On the Legitimacy of the Settlements: A Legal and Historical Perspective
[Dr Lorenzo Kamel is Senior Fellow at IAI and Research Fellow at Harvard’s CMES]
It would seem unnecessary in 2015 to refer to the League of Nations or the Mandate for Palestine when discussing the legal status of the Palestinian territories. Yet, in recent years several scholars are resorting to these issues to provide a legal justification for the construction/enlargement of outposts/settlements and the indirect denial of the right of the Arab-Palestinian people to self-determination. This article aims to deconstruct these approaches and to shed light on the selective use of history and international law that underpins them.
The 89 pages of the Levy Report, released on 9 July 2012 by a special committee appointed in late January 2012 by PM Netanyahu to investigate whether the Israeli presence in the West Bank is to be considered an occupation or not, clarified that “with the establishment of the United Nations in 1945, the principle of recognizing the validity of existing rights of states acquired under various mandates, including of course the rights of Jews to settle in the Land of Israel by virtue of the above documents, was determined in article 80 of its charter”.
In a video entitled “the Legal Case for Israel,” international lawyer Eugene Kontorovich pointed out that “up to 1948 all this area [present-day Israel and the Palestinian territories] was Palestine reserved as a Jewish State by the League of Nations Mandate […] the legality of the Mandate jurisprudence cannot be changed.” More in general and according to an interpretation held by a growing number of scholars and by most of Israel’s right-wing parties, the preamble as well as Article 2 of the Mandate secured the establishment of the Jewish National Home on, in Howard Grief’s words, “the whole country of Palestine, not a mere part of it.” (H. Grief, The Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel under International Law (Jerusalem: Mazo, 2008), p. 106.) It would follow that, as argued by the late Eugene Rostow, “the Jewish right of settlement in the whole of western Palestine – the area west of the Jordan – survived the British withdrawal in 1948”.
But to resort to the League of Nations and the British Mandate for Palestine might be counterproductive for those committed to finding legal justifications for the construction of outposts, or the enlargement of settlements, in the Palestinian territories. The term “national home,” in fact, had no mutually agreed-upon meaning or scope and the British government was under no definite obligation, since the Mandate made any Jewish immigration subject to “suitable conditions” and contained safeguards for the rights and position of the non-Jewish communities.
True, in 1919 prominent British official Jan Christiaan Smuts, a leading figure in Lloyd George’s War Cabinet and an open supporter of racial segregation, envisaged the rise of “a great Jewish State.” Lloyd Gorge himself pointed out that “it was contemplated that when the time arrived for according representative institutions in 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”.
On the other hand, the first Attorney General of Palestine, “lifelong Zionist” Norman Bentwich, contended that “a national home, as distinguished from a state, is a country where a people are acknowledged as having a recognized legal position and the opportunity of developing their cultural, social and intellectual ideals without receiving political rights”.
This position was also consistent with the one expressed a few years earlier by the general secretary and future President of the Zionist Organization Nahum Sokolov. He represented the Zionist Organization at the 1919’s Paris Peace Conference, where made it clear that the
“object of Zionism is to establish for the Jewish people a home in Palestine secured by public law […] It has been said and is still being obstinately repeated by anti-Zionists again and again, that Zionism aims at the creation of an independent ‘Jewish State’. But this is wholly fallacious. The ‘Jewish State’ was never part of the Zionist program. The Jewish State was the title of Herzl’s first pamphlet, which had the supreme merit of forcing people to think. This pamphlet was followed by the first Zionist Congress, which accepted the Basle program – the only program in existence.”
Hubert Young, an important figure of the Foreign Office, wrote in November 1920 that the commitment made by London “in respect of Palestine is the Balfour Declaration constituting it a National Home for the Jewish People.” Lord Curzon corrected him: ‘No. “Establishing a National Home in Palestine for the Jewish people” – a very different proposition.” (The National Archives [TNA] FO 371/5124. Curzon, 29 Nov. 1920. See L. Kamel, Imperial Perceptions of Palestine: British Influence and Power in Late Ottoman Times (London: I.B. Tauris, 2015).)
