Tuesday, October 20, 2015

INTERNATIONAL LAW REGARDING THE LAND OF ISRAEL AND JERUSALEM aka PALESTINE - Draiman


INTERNATIONAL LAW REGARDING THE LAND OF ISRAEL AND JERUSALEM aka PALESTINE


International law is often cited as a pretext for the policies of Western governments and human rights agencies toward Judea, Samaria, and Gaza in general and Jerusalem in particular. A certain assumption or presumption about the international law status of these areas is the premise for claims that they are “occupied territory,” that Israeli construction in formerly Jordanian-ruled parts of Jerusalem is “illegal,” etc.
Given the centrality of allegations about international law in the diplomatic and political assaults on Israel made by such bodies as the European Union, the UN General Assembly, and others, there is a need to know, to understand and to expound the true international law concerning the Land of Israel as a matter of sheer political self-defense. What indeed has been the status of Judea, Samaria, Golan and Gaza under the law of nations?
International law has recognized Jewish rights to sovereignty over the Land of Israel and to settlement throughout the land. In April 1920, at the San Remo Conference (part of the post-World War I peace negotiations), the Supreme Principal Allied Powers, acting on behalf of the international community, recognized all the land in Palestine east and west of the Jordan River and the sea, including Jerusalem, as part of the Jewish National Home, based on the Jewish people’s historic rights. On the same grounds, the Golan[1] and Transjordan too were within the National Home (albeit the eastern border of the National Home, was  clearly east of the Jordan river, it was also acknowledged by the January 1919 Faisal Weizmann Agreement).
The San Remo decision meant also the juridical creation of “Palestine” as a political entity as well as the introduction of that name as the official geographic designation for the new entity to be the reconstituted Jewish National Home. During the centuries of Ottoman rule, the country was divided among larger administrative entities with their capitals outside the country, the vilayets of Beirut and Damascus, although in the mid-nineteenth century, as a consequence of increasing influence by Christian powers on the Ottoman Empire and Jerusalem’s political sensitivity due to the Christian powers’ interest in the city, the Jerusalem area was made into an independent sanjaq (district). It was called “independent” because its governor reported directly to the Ottoman capital, Istanbul (then called Constantinople in the West), not to a provincial (vilayet) governor.
Furthermore, Arab-Muslims traditionally saw the land as an undifferentiated part of Bilad al-Sham, usually translated as Syria or Greater Syria, which comprised the Syria, Lebanon, Israel and Jordan of today, roughly speaking. Before the Crusades, the Arab-Muslim conquerors had designated the southern part of Israel (roughly speaking) as the military district of Filastin, corresponding to the Roman-Byzantine district of Palestina Prima (one of three parts of Palestina). The Crusaders ordinarily called the country Holy Land (Terra Sancta). Use of the name Filastin was not resumed by Muslim rulers after the Crusades. Under the Mamluks and Ottomans, Bilad al-Sham underwent several administrative reorganizations, changes of internal borders, etc. But there was never a Muslim governmental unit of any name that corresponded geographically to the Jewish concept of Land of Israel or the Greco-Roman Judea (= IUDAEA, which included Samaria, Galilee, Golan, the coastal plain, the Jordan’s eastern bank, etc., in addition to Judea in the narrow sense). Emperor Hadrian had renamed the Province of Judea (= Provincia Iudea) “Palestina” (ca. 135 CE) for imperialist reasons.
Hence, the Arab-Muslim geographic concept differed radically from that of Jews and Christians. Further, whereas both Jews and Christians saw the country as a distinct geographic concept, they tended to use different names for it. In Jewish tradition the land was long called the Land of Israel, while Christians, through the nineteenth century, were likely to call it Holy Land (according to their various languages, that is, Terre Sainte, etc.), with Palestine, Judea, Land of the Bible, etc., as alternate names.
The 1920 San Remo decision for the Jewish National Home was ratified by the League of Nations with illegal violation by allocating the land east of the Jordan River to Transjordan, in 1922 and endorsed by a joint resolution of the United States Congress that same year, with a more official US endorsement coming in the Anglo-American Convention on Palestine (proclaimed 1925).
This legal state of affairs was expounded in a legal memorandum drawn up in 1946 [2] by a group of distinguished American-Jewish jurists including Judge Simon Rifkind, Abraham Fortas (later appointed to the Supreme Court), and others.
To measure the extent of American commitment to the National Home at the beginning, we may quote from the terminology of the time: “RES. 52: Expressing satisfaction at the re-creation of Palestine as the national home of the Jewish race” (House Committee on Foreign Affairs). “Resolved by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, that the United States of America favors the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people…” (1922).
Because the legal issue is once again very much alive, a brief survey of the matter is useful, with particular reference to Jerusalem.[3] By the time the League of Nations was replaced by the UN in 1945, Britain had illegally tried to revoke the Jewish National Home, violating the principles of the League’s mandate. This attempt was embodied in the Palestine White Paper of 1939, on the eve of the Holocaust, and in various subsequent ordinances illegally enacted by the British mandatory government, which made it very difficult for Jewish refugees to enter the country and forbidding any Jews to buy real estate in most of the country. Nevertheless, this British attempt to change the country’s status was rejected as illegal by the League of Nations Permanent Mandates Commission in June 1939. The British ignored it and severely restricted Jewish immigration to Palestine, These restrictions caused the deaths of millions of Jews trying to escape Nazi concentration camps. The British went out a far as blowing-up after WWII Jewish refugee ships bound for Palestine as "Operation Embarrass".
