Dr. Hans Köchler Professor of Philosophy, University of Innsbruck, Austria President of the International Progress Organization |
|
The
Evolution of the Palestine Problem and the Status of Jerusalem: Lecture delivered at the International Conference on Jerusalem organized by
League of Arab States and Organization of Islamic Cooperation Doha, Qatar, 27 February 2012 |
I.P.O. Online Publications International Progress Organization, A-1010 Vienna, Kohlmarkt 4, Austria © International Progress Organization, 2012. All rights reserved. |
Outline -
The Jerusalem
question cannot be dealt with in isolation from the larger problem
of Palestine; it is an integral part of the struggle for
independence of the peoples on the territory of the former Ottoman
Empire. In view of the imperialist policies pursued upon the end of
World War I, the Jerusalem issue is also the legacy of de facto
colonial rule since the era of the British Mandate.
–
The status of Jerusalem is, first and
foremost, an issue of self-determination of the Arab people of
Palestine. International rights and privileges in regard to the
places of worship of the three monotheistic religions (“The Holy
City of Jerusalem”) are to be dealt with in the context of
Palestinian sovereignty.
–
The status quo in Jerusalem is the result
of a series of injustices and violations of basic principles of
international law since the end of Ottoman rule in Palestine.
–
However: ex injuria jus non oritur; an
accumulation of breaches of legal norms, even over an extended
period of time, will not lead to a situation of legality – as long
as those breaches have been identified as such and rejected, in a
consistent and persistent manner, by the affected party.
–
The specific provisions of the British Mandate
for Palestine, insofar as they incorporated, as political
commitments, the promises of the Balfour Declaration (1917), were
technically illegal; they openly violated Article 22 of the Covenant
of the League of Nations.
–
United Nations General Assembly resolution 181
(II) of 29 November 1947 was ultra vires in terms of the UN
Charter itself, and it violated the then generally recognized right
of self-determination of peoples.
–
The respective provisions for an international
status of Jerusalem (as part of the partition plan) were, by
implication, also legally invalid.
–
The seizure of the eastern part of Jerusalem in
1967 and its subsequent annexation by Israel in 1980 (“Basic Law:
Jerusalem, Capital of Israel”) are null and void since these
unilateral measures have violated the generally recognized principle
of contemporary international law of the “inadmissibility of the
acquisition of territory by war” (as affirmed by Security Council
resolution 242 [1967]).
–
The resolutions adopted by the UN Security
Council concerning the occupation of Arab territory and, in
particular, the annexation of Jerusalem, are not based on Chapter
VII of the UN Charter and, thus, lack any enforcement mechanisms.
–
Repeated resolutions of the United Nations
General Assembly under the provisions of the so-called “Uniting for
Peace” resolution of 1950 may have had political significance
(in terms of the mobilization of international public opinion), but
they had no legal effect.
–
The recent Israeli legislation (“referendum law”
of 22 November 2010), making the restitution of annexed territories
(in particular Jerusalem) conditional on a domestic political act
(either a referendum or a decision by a 2/3 majority of the
Knesset), constitutes an outright violation of international law
since it interferes into the sovereign domain of another people or
country. Israel possesses no right whatsoever over the annexed
territory of Jerusalem; the referendum law is, thus, without object.
–
As occupying power, Israel is bound, inter
alia, by the provisions of the Geneva Convention Relative to the
Protection of Civilian Persons in Time of War of 1949, but possesses
no rights of sovereignty which would entitle it to decide about the
future status of occupied territories, including Jerusalem.
–
Ever since the time of the British Mandate, the
Arab people of Palestine have been prevented from exercising their
inalienable right to self-determination, one of the fundamental
norms of international law. They have the right to resist foreign
occupation and annexation of their land.
–
Since 1947, the United Nations Organization has
repeatedly failed to properly acknowledge Palestinian rights and to
exercise its responsibility, confirmed in its own resolutions, for
the enforcement of international law in Palestine.
–
Because of the non-enforcement of international
law in Jerusalem (and Palestine in general), the Palestinian people
is entitled to seek the support of concerned regional states (and
the international community at large) for the restoration of its
legitimate rights. – The State of Palestine, with Jerusalem as its capital, will be legitimately established not by diktat of outside powers (or by fiat of the world organization), but by the free decision of the Palestinian people whose collective will alone is the basis of sovereignty in Palestine – in terms of general international law as well as of the United Nations Charter. ____________________________________________________________________________________________ Preliminary Remarks
The Jerusalem question cannot be dealt with in
isolation from the Palestine problem, which is essentially an issue of
the right to self-determination of peoples, as enshrined in the
United Nations Charter (Article 1[2]).[1] The corpus
separatum approach, dating back to the “partition resolution” of the
United Nations General Assembly,[2]
is legally unfounded.[3]
The status quo in Jerusalem, as in the entire
Palestine, is the result of a long and continuous series (a) of
injustices inflicted on the native people of Palestine, particularly
since the surrender of Jerusalem to British forces on 9 December 1917
and the end of the Ottoman Empire, and (b) of accumulated violations of
international law[4]
since that date. However, ex injuria jus non oritur.
Otherwise,
colonial domination over peoples in distant countries
could still be justified today. Continued and persistent violations of
international norms, adding one transgression upon another, do not
necessarily correct a legally deficient situation, i. e. do not create
legal rights.
(I) Colonial legacy prior to World War II
We shall first give a brief overview of events in terms
of international law (since the termination of Ottoman rule in Palestine
upon the end of World War I),[5]
and from there proceed to an analysis of the legal facts pertaining to
the present situation.[6]
In the period up to World War I, the
Palestinians were subjects of the Ottoman Empire. According to the
Ottoman Constitution of 1876, they did possess equal civil and political
rights with the Turks,[7]
including the right to elect representatives to the Parliament (Chamber
of Deputies) of the Empire.[8]
As regards the subsequent developments, in
particular the decisions taken by European powers that determined the
status of formerly Ottoman territories, it is important to note that the
Ottoman Empire, upon the termination of its rule over Arab lands, did
never transfer sovereignty to the victors of World War I, namely the
“Principal Allied Powers.” The Treaty of Sèvres (1920),[9]
which would have included such a provision,[10]
did not enter into force. The Treaty of Lausanne of 24 July 1923 (which
entered into force in 1924, i. e. after the end of the Ottoman Empire)
included Turkey’s renunciation of “all rights and title whatsoever” over
the territories “outside the frontiers laid down in the present Treaty,”
but not in favor of any other power(s); instead, the respective Article
16 contained the important proviso that “the future of these
territories” will “be settled by the parties concerned,” a formulation
that can only be meaningfully interpreted as to include the people that
inhabited the respective territories at the time of Turkey’s abdication
of her sovereign rights.[11]
Nonetheless, the people of Palestine were
subjected to an effectively colonial régime that denied them the rights
they should have enjoyed under the terms of the Treaty of Lausanne.
