Michael I. Krauss, professor at George Mason University School of Law, and J. Peter Pham, director of the Nelson Institute for International and Public Affairs at
Krauss and Pham, who are both academic fellows of the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, succinctly summarize the history and legal principles applicable to the
With respect to Jewish settlement on the
West Bank , the first document of any legalconsequence dates from the San Remo Conference of 1920, where the victorious allied powers of World War I assigned the League of Nations mandate for
Palestine to. In doing so, they recognized, in the words of the mandate, “the historical connection of the Jewish people with Great Britain ” and the “grounds for constituting their national home in that country.” Article 6 of the document even “encouraged close settlement by Jews on the land,” land very much including the modern West Bank. Palestine
Though the League of Nations ceased to exist after World War II, the established right of Jews to live in the territories of
remained in force. When the United Nations was created in 1946, its charter specifically preserved the existing mandates of the League. A year later, in Resolution 181, the UN, facing Palestine Great Britain ’s withdrawal from its mandate, recommended the partition of. Though the resolution, like all actions of the General Assembly, lacked legislative authority -- and thus did not vest territorial rights in the region’s Jews or Arabs -- it did express the wishes of the international community. Palestine
Or, at any rate, most of the international community. For partition of
was rejected from the start by the Arab states. As Palestine Israel prepared to claim its independence, the forces ofEgypt ,Iraq ,Lebanon ,Syria , andmade ready to invade, hoping to strangle the Jewish state in its cradle. Though this act of aggression failed, it did result in Saudi Arabia Jordan ’s forcible acquisition of theWest Bank , in direct violation of the UN partition resolution and of the UN Charter. Jordan went so far as to purport to have annexed the area, but between 1949 and 1967, only two UN member states (Great Britain and Pakistan) recognized its sovereignty there. . . .
What did all this mean for the
West Bank ’s legal status? According to Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, editor of Oppenheim’s International Law, one of the field’s authoritative reference works, no state had sovereignty over the West Bank at the onset of the 1948-49 war.certainly could not then lay legitimate claim to the territory after acquiring it through armed aggression. Nor could the UN, since its partition proposal was merely hortatory -- a recommendation -- and in any event the organization’s charter contains no authorization for it to assume territorial sovereignty anywhere. In these circumstances, Lauterpacht concludes, the British withdrawal from the territory of the mandate resulted in a lapse or vacancy of internationally recognized sovereignty. The Jordan West Bank was, in legal jargon, res nullius: a thing belonging to no state. In such a case, sovereignty in international law may be acquired by any state in a position to assert effective and stable control without resort to unlawful means -- a situation that would not exist until 1967.
It was with the Six-Day war of 1967 that
Israel first came into possession of theWest Bank , bringing down upon itself the now familiar charge of being an illegal “occupier” there. But a charge does not acquire moral or legal force simply through repetition over time, even if such repetition establishes it as conventional wisdom. Like the notion thatJordan or the UN or some other entity held valid title to the West Bank after 1949, the related notion that’s presence in the territory constitutes an “occupation” is utterly specious. Israel
Krauss and Pham then summarize the rights
None of this is to suggest that
Israel ’s legal and historical claims to sovereignty in theWest Bank require it to remain there. But neither is it required to consult either the Palestinian Arabs or the self-appointed representatives of the “international community” if it decides to withdraw from some territory and determine its own borders. . . . If it chooses to do so, [] has every legal right to act alone. Israel
Also worth reading: Krauss and Pham’s June 29 article on the new “implicit recognition” document between Hamas and Fatah: “The Non-Recognition ‘Recognition’.”
I knew you'd be posting on this. I had hoped to beat you to the punch!
If I may correct one thing; I believe that there may be more than one way to access Commentary. For example in Maryland the library system pays for access to archives of many publications. Anyone who wants access should check out their library system and see if they can access. Companies like EBSCO or Infotrac provide these archives to libraries. It may well be that if you have a library card you can get access.
Posted by: soccerdad | July 05, 2006 at 02:19 PM
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2751/is_n33/ai_14538698/print
Here is another excellent essay on Israel. You probably have read it already.
Posted by: mal | July 09, 2006 at 01:17 AM
Essays worth reading
http://www.aijac.org.au/review/2000/258/essay258.html
http://www.aijac.org.au/review/2001/266/essay266.html
http://www.aijac.org.au/review/2002/278/occup278.html
http://www.benadorassociates.com/article/10639
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2751/is_n33/ai_14538698/print
http://www.jmu.edu/nelsoninstitute/Israel%27s%20Borders%20(Commentary%202006-Krauss&%20Pham).pdf
Posted by: mal | July 09, 2006 at 03:10 AM