctrine is already a doctrine of international
law stricto sensu, or (as many international lawyers would still say) a precept of
politics, or policy, or of justice, to be considered where appropriate, it is clear
that its application is predicated on certain findings of fact. One of these is the finding
that at the relevant time the claimant group constitutes a people of nation with a common
endowment of distinctive language or ethnic origin or history and
tradition, and the like, distinctive from others among whom it lives, associated with particular
territory, and lacking an independent territorial home in which it may live according
to its lights
Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) leaders have frankly
disavowed distinct Palestine
identity. On March 3, 1977 ,
for example, the head of the PLO Military Operations Department, Zuhair Muhsin,
told the Netherlands
paper Trouw that there are no differences between Jordanians, Palestinians,
Syrians and Lebanese:
We are one people. Only for political reasons do we
carefully underline our Palestinian identity. For it is of national interest for the
Arabs to encourage the existence of the Palestinians against Zionism. Yes, the
existence of a separate Palestine
identity is there only for tactical reasons. The establishment of a Palestinian State
is a new expedient to continue the fight against Zionism and for Arab unity.
The myth of the 1966 Palestinian Covenant that the
Palestinian people was unjustly displaced by the Jewish invasion of Palestine
in 1917 is widely disseminated and unquestioningly and dogmatically espoused in studies from
the United Nations
Secretariat. However, it is necessary to recall, not only
the Kingdom of David
and the succession of Jewish polities in Palestine
down to Roman conquest and dispersion at the turn of the present era, but also that the Jews
continued to live in Palestine even after that conquest, and were in 1914 a well-knit population there.
Hundreds of thousands of other Jews, driven from Palestine
homeland by successive waves of Roman, Arab, and other conquerors, continued to live on for
centuries throughout the
17
pogrom-ridden
Russia and Poland,
they live in
conditions of tyrannous
and humiliation subjection and under daily threat to their lives...
That the provision for a Jewish national home in Palestine
was an application of the principle of self-determination is manifest from the
earliest seminal beginning of the principle. The Enquiry Commission, established by President
Wilson in order to draft
a map of the world based on the Fourteen Points, affirmed
the right of the Jewish people that Palestine
should become a Jewish State clearly on this ground. Palestine , the commission said, was
the cradle and home of their vital race , the basis of the Jewish spiritual contribution, and the Jews were the only people whose only home
was in Palestine.
The problem of competing self-determination becomes, indeed,
even more difficult, whether for purposes of determining aggression or for other
purposes, where the competing claims and accompanying military activities,
punctuated by actual wars,
armistices, and cease-fire agreements, have been made over
protracted historical periods Is the
critical date of the Middle East crisis 1973 or 1967, or
the first Arab states attack on Israel
in 1948, or is it at the Balfour Declaration in 1917, or at the Arab invasions and conquest of the seventh century AD, or
even perhaps at the initial Israelite conquest of the thirteenth century BC? The
priority question, as well as the self-determination question, is difficult enough. They
become quite baffling when, in the course of such a long span of time, a later developing
claim of self-determination like that of the Palestinian people in the 1960's, arises,
and claims to override retrospectively the sovereign statehood of another nation,
here the Jewish people, already attained by right of self determination.
Note:
Stone s characterization of the doctrine of
self-determination as a precept of
policy, or politics or of justice has
since been clarified in a number of decisions of the International Court of
Justice. While the Court has acknowledged the right of various peoples to
self-determination as a matter of principle, it has naturally been careful not
to confer territorial rights on the basis of self-determination in cases where
a sovereign state is in lawful possession of the relevant territory.
In the East Timor Case (1995), for example, the Court
refused to consider a claim based
on self-determination, since
this would require
a determination that Indonesia
s entry into and continued presence in the territory was unlawful, and Indonesia
had not submitted to the Court s jurisdiction.
Stone's observations on the competing Jewish and Palestinian
claims of self-determination in respect of the whole of historical Palestine
were, of course, made at a time when the phrase
the inalienable rights of the Palestinian people was still a coded reference to the projected destruction of Israel ,
and before the Oslo Accords
18
incorporated the first Palestinian acceptance of the concept
of compromise by partition. As an example of the way in which the principles of
pan-Arab national selfdetermination then applied to Israel ,
Stone cited:
a letter dated February 20, 1980 to the
Secretary-General, transmitted for UN circulation to the General Assembly and the Security Council
in connection with item 26 of A/35/11000-S/13816 (Situation in the Middle East)
[which] declared a propos of inclusion in the Charter of a principle of non-use
of force:
The principle of non-use of force shall apply to the
relations of the Arab Nation and Arab
States with the nations and
countries neighbouring the Arab homeland. Naturally, as you know, the Zionist
entity is not included, because the Zionist entity is not considered a State,
but a deformed entity occupying an Arab territory. It is not covered by these
principles.
The critical question at the time of writing is therefore
whether the legal framework of a peace process based on historic compromise can
survive the breakdown of the permanent status negotiations at Camp David II and
Taba, the ensuing violent conflict, and the widespread revival of pan-Arab and Islamic ideologies which reject
such compromise.