Furthermore, the “British Mandate for Palestine” that followed Ottoman
rule violated the very principles of the definition of “mandate” in the
Covenant of the League of Nations, incorporated in the Treaty of
Versailles, which was the only, though in itself dubious, legal basis
for the British administration in Palestine. Article 22 of the Covenant
stipulates that the “well-being and development” of peoples of
territories that “have ceased to be under the sovereignty of the States
which formerly governed them […] form a sacred trust of civilization.”
This formulation would have required of the then international community
(the member states of the League of Nations) to respect the civil and
political rights of the people of Palestine and to assist them, through
the mandate, in the development of social, economic and political
structures that would eventually have enabled the Palestinians, in the
language of Article 22, “to stand by themselves.”
In spite of this solemn commitment, the
framework and regulations for the Palestine Mandate, entrusted to
Britain in 1923 by decision of the Council of the League of Nations,[12]
violated the very principles of this “sacred trust of civilization” and
prejudiced the political developments in Palestine in a manner that
curtailed the concerned people’s political rights. In actual fact,
the “British Mandate for Palestine” was tantamount to an outright
negation of the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination. Its
Preamble explicitly states the Mandatory Power’s (Britain’s)
responsibility “for putting into effect” the declaration which the
British government had itself made earlier “in favour of the
establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people.”
This was a reference to the so-called “Balfour Declaration,” a letter
signed by British Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour on 2 November
1917 on behalf of the British government, in which he confirmed that
Britain viewed “with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national
home for the Jewish people,” and pledged that the government “will use
their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object.”[13]
Article 2 of the Mandate unambiguously states that “[t]he Mandatory
shall be responsible for placing the country under such political,
administrative and economic conditions as will secure the establishment
of the Jewish national home, as laid out in the Preamble …”
Through these provisions, the League of Nations was also implementing
the resolution of the “San Remo conference” of the “Principal Allied
Powers,” the victors of World War I (Britain, France, Italy, Japan), of
25 April 1920. Under item (b) and by reference to Article 22 of the
Covenant of the League of Nations, the resolution entrusted the
administration of Palestine to a Mandatory who “will be responsible for
putting into effect” the Balfour Declaration of 1917, a formulation that
was eventually incorporated into the wording of the British Mandate. It
is worthy of note that this formulation of the San Remo resolution was
also used in Article 95 of the stillborn Treaty of Sèvres, Article 97 of
which further stipulated that “Turkey hereby
undertakes, in accordance with the provisions of Article 132, to accept
any decisions which may be taken in relation to the questions dealt with
in this Section.” This Article would have required Turkey (i. e. the
Ottoman Empire) to renounce all rights and title “in favour of the
Principal Allied Powers” and “to recognise and conform to the measures
which may be taken now or in the future by the Principal Allied Powers.”
For the proper legal evaluation of the British Mandate it is extremely
important to be aware of the fact that Turkey’s abdication of her
sovereign rights in favour of the “Principal Allied Powers” was
initially understood to be the basis for the mandatory régimes in
the former Ottoman territories in the Arab world. In reality, those
powers considered themselves entitled to establish a mandatory régime in
Palestine by virtue of a transfer of sovereignty that never occurred
(because the respective treaty never entered into force). The (peace)
Treaty of Lausanne that superseded the Treaty of Sèvres (and that
contained no provisions for mandates) entered into force on 5 September
1924, i. e. after the League of Nations had entrusted Britain
with the Mandate in Palestine. Whatever the legal shortcomings (in terms of
international treaty law) and inconsistencies of the arrangements
finally enacted under the auspices of the League of Nations may have
been, the “Mandate for Palestine” effectively curtailed Palestinian
rights, and in the most basic sense. The denial of self-determination
was the cardinal sin committed by the self-appointed guardians of
peoples’ rights in the post-Ottoman order. The “tutelage” over the
Palestinian people (according to the terminology of Article 22 of the
Covenant of the League of Nations), as interpreted in the Mandate for
Palestine, has set in motion a process that led away from independence,
instead of promoting it, and that undermined the professed (implicit)
goal of the League’s mandatory régime to assist peoples “to stand by
themselves.”[14] Although the architects of the post-Ottoman colonial
order were well aware of this commitment, the contradiction between
idea (the definition of “mandate” in the Covenant of the League of
Nations) and reality (the actual intentions of the victorious
powers that resulted in the wording of the British Mandate, enacted by
the League) was rarely admitted. In a Memorandum of 11 August 1919,
addressed to Lord Curzon, the British Foreign Secretary, Lord Balfour
frankly stated: “The contradiction between the letters of the Covenant
and the policy of the Allies is even more flagrant in the case of the
‘independent nation’ of Palestine […]. For in Palestine we do not
propose to even go through the form of consulting the wishes of the
present inhabitants of the country …”[15] Furthermore, since the period of the war, the
British had given contradictory promises to Arabs and Jews concerning
the allocation of territories as well as the future status
of the territories that were eventually given to one or the other side.
