Excerpt from Are critics of Israeli
occupation getting nervous? by David Suissa Former Israeli Supreme Court
Justice Edmond Levy, led a commission that concluded that “Israeli settlements
are legal under international law.” The report concludes that the laws of
belligerent occupation do not apply de jute to Israel ’s presence in the West Bank . Is that reasonable? As Avi Bell, professor at the University
of San Diego School of Law, notes: “One of the sine quibus non of belligerent
occupation, as reaffirmed recently in an expert conference organized by the
International Committee of the Red Cross, is that the occupation take place on
foreign territory,” adding that “considerable state practice supports the
traditional view that captured territory is ‘foreign’ only when another state
has sovereignty.” Bell asserts that the Levy commission “is on solid ground in
observing that neither Jordan nor any other foreign state had territorial
sovereignty over the West Bank in 1967 and that the territory cannot therefore
be ‘foreign’ for purposes of the law of belligerent occupation.” In fact, one
could persuasively argue that Israel itself was already the lawful sovereign over the West Bank in 1967.
Individuals such as yourself ignore the binding League of Nations agreements
which laid down the Jewish legal right to settle anywhere in western Palestine,
the area between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea, an entitlement
unaltered in international law. This “Mandate for Palestine ” was
fully embraced by the international community. Fifty-one member countries — the
entire League of Nations — unanimously declared on July 24, 1922 : “Whereas recognition has been given to the historical
connection of the Jewish people with Palestine and to
the grounds for reconstituting their national home in that country.” As Eli
Hertz and other experts have pointed out, political rights to
self-determination as a polity for Arabs were guaranteed by the same League of Nations in four
other mandates — in Lebanon and Syria [The French Mandate], Iraq , and later Trans-Jordan [The British Mandate]. Arab entity
called Palestine never existed; the term Palestine referred
only to the Jews.
Moreover, the Arabs never established
a Palestinian state when the UN in 1947 recommended to partition Palestine , and to
establish “an Arab and a Jewish state” (not a Palestinian state, it should be
noted).
Nor did the Arabs recognize or
establish a Palestinian state during the two decades prior to the Six-Day War
when the West Bank was under Jordanian control and the Gaza Strip was under
Egyptian control; nor did the Palestinian Arabs clamor for autonomy or
independence during those years under Jordanian and Egyptian rule. It’s a fact,
not an opinion, that the Arab Palestinian movement came of age only after the
Arabs lost the Six Day War and the hated Zionists took over the West Bank .
Resolutions 242 and 338 never branded
Israel as an “unlawful occupier” or an “aggressor.” The fact is, the
resolution never called on Israel to withdraw from all the “territories,” while the wording of
the resolutions themselves clearly reflect Israel ’s contention that none of the territories were occupied land
taken by force in an unjust war. In contrast, the revisionist International
Court of Justice, like to quote, repeatedly talks of the “… illegality of [Israel ’s] territorial acquisition,” misleading readers by ignoring
Arab aggression and concealing “the provisions of the Charter concerning cases
in which the use of force is lawful,” as was the case of the 1967 Six-Day War.
In fact, if you study the minutes of the six month ‘debate’ over the wording of
Resolution 242, you’ll see that draft resolution proposals that speak of
“occupied territories,” “aggression” and called on Israel to “withdraw immediately all its forces to the positions they
held prior to 5 June 1967 ,” were all
defeated. As is well documented, one can easily trace the General Assembly’s
attempts to change the status of the Territories, doctoring the definition of
their status from “territories” to “Occupied Territories” to “Arab territories”
to “occupied Palestinian territories” to “Occupied Palestinian Territory” and
finally to “occupied Palestinian territory, including Jerusalem.” All of the
above has been documented in detail by legal expert Eli Hertz. Ibish doesn't
get into all those details, and who can blame him? They would severely
undermine his “black and white” case.
As if all that weren’t enough to show
that this is hardly a slam dunk case, Professor Bell notes an additional reason
for questioning the de jure application of the laws of belligerent occupation
to the West Bank : Israel ’s peace agreement with Jordan .