19
Part 5
THE LEGAL EFFECT OF THE
PEACE PROCESS
Extracts from Documents 1993-2003 with Notes
DECLARATION OF PRINCIPLES ON INTERIM SELF-GOVERNMENT ARRANGEMENTS
The Oslo Accords (the
DOP ) contemplated the negotiation of a final peace
settlement within an anticipated period of five years,
during which successive interim
measures would be implemented. These measures included an interim
transfer of
autonomous
powers to a
Palestinian self-governing Authority,
and the re-
deployment of Israeli
military forces within the Territories out of populated areas,
on the terms which were negotiated in the later agreements
extracted below.
Article I
Aim of the Negotiations
The aim of the Israeli-Palestinian negotiations within the
current Middle East peace
process is, among other things, to establish a Palestinian
Interim Self-Government
Authority, the elected Council (the "Council"),
for the Palestinian people in the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip, for a transitional period not
exceeding five years, leading to
a permanent settlement based on Security Council Resolutions
242 and 338
Article XIII
Redeployment of Israeli Forces
military forces
should be redeployed outside populated areas.
3. Further redeployments to specified locations will be
gradually implemented
commensurate with
the assumption of responsibility for public order and
internal security
by the Palestinian police force.
TREATY OF PEACE BETWEEN THE STATE OFISRAEL
AND THE HASHEMITE KINGDOM
OF JORDAN
TREATY OF PEACE BETWEEN THE STATE OF
Following the negotiation of the Oslo Accords, the Peace
Treaty between Israel
and
the West
Bank of the Jordan
river . The definition of the border is therefore
20
qualified by the words
without prejudice to the status of any territories that came under
Israeli military control in 1967
Article 3
International Boundary
2. The boundary, as set out in Annex I (a), is the
permanent, secure and recognised
international
boundary between Israel
and Jordan ,
without prejudice to the status
of any
territories that came under Israeli military government control in 1967
Annex I (a)
2. The boundary
is delimited as follows:
The boundary line shall follow the middle of the main course
of the flow of the Jordan
and Yarmouk Rivers
ISRAELI-PALESTINIAN INTERIM AGREEMENT ON THE WEST
BANK AND THE GAZA
STRIP, Washington , D.C. ,
September 28, 1995
This Agreement superseded the previous agreements which
comprised the first stages of the peace
process under the Oslo Accords. It was
re-affirmed in the subsequent documents, and as at 2003 it remains the
operative document of the process.
The Agreement provided for the replacement of Israel
s governmental institutions in
the Territories by the Palestinian Authority, and the
transfer of all government
powers to that Authority, with the exception of those powers
specifically reserved to
Significantly for determining the current status of the
Territories, the Agreement is described as an
Interim Agreement . It is expressed to be for a term not exceeding five
years, and it contains a provision preserving existing rights.
Articles X and XII (1), gives Israel all the powers necessary to meet its responsibility for overall
security of Israelis and Settlements
RECOGNIZING that the aim of the Israeli-Palestinian
negotiations within the
current Middle East peace process is,
among other things, to establish a Palestinian
Interim Self-Government Authority for the Palestinian people
in the West Bank
and the Gaza Strip, for a transitional period not exceeding
five years leading to a permanent
settlement based on Security Council Resolutions 242 and 338
Article I - Transfer of Authority
21
5. After the inauguration of the Council, the Civil Administration
in the West Bank will be dissolved, and the Israeli
military government shall be withdrawn. The withdrawal of the military
government shall not prevent it from exercising the powers and responsibilities
not transferred to the Council
Article X
4. Israel
shall continue to carry the responsibility for external security, as well as
the responsibility for overall security of Israelis for the purpose of
safeguarding their internal security and public order.
Article XI Land
1. The two sides view the West Bank
and the Gaza Strip as a single territorial unit, the integrity and status of
which will be preserved during the interim period
2. The two sides agree that West Bank
and Gaza Strip territory, except for issues that
will be negotiated in the permanent status negotiations,
will come under the
jurisdiction of the Palestinian Council in a phased
manner as specified below:
a. Land in populated areas (Areas A and B) will come under the jurisdiction of the
Council during the first phase of redeployment.
b. All civil powers and responsibilities, including planning
and zoning, in Areas A and B will be
transferred to and assumed by the Council during the first phase of
redeployment.
c. In Area C, during the first phase of redeployment Israel
will transfer to the Council civil powers and responsibilities not relating to
territory
Article XII
Arrangements for Security and Public Order
1. Israel
shall continue to carry the responsibility for defence against external
threats, including the responsibility for protecting the
Egyptian and Jordanian
borders, and for defence against external threats from the
sea and from the air, as well as the responsibility for overall security of
Israelis and Settlements, for the purpose of safeguarding their internal
security and public order, and will have all the powers to take the steps
necessary to meet this responsibility.
3. Except for the Palestinian Police and the Israeli
military forces, no other armed forces shall be established or operate in the West
Bank and the Gaza Strip.
4. Except for the arms, ammunition and equipment of the
Palestinian Police described
in Annex I, and those of the Israeli military forces, no
organization, group or
individual in the West Bank and the
Gaza Strip shall manufacture, sell, acquire,
22
possess, import or otherwise introduce into the West Bank or
the Gaza Strip any firearms, ammunition, weapons, explosives, gunpowder or any
related equipment, unless otherwise provided for in Annex I.