When the UN was founded in 1945, it reaffirmed through its Charter the existing territorial rights of peoples as they had been before the war (Article 80). This applied of course to the Jewish National Home which was reconstituted in 1920. However, many or most people today are either not aware that the whole country constituted the Jewish National Home, or believe that the UN had somehow eliminated this status and, in any case, had fixed legal boundaries for Israel through the 1947 Partition Resolution. Yet the 1947 resolution was passed by the General Assembly. And all General Assembly resolutions on political issues are merely recommendations and have no validity unless accepted by all parties, and the Arabs rejected them outright.
The UN Charter states, defining the powers of the various UN bodies: “The General Assembly may discuss any questions relating to the maintenance of international peace and security… and… may make recommendations with regard to any such question” (Article 11; also see Arts. 10, 12, 13, 14). Only the Security Council can make binding resolutions, according to the Charter, which must be accepted by the parties to be valid.
Now the Partition Plan, in a not uncommon display of unrealistic, political move that recommended two states in the former revised mandatory of Palestine west of the Jordan River, one Jewish and one Arab, plus a special status for Jerusalem (The British as trustee for the Jewish people and in violation of international law and treaties of post WWI, had separated Transjordan unilaterally from the Reconstituted Jewish National Home in 1922, although not de jure). The Holy City was to be an internationally governed corpus separatum. While the Jewish leadership accepted the Plan, the Arab governments and local Arab leadership universally rejected it, which made the resolution and partition meaningless. After the war had begun the UN made no effort to prevent the invasion of the country by Arab states, to prevent Arab attacks on Jews within the country or to eliminate the Arab siege of the Jews in Jerusalem, a city where Jews had been the majority at least since 1870. Thus Israel did not feel bound by the Partition recommendation. Professor Eugene Rostow, an authority on international law, has pointed out that the Arab war on Israel of 1947-49, “made the Partition Plan irrelevant and void.”[4]
After the battles of the War of Independence had ended, Israel and four Arab states signed armistice agreements. The accord with Jordan (then called Transjordan) specifically stated that no political border with Israel was being recognized, merely an armistice line (the “green line”). And this at Arab insistence! Arab spokesmen repeated this on later occasions. For instance, the Jordanian delegate to the UN told the Security Council a few days before the Six Day War:
There is an Armistice Agreement. The Agreement did not fix boundaries; it fixed a demarcation line. The Agreement did not pass judgment on rights – political, military, or otherwise. Thus I know of no territory; I know of no boundary. (May 31, 1967)
Obviously, since no political border between Jordan and Israel was recognized, then the prior legal status prevailed – that is, the Jewish National Home recognized and constituted in 1920 at San Remo. Hence, the areas that Jordan called “West Bank,” as well as east Jerusalem (which had thousands of Jewish residents before 1948), remained part of the National Home even during Jordanian occupation. The Assembly’s repetitions of its Jerusalem recommendation (GA resolutions 194, 303, etc.) could not change this. Nor did the Security Council change the status of Jerusalem by its famous Resolution 242 after the Six Day War.
Although the Council’s resolutions are said by the UN Charter to be binding, this resolution did not specify what territories were “occupied.” Perhaps the Council was referring to the Sinai Peninsula, occupied by Israel in that just war of self-defense. Furthermore, the Council could not legislate ex post facto, after the fact, to take away the already existing rights of the Jewish people. According to Professor Rostow, “The withdrawal and abandonment of Great Britain as administrator and trustee did not of course terminate the Mandate as a trust [for the Jewish people].”[5]
Jerusalem as the ancient and current capital of Israel, of course took a special place in the age-old yearning for a restored Jewish National Home. Thus, in Jerusalem too this yearning ran into opposition not just from Arabs but from misinformed Western powers (and others following their lead). They have long irrationally refused to recognize any part of Jerusalem as part of Israel, nor do they recognize the Holy City as Israel’s capital. Their pretext is the separate status provided for Jerusalem in the Partition Plan, which even if it was binding, expired after 10 years. Yet this Plan was merely an Assembly recommendation, whereas the San Remo decision of 1920 was international law. Thus, the irrational refusal of the powers to transfer their embassies to Jerusalem, which means refusal to accept the city as Israel’s capital, has no foundation in law.
Obviously, the refusal has its illogical reasons. It may stem from the same reasons that induced the British to allow Arab mobs in a series of pogroms (1920, 1929, 1936-38) to drive Jews away from the neighborhood of Jewish holy places, such as the Temple Mount and the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron. It may be related to Britain’s reasons for appointing only Arab mayors for Jerusalem, even-though the Jews had a majority throughout the whole mandatory period, despite the Jewish majority since at least 1870. Now the Ottoman Empire did the same up to 1917, but then the Ottoman Empire was an avowed Muslim state, whereas the British had accepted an international commitment and obligation as trustee (the Mandate for Palestine) to foster immigration and development of the country as the Jewish National Home.
It is clear that according to the San Remo decision of 1920 and the League of Nations vote of 1922 for the Jewish National Home, Israel’s liberation and extension of its jurisdiction over all of Jerusalem since the Six Day War is legal and proper.
Nevertheless, self-serving deceptive interpretations of law are often made by interested parties. In the case of Israel, such interpretations provide pretexts for declarations by governments and groupings of governments – the Arab League, the European Union, the UN General Assembly – that are hostile to Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem (or indeed anywhere in the country). Such false, deceptive and hostile interpretations remind us that we dare not place our trust in law or international accords. Yet, the outbursts in the form of declarations and illegal resolutions based on these interpretations have the illusion of more force and cause more damage than many friends of Israel seem to realize, although they may be less effective than their authors would like). And thus they need to be answered.