In a letter dated 24 October 1915, Sir Henry McMahon, the British High
Commissioner in Cairo, had, “in the name of the Government of Great
Britain,” assured Husain Ibn Ali, the Sherif of Mecca, that “Great
Britain is prepared to recognise and support the independence of the
Arabs in all the regions within the limits demanded by the Sherif of
Mecca.”[16]
He only excluded from this pledge the “districts of Mersina and
Alexandretta and portions of Syria lying to the west of the districts of
Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo.”[17]
Since Palestine is situated to the south of these districts, it was
meant to be included. (The exception was meant to exclude from the
pledge territory which now is Lebanon.) It is to be recalled that Sherif
Husain, in a letter to McMahon dated 14 July 1915, had demanded “the
independence of Arab countries, bounded […] on the west by the Red Sea,
the Mediterranean Sea up to Mersina.”[18]
In view of these facts, Lord Curzon, the British Foreign Secretary,
former Vice-Roy of India, admitted that Palestine was promised to the
Arabs. On 5 December 1918 he stated in a Cabinet meeting: “If we
deal with our commitments, there is first the general pledge to Hussein
in October 1915, under which Palestine was included in the areas as to
which Great Britain pledged itself that they should be Arab and
independent in the future …”[19] Apparently aware that this
pledge was in no way compatible with the commitment of the Balfour
Declaration, Sir Winston Churchill, in his capacity as Secretary of
State for the Colonies, tried to reinterpret the Balfour Declaration so
as to alleviate concerns on both sides of the ethnic divide. In a rather
ambiguous and misleading “White Paper” that was obviously meant to
please both sides, he rejected, with an Arab audience in mind,
“exaggerated interpretations of the meaning of the Declaration” and
emphasized that its terms “do 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 [emphases added].”[20]
At the same time, he affirmed – with a Jewish audience in mind – that
the Balfour Declaration “is not susceptible of change,” reminding the
concerned public that it was “reaffirmed” by the Conference of the
Principal and Allied Powers at San Remo (1920) and in the Treaty of
Sèvres (1920) – whereby he could not know at the time (June 1922) that
the latter would never enter into force. In legal terms, however, the
importance of this fact should not be underestimated since it means the
total lack of
legitimization of
the decisions that were subsequently taken in the name of the
“abdicating” sovereign in Palestine. Furthermore, in
spite of Churchill’s diplomatic maneuvering and word splitting, it
cannot be denied that the foundation of a Jewish homeland in
Palestine could only mean partition of the territory. These well-documented and undeniable historical
facts make it obvious that the problem of Palestine and Jerusalem,
intractable as it seems until the present day, is part of the legacy of
the colonial era. The outright denial of the right of self-determination
to the Palestinian people was at the origin of the problem after the end
of the Ottoman era. The text of the Mandate (which we have referred to
above) cannot be interpreted in any other way. Britain, the major
colonial power at the time, was, as “advanced nation” (Article 22 of the
Covenant of the League of Nations), entrusted with a Mandate in
Palestine that included a legally worded commitment “for placing the
country under such political, administrative and economic conditions as
will secure the establishment of the Jewish national home.”[21]
It goes without saying that this “obligation” – which Britain, in a
self-serving manner, had succeeded to introduce into the Mandate –
prejudiced the determination of the future status of Palestine and
Jerusalem, and in fact precluded the meaningful exercise of their
political rights by the Palestinians (since it limited the options and,
thus, predetermined in a substantial sense the possible outcome of
political developments). It should not surprise us that, in such a framework, Jewish immigration into Palestine was strongly encouraged and, especially in the course of World War II, the concept of “population transfer” was propagated as a means to create an ethnically homogeneous territory for the promised “homeland.”[22] Joseph B. Schechtman, author of the authoritative work “European Population Transfers, 1939-1945,”[23] referred to Palestine as “a classic case for quick, decisive transfer action [sic!] as the only constructive method of solving the basic problem and preventing extremely dangerous developments.”[24] His approach corresponds with an earlier statement of Chaim Weizmann, President of the World Zionist Organization, who, in a meeting of Hadassah leaders on 3 April 1941, had expressed the view that “after this war the whole problem of exchanges of population will not be such a taboo subject as it has before.” He continued: “It is going on now and probably will become part and parcel of the future settlement.”[25]
(II)
Colonial legacy after World War II The colonial legacy since the end of the Ottoman
Empire, with the ominous precedent of World War II policies, was
reflected, and in a sense culminated, in the so-called “partition
resolution” of the United Nations General Assembly upon the termination
of the British Mandate (which was a unilateral decision by the British
themselves). Resolution 181 (II) (“Future government of
Palestine”), adopted on 29 November 1947, is at variance with
international law in different important respects: (a)
If interpreted as legal basis for
the existence of the State of Israel and an eventual Arab state in
Palestine, it was ultra vires. According to Article 10 of the UN
Charter, the General Assembly can only make “recommendations” to the
member states and/or to the Security Council, and in the exercise of
this modest right it is tied to the Security Council.[26]
When it adopted the resolution, the General Assembly was aware of this
statutory limitation and merely “recommended” to the United Kingdom “as
the mandatory Power for Palestine,” and to all other member states, the
partition of Palestine. It “requested” the Security Council to
“implement” the “Plan of Partition with Economic Union” and to determine
as threat to the peace or breach of the peace under Article 39 of the UN
Charter any attempt “to alter by force the settlement envisaged by this
resolution.” It cannot be overlooked that the Assembly, by suggesting
(in a rather construed way) measures under Chapter VII of the UN
Charter, was seeking enforcement for a decision it had no power to
adopt.[27] It is worthy
of note that no such action has ever been taken by the Security Council.
