And the Jewish People shall return to their
homeland
And the children of Israel shall return to their borders
[...] Part II: Israeli
Sovereignty Over Judea and Samaria Part II: Israeli Sovereignty Over Judea and
Samaria Part II: Israeli Sovereignty Over Judea and Samaria Worth a careful
read. Has the UN's Partition Plan any remaining significance for either the
Arabs or the Jews? Wallace Edward Brand, JD See also Part 1 … http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/11408#.T2pW0HJSR0UBalfour resigned
as foreign secretary following the Paris Conference in 1919, but continued in the
Cabinet as lord president of the council. In a memorandum addressed to new
Foreign Secretary Lord Curzon, he stated that the Balfour Declaration
contradicted the letters of the covenant (referring to the League Covenant) the
Anglo-French Declaration, and the instructions to the King-Crane Commission. All
of the other engagements contained pledges that the Arab or Muslim populations
could establish national governments of their own choosing according to the
principle of self-determination. Balfour explained: “… in Palestine we do not
propose to even go through the form of consulting the wishes of the present
(majority) inhabitants of the country though the American [King-Crane]
Commission is going through the form of asking what they are. Balfour stated
explicitly to Curzon: "The Four Great Powers [Britain , France, Italy and the United States ] are committed to Zionism. And Zionism, be it right
or wrong, good or bad, is rooted in age-long traditions, in present needs, and
future hopes, of far profounder import than the desires and prejudices of the 700,000
Arabs who now inhabit that ancient land. In my opinion that is right." * *
* * *Balfour continued: "I do not think that Zionism will hurt the Arabs,
but they will never say they want it. Whatever be the future of Palestine it is not now an ‘independent nation’, nor is it yet
on the way to become one. Whatever deference should be paid to the views of
those living there, the Powers in their selection of a mandatory do not
propose, as I understand the matter, to consult them.". . ."If Zionism
is to influence the Jewish problem throughout the world, Palestine must
be made available for the largest number of Jewish immigrants" While the
rights granted under the Trust restricted the Jews, when they did exercise
sovereignty, from doing anything that would impair the civil or religious
rights of the Arabs it did not give the political rights for the Arabs. The
Mandate Law also became the domestic law of the UK and the US in 1924 as Treaty
Law when, under a new American Administration, the Mandate became the subject
of the Anglo American Convention of 1924.[24]Perfidious Albion did not maintain
the 1920 form of its trust for very long. Circumstances changed, British
interests changed, they wanted control of the oil reserves in the Middle East and the British Government also changed. President Wilson's opposition
had delayed the issuance of the mandate as proposed and initially submitted and
approved by the WWI Allies at San Remo . In the meantime, England had installed Feisal as the King of Syria.[25] After
the Battle of Maysalun, in which the French Armed Forces defeated the Syrian
Army the French deposed Feisal.[25] Abdullah, Feisal's brother, was furious. He
marched his troops from their home in the Hejaz
(in the Arabian Peninsula ) to Eastern
Palestine and made ready to
attack the French in Syria . Churchill did not want war between the Arabs and the
French. In the secret Sykes-Picot Agreement, Syria was in the French sphere of influence.