ARTICLE XIII
Security
l. The Council will, upon completion of the redeployment of
Israeli military forces in each district
assume the powers and responsibilities for internal security and public
order in Area A in that district.
public order for Palestinians. Israel
shall have the overriding responsibility for
security for the purpose of protecting Israelis and confronting
the threat of terrorism.
Article XV
Prevention of Hostile Acts
1. Both sides shall take all measures necessary in order to
prevent acts of terrorism,
crime and hostilities directed against each other, against
individuals falling under the
other's authority and against their property and shall take
legal measures against
offenders.
Article XXII
Relations between Israel
and the Council
1. Israel
and the Council shall seek to foster mutual understanding and tolerance and
shall accordingly abstain from incitement, including hostile propaganda,
against each other and, without derogating from the principle of freedom of
expression, shall take legal measures to prevent such incitement by any
organizations, groups or individuals within their jurisdiction.
2. Israel and the Council will ensure that their respective
educational systems contribute to the peace between the Israeli and Palestinian
peoples and to peace in the entire region, and will refrain from the
introduction of any motifs that could adversely affect the process of
reconciliation
Article XXXI Final
Clauses
5. Permanent status negotiations will commence as soon as
possible, but not later
than May 4, 1996 ,
between the Parties. It is understood that these negotiations shall
cover remaining issues,
including: Jerusalem , refugees,
settlements, security
23
arrangements, borders, relations and cooperation with other
neighbours, and other issues of common interest
6. Nothing in this Agreement shall prejudice or pre-empt the
outcome of the
negotiations on the permanent status to be conducted
pursuant to the DOP.
Neither Party shall
be deemed, by
virtue of having
entered into this
Agreement, to have renounced or waived any of its existing
rights, claims or
positions.
Israel
s Reservations
1. A
reservation established with regard to another party modifies for the reserving State in its
West Bank 1.2m. Gaza
880,000 Jordan 1.8m.
Lebanon 372,700 Syria
352,100
Palestine a Partition plan which envisages the
establishment of an
Israel
declares its sovereignty and independence. The Partition Resolution is rejected by the Arab
states and the proposed Palestinian state and the international regime in Jerusalem
are not established.
Israel
is invaded by the armies of Egypt ,
Trans-Jordan , Syria ,
Iraq and Saudi
Arabia and irregular forces from Lebanon
and Sudan .
Jordan
places its forces under joint command with Egypt
and declines Israel
s request for non-belligerence as conveyed by UNTSO.
THE ROADMAP 30
April 2003
The Roadmap is not embodied in any instrument signed or
formally ratified by either party. Its terms are set out in a press statement
issued by the US Department of State on 30
April 2003 .
On 25 May 2003
the Israeli cabinet passed a resolution by 12 votes to 7, with 4
abstentions, agreeing to
accept the steps set out in the roadmap . That agreement
followed 14
reservations conveyed to the US
government, and was made on the basis of a US
commitment to fully and seriously address
Israel s
comments to the roadmap during the implementation stage.
A Performance-Based Roadmap to a Permanent Two-State
Solution to the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict
The following is a performance-based and goal-driven
roadmap, with clear phases, timelines, target dates, and benchmarks aiming at
progress through reciprocal steps by the two parties
A settlement, negotiated between the parties, will result in
the emergence of an
independent, democratic, and viable Palestinian state living
side by side in peace and
security with Israel
and its other neighbours. The settlement will resolve the Israel-
Palestinian conflict, and end the occupation that began in
1967, based on the
foundations of the Madrid Conference, the principle of land
for peace, UNSCRs 242, 338 and 1397, agreements previously reached by the
parties, and the initiative of Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah endorsed by the Beirut Arab League Summit
calling for acceptance of Israel as a neighbour living in peace and security,
in the context of a comprehensive settlement
Phase I: Ending
Terror and Violence,
Normalizing Palestinian Life,
and Building Palestinian Institutions -- Present to May 2003
24
Palestinians declare an unequivocal end to violence and
terrorism and undertake visible efforts on the ground to arrest, disrupt, and
restrain individuals and groups conducting and planning violent attacks on
Israelis anywhere.