Many other at times contradicting points of view might be quoted. Speaking in front of the Peel Commission in 1937, Winston Churchill made it clear for instance that there was nothing in the definition of the “National Home” that might have precluded “the establishment of a Jewish State.” (Palestine Royal Commission: Command Paper 5479 of 1937.) As noted by Isaiah Friedman in his British Pan-Arab Policy, 1915-1922: “Whether [the first British High Commissioner for Palestine Herbert] Samuel had this ultimate aim in mind when conceiving his policy is dubious. But Churchill, as his response of the Peel Commission shows, did favour it. Throughout his career as Colonial Secretary, he adhered to his Zionist convictions.”
Whatever the opinion of anyone on the excerpts quoted up to this point, it must be stressed that they are nothing more than personal opinions coming mainly from pro-or-anti-Zionists, pro-or-anti-Arabs/Palestinians, anti-Semites, pro- imperial statesmen and so on. None of them has any legal value.
The first document that officially clarified the interpretation of the Mandate’s text (before its ratification) is the British White Paper of June 1922. It pointed out that the Balfour Declaration does “not contemplate that Palestine as a whole should be converted into a Jewish National Home, but that such a Home should be founded ‘in Palestine’”. Furthermore, it stressed that the “Zionist congress” that took place in Carlsbad in September 1921 had officially accepted ‘the determination of the Jewish people to live with the Arab people on terms of unity and mutual respect, and together with them to make the common home into a flourishing community, the upbuilding of which may assure to each of its peoples an undisturbed national development.”
It is only in light of these clarifications that the preamble, and Article 2, of the Mandate can and should be understood. It is noteworthy that Zionist consent to the interpretation contained in the White Paper was requested and received before the Mandate was confirmed in July 1922. In Weizmann’s words: “It was made clear to us that confirmation of the Mandate would be conditional on our acceptance of the policy as interpreted in the White Paper [of 1922], and my colleagues and I therefore had to accept it, which we did, though not without some qualms.” (C. Weizmann, Trial and Error: The Autobiography of Chaim Weizmann (Westport: Greenwood, 1972), p. 208.)
The British Mandate for Palestine was approved on the basis of a clear understanding that sheds light on, and directly contradicts most of, the claims made at the beginning of this article.
Israel’s right to exist and to defend itself against terror and discrimination is something that any person interested in peace must support. Equally true is that the attempt to justify the construction of outposts or the enlargement of settlements in the Palestinian territories through a selective use of the League of Nations and its mandates system is a misleading and problematic approach that requires better public understanding.
To deconstruct these approaches is a precondition for any serious attempt to achieve a mutual understanding between Israelis and Palestinians.
WE EXTEND our hand to all neighboring states and their peoples in an offer of peace and good neighborliness, and appeal to them to establish bonds of cooperation and mutual help with the sovereign Jewish people settled in its own land. The State of Israel is prepared to do its share in a common effort for the advancement of the entire Middle East.”
at 2:28 pm ESTel roam
The two state paradigm is still the best hope for a new and lasting peace.
at 3:21 pm ESTJordan
at 5:16 am ESTAnon
at 7:39 am ESTAnswering
a) a claim of “The term “national home,” in fact, had no mutually agreed-upon meaning” is weak. For example, the US delegation to the 1919 Versailles Peace Conference understood the object as a “Jewish state” (http://myrightword.blogspot.co.il/2015/11/was-Jewish-state-agenda-item-from.html).
b) all British statements weakening the view of a future Jewish state were made under pressure of Arab violence and therefore, the validity of such alterations in the original intent is questionable.
c) the act of restricting Jewish settlement east of the Jordan in 1922 (for the benefit of a Saudi Arabian who had invaded the area) was itself an apparent recognition that all the remaining territory was to become a Jewish state.
d) UN Article 80 grants the original Palestine Mandate a status.
at 11:22 am ESTYisrael Medad
at 11:42 am ESTe-kontorovich@law.northwestern.edu
at 4:22 pm ESTYisrael Medad
at 4:32 pm ESTAnswerMedad
The person that wrote the post that you are pasting and copying missed the point. The historical outcome of the “national home” debate is not “decisive” to the modern legal and non-legal questions. If I understand correctly, the real issue here is not the debate on the “national home”. The issue is that different opinions were expressed, all valid and all irrelevant. The agreed, approved, Mandate is what it matters, and it clarified several aspects that contradict what you and others claim or imply (“up to 1948 all this area was Palestine reserved as a Jewish State by the League of Nations Mandate”). Your colleague makes confusion also regarding the fact that the issue here is related to “Jewish residence in the West Bank”, and not to a massive state-funded project.