In legal terms, Security Council action on the basis of Chapter VII – to
enforce the partition resolution or, more precisely, implement the
Assembly’s “partition plan” – would also have been ultra vires
since the Council cannot act as proxy in the exercise of a people’s
right to self-determination; such action would be a blatant abuse
of the Council’s coercive powers under Chapter VII. (b)
The resolution of the General
Assembly (Part III/A) was also ultra vires in regard to the
“special international régime” envisaged in the partition plan for the
City of Jerusalem as corpus separatum, and the designation of the
United Nations Trusteeship Council as “Administering Authority on behalf
of the United Nations.” In actual fact, however, due to the armed
conflict triggered by this resolution, Jerusalem was never established
as a separate territory, but divided among the warring parties. (c)
The resolution meant the negation
of the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination by the very
organization that was supposed to uphold that right as one of its
“Purposes” (Article 1[2] of the Charter). A legally correct procedure –
that was in conformity with United Nations principles – would have had
to be radically different: Upon termination of the British Mandate, the
people in the territory should either have been entitled to vote in a
referendum on the future status of the entire Palestine, or the
mandate should have been transferred to a UN trusteeship régime
(according to Chapter XII of the UN Charter) with the goal of securing
independence at a later stage, i. e. in the sense of preserving
the rights of the population of Palestine, not abrogating them. (d)
Not only did the UN General
Assembly lack the necessary legal authority to partition Palestine
(should resolution 181[II] actually be interpreted in that sense), a
territory can only be partitioned or attributed to newly created states
by decision of the territorial sovereign. It is to be recalled
that, in the course of the renunciation of sovereign rights by the
Ottoman Empire, those rights were not transferred to the Principal
Allied Powers, or the League of Nations collectively. These countries
were, thus, not in any way entitled to practice the tutelage which they
were exercising under Article 22 of the Charter of the League of Nations
in such a way as to curtail, even negate, the Palestinians’ right to
self-determination, namely through a mandatory régime which implied the
implementation of the Balfour Declaration and eventually ended in the
partition resolution of 1947 (which incorporated the very rationale of
that Declaration). The subsequent
General Assembly resolution 194 (III) of 11 December 1948 was equally
ultra vires insofar as it “resolved” that the “Jerusalem area”
(including the city and the surrounding villages) “should be accorded
special and separate treatment from the rest of Palestine” and should be
placed under effective United Nations control, envisaging “a permanent
international regime for the Jerusalem area” (Paragraph 8). This can
only be seen as an arrogation of powers by the General Assembly,
a body which possesses no authority whatsoever as “territorial
sovereign” – neither under the UN Charter nor under general
international law. This also applies to General Assembly resolution 303
(IV) of 9 December 1949 which restated, “in relation to Jerusalem,” that
the city should be placed under international regime and be established
as corpus separatum,” administered by the United Nations, and
which designated the Trusteeship Council to undertake the respective
measures (Paragraph 1). At the same time, the General Assembly
“confirmed” the geographical boundaries of Jerusalem and surroundings as
they had been laid out in the “partition resolution.” Accordingly, the Trusteeship Council, at its
eighty-first meeting on 4 April 1950, adopted the “Statute for the City
of Jerusalem.” It is a special irony that though it reads like a “Magna
Carta” of the rights of the citizens and residents of Jerusalem it has
never entered into force. In statutory terms, the General Assembly had
no authority anyway to enact such measures through the Trusteeship
Council, and the Security Council did actually not enforce those
measures by way of a Chapter VII resolution, a step that would also have
been ultra vires under the UN Charter (since neither Council nor
Assembly can act as territorial sovereign). It is important to be aware of the legal limits of
United Nations action in this particular case since the Security
Council, in the meantime, has resorted to a practice of using Chapter
VII resolutions for purposes that go far beyond the scope of Article 39,
and directly impact on the jus cogens domain of the sovereign
rights of nations.[28] In strictly legal terms, the partition resolution of
the General Assembly and all subsequent measures by the Assembly and the
Trusteeship Council have remained dead letter. They were not at the
origin and have never been part of an accepted legal régime in
Palestine. The State of Israel was created subsequent to the
partition resolution, but not on the basis of it. Resolution 181
(II) would have provided for the simultaneous (or parallel) creation of
two sovereign entities, a Jewish and an Arab state; for the
establishment of Jerusalem as corpus separatum under UN auspices;
and for a demarcation of borders between the two entities that would
have been different from the area Israel claimed as its territory
in the course of the events of 1948/1949.[29]
For a comprehensive evaluation of the evolution of
the Palestine and Jerusalem dispute, one also has to be aware of a
fundamental legal issue that relates to the renunciation of the League
of Nations Mandate by Britain in 1948: The mandate régime had not brought about the
independence of Palestine (which was meant to be the basic rationale
of a League of Nations Mandate under Article 22 of the Covenant of the
League). It had, to the contrary, curtailed Palestinian national rights
in favour of the preparation of measures for the establishment of a
Jewish “national home.” The territory should thus have been handed over
to the United Nations Organization under the trusteeship provisions of
Chapter XIII of the UN Charter. This would have been necessary so as not
to further prejudice Palestinian rights (in the entire Palestine
including Jerusalem). These regulations, should they ever have been
enacted, would have been based on the objective to promote the
“progressive development towards self-government or independence”
(according to Article 76 of the UN Charter), a process which, however,
was not allowed to begin – in total neglect of the United Nations’ lofty
principle of “self-determination of peoples” (Article 1[2]). It is worthy to note that, at the time, the United
States delegation in the UN favoured, according to a statement delivered
in the Security Council on 19 March 1948, a “temporary trusteeship for
Palestine […] to maintain the peace and to afford the Jews and Arabs of
Palestine, who must live together, further opportunity to reach an
agreement regarding the future government of the country …”[30]
With the unilateral declaration of independence by Israel – as a
consequence, though not legal result, of General Assembly resolution 181
(II) – this opportunity was missed.
(III) The role of the Security Council
In view of the legal vacuum that resulted from the
actions of incompetent bodies or governments since the end of Ottoman
rule in Palestine, a general observation on the role of the UN Security
Council seems appropriate. The Council has not used its enforcement
powers under Chapter VII to enact the General Assembly resolutions (or
more precisely, implement its recommendations) concerning the partition
of Palestine and a special international status for Jerusalem, nor has
it taken coercive measures to bring to an end the occupation of
Palestinian territory since 1967 and to force Israel to abrogate the
annexation of specific Arab territories (namely Jerusalem and the
Golan).
This has resulted in a continued situation of
lawlessness – due to the initial unilateral declaration of
independence (1948) and the subsequent further occupation and annexation
of territory. It also has undermined the legitimacy of the United
Nations Organization, and the international rule of law as such. The
Council has done effectively nothing to enforce its own resolutions
calling for the withdrawal of Israel from occupied territories
(242[1967] and 338[1973] respectively).[31]
The Security Council practice concerning the
question of Palestine, including Jerusalem, preceding and following the
creation of the State of Israel in 1948, has been characterized by a
consistent pattern of appeals, affirmations and threats short of
enforcement measures.