Churchill gave Feisal the Kingdom of Iraq
as a consolation prize[26] and gave Abdullah and his Hashemite tribe from the
Arabian Peninsula Eastern Palestine in violation of the British Mandate.[27]
The Mandate at San
Remo had
prohibited the Mandatory from ceding any land to a foreign nation. In the 1922
change, with a new Article 25, which is in violation of International Treaties
(San Remo, 1920 Treaty of Sevres and Lausanne) it formally approved delaying
organized settlement by the Jews East of the Jordan River and informally gave TransJordan to Abdullah and his Hashemite Tribe from the Hejaz . Article
25 preserved the prohibition of the Mandatory Power from discriminating among
races or religions.[28] The land East of the Jordan River became TransJordan and then Jordan and the Mandatory, despite the specific terms of the
mandate, prohibited Jews, but not other ethnic groups, from settling
there. The British urging the League to adopt Article 25 was a
breach of its fiduciary relationship as trustee with its beneficiary and as
guardian, with its ward.[29] as were the policies in their White Papers of
1922, 1930 and the vicious White Paper of 1939 under the Prime Minister Neville
Chamberlain, of Munich fame, that blocked many Jews from fleeing from the
Nazi Holocaust which caused the death and extermination of millions of Jewish, men,
women and children. A vicious enforcement of the blockade ensued and
directly disobeyed the Mandate's requirement to facilitate Jewish immigration. (But
the British turned a blind eye to the influx of hundreds of thousands of Arabs
into Palestine ). During WWI the Hussein/McMahon correspondence with
the Arabs in the Arabian Peninsula led to a British offer to all Arabs in the
Caliphate of self-government free from Turkish rule if they helped the British
in the war.[30]The Arabs local to Palestine, unlike the Arabs from the Arabian
Peninsula that had been led by Lawrence declined the British offer of political
self determination if they were to help the Allies, and preferred to fight for
the Ottoman Turks who ruled from Constantinople. According to Winston
Churchill, , "The Arab-Palestinian Arabs, of course, were for the most
part fighting against us, ,,," [31]"However the Jews assembled
several battalions of Jewish soldiers that fought alongside the British in
Palestine in WWI.[32]At that point the Jews had, de facto, lost 78% of their San
Remo Mandated beneficial right to sovereignty in Palestine, the land
TransJordan or East of the Jordan River. Only 22% of the Mandate was
left. After WWII, Article 80 of the UN Charter[33] expressly preserved
the rights that had been granted by the League of Nations prior to its demise, i.e. the Jewish national rights,
so the UN could not grant any of it to the Arabs (It is a violation of
international law). As I have noted, the Mandate itself prohibited the trustee
from ceding any land in Palestine
to a foreign Power. Known as “the Palestine clause,” Article 80 was drafted by Jewish legal
representatives including the liberal Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, Peter Bergson
(Hillel Kook) from the right-wing Irgun, and prominent Revisionist Ben-Zion
Netanyahu (father of Bibi). It preserved the right of the Jewish people to
“close settlement” throughout their remaining portion of Palestine west of the Jordan River . In 1947 nevertheless, the UN did not
“grant” but its General Assembly “recommended” (not a grant– that would be
inconsistent with the previous grant) a partition that offered a part of the
area West of the Jordan (a part of the 22% remaining) to the Jews, in effect,
releasing that part of the trust res (the political rights) to the Jews, and
the remainder to the local Arabs, although the latter was unauthorized by the
Mandate. In the UNSCOP hearings, the Arabs had threatened violence if
the Jews were to have a state in any part of the Middle East . It is evident that the UN, by submitting to the Arabs extortion
— threats of violence — and recommending still further partition of the
remainder, hoped to avoid the violence. In the San Remo Resolution, the
Allies agreed "To accept the terms of the Mandates Article as given
below with reference to Palestine, on the understanding that there was inserted
a process-verbal an undertaking by the Mandatory Power that this would not
involve the surrender of the rights hitherto enjoyed by the non-Jewish
communities in Palestine;"[34]What were those rights? The Mandate preserved the civil and religious rights of the local Arabs
but did not create any political rights for them. The civil rights included
individual political or electoral rights but not the collective political right
of self-determination. It did not and could not "preserve" any
collective political rights or "national rights" in Palestine for local Arabs in Palestine as they had never in history had any. It follows,
therefore, as to political rights, the local Arabs were no worse off than they
were under the Ottoman rule from 1520 to 1920, the British suzerainty from 1920
to 1948, or the Jordanian rule from 1948 to 1967. But the Arabs didn't want the
Jews to have any land with political rights for religious reasons, because it
violated Islam to have any inroads on the Dar-al-Islam.[35] They engaged in
jihad against the Jews and the Arab Higher Committee brought in the Armies of
the surrounding Arab and Muslims States . What was the effect of the abandonment of the trust
by the trustee in 1948? Howard Grief provides a more legally precise
reason,[36] but a simple way to look at it was that when the trustee quit
his obligation, the only equitable thing to do was to give the rights to the
beneficiary of the trust or the ward of the guardian (the Jewish people in