Rebuilt and refocused Palestinian Authority security
apparatus begins sustained, targeted, and effective operations aimed at
confronting all those engaged in terror and dismantlement of terrorist
capabilities and infrastructure. This includes commencing confiscation of
illegal weapons and consolidation of security authority, free of association
with terror and corruption
Phase II:
Transition June2003-December2003
In the second phase, efforts are focused on the option of
creating an independent Palestinian state with provisional borders and
attributes of sovereignty
Progress into Phase II will be based upon the consensus
judgment of the Quartet of whether conditions are appropriate to proceed,
taking into account performance of both parties
Phase III: Permanent Status Agreement and End of the
Israeli-Palestinian
Conflict 2004
2005
Progress into Phase III, based on consensus judgment of
Quartet, and taking into account actions of both parties and Quartet
monitoring. Phase III objectives are consolidation of
reform and stabilization
of Palestinian institutions,
sustained, effective Palestinian security performance, and
Israeli-Palestinian negotiations aimed at a permanent status agreement in 2005
1 As a condition
for progress to the second phase, the Palestinians will complete
the dismantling of terrorist organizations (Hamas, Islamic
Jihad, the Popular Front,
the Democratic Front,
Al-Aqsa Brigades and
other apparatuses) and
their infrastructure [and] collection of all illegal weapons and their
transfer to a third party for the sake of being removed from the area and destroyed
6 Declared
references must be made to Israel 's
right to exist as a Jewish state and
to the waiver of any right of return for Palestinian
refugees to the State of Israel
10. The removal of
references other than 242 and 338 (1397, the Saudi Initiative and the Arab
Initiative adopted in Beirut ). A
settlement based upon the road map will be an autonomous settlement that
derives its validity therefrom. The only possible reference should be to
Resolutions 242 and 338, and then only as an outline for the conduct of future
negotiations on a permanent settlement
25
The reference to the
Arab Initiative adopted in Beirut is to the Beirut
Declaration of 28 March
2002 . That Declaration
called for complete
withdrawal from the occupied Arab territories, including the
Syrian Golan
Heights, to the 4
June 1967 line , a solution
to the problem of Palestinian
refugees in
accordance with UNGA Resolution 194
and a Palestinian State
with East Jerusalem as its
capital. It also emphasise[d] the distinction between
international terrorism and the peoples' legitimate right to resist foreign
occupation
The Palestinian Response
Palestinian Prime Minister Mahmoud Abbas rejected the
reservations:
We are saying to the Israelis, 'follow the map and don't
waste time haggling over
details'. We must get into the implementation phase,"
Abbas said "In any case
nobody will pay any attention to this or that
reservation." [Report in Ha aretz.]
In this context, if the Roadmap were to be regarded as
creating international
obligations analogous to treaty obligations, then Article 21
of the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties would be relevant. This
provides:
relations with that other party the provisions of the treaty
to which the reservation relates to the extent of the reservation
3. When a State objecting to a reservation has not opposed
the entry into force of the treaty between itself and the reserving State, the
provisions to which the reservation relates do not apply as between the two
States to the extent of the reservation.
The result would then be that the Roadmap would be binding
only as modified by the reservations. Indeed subsequent Israeli statements have
re-iterated the government s commitment to the map on that basis.
In the absence of formal documentation, however, it appears
that the Roadmap should be characterized
as a guide
for the implementation of
the Oslo agreements, rather than
as a modifying agreement.
26
Part 6
ARAB REFUGEES AND
THE RIGHT OF RETURN
Extracts from Relevant Instruments
A central reason for the failure of the final status
negotiations at Camp David II in July 2000 and at Taba in January 2001 was a Palestinian
insistence that Israel
should recognize that the Arab refugees of 1947-1948 and their
descendants have a right of
return into Israel .
As at the date of writing this remains a central Palestinian demand.
Estimates of the number of refugees who left their homes in Israel
in 1947-1948 vary from 419,000, calculated on the basis of numbers before and
after the exodus, to 726,000, based on UNRWA relief figures.
As at 1996 UNRWA registered over four and a half million
people as Palestinian refugees and their descendants, as follows:
Some of the refugees still face hardship as a result of the
refusal of their host nations to grant them citizenship or equal economic rights.
Obviously repatriation into Israel of a large and hostile population is not a realistic
proposition. However the question
is whether international law places Israel
under any legal obligation to accept such a right of return.
Extracts from the relevant international instruments, with
notes, appear below.
CONVENTION RELATING TO THE STATUS OF REFUGEES, 1951
The Convention defines the term refugee
and prescribes the rights granted to refugees in general under
international law.
Article 1. - Definition of the term "refugee"
A. For the purposes of the present Convention, the term
"refugee shall apply to any person
who:
(2) owing to
well-founded fear of being persecuted for reasons of race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or
political opinion, is outside the country of his nationality and is unable, or owing to
such fear, is unwilling to avail himself of the protection of that country; or who, not
having a nationality and
27
being outside the country of his former habitual residence
as a result of such events, is unable or, owing to such fear, is unwilling to
return to it [Note: This definition assumes a factual situation of a
different character to that of those Palestinians who actively seek to return
to the country of their former residence.]
C. This Convention shall cease to apply to any person
falling under the terms of section A if:
(3) He has acquired a new nationality, and enjoys the
protection of the country of his new nationality; [Note: This excludes those Palestinians who have taken
Jordanian citizenship.]
D. This Convention shall not apply to persons who are at
present receiving from organs or agencies of the United Nations other than the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees protection or assistance.
[Note: This excludes Palestinians registered with UNRWA.]
Article 33. - Prohibition of expulsion or return
("refoulement")
1. No Contracting State shall expel or return
("refouler") a refugee in any manner whatsoever to the frontiers of
territories where his life or freedom would be threatened on account of his
race, religion, nationality, membership of a particular social group or
political opinion.
[Note: This is the critical right created by the Convention.
It is relevant only to any Palestinian who might seek protection against being
returned to Israel
or the Territories. Conversely, the Convention does not include any right to
compel the former country of residence to accept repatriation.]
THE TEN-POINT PROGRAM 1974 Approved by the Palestine
National Council at the 12th Session, 8th
June 1974
This represented the official Palestinian view that the
right of return is a national rather than a humanitarian refugee issue.
1. The assertion
of the PLO position regarding Resolution 242 is that it obliterates the patriotic and national rights of our people and deals
with our people's cause as a refugee problem.
Therefore, dealing with this resolution on this basis is rejected at
28
any level of Arab and international dealings including the Geneva
conference.