FOOTNOTES
1. The Golan was an original part of the Jewish National Home as decided at San Remo and had been populated and ruled by Jews in Second Temple times and afterwards. In 1923, the British authorities in violation of international law and treaties, transferred the Golan to the French mandate of Syria without approval of the Zionist Organization.
2. Simon Rifkind, Abraham Fortas, et al., Basic Equities of the Palestine Problem: A Memorandum (1946) [reprinted New York: Arno Press, 1977].
3. We shall use the Rifkind-Fortas memorandum, our own study of the UN Charter and subsequent UN acts, writings of Prof. Julius Stone and Prof. Eugene Rostow, and various historical information. We have also benefited from conversations with Attorney Howard Grief of Jerusalem, a former advisor on international law to the Israeli Ministry of Energy, who has done research into the Balfour Declaration, the San Remo Decision, the League of Nations Mandate, etc., up to the series of agreements going by the name of the Oslo Accords. The conclusions are my own. In early October 2015, the leader of the Arab PA in a speech in front of the UN declared that he will not abide by the terms of the Oslo Accord and therefore, the Oslo Accord is no longer in affect.
4. Eugene Rostow, “Resolution 242 at Twenty,” Jerusalem: Institute for Advanced Strategic and Political Studies, 1988, p 5.
Since WWII; the Arab States terrorized and expelled over a million Jewish families and confiscated all their assets including homes and land of about 70,000 square miles valued today in the trillions of dollars. Most of those expelled Jewish families from Arab countries were resettled in Israel and today comprise over half the population.
5. Ibid.
The author is a researcher, writer and translator, living in Jerusalem.

This is a substantially revised and re-written version of an article published in Midstream (New York) in February/March, 1999.

5 comments:

  1. SSRN.com/abstract=2679399
    http://israelagainstterror.blogspot.com/2015/11/sovereignty-suzerainty-statehood-and.html

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  2. Sovereignty, suzerainty, statehood and peoplehood In palestine - Wallace Brand


    by Wallace Brand
    "It is right that Palestine should become a Jewish state, if the Jews, being given the full opportunity, make it such. It was the cradle and home of their vital race, which has made large spiritual contributions to mankind, and is the only land in which they can hope to find a home of their own;"