The Council was, inter alia,
–
“calling upon” concerned parties to suggest or
take measures for the implementation of the partition resolution of the
General Assembly (resolutions 42[1948],[32]
44[1948],[33] 49[1948]);[34]
–
threatening to “reconsider” the situation in
Palestine “with a view to action under Chapter VII” (Resolution
50[1948]);[35]
–
“determining” that the situation in Palestine
“constitutes a threat to the peace within the meaning of Article 39 of
the Charter of the United Nations,” but again merely mentioning coercive
measures as a possibility, without ever acting (Resolution 54[1948]);[36]
and
–
“affirming” that “withdrawal of Israel armed
forces from territories occupied in the recent conflict” is a “principle”
that is required for the establishment of just and lasting peace
([242]1967).[37]
It is to be noted, however, that the Security Council
has not been able to act decisively and make true its threats of Chapter
VII action due to the veto that would have been used by at least one
permanent member. The paralysis of the Council as enforcer of its own
and General Assembly resolutions in Palestine is due to the procedural
provision of Article 27(3) of the UN Charter; it does not necessarily
reflect a lack of political will of the majority of member states.[38]
Another aspect that highlights the Council’s
“imposed” (or structural) lack of determination concerning the
enforcement of the law in Palestine is the vagueness of the English text
of Security Council Resolution 242 (1967) that uses the phrase
“withdrawal […] from territories occupied in the recent conflict” –
without the article “the” before “territories.”[39] This wording
has been considered, by some, as an invitation to the occupying power to
choose the territories from which it may withdraw; this has
complicated the legal situation concerning Jerusalem in particular.[40]
(IV) The status of Jerusalem post-1948 and
post-1967
The ambiguity and lacking enforcement mechanism of
Resolution 242 are indeed evidence of the legal vacuum in which facts
have been created “on the ground” since the end of Ottoman rule, and
since the partition resolution of the United Nations in particular. As
we have explained earlier, the corpus separatum “recommendation”
of the General Assembly[41]
– which apparently was considered as sufficient basis for the
Trusteeship Council to adopt a “Statute for the City of Jerusalem” – was
ultra vires, and was anyway never realized. The warring parties
occupied the territory in the course of the armed confrontation
following Israel’s unilateral declaration of independence in 1948, and
the details were set out in the
Armistice Agreement with Jordan of 3 April 1949.
Well aware of the Security Council’s
(structural) inability to undertake coercive measures concerning
Palestine, and Jerusalem in particular, the State of Israel took the
drastic step to “unite” the divided city on its own terms by
annexing the Eastern part, which it had occupied in the course of
the 1967 war.[42]
Paragraph 6 of the 1980 annexation law explicitly excludes any form of
internationalization of the Holy City: “No authority [of the Israeli
State] … may be transferred either permanently or for an allotted period
of time to a foreign body.” It is obvious that it was the special
status of Jerusalem, as perceived by the occupying power exclusively
in terms of the Jewish tradition, that prompted this provocative
unilateral act – in open defiance of the Security Council’s earlier
(1967, 1973) calls for withdrawal.
The Security Council resolutions that were
prompted by this act have remained empty threats and non-consequential
angry condemnations because, unlike so many resolutions on Arab matters
(such as those related to the Gulf conflict of 1990/1991[43]
or the Lockerbie dispute[44]),
they were not based on Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter. When
it comes to the use of its coercive powers, the Security Council
undeniably has followed a policy of double standards.
Resolution 476 (1980) of 30 June 1980 declared
that all Israeli measures aimed at changing the status of the “Holy City
of Jerusalem” have no legal validity (Paragraph 3), and threatened
further measures in accordance with the UN Charter “to secure the full
implementation of the present resolution” (Paragraph 6). In actual fact,
no such measures have ever been taken by the Council. Resolution 478
(1980) of 20 August 1980 determined that Israel’s “Basic Law” on
Jerusalem “constitutes a violation of international law” (Paragraph 2)
and stated that all Israeli measures to alter the character and status
of the Holy City of Jerusalem “are null and void and must be rescinded
forthwith” (Paragraph 3). Again, no measures have ever been taken, over
a period of 30 years, to enforce this resolution.
The illegality of the Israeli annexation of East
Jerusalem has again become obvious in the “referendum law” adopted by
the Israeli Knesset on 22 November 2010. According to that unilateral
measure “at the meta-level” (in relation to the actual annexation by
means of the “Basic Law”), either a 2/3 majority in the Knesset or a
national referendum is required in order for Israel to give up, as part
of a future peace deal, any annexed territory. It goes without saying
that this provision openly contradicts one of the basic norms of
international law according to which the acquisition of territory by
force – as in the case of Arab Jerusalem’s occupation in 1967 and
annexation in 1980 – is inadmissible, and all measures and legal claims
resulting from such an illegal act are null and void. The “referendum
law” is, thus, without object since Israel is not entitled to take any
decision whatsoever on the legal status of occupied Jerusalem (or any
other occupied or annexed territory for that matter). As occupying
power, it is bound by the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention of
1949. It can in no way act as territorial sovereign.
(V) Conclusion: Law of force versus the force of
law
The laws and international resolutions that relate to
the status of Jerusalem, which we have briefly referred to above,
highlight what may be characterized as disparity between law and
politics, or idea and reality, in a most dramatic manner.
The legal principles are clear and unambiguous as regards the
inadmissibility of the occupation and annexation of Arab Jerusalem (the
Holy City of Jerusalem). The law, however, may not be enforceable for
the foreseeable future. The only international body with coercive powers
– the United Nations Security Council – has been paralyzed since the
very beginning of the conflict because of the veto of at least one
permanent member.
The situation is characterized by a complex
dilemma between the “rule of law” and the “law of force.” Upon the
end of Turkish rule, Jerusalem had become part of the territory of the
British Mandate for Palestine. Upon the termination of the Mandate, a
special international status was declared for Jerusalem, but without the
involvement of the people concerned – and this status has never been
implemented. In actual fact, the Holy City has been subjected to an
occupation régime and subsequently become the victim of a usurpation of
sovereignty by the occupant. The resulting dilemma can best be described
by way of juxtaposition of the facts “on the ground,” created by
realpolitik, including violent means, and the legal principles that
underlie the Charter of the United Nations Organization:
(A)
The law of force
has determined the course of events ever since the end of Ottoman rule
in Palestine. The people directly concerned – who are referred to in the
Treaty of Lausanne[45] – were never
allowed to exercise their right of self-determination. This has been
evident in numerous actions and decisions of non-Palestinian (non-Arab)
parties such as:
§
Part of the Palestinian territory was promised
to another people – in fact to people residing outside Palestine.[46]
§
Consequently, foreign immigration into Palestine
was encouraged by the mandatory power during the League of Nations
period.