PS
These are first and foremost historical facts with legal repercussions, not the other way round. Wrong understanding of historical facts brings wrong legal assumptions.
at 5:17 pm ESTAnswerMedad
at 6:28 pm ESTAnon
at 2:53 am ESTYisrael Medad
at 5:32 pm ESTWallace Edward Brand
The British White Paper of 1 year later, June 1922, clarified, among other issues, that the Balfour Declaration does ‘not contemplate that Palestine as a whole should be converted into a Jewish National Home, but that such a Home should be founded “in Palestine”.’ No doubt regarding the geographical scope/limits of the White Paper (WP) of 1922, that served as the base of the agreed approved version of the Mandate: Jordan was outside of the scope of the ‘national home’ ‘IN Palestine’ mentioned in the WP and agreed, before its approval, in the Mandate.
at 12:01 pm ESTcarl m.
at 12:35 pm ESTJordan
http://www.israpundit.org/archives/63611332
at 1:29 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
But this is assumption is totally flawed and wrong and betrays a political bent by the author.
There has never been any legally authoritative or binding determination that the territories are Palestinian.
To the contrary – the Palestinian leadership itself, as well as the US, EU, UN Russia and others have acknowledge, and counter-signed the Oslo Accords in which the issue of the permanent status of the territories iis a negotiating issue.
Hence, in determining in your paper, – probably through an element of wishful thinking – that the territories are Palestinian, the author and others of his ilk, are in effect attempting to prejudge an agreed-upon negotiating issue.
As an historian, he might be advised to stick to dealing with history, rather than dabbling in law.
at 3:57 am ESTAlan Baker
http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmintdev/230/230.pdf
at 5:29 am ESTLisa Cardon
at 8:30 am ESTAlan Baker
at 2:19 pm ESTLisa Cardon
at 4:23 pm ESTcarl m.
at 9:38 pm ESTSalomon Benzimra
My guess is because Jordan was outside of the scope of the agreed and because in the opinion of what were the 9/10th of the total population in Palestine 100 years ago, the area in present-day Jordan have never had the same religious, historical, cultural and social importance as compared to the the land between the river and the sea.
at 4:35 am ESTmartburton
My guess is because Jordan was outside of the scope of the agreed ‘national home’ ‘in Palestine’ and because in the opinion of what were the 9/10th of the total population in Palestine 100 years ago, the area in present-day Jordan have never had the same religious, historical, cultural and social importance as compared to the the land between the river and the sea.
at 4:38 am ESTmartburton
at 8:38 am ESTYisrael Medad
at 9:14 am ESTmartburton
at 10:20 am ESTcarl m.
at 9:11 pm ESTHostage
at 1:36 am ESTHostage
a) it shows that in spite of the international guarantees, the British did not hesitate to violate them in their successive White Papers, thus engaging in illegal political man-oeuvres;
b) it shows that these decisions are not “mere opinions,” as Dr. Kamel inferred in his article, but are legal provisions solidly entrenched in international law;
c) and it begs the question, again, as I wrote above: Is there any similar sequence of internationally guaranteed decisions that support Arab national rights in Palestine?
at 1:56 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
http://www.mepc.org/journal/middle-east-policy-archives/state-palestine-exists?print
at 5:58 am ESTcarl m.
at 6:28 am ESTRoberto Maza
at 2:09 am ESTYisrael Medad
at 2:31 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
at 3:35 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
at 6:08 am ESTroberto
For now all that we know is that the sentence “in respect of Palestine is the Balfour Declaration constituting it a National Home for the Jewish People” was Changed with the formula “IN Palestine” in order to avoid your interpretation. Weizmann was very angry about it and wrote many letters complaining for this. I can image that for you too this is frustrating. Yet, this is how the document was officially released.
at 7:48 am ESTcarl m.