2. The PLO will
struggle by every means, the foremost of which is armed struggle, to liberate Palestinian land and to establish the people's
national, independent and fighting authority on every part of Palestinian land to be
liberated. This requires more changes in the balance of power in favor of our people
and their struggle.
3. The PLO will
struggle against any plan for the establishment of a Palestinian entity the price of which is recognition, conciliation,
secure borders, renunciation of the national right, and our people's deprivation of their
right to return and the right to determine their fate on the national soil.
UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY RESOLUTION
194(III) 11
December 1948
UNGA Resolution 194 is usually cited as the basis for the
current claim to a right of return.
The General Assembly, Having considered further the situation in Palestine.
11.Resolves that the refugees wishing to return to their homes
and live at peace with their
neighbors should be permitted to do so at the earliest practicable date, and that
compensation should be paid for the property of those choosing not to return and
for loss of or damage to property which, under principles of international law
or in equity, should be made good by the Governments or
authorities
responsible;
12. Instructs the
Conciliation Commission to
facilitate the repatriation, resettlement and
economic and social rehabilitation of the refugees and the payment of
compensation, and to maintain close relations with the Director of the United
Nations Relief for Palestine Refugees and, through him, with the appropriate
organs and agencies of the United Nations;
Notes:
1. The General
Assembly has, of course, no power under the Charter to create binding rules
of law or to make any binding judicial determination.
In fact Resolution 194 consisted of some 15 clauses, making various recommendations aimed at the peaceful conciliation of the
war that was still in progress. These included procedures for the establishment of
a new Conciliation
29
Commission, and placing Jerusalem ,
and also Nazareth , under UN control
with guaranteed freedom of access. None of these recommendations eventuated.
In this context it will be seen that Clause 11 uses the
word should, the language of recommendation, and
that it does
not purport to
enunciate principles of law. This is consistent with a resolution which
was not intended as a law-making exercise, but rather as an attempt to provide
a formula for the peaceful settlement of hostilities that were still continuing
at the time.
2. Most
significantly, clause 11 was conditioned on a desire to live in peace with their
neighbors by those who wish to return.
3. The resolution
also calls for compensation by the
governments or authorities responsible ,
leaving that issue to be determined according to law. In this regard it is notable
that the ultimate cause of the Arab exodus was the war which began with the Arab
rejection of the Partition Resolution of November 1947, and
continued with the invasion of March 1948. In effect, without that war there
would have been no significant exodus.
INTERNATIONAL COVENANT ON CIVIL AND POLITICAL RIGHTS (1966),
entered into force Mar. 23, 1976 .
Article 12.4 of the ICCPR is occasionally claimed as a basis
for a right of return.
Article 12
4. No one shall be arbitrarily deprived of the right to
enter his own country.
The key word in sub-clause 4 is arbitrarily, which implies that a state is entitled to exercise its discretion to refuse entry, provided that it
specifies reasonable grounds which are universally applicable.
The phrase his own
country , clearly refers to citizenship, since any alternative construction of
the Covenant protecting, say, a universal claim of right of entry by descent,
would not accord with international practice.
30
APPENDIX
CHRONOLOGY
The outline below summarises those historical events which
are relevant to the legal conclusions reached in the text.
c.1900 BCE The era
of the Biblical patriarchs.
c.1000 BCE The
Kingdoms of David and Solomon
70 CE Roman
destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem
- the traditional date for
the beginning of the Dispersion - ends Jewish sovereignty,
although a Jewish presence remains.
638-1099 Palestine
part of the Arabian Empire. Arabic language and Islamic
religion introduced.
1099-1291 Crusader
Kingdom of Jerusalem .
1291-1516 Egyptian Mamluk rule.
1516-1917
Palestine part of the Turkish Empire .
1917 The
Balfour Declaration the establishment
in Palestine of a national
home for the Jewish people .
1920-1948 The
British Mandate.
1947
The United Nations,
by General Assembly
Resolution 181
recommends to the United
Kingdom , as the mandatory Power for
Arab state, a Jewish state and an internationalised Jerusalem .
1948 Britain
relinquishes its Mandate in Palestine .
31
1949 The
truce which ends hostilities is followed by Armistice Agreements which establish military
demarcation lines . Article
II of the agreement with Trans-Jordan provides
1. The principle that no military or political advantage
should be gained under the truce ordered by the Security Council is recognized;
2. It is also recognized that no provision of this Agreement
shall in any way prejudice the rights, claims and positions of either Party
hereto in the ultimate peaceful settlement of the Palestine
question, the provisions of this Agreement being dictated exclusively by
military considerations.
1950 Trans-Jordan annexes the West
Bank of the Jordan
river and East Jerusalem , and
changes its name to The Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan .
1967 The
forces of Egypt ,
Syria and Jordan
mass on Israel
s borders, and Egypt
blockades the Gulf of Akaba .
On 25 May President Abdel Nasser announces to the
Egyptian parliament:
The problem before the Arab countries is not whether the port
of Eilat should be blockaded or how to blockade it but how totally to exterminate the State of
Israel for all time.
In the ensuing war Israel
takes possession of the Sinai, the Gaza
strip, the West Bank , East Jerusalem
and the Golan. Israel
annexes east Jerusalem , but not the
remaining territories.