§
The territory was – illegally –
partitioned in a plan that nonetheless was never implemented according
to its own provisions. One of the two states envisaged in the plan
eventually emerged with a territory much larger than specified in it,
and the regulations, attached to that plan, for an international status
of Jerusalem remained dead letter.
§
In 1948/1949 and 1967 respectively, additional
territories of the original mandated area (Palestine) were seized, and
some were later annexed by Israel.
§
Up to the present day, settlements are being
established on illegally held (occupied or annexed) territory and
systematic measures are being undertaken to change the status of
Jerusalem (including its demographic composition).
§
All these measures were and are being undertaken
in constant defiance of United Nations resolutions that call for the
withdrawal from occupied territories and declare the annexation of
conquered land null and void.
§
In the latest step in this escalation of illegal
acts in Palestine and vis-à-vis the Palestinians, the occupying power
has aimed to subject any decision about the future status of annexed
land – in Arab
Jerusalem
– to the domestic political process, namely by
conditioning the return of annexed territories on the consent of the
Israeli electorate (according to specific voting requirements set out in
the “referendum law” of 22 November 2010).
(B)
In the face of all these transgressions and
unilateral acts or arrogations of rights – that exemplify the law of
force, or a policy of faits accomplis, the United Nations
Organization, in particular the Security Council, has constantly
propagated the rule of law; but the world organization has been
effectively prevented to use its powers (namely the provisions laid out
in Articles 41 and 42 of the Charter) to enforce the law.
Notwithstanding the resulting state of legal limbo, or
international anarchy, the people of Palestine possess the inalienable
right to decide the future status of Palestine, in particular of
the territories occupied or annexed since 1967, and to establish, at a
time of their choosing, the State of Palestine with Jerusalem as its
capital. In the exercise of their right to self-determination they are
legally independent of decisions by those international bodies that, up
to the present moment, have proven to be incapable or unwilling to
enforce the international rule of law in Palestine, and that have anyway
no right to substitute the rights of the territorial sovereign.[47]
Ex injuria jus non oritur: violations of the law do not create legal title. The state of
injustice resulting from the continued occupation of Palestinian
territory and the annexation of Jerusalem, and the systemic paralysis[48]
of the United Nations Organization in all matters related to Palestine
entitle the Arab people of Palestine to defend themselves and to
undertake appropriate and necessary measures, in conformity with
international law and the United Nations Charter, to realize their
inalienable rights – a step which they should have been enabled to
undertake on the basis of the mandate régime of the League of Nations
after the end of Ottoman rule.
Despite its name, the UN General Assembly’s
“Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian
People” has not been able to redress this situation in the several
decades of its existence.[49] For
statutory reasons, it can only emphasize, but not enforce,
those rights while the Security Council would be able to enforce them,
but will not make use of its prerogative for political reasons.
In regard to Jerusalem, “inalienable rights”
means the entitlement of the Palestinian people to decide, without
outside interference or tutelage, the future status of Arab Jerusalem,
including the Holy City, with special guarantees for the rights of all
religious communities of the three monotheistic faiths.[50]
The international régime that was envisaged by the General Assembly of
the United Nations in 1947 never materialized. The status quo is
essentially the result of an illegal use of force. The
annexation, following the occupation in 1967, is null and void.
It is obvious that, in this “legal vacuum,” an internationally accepted
legal status can only be established by the legitimate inhabitants of
Palestine on the basis of the exercise of their right to
self-determination. This will include the full restoration of the Arab
character of the now occupied and annexed city.
It is important to emphasize that, in terms of
modern international law, the Arab people of Palestine not only enjoys
the right of self-determination (as all other peoples do),[51]
but that it also has the right to resist foreign occupation[52]
and to take measures against the continued annexation of East Jerusalem.
Furthermore, absent action by the Security Council, Arab or other
concerned states may undertake collective measures such as those adopted
in 1973, within the limits of international law, to bring about the
implementation of United Nations resolutions concerning Palestine.
After almost a century of false and
contradictory promises to the Arab people of Palestine, of empty
proclamations and appeals, of urgent calls of the international
community that were not heeded, demands that were not met, and of
resolutions that were never enforced, it seems appropriate, upon the
conclusion of this analysis, to make a point of principle:
Norms of law are defined by their being linked
to coercive measures (sanctions, punishment) in case of non-compliance.[53]
Accordingly, norms that lack enforcement mechanisms are mere moral
principles or “requests.” If the UN member states are indeed committed
to the Charter of the United Nations, with its affirmation of the
international rule of law, it is in their vital interest that coercive
measures be taken to enforce, in Palestine, the fundamental norm of the
non-admissibility of acquisition of territory by force (as affirmed,
inter alia, in Security Council Resolution 242[1967]). If, as we
have explained, the Council is paralyzed because of the special voting
provision of Article 27(3) of the UN Charter, concerned member states,
first and foremost those from the region, have the right to take
measures of their own. Another General Assembly resolution on the basis
of “Uniting for Peace,” in addition to the earlier resolutions,[54]
will not bring tangible results either because nothing can do away with
the statutory fact that the Assembly can only make recommendations.
Only decisive measures, not
recommendations or appeals, will enable the people concerned to reverse
the catastrophic course of events that has been determined by the law of
force in Palestine since the era of the First World War.
*** Endnotes [1]
For details see Hans Köchler, “The
Palestinian People’s Right of Self-determination: Basis of Peace
in the Middle East,” in: IKIM
Journal, Vol. 7, No. 2
(July-December 1999), pp. 45-58; and
The Palestine Problem in the Framework of International
Law: Sovereignty as the Crucial Issue of a Peaceful Settlement
of the Palestinian-Israeli Conflict. Lecture delivered at the
international conference
“1991-2000: The Palestinian-Israeli Peace Process – A critical
evaluation of ten years of negotiations between the Palestinian
Authority and Israel.” Madrid, 30 September - 1 October 2000.