    David, King of the united Kingdom of Israel and Judea following the civil war with Saul, created a strong and unified Israelite monarchy, reigning from c. 1000–961 BCE. Solomon, David's successor, maintained the unified monarchy, c. 961-922.
    David established Jerusalem as its national capital in 1006 BCE.
    Following Solomon's death in c. 926 BCE, tensions between the northern part of Israel containing the ten northern tribes, and the southern section dominated by Jerusalem and the southern tribes reached a boiling point. Solomon's successor dealt tactlessly with economic complaints of the northern tribes. In about 930 BCE (there are difference of opinion as to the actual year) the united Kingdom of Israel and Judah split into two kingdoms: the northern Kingdom of Israel, which included the cities of Shechem and Samaria, and the southern Kingdom of Judah, which contained Jerusalem; with most of the non-Israelite provinces achieving independence. The Kingdom of Israel (or Northern Kingdom, or Samaria) existed as an independent state until 722 BCE when it was conquered by the Assyrian Empire, while the Kingdom of Judah (or Southern Kingdom) existed as an independent state until 586 BCE when it was conquered by the Babylonian Empire. (From Wikipedia - Biblical version)

    In that initial period the Jewish People had absolute political self-determination except for the rule of YHWH duly noted in the Decalogue. Later, under the rule of Herod, Rome was Judea’s suzerain. Others occupying the role of suzerain over the Jewish People’s state included the Greeks, the Babylonians, the Persians, the Assyrians.

    Suzerainty is a situation in which a region or people controls the foreign policy and international relations of a tributary vassal state while allowing the subservient nation internal autonomy. The dominant entity in the suzerainty relationship, or the more powerful entity itself, is called a suzerain. The term suzerainty was originally used to refer to the relationship between the Ottoman Empire and its surrounding regions. It differs from sovereignty in that the tributary enjoys only some self-rule, often limited.

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  3. Suzerainty is a situation in which a region or people controls the foreign policy and international relations of a tributary vassal state while allowing the subservient nation internal autonomy. The dominant entity in the suzerainty relationship, or the more powerful entity itself, is called a suzerain. The term suzerainty was originally used to refer to the relationship between the Ottoman Empire and its surrounding regions. It differs from sovereignty in that the tributary enjoys only some self-rule, often limited.

    A vassal state would have been the status of Palestine if it had internal autonomy, but it did not. Prior to 1964, none of the Arabs in the Palestine territory had ever claimed statehood, even the status of a vassal state. At the beginning of the 17th century the Ottoman Empire contained 32 provinces and numerous vassal states. The territory of Palestine was simply land in one of these provinces.

    So Palestine was not even a vassal state. If there was any self-rule it was limited to tribal rule. The Arabs in Palestine were not a unique “people” but an indistinguishable part of the Arab People. They did not claim a capital in Palestine. In comparison, The Jewish People had a sovereign state with a capital located within it for at least 400 years and governed as a vassal state for many more with its capital in Jerusalem.

    This was the history faced by “The Inquiry”, a group of academics, assembled in 1917 by Col. House to help Woodrow Wilson in the Paris Peace Talks. The same was found 50 years later by Count Folke Bernadotte, investigating for the UN Special Committee on Palestine in 1947 who wrote in his diary “The Arabs in Palestine have no interest in nationalism and never had.” In the Hussein–McMahon correspondence, King Hussein Ibn Ali, the Sharif of Mecca, claimed he had been offered the entire Levant if he fought on the side of the British in WWI. He had proposed a Pan Arab uprising to help the Allies in return for independence from the Ottomans. Whether or not the British proposal included Palestine later became in dispute. According to Winston Churchill while Arabs in the Arabian Peninsula helped the British, the Arabs in Palestine and Syria did not. Many Arabs fought for the Ottomans, including the infamous Haj Amin al-Husseini who later became a friend of Adolph Hitler and had suggested in November, 1941 that genocide for the Jews would be better alternative than deporting them to Palestine. King Hussein had predicted a general uprising of Arabs throughout the Levant but never recruited more than about 5,000 regulars.

    The so-called “Palestinians” were never a unique “people”. Palestine was never a state, not even a vassal state.
    That they were not a unique people was admitted by Zahir Muhsein, a member of the Executive Board of the PLO in 1977 who said
    “There is no such thing as the Palestinian People”. He referred to the term “Palestinian People” as a political ploy. You can find this in his interview by the Dutch newspaper Trouw in 1977.

    According to Professor Efraim Karsh, “As far back as 1978, Arafat told his close friend and collaborator, Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceausescu, that the Palestinians lacked the traditions, unity, and discipline to have a successful state.” Dr. Karsh also concluded: “…it was the total lack of communal solidarity — the willingness to subordinate personal interest to the collective good — that accounted for the collapse and dispersion of Palestinian Arab society as its leaders tried to subvert partition.”

    The Inquiry academics accompanied Wilson to Paris in 1919. For Palestine, they recommended that the dispersed Jewish People settle there and later, rule in Palestine. Initial rule was to be carried out by a trustee.