In Resolution 242 the Security Council affirms
principles which
should apply in the establishment of a just and lasting
peace, including
(i) Withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories
occupied in the recent conflict;
(ii) Termination of all claims or states of belligerency and
respect for and acknowledgement of the sovereignty, territorial integrity
and political independence of every State in the area and their right to
live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries free from threats or acts
of force;
32
[and] the necessity
for achieving a just settlement of the refugee problem In negotiating the terms of the resolution it is agreed that
the word the should be omitted
before the word territories having regard to the requirement for
"secure" boundaries.
However the resolution is accepted by Jordan
and Egypt only
on the basis that "territories" means "all the
territories", and that any
settlement should be "subject to the right of the
Palestinians to
continue their struggle for the liberation of the whole of Palestine ".
The resolution is rejected by Syria
and the PLO.
1979 Following Egyptian President Anwar Sadat s historic visit to Jerusalem in 1977 and the Camp David Accords, the peace treaty with Egypt
sets Israel
s southern boundary, without prejudice
to the issue of the Gaza Strip.
1993 The Oslo Accords
provide for the
establishment of an
interim Palestinian self-governing authority, a timetable for the
redeployment of Israeli forces within the Territories and the negotiation of a
permanent status agreement.
1994 The
peace treaty with Jordan
implies the renunciation of any Jordanian claim of sovereignty over the West Bank
or east Jerusalem , and sets Israel
s eastern boundary, without prejudice to
the status of any territories that came under Israeli military control in 1967.
1995 The Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on
the West Bank and the Gaza Strip (the Oslo
II Agreement) becomes the currently
binding agreement defining the interim power-sharing arrangement in the
Territories.
2000 Permanent Status negotiations at Camp David II and Taba fail, and violence follows. However the interim provisions comprised
in the Oslo agreements remain in
force.
2003 The Road-map provides a performance-based timetable for
implementation of the Oslo
agreements, and foreshadows the creation of a Palestinian state in the context
of a peaceful settlement.
33
MAPS
East Jerusalem was formally annexed,
and Israeli law was applied in the Golan. Otherwise land beyond the green line
was governed by Israel
as the Territories , pending the
negotiation of secure and recognized boundaries
under UN Resolution 242.
The British Mandate, 1920-1948
The above territory was held by Britain
under the Mandate agreed upon at the Conference of San
Remo in 1920 and formally granted by the League
of Nations in 1922. The Mandate incorporated
the provisions of the Balfour Declaration, the establishment in Palestine
of a national home for the
Jewish people.
The Trans-Jordan region was separated in 1921, and became an
independent Kingdom in 1946. The Golan was ceded to the French Mandate of Syria
in 1923 in
exchange for the Metulla region.
34
The UN Partition Plan, 1947
Following the British relinquishment of the Mandate in 1948,
Israel declared
its independence in accordance with the Partition resolution.
The Resolution was rejected by the Palestinian Arabs, and
they refused to establish a Palestinian Arab state alongside Israel .
Hostilities commenced in 1947, and the neighbouring Arab states invaded in
1948. As a result no Palestinian state was established, and there was no
international regime in Jerusalem .
35
Armistice lines 1949-1967
Source : Website of the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
The above demarcation lines were fixed by the Rhodes
Armistice Agreements. Article V.2 of the Agreement with Egypt
(in similar terms to the other Agreements), provided:
The Armistice Demarcation Line is not to be construed in any
sense as a political or territorial boundary, and is delineated without
prejudice to rights, claims and positions of either Party to the Armistice as
regards ultimate settlement of the Palestine
question.
36
Ceasefire Lines, 1967-1982
Source: Website of the Israel Ministry of Foreign Affairs
These are the cease-fire lines at the end of the Six Day War
of June 1967. That war followed the removal of UN forces from the Sinai
at Egypt s
demand, Egypt s
blockade of the Straits of Tiran and the massing of Egyptian, Syrian and
Jordanian forces on the borders under joint command with the declared aim of
invading Israel .
37
Areas under Israel
s Jurisdiction 1982-1993
Source: Website of the Israel
ministry of Foreign Affairs
These boundaries followed the final implementation of the
1979 Egypt-Israel Peace Treaty in
1982. The demarcation lines of 1949 are not shown, as they
were no longer legally applicable after
the collapse of the armistice agreements. However those
lines were treated as an informal green
line .
38
The Interim Agreement under the Oslo
Accords, 1995
Source: Yediot Ahronot
Under Clause 1 of Article XIII of the Interim Agreement, the
Palestinian Authority has full jurisdiction in Area A, which comprises the main
population centres.
Under Clause 2(a) Israeli forces are re-deployed out of Area
B, but retain overriding responsibility
for security to protect Israelis and
confront terrorism.
Under Article XI the PA exercises jurisdiction in Area C in
matters not related to land or security.
Between 1995 and 2000 land was progressively transferred by
negotiation from Areas B and C to Areas A and B respectively.
39
40
JULIUS STONE (1907 - 1985)
The late Professor Julius Stone was recognised as one of the
twentieth century's
leading authorities on the Law of Nations. His Israel
and Palestine , which appeared
in 1980, represents a detailed analysis of the central
principles of international law
governing the issues raised by the Arab-Israel conflict.