I.P.O. Research Papers, Vienna,
October 2000, at i-p-o.org/palestine-sovereignty.htm.
[2]
Resolution 181 (II), adopted on 29 November 1947 (“Future
government of Palestine / Resolution adopted on the report of
the ad hoc committee on the Palestinian question”).
[3]
We shall explain the specific legal reasons in chapter II below.
[4]
This is understood in terms of the norms that were in force at a
given time. (We do not believe in a retroactive enforcement of
legal norms.)
[5]
For a comprehensive historical overview until the post-1967
period see Edward W. Said, Ibrahim Abu-Lughod, Jenet L.
Abu-Lughod, Muhammad Hallaj, Elia Zureik, Porträt des
palästinensischen Volkes. Vienna: International Progress
Organization, 1983.
[6]
For a comprehensive analysis see also Hans Köchler (ed.), The
Legal Aspects of the Palestine Problem with Special Regard to
the Question of Jerusalem. (Studies in International
Relations, Vol. IV.) Vienna: Braumüller, 1981.
[7]
“All subjects of the Empire are called Ottomans, without
distinction whatever faith they profess …”
Kanûn-ı Esâsî
(“Basic Law"),
proclaimed by Grand Vizier Midhat Pasha
on 23 December 1876, Article 8, quoted according to the English
translation published by
Atatürk Institute of Modern Turkish History, Boğaziçi University
(2004).
[8]
For details see Henry Cattan, The Solution of the Palestine
Refugee Problem. (Studies in International Relations, Vol.
VI.) Vienna: International Progress Organization, 1982, Chapter
“Palestinian Sovereignty,” pp. 15ff.
[9]
Signed at Sèvres, France, on 10 August 1920.
[10]
Article 132: “Outside her frontiers as fixed by the present
Treaty Turkey hereby renounces in favour of the Principal Allied
Powers all rights and title which she could claim on any ground
over or concerning any territories outside Europe which are not
otherwise disposed of by the present Treaty.”
[11]
This interpretation is also suggested by Henry Cattan, op.
cit., p. 20.
[12]
The decision was adopted on 24 July 1922, and the Mandate came
into effect on 26 September 1923.
[13]
Letter of Foreign Secretary Arthur James Balfour to Baron
Rothschild, a leader of the Jewish community of Britain, dated 2
November 1917. (Text quoted according to The Times,
London, November 9, 1917, p. 7: “Palestine for the Jews.
Official Sympathy.”)
[14]
Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations committed
the member states to assist those peoples of territories
formerly governed by countries defeated in World War I who were
considered “not yet able to stand by themselves under the
strenuous conditions of the modern world.” This formulation
(“not yet able”) logically implied a commitment to their future
independence.
[15]
Quoted according to: Palestine Papers 1917-1922: Seeds of
Conflict. Compiled and annotated by Doreen Ingrams. New
York: George Braziller, 1973, p. 73.
[16]
Quoted according to Michael S. Neiberg (ed.), The World War I
Reader: Primary and Secondary Sources. New York/London: New
York University Press, 2007, Chapter 6.2: “British Diplomacy –
The Hussein-McMahon Letters” / “Sir Henry McMahon, British High
Commissioner in Cairo, to Hussein Ibn Ali, the Sherif of Mecca,”
p. 335 (paragraph 1 of the assurances).
[17]
Ibid.
[18]
Quoted according to: Great Britain and Palestine, 1915-1945.
(Information Papers, No. 20.) London/New York: Royal Institute
of International Affairs, 1946, Chapter “Extracts from the
McMahon Correspondence of 1915-16 / No. 1. Letter from the
Sherif of Mecca to Sir Henry MacMahon, July 14, 1915,” p. 144.
[19]
Statement at the meeting of the Eastern Committee of the British
Cabinet, chaired by Lord Curzon, 5 December 1918, quoted
according to Jean Allain, International Law in the Middle
East: Closer to Power than Justice. Aldershot, Hants (UK) /
Burlington, VT (USA): Ashgate, 2004, p. 78.
[20]
Quoted according to: International Documents on Israel &
Palestine 1915 to 2008. Collected & Edited by David Lane.
First Printed Edition June 2008, Chapter “The Churchill White
Paper (June 1922),” p. 38.
[21]
Article 2 of the British Mandate for Palestine, confirmed by the
Council of the League of Nations on 24 July 1922, and enacted on
26 September 1923.
[22]
For details see Mark Mazower, No Enchanted Palace: The End of
Empire and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations.
Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2009, Chapter
3: “Nations, Refugees, and Territory – The Jews and the Lessons
of the Nazi New Order,” esp. pp. 133ff.
[23]
Joseph B. Schechtman, European Population Transfers,
1939-1945. New York: Oxford University Press, 1946.
[24]
Joseph B. Schechtman, Population Transfers in Asia. New
York: Hallsby Press, 1949, Chapter III: “The Case for
Arab-Jewish Transfer of Population,” p. 84.
[25]
Quoted according to Rafael Medoff, Zionism and the Arabs: An
American Jewish Dilemma, 1898-1948. Westport, CT: Praeger
Publishers, 1997, p. 104.
[26]
UN Charter, Article 12(1): “While the Security Council is
exercising in respect of any dispute or situation the functions
assigned to it in the present Charter, the General Assembly
shall not make any recommendation with regard to that dispute or
situation unless the Security Council so requests.”
[27]
Arab and other states had initially suggested, inter alia,
that the General Assembly should seek an advisory opinion from
the International Court of Justice on the following question:
“Whether the United Nations, or any of its Member States, is
competent to enforce or recommend the enforcement of any
proposal concerning the constitution and future government of
Palestine, in particular any plan of partition which is contrary
to the wishes, or adopted without the consent, of the
inhabitants of Palestine.” (Official Records of the General
Assembly, Second Session, Ad Hoc Committee on the
Palestine Question, Doc. A/AC 14/32 [1947].) The initiative
was narrowly rejected (21 to 20 votes) by a resolution of the
General Assembly acting as Ad Hoc Committee (24
November 1947).
[28]
For details see Hans Köchler, The Security Council as
Administrator of Justice? Reflections on the Antagonistic
Relationship between Power and Law. (Studies in
International Relations, Vol. XXXII.) Vienna: International
Progress Organization, 2011.