He quotes expert Yoram Dinstein on
this point: “The rules of belligerent occupation cannot be applied to Israel’s
presence in the West Bank in light of the combined effect of ... the
Jordanian-Israeli Treaty of Peace of 1994 and the series of agreements with the
Palestinians. There is simply no room for belligerent occupation in the absence
of belligerence, namely, war.” On the issue of settlements, Bell continues, “the
Levy report likewise adduces several strong arguments to the effect that even
if the laws of belligerent occupation applied to Israel ’s presence in the West Bank , the Fourth Geneva Convention poses no bar to the kinds of
actions that are subsumed under the term ‘settlement activities.’”
Again, you chooses to ignore the
crucial fact that while The Fourth Geneva Convention forbids “transfers” and
“deportations” by the occupying state of parts of its population into occupied
territory, it does not forbid “settlements.” As Bell explains,
officials of the state of Israel have provided services to settlers and sometimes encouraged
them, but the state of Israel has not transferred any Israeli to the West Bank against his or
her will. In fact, as even anti-settlement activists like Talia Sasson
acknowledge, “there was never a considered, ordered decision by the state of Israel , by any Israeli government” on settlements. “There is no
precedent,” Bell writes, “for any other state being adjudged to have violated
the Fourth Geneva Convention simply on the basis of permitting or facilitating
private preferences in the way Israel has done.” In a worst case scenario, even if facilitating
private Jewish residential preferences in the West Bank were otherwise suspect
“transfers,” the Levy report notes that sui generis rules apply to the area:
“Article 6 of the Mandate of Palestine demands ‘encourage[ment], in cooperation
with the Jewish Agency ... [of] close settlement by Jews on the land, including
State lands ...’”
Bell quotes the late Yale professor and
international law expert Eugene Rostow as asserting that “this command is
preserved by article 80 of the UN Charter, and, if the West Bank is under
belligerent occupation, by article 43 of the Hague Regulations.” I could go on,
but you get the picture: The deeper you investigate the accusation that Israel is an “illegal occupier,” the more you realize that this is
hardly an open and shut case. What would happen if this “alternative” view ever
gained traction? Well, for one thing, the global movement to make Israel the most hated nation on the planet would definitely stall.
Deprived of their cherished “illegal Israeli occupation” lightning rod, what
would the Israel haters do then? Would they be forced to finally confront the
unpublicized and miserable conditions of Palestinians living in Lebanon and Jordan , who are much worse off than Palestinians living in the West Bank ? Would they be
forced to admit that the Arabs with the most human rights, the most freedom and
the most economic opportunities in the Middle East live in that hated Zionist
state, Israel? Would they also have to admit that Israel has offered to end the occupation three times, and that the
Palestinians refused each time? What would happen if the mainstream media ever
got hold of the narrative that the Israel occupation may not be so illegal after all? As shocking as it
may sound, one can make a case that it might benefit the peace process. How so?
Because Israel can’t credibly negotiate “land for peace” if it is seen as
having no rights to the land in the first place.
As I wrote in my original column, one
of the reasons negotiations with the Palestinians have gone nowhere is that,
since Palestinians believe the land is already theirs, they have no incentive
to negotiate, let alone compromise. Until they realize that Israel does, in fact, have rights to the land, why should they
compromise? What is there to negotiate? Of course, don’t bet on any of these
“alternate” views gaining traction any time soon. Ibish and his ilk know that
there’s a better chance of convincing the world media that Ahmadinejad is a
peacenik than convincing them that the Israeli occupation is not illegal.
Truisms against Israel die hard. But cynicism is no excuse. The “disputed, not
illegal” position is a fair and reasonable one. This debate has nothing to do,
it must be noted, with whether one thinks the occupation is a good or moral
idea or even in Israel ’s interest. Those issues have dominated the dialogue up until
now. The debate ignited by the Levy report is about legal rights. This is an
important debate that is long overdue. If Israel can credibly assert its rights, this could have positive
implications for the peace process and put the ills of the Middle East in a fresh
perspective. The pervasive propaganda that for decades has made Israel the Middle East ’s favorite scapegoat — because of its “illegal occupation”— has
only hurt the people of the Middle East . No matter what people like Ibish tell you, this should be the
beginning of a great debate, not the end of one.
Some key References:
Former Israeli Supreme Court Justice Edmond Levy, Avi Bell, professor at the
University of San Diego School of Law Talia Sasson
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