This summary is intended to
provide a short outline of the main points in the form of
extracts from the original
work.
Also included in this 2003 edition are extracts from the
subsequent international documents, and updated commentary.
IAN LACEY, a former student of Professor Stone, is an
Australian lawyer and
historical writer. He has given evidence on the issues
considered in this booklet to the
Australian Parliament s Joint Standing Committee on Foreign
Affairs, Defence and
Trade.
Jirlac Publications
ISBN 0-9751073-0-5
41

Local Arabs is the description of the Arabs in what was formerly known as the region of Palestine, which is the Land of Israel.
ReplyDeleteIt is an insult and it is promoting the perpetration of a fraud by calling the local Arabs nothing else than local Arabs. Prior to the mid sixties they were called Arabs all of a sudden they woke up one morning and decided in order to promote their fraud and deception to assume the title the Jews had since the Romans renamed the Land of Israel Palestine and Jerusalem Aelia Capitolina.
YJ Draiman
When is the Israeli government stopping in deluding itself that the Arab/Palestinians want peace? It is time to face reality and stop wasting time on a façade in the illusion of peace. The Arabs behavior and actions speak volumes, that they do not want peace. When you teach your children to commit terror and violence, honor terrorists and suicide bombers; there is no one to talk to.
As long as you have Arabs living in Greater Israel, terror and violence will never stop. It is in their blood and in their culture. Just look around in the world and see how terror and violence is promoted in the Muslim countries and in the Muslim communities in Europe and elsewhere. They are killing each other by the tens of thousands. When is the world at large going to wake up and face the hard reality? That terror and violence must be eliminated at all costs like a cancer or we are doomed to extinction. Death to all terrorists must be applied, no exception. When the Arabs Muslims; are teaching their children from infancy to commit terror and violence. There is no alternative but elimination of the terrorists and those who promote and incite the masses to commit terror and violence.
No Jew has the right to yield the rights of the Jewish People in Israel -
ReplyDeleteDavid Ben Gurion
(David Ben-Gurion was the first Prime Minister of Israel and widely hailed as the State's main founder).
“No Jew is entitled to give up the right of establishing [i.e. settling] the Jewish Nation in all of the Land of Israel. No Jewish body has such power. Not even all the Jews alive today [i.e. the entire Jewish People] have the power to cede any part of the country or homeland whatsoever. This is a right vouchsafed or reserved for the Jewish Nation throughout all generations. This right cannot be lost or expropriated under any condition or circumstance. Even if at some particular time, there are those who declare that they are relinquishing this right, they have no power nor competence to deprive coming generations of this right. The Jewish nation is neither bound nor governed by such a waiver or renunciation. Our right to the whole of this country is valid, in force and endures forever. And until the Final Redemption has come, we will not budge from this historic right.”
BEN-GURION’S DECLARATION ON THE EXCLUSIVE AND INALIENABLE JEWISH RIGHT TO THE WHOLE OF
THE LAND OF ISRAEL:
at the Basle Session of the 20th Zionist Congress at Zurich(1937)
Sovereignty of Israel with no safety and security is a hollow sovereignty
ReplyDeleteThe State of Israel must always keep in mind its own sovereign obligations and be careful not to risk its capacity to perform the vital task of defending itself, its people, and its interests. Israel even under the most adverse conditions, it shall not capitulate to world pressure whereby its citizen’s safety and security is compromised.
Israel has faced over 23,190 terror attacks since September 2000, when a wave of terror started against Israeli citizen’s right after Arafat was offered a second independent Arab/Palestinian state.
To date Israel's concessions and appeasement to the Arabs has decreased the safety and security of Israel's population. It is time to change direction and not worry about world opinion. Do not wait for the world at large to condemn these terrorist attacks, they did not care in the past when Jewish blood was spilled and they do not care now. The security and safety of the people of Israel must be first and foremost above any other consideration. That is the duty and obligation of a responsible government. Deliberating at time of National crisis without a previous set plan borders on dereliction of duty, based on Israel's experience with terror, they should know better. Meanwhile, Israelis are being killed and injured on a daily basis throughout Israel, the people in Israel feel unsafe and the economy is suffering. Get your act together, act immediately and forcefully with no compromise, now that is the only way, it has to be Israel's way or the highway. Any delay in implementation will increase terror and violence and escalate the death and injury of Jewish lives in Israel. Israel must face the bold facts. The Arabs do not want peace, they never did, they only want the destruction of Israel, Israel must act accordingly with no illusion and fantasy or false promises that the Arabs are partners for peace, it is perfectly clear that they are not interested in peace at all. Their Charter and actions confirm it.
The Arabs educate and train their children and the masses to commit terror and violence, celebrate and glorify suicide bombers, Need I say anymore. Stop bickering among yourselves, unify, and face the enemy with vigor and determination and do not stop until the enemy is totally vanquished and peace and tranquility returns to Israel.
YJ Draiman
The “Jewish National Home” was a part of a two step process. The Jews did not want immediate statehood because of their small number in 1917. They wanted the unrestricted right to settle in Palestine until they became a majority and had the capability of exercising sovereignty. The Palestine Mandate was a trust. Trusts do not expire when the trustee resigns. The Palestine Mandate was a self executing document in which the trust vested when the standards were met. I can put in trust a Ming Dynasty vase for my young daughter who is to get it when she is 35 years old if she avoids drugs. If she meets those standards, no further action by any tribunal is required for her to obtain legal dominion over them. Recognition of a state may be tacit under the 1933 Montevideo Convention. Approval of the intention of statehood at a later time is sufficient for tacit recognition of a state. Confirmation of the Palestine Mandate by at least 52 states met that requirement.