Israel). Going back to 1922, by 1922 the British Government's interests had
changed and the government had changed. In addition to its problems with the
deposing of King Feisal, it was defending itself from charges that it had
conferred political rights to the same land to the French, the Arabs and the
Jews in three different agreements, the Sykes-Picot agreement, the
McMahon-Hussein correspondence, and the Lord Balfour Declaration. So in 1922,
Churchill, in a White Paper, tried wiggle out of England 's obligation to the Jews by hinting broadly that a
"national home" was not necessarily a state. However in private, many
British officials agreed with the interpretation of the Zionists that a state
would be established when a Jewish majority was achieved.[37]In the British
cabinet discussion during final consideration of the language of the Balfour
Declaration, in responding to the opposition of Lord Curzon, who viewed the
language as giving rise to the presumption that Great Britain favored a Jewish
State, Lord Balfour stated: "As to the meaning of the words 'national
home', to which the Zionists attach so much importance, he understood it to
mean some form of British, American, or other protectorate, under which full facilities
would be given to the Jews to work out their own salvation and to build up, by
means of education, agriculture, and industry, a real center of national
culture and focus of national life. It did not necessarily involve the early
establishment of an independent Jewish State, which was a matter for gradual
development in accordance with the ordinary laws of political evolution."
The key word here was 'early'; otherwise, the statement makes it quite clear
that Balfour envisaged the eventual emergence of an independent Jewish state.
Doubtless he had in mind a period somewhat longer than a mere thirty years; but
the same could also be said of Chaim Weitzman."[38]According to Lloyd
George, one of Churchill's contemporaries, for example, the meaning was quite clear:"
There has been a good deal of discussion as to the meaning of the words
"Jewish National Home" and whether it involved the setting up of a
Jewish National State in Palestine .
I have already quoted the words actually used by Mr. Balfour when he submitted
the declaration to the Cabinet for its approval. They were not challenged at
the time by any member present, and there could be no doubt as to what the
Cabinet then had in their minds. It was not their idea that a Jewish State
should be set up immediately by the Peace Treaty without reference to the
wishes of the majority of the inhabitants. On the other hand, it was
contemplated that when the time arrived for according representative
institutions to Palestine , if the Jews had meanwhile responded to the
opportunity afforded them by the idea of a National Home and had become a
definite majority of the inhabitants, then Palestine would thus become a Jewish Commonwealth. The notion
that Jewish immigration would have to be artificially restricted in order to
ensure that the Jews should be a permanent minority never entered into the
heads of anyone engaged in framing the policy. That would have been regarded as
unjust and as a fraud on the people to whom we were appealing."[39]If
there is any further doubt in the matter, Balfour himself told a Jewish
gathering on February 7, 1918 : "My personal hope is that the Jews will make
good in Palestine and eventually found a Jewish state. It is up to them
now; we have given them their great opportunity." [40]Following an opinion
of the renowned international lawyer Julius Stone that focused on the
settlement question,[41] President Reagan and succeeding Presidents through
George W. Bush maintained a US view that the Jewish Settlements in the West
Bank were legal but as a policy matter should be discouraged because of their
tendency to discourage the Peace Process. President Obama while continuing the
position on policy has not specifically stated his view on legality of the
settlements but has referred to them wrongly as “illegitimate”.. As to
Jerusalem, East Jerusalem fell in 1948 [42] to an attack of the Jordanian Arab
Legion supplied and trained by the British and led by Sir John Bagot Glubb
frequently referred to as "Glubb pasha". The Arab Legion later became
the Jordanian Army. The Jordanians
demolished 58 synagogues and their contents, uprooted the tombstones of Jewish
cemeteries, and used them for paving or building latrines, and built a latrine
against the Western Wall of the Temple Mount, the single most holy site for
Jews.[43] They expelled all the Jewish inhabitants of East Jerusalem took over
their homes and property and it became, as Adolph Hitler liked to say, Judenrein
or cleansed of Jews. In June 1967 in the Six Day War, after Jordan attacked Israel after Egypt and Syria had been battling Israeli defense forces. Israel liberated Jerusalem and Judea and Samaria thus driving the Jordanians east of the Jordan River and regained its control of liberated East Jerusalem. [44] They did not use their conquest to deprive the Muslims
access to their holy sites in East
Jerusalem as the Jordanians
had done to the Jews and Christians. Has the UN's Partition Plan any remaining
significance for either the Arabs or the Jews? No. According to acclaimed
International Lawyer Julius Stone, ""The State of Israel is … not
legally derived from the partition plan, but [in addition to the grants
referred to above] rests (as do most other states in the world) on A. assertion
of independence by its people and government, B. on the vindication of that
independence by arms against assault by other states, and C. on the
establishment of orderly government within territory under its stable
control." D. Implementing the 1920 San Remo International treaty.
