"Occupied", "Shmockupied"


By Jon_i_Cohen
February 20, 2010
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To truly determine the legal status of the area known as Yesha (Judea, Samaria and Gaza), it is important to understand the different types of UN resolutions. Once you understand the differences it becomes clear there is no such thing as the Israeli-occupied territories.

If anything, they are actually Arab-occupied territories now "liberated".

"Occupied territories" has become the most widely misused term connected with the Arab-Israeli conflict. People simply do not know the facts or like our trendy-lefty, Guardianesque friends, deliberately misinterpret them thereby completely distorting the real picture of the land distribution between the Arabs and the Jews.

The facts are, according to international law, the Jews have the complete and unquestionable right to settle the territories of Judea, Samaria and Gaza (collectively known as Yesha, not that we actually want Gaza anymore, but nevertheless). Not a single enforceable international document exists that forbids them from settling these lands.

On the contrary, the only existing enforceable document actually encourages Jewish settlement.

Created on April 24, 1920 at the San Remo Conference, this document has the Principal Allied Powers assigning the Mandate for the territory of Palestine to Great Britain. By doing so the League of Nations "recognized the historical connection of the Jewish people with Palestine" and established "grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country." Article 6 of the Mandate "encouraged ... close settlement by Jews on the land," including the lands of Judea, Samaria and Gaza (Yesha).

There is nothing whatsoever in the Mandate that separates Yesha from the rest of the mandated territory. That means that the right of the Jews to settle the land spreads to the whole of the Mandated region of Palestine. It is worth mentioning that the 76% of the territory of Mandated Palestine known today as Jordan, was not permanently exempt from settlement by the Jews either. Article 25 only allowed to "postpone or withhold application of [this] provision."

When the League of Nations was disbanded, the rights of the Jews to settle the territories of Palestine, including Yesha, was not foregone. When in 1946 the United Nations was created in place of the League of Nations, its Charter included Article 80 specifically to allow the continuation of existing Mandates (including the British Mandate). Article 80 stated that "nothing ... shall be construed in or of itself to alter in any manner the rights whatsoever ... of any peoples or the terms of existing international instruments to which Members of the United Nations may respectively be parties."

In November 1947 Resolution 181 recommended the Partition of Palestine. Like all UN Resolutions pertaining to the Jewish-Arab conflict it was not enforceable. It was simply a recommendation, and the Arab countries rejected it. As the Syrian representative in the General Assembly stated:

"In the first place the recommendations of the General Assembly are not imperative on those to whom they are addressed.... The General Assembly only gives advice and the parties to whom advice is addressed accept it when it is rightful and just and when it does not impair their fundamental rights"(1).

If the resolution had been implemented maybe it would be possible to argue that it replaced the San Remo Conference resolution, which had legitimized the rights of the Jews to settle in any place in Palestine. However, it was not only rejected by the Arabs, but in violation of the UN Charter they launched a military aggression against the newly reborn Jewish state thus invalidating the resolution.

By the time of the ceasefire at the end of the War of Independence there was still no other enforceable document pertaining to the rights of the Jews to settle Eretz Yisrael - they remained intact.

Now to the most misunderstood aspect of the scope and application of international documents. In order to resolve the term "occupied" territories, one must clearly distinguish between the different types of resolutions passed by the United Nations. Misconceptions about the issue led to the question of a double standard that was constantly raised by the Arabs after the first Gulf War. The Arabs were unable to understand why from Iraq the UN demanded compliance with the decisions of the international body while Israel was not forced to comply with UN resolutions.

On April 3, 1998 Swedish Foreign Minister Lena Hjelm-Wallen, well known for championing the Arabs' position, in an interview with the London al-Quds al-'Arabi, gave an explanation of this "paradox." She was asked, "What about the double standards that the United States and Europe adopt when it comes to Arab issues?" She answered, "I understand this view, which is common in many Arab countries. Nevertheless, the UN resolutions passed on Iraq are different, because they are binding for all nations according to Article 7 of the UN Charter. Meanwhile, the resolutions passed against Israel are not subject to Article 7 of the Charter."

To understand the way UN resolutions work, it is worth reading an open letter by Uri Lubrani, coordinator of Israeli activities in Lebanon, addressed to Lebanon's Foreign Minister Faris Buwayz and published on February 27, 1998 in the Paris newspaper al Watan al-'Arabi. Although the letter was written regarding Resolution 425, it talks about all resolutions pertaining to the Arab-Israeli conflict. Uri Lubrani wrote the following,

"... There are two types of resolutions in the Security Council. The first type are resolutions passed on the basis of Chapter Six of the UN charter that relates to the settlement of disputes through peaceful means. Such resolutions are considered recommendations. They are not binding, and they do not require immediate implementation.... The second type of resolutions are based on Chapter Seven of the UN charter.... This chapter grants the UN Security Council resolutions an implementative authority and commits the international community to use force if necessary to implement these resolutions.... None of the UN Security Council resolutions pertaining to the Arab Israeli conflict, including Resolution 425, were passed on the basis of Chapter Seven. They were passed on the basis of Chapter Six of the UN charter, which is the basis also of UNSC Resolutions 242 and 338."

So, NO mandatory UN Resolution exists pertaining to the Arab-Israeli conflict, we are left with the San Remo Conference decision that governs land ownership in the region of Palestine. That means that not a single enforceable internationally valid document exists that prevents or prohibits the Jews from settling anywhere in Judea, Samaria, Gaza and all the rest of Eretz Yisrael. Or, to put it differently, from the standpoint of international law for the Jews it is not “occupied” land. I now view the areas as “liberated” land.