[29]
It has been stated that Israel derives its existence from a UN
resolution it pledged to respect upon its admission to the world
organization, but has been violating from the outset. – Cf. the
wording of UN General Assembly Resolution 273 (III) adopted on
11 May 1949: “[…]
Recalling its resolutions of 29 November 1947 and 11 December
1948 and taking note of the declarations and explanations made
by the representatives of the Government of Israel before the
Ad Hoc Political Committee in respect of the implementation
of the said resolutions, The General Assembly […]
1. Decides that Israel is a peace-loving State which accepts the
obligations contained in the Charter and is able and willing to
carry out those obligations; 2. Decides to admit Israel to
membership in the United Nations.”
[30]
Statement by Ambassador Warren R. Austin, United States
Representative in the Security Council,
UN Doc. S/P. V. 271, March 19, 1948.
[31]
It is obvious that this passive attitude is due to the position
of at least one veto-wielding country.
[32]
Par. 1, Doc. S/691, 5 March 1948.
[33]
Doc. S/714, II, 1 April 1948.
[34]
Par. 1, Doc. S/773, 22 May 1948.
[35]
Par. 11, Doc. S/801, 29 May 1948.
[36]
Par. 1, Doc. S/902, 15 July 1948. The language of Par. 3 is
typical of the Council’s “timid” approach concerning enforcement
of its own resolutions in matters related to Palestine: the
Council declared that failure to comply with the resolution –
namely to “desist” from further military action” – “would
demonstrate the existence of a breach of the peace within the
meaning of Article 39 of the Charter requiring immediate
consideration by the Security Council with a view to such
further action under Chapter VII of the Charter as may be
decided upon by the Council.”
[37]
Par. 1(i), Resolution 242 (1967) of 22 November 1967.
[38]
For an analysis of the implications of the veto provision for
the legitimacy of the United Nations Organization in general see
Hans Köchler, The Voting Procedure in the United Nations
Security Council: Examining a Normative Contradiction and its
Consequences on International Relations. (Studies in
International Relations, Vol. XVII.) Vienna: International
Progress Organization, 1991.
[39]
Par. 1(i).
[40]
It is to be noted that the French version of the resolution
differs from the English text insofar as it can also be
interpreted as a call to retreat from “the” – not only some –
recently occupied territories (“Retrait
des forces
armées israéliennes des
territoires occupés lors du recent conflit”
/ underlining by the author).
[41]
Plan of Partition with Economic Union,
Part III: “The City of Jerusalem,” attached to Resolution 181
(II).
[42]
Israeli Knesset, Basic Law: Jerusalem, Capital of Israel,
13 July 1980, Par.
1: “Jerusalem, complete and united, is the capital of Israel.”
– A similar annexation law was later adopted by the Knesset
regarding the Syrian Golan Heights: Golan Heights Law, 14
December 1981. (Par. 1: “The
Law, jurisdiction and administration of the state shall apply to
the Golan Heights …”)
[43]
For
details see Hans Köchler (ed.), The Iraq Crisis and the
United Nations: Power Politics vs. the International Rule of
Law. Memoranda and Declarations of the International Progress
Organization (1990 – 2003). (Studies in International
Relations, Vol. XXVIII.) Vienna: International Progress
Organization, 2004.
[44]
For a documentation of the respective Chapter VII resolutions
see Hans Köchler and Jason Subler (eds.), The Lockerbie
Trial: Documents Related to the I.P.O. Observer Mission.
(Studies in International Relations, Vol. XXVII.) Vienna:
International Progress Organization, 2002, pp. 121ff.
[45]
It is to be recalled that Article 16, dealing with Turkey’s
renunciation of sovereignty in the territories it surrendered as
a result of the war, was based on the understanding of “the
future of these territories and islands being settled or to be
settled by the parties concerned.”
[46]
Through the Balfour Declaration of 1917 and subsequent
statements by Britain and other interested parties after World
War I and in the course of and shortly after World War II.
[47]
On the historical and legal details of Palestinian sovereignty
see esp. Henry Cattan, The Solution of the Palestine Refugee
Problem, pp. 15ff.
[48]
We refer here to the veto rule of Article 27(3) of the UN
Charter, which has enabled the main strategic partner of the
occupying power in Palestine to block each and every initiative
towards the enforcement of the law in Palestine.
[49]
The Committee was established by General Assembly resolution
3376 (XXX) on 10 November 1975.
[50]
For details see also Sally V. Mallison and W. Thomas Mallison,
“The Jerusalem Problem in public international law: Juridical
Status and a start towards solution,” in: Hans Köchler (ed.),
The Legal Aspects of the Palestine Problem with Special Regard
to the Question of Jerusalem, pp. 98-119.
[51]
For details see also Hans Köchler, “The Palestinian People’s
Right of Self-determination: Basis of Peace in the Middle East,”
loc. cit.
[52]
On the right of resistance see, inter alia, Richard A.
Falk and Burns H. Weston, “The Relevance of International Law to
Israeli and Palestinian Rights in the West Bank and Gaza,” in:
Emma Playfair (ed.), International Law and the Administration
of Occupied Territories:
Two Decades of Israeli Occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
New York: Oxford University Press, 1992, pp. 143ff. [53] On the definition of legal norms see Hans Kelsen, Pure Theory of Law. Translation from the second (revised and enlarged) German edition by Max Knight. Berkeley / Los Angeles / London: University of California Press, 1967, esp. Chapter I/6/c (“The Law As a Normative Coercive Order …”), pp. 44ff.
[54]
Resolution 377 [V] AA, adopted at the 302nd plenary
meeting on 3 November 1950: The General Assembly “[r]
esolves that
if the Security Council, because of lack of
unanimity of the permanent members, fails to exercise its
primary responsibility for the maintenance of international
peace and security in any case where there appears to be a
threat to the peace, breach of the peace, or act of aggression,
the General Assembly shall consider the matter
immediately
with a view to making appropriate recommendations to Members for
collective measures (…) to maintain or restore international
peace and security.” The Seventh (1980-1982) and Tenth (1997,
adjourned in 2006) Emergency Special Sessions of the General
Assembly, convened on the basis of Uniting for Peace, were
devoted to the Palestinian issue.
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