– The very text of the Mandate Charter – its preamble and 28 articles;
– No “national” entity envisaged in the Mandate, other than the JNH;
– The different approach for Palestine vs. the two other Mandates, as shown in the Treaty of Sèvres (Art. 94 and 95);
– The principle of the Mandates system, clearly expressed in Article 22 of the Covenant, which envisaged independent states at the end of the Mandatory period, hence a Jewish State upon the termination of the Mandate for Palestine.
Now, wouldn’t it be for YOU, rather to quote a legal “primary source” anywhere pointing to the “national” provisions granted to the Arabs in Palestine?
at 2:42 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
at 2:49 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
Israel Bartal, Avraham Harman Professor of Jewish History, clarified (in a very cogent piece in which he criticized Shlomo Sand) these aspects with the following words:
“No ‘nationalist’ Jewish historian has ever tried to conceal the well-known fact that conversions to Judaism had a major impact on Jewish history in the ancient period and in the early Middle Ages. Although the myth of an exile from the Jewish homeland (Palestine) does exist in popular Israeli culture, it is negligible in serious Jewish historical discussions. Important groups in the Jewish national movement expressed reservations regarding this myth or denied it completely.”
Palestine was to become the national home of the Jews while remaining the national home of the existing, mostly Arab, population: “a common home the up-building of which will assure to each of these peoples an undisturbed national development”
at 3:16 pm ESTcarl m.
“…the status of these residual territories [Judea & Samaria, aka the “West Bank,” and Gaza] is not merely, as is too often assumed, that of territories under belligerent occupation; it is rather that of continuing dedication to the objectives of the mandate. Central among these is ‘the establishment of the Jewish National Home’ in Palestine for the benefit of the Jews of Israel, and of any Jews elsewhere who wish to go there to live. This, in leading contemporary pronouncements, was ‘the very soul of the Mandate,’ its ‘primary purpose’ (74)… It would follow, in the meanwhile, that the right of Jews to enter and settle in these territories, subject only to the ‘civil and religious rights of the other inhabitants’ reserved by the terms of the mandate, must remain as a central element of its territorial status.” (P. 122).
And Note 74 reads as follows:
“In the League Permanent Mandates Commission (P.M.C.) the Balfour Declaration was stated to be ‘the very soul of the Mandate’ (P.M.C. Minutes of 27th session, 1935, p.138, Spanish Member Palacios). Cf. in terms of ‘the primary purpose of the Mandate,’ the Peel Royal Commission Report (Command Paper 5479, 1937, p.39). Even the so-called Churchill White Paper, June 3, 1922, Cmd. 1700, backtracking as it was, was concerned to insist that Jews are in Palestine ‘as of right and not on sufferance’ (3 Norton Moore 65, at 67). And see other citations in N. Feinberg, ‘Sovereignty over Palestine’, repr. in 1 Norton Moore 224, at 238.”
“The supposed claims of such a ‘[Palestinian] entity’, putatively associated with claims of ‘Palestinian peoplehood’, have now come, since the 1967 War, to be offered as a central factor to be reckoned with on the current Middle east conflict…The first is as to the genuineness of the supposed association of this evoked entity with a Palestinian ‘people’, much less with a Palestinian ‘nation’, in the sense of those symbols which today implies an entitlement to political independence. Even scholars rather sympathetic to Arab claims have pointed out that when the British White Paper of 1939 had apparently made an independent Arab State inevitable, ‘most of the country’s Arab leaders slipped into lethargy and paralysis of action which was to last nearly thirty years’.”
at 3:17 am ESTSalomon Benzimra
http://lib.haifa.ac.il/departments/4del/nedirim/eng/hadriani.html
at 4:29 am ESTcarl m.
at 11:43 am ESTHostage
at 1:43 pm ESTHostage
at 2:21 pm ESTHostage
The text of the Treaty is readily available online via the kinghussein dot gov dot jo or the Israeli MFA websites.
at 2:51 pm ESTHostage
at 9:03 am ESTHostage