This conclusion was confirmed by an unexpected (for Israel) source. It is hard to argue with the fact that James Baker, former US Secretary of State, was not the best friend of the Jewish state. However, he categorically rejected the mislabelling of the lands of Yesha. This happened at the Middle East Insight Symposium in Washington on May 4, 1998. Hoda Tawfik, from the newspaper Al Ahram asked him, "What do you think is right? That these are occupied Arab territories and not disputed territories?" Baker replied, "They're clearly disputed territories. That's what Resolutions 242 and 338 are all about. They are clearly “disputed” territories." NOT “occupied” territories.

This is NOT semantics, what it means is that when the Jews build settlements in Yesha, they are NOT building them on "occupied" territories. If one wants, one may call them "disputed" territories, as Baker did. However, this will still not change the fact that from the standpoint of international law it is the very land where the Jews were encouraged to settle.

Finally, it should not be surprising that the San Remo Conference plays such an important role in this particular case. The majority of the other players in the conflict: Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, etc. gained sovereignty over their territories based on the decisions of exactly the same conference.

We Jews finally deserve to settle freely on all of our land.

It is time to stop labelling these areas with the trendy-lefty, Guardianesque term "occupied" but use the term "liberated".

COMMENTS

moshetzarfati2

20 February, 2010 - 18:19

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So, Jon, when are you going to leave the fleshpots of Babylon and settle all of the land? No one deserves land. To say otherwise is to fetishise land blood and other meaningless symbols.
By the way, the only land Israel is entitled to is that set aside for the Jewish homeland under UN resolution 181 of 1947.


Jon_i_Cohen

20 February, 2010 - 18:39

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In November 1947 Resolution 181 recommended the Partition of the Region of Palestine. Like all UN Resolutions pertaining to the Jewish-Arab conflict it was NOT enforceable. It was simply a recommendation, and the Arab countries rejected it and started a war.
Does that answer your point?

moshe
Please read what I have written in the the whole article, above.


moshetzarfati2

21 February, 2010 - 08:20

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If it ain't enforceable, Israel shouldn't exist.


Avraham Reiss

21 February, 2010 - 10:05

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Sorry to disappoint you again, Israel-hater, but our chief enforcer is the IDF.

State of Israel thus ratified.


Jon_i_Cohen

21 February, 2010 - 11:33

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moshe
You dissapoint and, as all trendy-lefties do,try to distort the truth.

What is NOT enforceable was the partition.
The State of Israel was ratified and accepted by a majority vote at The United Nations, that is an irrevocable fact.

And, as Avraham Reiss so succintly puts it, now enforced by the IDF, thereby by ratification is undeniable and again irrevocable.

Perhaps you should take up another cause now?

As all trendy-lefty ideology is going the way of the "Iron Curtain", - into the annals of history, or the dustbin of history - no one is interested any more.


zachary esterson

21 February, 2010 - 15:30

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But didn't the PLO accept 181, albeit 40 years late?


moshetzarfati2

22 February, 2010 - 12:18

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No one "deserves" land. You might deserve a sweet or another prize, but not land. Sorry, Jon, but in case you hadn't noticed, it was you who raised the UN, not I. And it wasn't me who from 2,200 miles distant was fetishising someone else's land, blood and other meaningless symbols.


mattpryor

22 February, 2010 - 12:33

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This is all valid and true, however the United Nations clearly does not share this view.

So what are we going to do about it?

I will never stoop to violence and intimidation as the Palestinians' army of supporters do. I will never try to silence people who disagree with me. And yet this tactic appears to pay dividends.

There has to be a way that the moderate, intelligent and pragmatic people who passionately support Israel's right to exist as a Jewish state within secure and defensible borders, and who would also welcome improvements to the Palestinians' sorry state of affairs to have a clear, unified voice.

We (people who fit into the above category) need to organise ourselves, now, because it will be too late soon.

Enough hatred, enough blame.


moshetzarfati2

22 February, 2010 - 12:40

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Matt, you are right. There are Jewish-Zionist organisations which seek just that -- ProZion, for instance, Meretz UK or Peace Now UK.


mattpryor

22 February, 2010 - 13:46

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When will all these organisations fall under a common umbrella?

Israel's enemies are becoming united and determined. Their attacks are becoming more and more effective.

If Israel's supporters do not unite to counter this, it will be the end of Israel and the biggest blow to Western civilisation in our history.


steveabbott

22 February, 2010 - 14:56

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Why not start from the point of view of justice. Israelis have their state, Palestinians must have theirs. Or, as another comment mentioned - Palestinians and Jews must live in 1 single state. That would have to be a state will equal rights for all its citizens – not an apartied state like South Africa.

I am not sure your proposal is even serious. No1 Jordan would not accept it. Why should they swop the stable-state they currently have for an unstable state incorporating the occupied west bank. Remember they acted in 1970 to suppress the PLO, and thus reduce Palestinian influence in Jordan. Also, you want to sub-contract all the problems of the occupied territories to Jordan, but you want Israel to maintain sovereignty???? Does that sound like a serious idea to you?

The only solution is a just solution, and that means 2 states. And no, Israel cannot expect to exercise control over the new Palestinian state after independence – that’s not what independence means. It is also what is has tried to do in Gaza since the evacuation, and that has not worked too well – has it?

Israel (and its Diaspora supporters), need to stop thrashing around trying to come up with increasingly unviable and bizarre solutions to the occupation, and end it. There is no other way, unless Israel is to cease to be a Jewish state, and becomes an Israeli/Palestinian federation or confederation.

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