ReplyDeleteThe rights granted to the Jewish people in the Mandate for Palestine aka “The Land of Israel” was to be given affect in all of Palestine aka The Land of Israel. It thus follows that the legal rights of the claimants to sovereignty over the Old City of Jerusalem it derives from the decisions of the Supreme Council of the Principal Allied Powers in 1920 San Remo (The Arabs received at that time over 12 million sq. km. of territory – there was also the January 1919 Faisal Weizmann Agreement) and from the implementation of the terms of the Mandate for Palestine aka The Land of Israel implemented and approved by the Council of the League of Nations.
ReplyDeleteIn March 1921, in Cairo, Great Britain arbitrarily and without legal authority, decided to partition the mandated territory of Palestine, for international political reasons of its own. Article 25 of the Mandate gave the Mandatory Power permission to postpone or withhold (but not transfer any territory) most of the terms of the Mandate in the area of land east of the Jordan River (“Trans-Jordan”). Great Britain, as Mandatory Power, wrongfully exercised that right.
For former UN Ambassador, Professor Yehuda Zvi Blum, the rights vested in the Arab people of Palestine aka The Land of Israel with respect to the principle of self-determination were fulfilled as a result of this initial partition of Palestine aka The Land of Israel implemented and approved by the Council of the League of Nations in 1922. According to Professor Blum: “The Arab-Palestinians; have long enjoyed the self-determination in their own state – the Arab-Palestinian State of Jordan”. (Worth mentioning here, in a letter written on 17 January 1921 to Churchill’s Private Secretary, Col. T.E. Lawrence (“of Arabia”) had reported that, in return for Arab sovereignty in Iraq, Trans-Jordan and Syria, King Hussein’s eldest son, Emir Feisal—a man said by Lawrence to be known for keeping his word—had “agreed to abandon all claims of his father to Palestine”. And there was also the January 1919 Faisal Weizmann Agreement).
Jewish roots and rights to all the land of Greater Israel are stronger than ever!
ReplyDelete“If I am turned out of hearth and home and remain outside one night, I am legally entitled to return the following day. If I suffer for ten, twenty, five thousand or fifty thousand nights, does my right of return stand in inverse relationship to the length of my exile? Quite the contrary; my right to return and recover my freedom becomes stronger in direct proportion to what I have endured, not by virtue of some abstract arithmetic, but because of the nights spent in exile, and because I want my children, to be spared a similar experience.”
YJ Draiman
We shall consider: ”Anyone in Israel considering the surrender of Jewish territory is treason and must be prosecuted”
ReplyDeleteClipping from Saint Petersburg Times (approximately 1946)
Washington - (UP) - Britain's treaty grafting independence to Trans-Jordan violates agreements with the United States, the United Nations and the Old League, as well as the rights of the people of Palestine, Senator Francis J. Myers, Pennsylvania democrat, charged yesterday.
Echoing the words of Senator Claude Pepper, Democrat, Florida, who flayed U.S. foreign policy, Thursday, Myers asserted that Trans-Jordan is not ready for the statehood and "illegally granted". And in offering that goal of all dependencies, he added Britain has acted "in contempt of the senate of the United States."
* * *
"WHY THIS HASTE and Stealth?" he asked in a floor speech. "The British government which has fought all attempts at freedom, all movements for independence in the Middle East, is now discovered in the gracious role of liberator.
"Are there perhaps some hidden resources, mineral wealth or oil which are involved?"
He demanded that the state department explain its failure to protest the treaty violation, and urged that the senate demand all the facts.
Pepper charged that the United States had become a guarantor of British Imperialism, and that the British-Trans-Jordan agreement was but a "subterfuge" so long as his majesty's troops are allowed to remain in that country. He also asserted that the United States and Britain were ganging up on Russia, and added:
"WHAT I DECRY is the international hypocrisy, sham and pretense. If the British people want the Russians to get their troops out of Iraq, let them get their troops out of Trans-Jordan. Let them get their troops out of Lebanon and Syria, and let them get their troops out of Palestine."
Myers picked up that tune, changing only the words. In angry mood, the dark-haired Pennsylvanian told his colleagues that:
1. The territory of Trans-Jordan is contained in the original mandate for Palestine, and under its terms, the mandate could not be unilaterally altered.
2. Under the Anglo-American Convention of 1924, Britain could not change the mandate's terms without the consent of the United States.
3. This violation of the treaty with the United States also "strikes at the charter of the United Nations adopted at San Francisco" which "specifically states that no change can be made in the status of mandated territories without the approval of the UNO's general assembly."
Myers asserted that there was no more justification for separating Trans-Jordan from Palestine then there was for "the separation of the United States into two nations: Trans-Mississippi and Cis-Mississippi."
"Aaron Burr tried to do that to our nation" he said. "He was tried for treason".
We shall consider: ”Anyone in Israel considering the surrender of Jewish territory is treason and must be prosecuted”
YJ Draiman