The Partition plan in violation of International treaties had assigned Eastern
Jerusalem Metropolitan Area to the UN's International Control, at least
temporarily for a period of 10 years. (thereafter it defaults to the
controlling power, which now is Israel ) However in the war of 1948, the UN did nothing to
vindicate that assignment by force of arms against the assault of the
surrounding Arab states. Therefore nothing remains of that part of the
Partition Plan either. [45]In fact you read in the news and hear on TV a
lot about Jewish settlements outside of Jerusalem and in East
Jerusalem , but have you ever
seen or heard a reference to new Arab settlements there? Since 1950 more than
twice as many new settlements have been built by Arabs in the West Bank as have
been built by Jews,[46] totally ignored by the press. They fill them with
Lebanese, Iraqis, Jordanians and Egyptians, and, mirabile dictu, they are Arab-Palestinians.
An Israeli Professor in Haifa
named Steven Plaut suggests, tongue in cheek, that the Arabs must have changed
the name of the area from Judea and Samaria to the "West Bank " so they wouldn't look silly in claiming that the Jews were
illegally settling in eponymous Judea . In June,1967, in the Six Day War, Israel recaptured Judea , Samaria and East
Jerusalem. [47] In 1994
Israel agreed that in return for a quitclaim of Jordan , to CisJordan, or the land of Palestine west of the Jordan River , it
would release its claim to TransJordan , the land East of the Jordan to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. [48]My
understanding from many authors, is that the Arab claims for the Arab
population in Judea , Samaria
and East Jerusalem are overstated. Annexing the so called West Bank known as Judea and Samaria would not currently jeopardize a Jewish democracy in Israel . Nor would it in the long run as correct
population growth shows Jewish population increase in the West Bank known as Judea and Samaria greater than that of the Arabs.[49]I would only offer
citizenship to those, Muslim, Jewish or Christian, who would take a loyalty
oath to Israel . Others could remain with the status of
permanent residents. What about Gaza ? It were to keep shooting missiles at Israel , that would be a casus belli and Israel should take it over. Also, when it ceded its
sovereignty over Gaza to the Arabs living there, the cession was under a
tacit agreement that the Arabs would quit their attacks on Israel . They haven't. [50] A material
breach of that obligation also justifies a takeover. Although the
people in Gaza were ceded Israel ’s political or national rights to the Gaza Strip,
they never met the requirements for sovereignty The first of these
is: are the Arabs local to Palestine
a “people”? No, as noted above they are an invented people. Another
requirement of a separate nation-state is unified control. When armed
truces were broken by the Gazans, Hamas, that claims control, always blames the
problem on other terrorist organizations. Since Israel’s takeover would
not be taking land of another sovereign, the land would not be occupied, but
disputed with Israel having the far better claim as liberated territory.[51]
I would suggest that until further Jewish population increase over that of the
non-Jewish population justifies annexation of Gaza, that the Gazans be
authorized Home Rule, but no vote in Israel’s policies. Israel should retain the right to eliminate candidates or
parties that are terrorists. That should meet the requirements of the
French "procès verbal" as the Arabs in Gaza never had the right to vote on the policies of the Ottoman Empire . In sum, it appears that there are five separate
views that justify Israeli sovereignty over CisJordan. These are 1. The
San Remo Resolution of 1920 which is justification under
International Law, 2. The Anglo-American Convention of 1924 reaffirms and makes
the Balfour Policy Treaty law and therefore the Domestic Law of the US and the UK , 3. Facts occurring after 1948, including Jordan’s