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  4. American Proposal for Jewish Homeland, January 21, 1919

    An excerpt from the Tentative Report and Recommendations of the Intelligence Section of the American Delegation to the Peace Conference, in accordance with instructions, for the President and the Plenipotentiaries, January 21, 1919*

    [--]
    It is recommended:
    1) That there be established a separate state of Palestine.
    2) That this state be placed under Great Britain as a mandatory of the League of Nations.
    3) That the Jews be invited to return to Palestine and settle there being assured by the Conference of all proper assistance in so doing that may be consistent with the protection of the personal (especially the religious) and the property rights of the non-Jewish population, and being further assured that it will be the policy of the League of Nations to recognise Palestine as a Jewish state as soon as it is a Jewish state in fact.
    4) That the holy places and religious rights of all creeds in Palestine be placed under the protection of the League of Nations and its mandatory.

    Discussion.
    1) It is recommended that there be established a separate state of Palestine.
    The separation of the Palestinian area from Syria finds justification in the religious experience of mankind. The Jewish and Christian churches were born in Palestine, and Jerusalem was for long years, at different periods, the capital of each. And while the relation of the Mohammedans to Palestine is not so intimate, from the beginning they have regarded Jerusalem as a holy place. Only by establishing Palestine as a separate state can justice be done to these great facts.
    As drawn upon the map, the new state would control its own source of water power and irrigation, on Mount Hermon in the east to the Jordan; a feature of great importance since the success of the new state would depend upon the possibilities of agricultural development.
    2) It is recommended that this state be placed under Great Britain as a mandatory of the League of Nations.
    Palestine would obviously need wise and firm guidance. Its population is without political experience, is racially composite, and could easily become distracted by fanaticism and bitter religious differences.
    The success of Great Britain in dealing with similar situations, her relation to Egypt, and her administrative achievements since General Allenby freed Palestine from the Turk, all indicate her as the logical mandatory.
    3) It is recommended that the Jews be invited to return to Palestine and settle there, being assured by the Conference of all proper assistance in so doing that may be consistent with the protection of the personal (especially the religious) and the property rights of the non-Jewish population, and being further assured that it will be the policy of the League of Nations to recognise Palestine as a Jewish state as soon as it is a Jewish state in fact.
    It is right that Palestine should become a Jewish state, if the Jews, being given the full opportunity, make it such. It was the cradle and home of their vital race, which has made large spiritual contributions to mankind, and is the only land in which they can hope to find a home of their own; they being in this last respect unique among significant peoples.
    At present, however, the Jews form barely a sixth of the total population of 700,000 in Palestine, and whether they are to form a majority, or even a plurality, of the population in the future state remains uncertain. Palestine, in short, is far from being a Jewish country now. England, as mandatory, can be relied on to give the Jews the privileged position they should have without sacrificing the rights of non-Jews.
    4) It is recommended that the holy places and religious rights of all creeds in Palestine be placed under the protection of the League of Nations and its mandatory.
    The basis for this recommendation is self-evident.

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  5. It is right that Palestine should become a Jewish state, if the Jews, being given the full opportunity, make it such. It was the cradle and home of their vital race, which has made large spiritual contributions to mankind, and is the only land in which they can hope to find a home of their own; they being in this last respect unique among significant peoples.
    At present, however, the Jews form barely a sixth of the total population of 700,000 in Palestine, and whether they are to form a majority, or even a plurality, of the population in the future state remains uncertain. Palestine, in short, is far from being a Jewish country now. England, as mandatory, can be relied on to give the Jews the privileged position they should have without sacrificing the rights of non-Jews.
    4) It is recommended that the holy places and religious rights of all creeds in Palestine be placed under the protection of the League of Nations and its mandatory.
    The basis for this recommendation is self-evident.
    --------------------------------------------------------
    1. David Hunter Miller, My Diary at the Conference of
    Paris, Vol. iv, pp. 263-264. Full text.
    Scroll down to DOCUMENT 246 263 ♦26.
    PALESTINE. *78
    2. J.C. Hurewitz (ed.), The Middle East and North
    Africa in World Politics: A Documentary Record, Vol.
    2, British-French Supremacy, 1914-1945 (New
    Haven: Yale University Press, 1979), p. 103.
    3. www.eretzyisroel.org/~samuel/americandraft.html

    It is clear from the San Remo Resolution, and the Palestine Mandate that the Allied Principal War Powers followed this view at San Remo. SSRN.com/abstract=2679399



    Wallace Edward Brand, JD Harvard 1957

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