aggressive war in invading a land in which the Jews had been awarded control
and political rights, and the defensive war by the Jews liberating and retaking
it resulted in acclaimed International Lawyers holding that the West Bank also
known as Judea and Samaria was liberated but disputed, not occupied, and the
Jews had the better uncontestable claim to it. In the Partition of 1947,
the UN General Assembly recommended an award of part to the Arabs, that was not
a grant because it had already been granted to the Jewish people. The
Jews assented, but the Arabs declined, which voids any Arab claim. The
Jews still had their rights under 1920 San Remo treaty. The Arabs had no political or sovereign
rights, certainly not the inalienable rights continuously claimed by Arafat and
Abbas. 4. In 1948 Israel declared independence, established unified control
over its territory and defended it by blood and treasure. That is
historically the way sovereignty arises. 5. Under canon law the Jews
had exclusive rights granted by G-d as provided in the Old
Testament. These 1920 San Remo Treaty exclusive rights to the Jewish
people make it legally a one state solution to the current Arab Israeli
conflict in Palestine . Those Jews in the Diaspora are also intended as the
beneficiaries of the 1920 San Remo Treaty grant. However in writing this
from the relative safety of suburban Washington , DC , it is not our intention to urge this course on the
heroic Israelis who currently face an added existential threat from Iran . Note we say relative safety. With Iran ’s hurrying development of nuclear bombs and
intercontinental ballistic missiles, no one is safe. This is only to confirm
the necessity and legality of a "one Jewish state solution" that
others, before us, have already suggested. It is the Israelis who
must choose Mr. Salomon Benzimra contributed to this article. He is the
author of "The Jewish People's Rights to the Land of Israel ", available in "Amazon-Kindle edition".
End
Notes[24] http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balfour_Declaration_of_191725 http://www.answers.com/topic/faisal-i-ibn-hussein26 http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18250.htm27
Mandate Article 5 http://www.mtholyoke.edu/acad/intrel/britman.htm28 Article
15. It is preserved by Article 25[29] http://www.mythsandfacts.com/conflict/mandate_for_palestine/mandate_for_palestine.htm http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiduciary30 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/McMahon%E2%80%93Hussein_Correspondence31http://cojs.org/cojswiki/What_Mr._Churchill_Said_in_1939_About_the_Palestine_White_Paper:_Excerpt32 http://www.crwflags.com/fotw/flags/il%5Egb.html#wwi33 http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/un/unchart.htm#art8034
Text of San Remo Resolution, section (a) I am advised it appears only in
two paragraphs of the Agreement, written in French http://www.cfr.org/israel/san-remo-resolution/p1524835 http://islamizationwatch.blogspot.com/2009/03/what-does-dar-al-harb-dar-al-islam-dar.html Spain in
the dar al Harb http://countercultureconservative.wordpress.com/2010/04/02/dar-al-islam-muslim-worshippers-squat-spanish-cathedral/36
Grief refers to the
doctrine of "acquired rights" codified in the Vienna Convention
on the Law of Treaties, Article 70 Article 70 1 b) and the legal doctrine
of "estoppel" See: Grief at pp.175,176 (The Legal Foundation and
Borders of Israel under International Law)[37] http://www.answers.com/topic/balfour-declaration-191738 High
Walls of Jerusalem, at 611[39] David Lloyd-George, Memoirs 736-7. [40] http://www.irfi.org/articles2/articles_2301_2350/Balfour%27s%20deceit.HTM41 “Israel and Palestine : An Assault on the Law of Nations” which dealt with
the legal aspects of the Arab-Israeli conflict. In it, Stone set forth the
central principles of international law upon which Israel ’s right to settle the West Bank is based and discussed the inapplicability of Article 49(6) of the
Fourth Geneva Convention to the case of Israeli settlement. Stone drew upon the
writings of Professor Stephen Schwebel, former judge on the Hague’s
International Court of Justice (1981-2000), who distinguished between territory
acquired in an "aggressive conquest" (such as Japanese conquests
during the 1930s and Nazi conquests during World War II) and territory taken in
a war of self-defense (for example, Israel’s liberation and re-capture of the
West Bank also known as Judea and Samaria and the Gaza Strip in 1967 war). He
also distinguished between the taking of territory that is legally held by
another nation (such as the Japanese occupation of Chinese territory and the
Nazi Germany occupation of France , Holland , Belgium and other European lands) as opposed to the taking of
territory illegally held. The latter applies to the West Bank also known as Judea and Samaria and Gaza, which were
not considered the legal territories of any High Contracting Party when Israel liberated
and won control of them; their Arab occupation
after 1948 by Jordan and Egypt was illegal and neither country ever had lawful
or recognized sovereignty. The last legal sovereignty over the territories was
that of the League of Nations Palestine Mandate as trustee for the Jewish
people which encouraged Jewish settlement of the land. See also a
discussion of Stone's work, by Andrew Dahdal: “A Reflection On The Views Of
Julius Stone And The Applicability Of International Law To The Middle East
Israel and Palestine : An Assault on the Law of Nations” which dealt with
the legal aspects of the Arab-Israeli conflict. Finally, see a video with Danny
Ayalon, Deputy Foreign Minister of Israel, adopting and illustrating the
position of Stephen Schwebel and Julius Stone.[42] http://www.historynet.com/glubb-pasha-and-the-arab-legion.htm43 http://www.palestinefacts.org/pf_1948to1967_holysites.phphttp://www.jcpa.org/JCPA/Templates/ShowPage.asp?DBID=1&LNGID=1&TMID=111&FID=443&PID=0&IID=3052 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Western_Wall44 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/East_Jerusalem45 http://www.dore-gold.com/2011/11/the-Arab-Palestinians-resurrect-the-partition-plan.php46 Draft
Report of Arab Settlement Activity in the West Bank http://www.eretzyisroel.org/~jkatz/settlementreport.html47 Best
account is still Michael B. Oren, Six Days of War: June 1967 and the Making of
the Modern Middle East (2003) See also, his Power, Faith, and Fantasy:
America in the Middle East: 1776 to the Present[48] Israel – Jordan, Treaty of
Peacehttp://www.mfa.gov.il/MFA/Peace%20Process/Guide%20to%20the%20Peace%20Process/Israel-Jordan%20Peace%20Treaty[49] http://www.biu.ac.il/Besa/perspectives15.html http://www.ijn.com/columns/view-from-denver/2220-the-myth-of-the-Arab-Palestinian-arab-womb[50]
660 rockets and 404 mortar shells fired into Israel since the end of Operation
Cast Lead until the end of February, 2012.March 1, 2012 Arab-Palestinians fired
three rockets toward Ashkelon. The projectiles landed in the Ashkelon Coast
Regional Council, causing no injuries or damage. March 2, Arab-Palestinians
fired a Qassam rocket into the Eshkol Regional Council, causing no injuries or
damage., March 3After nightfall, Arab-Palestinians fired a Qassam rocket into
the Eshkol Regional Council, causing no injuries or damage, March 4. Arab-Palestinians
in the Gaza Strip fired two Qassam rockets at Israel . One exploded in the Sdot Negev Regional Council[51] http://www.jcpa.org/jl/vp470.htmhttp://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/11412#.T2pWpnJSR0U [...]
and Operation Protective
Edge – July/August 2014
http://his-israel.com/2014/07/20/gaza-hamas-and-israel-at-war-operation-protective-edge-july-2014/
and http://mfa.gov.il/MFA/ForeignPolicy/Terrorism/Pages/Rise-in-rocket-fire-from-Gaza-3-Jul-2014.aspx - See more at: http://www.historynet.com/glubb-pasha-and-the-arab-legion.htm#sthash.h3xcoFtv.dpuf
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