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Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Is History To Repeat Itself In The Middle East?


Did you know that in 1919 Emir Feisal wrote to Chaim Weizmann and welcomed him home as part of the Feisal-Weizmann Agreement?  Most people do not.  Here is a history of the area and a new proposal to make Jordan the home of the Palestinians. Ironically, that was to be the way it was with the Balfour Declaration in 1917.  

The attached posting gives a history from 1917 to the present. It is well worth reading.

Conservative Tom



Palestine, Back to the Future… Again.

Unknown - Unknown,  June 25th, 2012

There was a time when the lands now known as Israel, (including Judea and Samaria and Gaza), and most of Jordan were called “Palestine”.  In fact, theBalfour Declaration of 1917 declared
    “His Majesty’s government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people”.
There followed considerable cooperation between the Jews, represented by Chaim Weizmann and the Arabs living in Mesopotamia, now Iraq, and Jordan, represented by Emir Feisal.  As a result, the Feisal-Weizmann Agreement was signed in January 1919, in which it was agreed that the Jews would get the lands lying west of the Jordan River watershed to the Mediterranean and the Arabs would get the land east of it.
Two months later Faisal wrote to Felix Frankfuter, the then leader of the American Zionists, extending a welcome:
    “We Arabs, especially the educated among us look with the deepest sympathy on the Zionist movement. Our deputation here in Paris is fully acquainted with the proposals submitted yesterday by the Zionist Organisation to Peace Conference, and we regard them as moderate proper. We will
    do our best, in so far as we are concerned, to help them through: we will wish the Jews a most hearty welcome home.”
Unfortunately that initial agreement and embrace were overtaken by events.  The British and the French had other plans.
Finally in 1920, the allied powers, Britain, France, Italy and Japan adopted theSan Remo Resolution in evidence of their agreement
    “The High Contracting Parties agree to entrust, by application of the provisions of Article 22, [Covenant of League of Nations ] the administration of Palestine, within such boundaries as may be determined by the Principal Allied Powers, to a Mandatory, to be selected by the said Powers. The Mandatory will be responsible for putting into effect the declaration originally made on November 8, 1917, by the British Government, and adopted by the other Allied Powers, in favour of the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people,”
This agreement was binding in international law as these powers had the right to dispose of these lands.
What remained was for the League of Nations to draw up the Palestine Mandate. Originally, the boundaries of Palestine included what is now Jordan, but a few months prior to the Palestine Mandate being confirmed by the Council of League of Nations on July 1922, the Jews were told that they must consent to the removal of Transjordan from the Jewish homeland if they wished the Mandate to be passed.  And so they did, under duress. And so was born Article 25 of the Mandate:
    “In the territories lying between the Jordan [river] and the eastern boundary of Palestine as ultimately determined, the Mandatory shall be entitled, with the consent of the Council of the League of Nations, to postpone or withhold application o
    f such provisions of this mandate as he may consider inapplicable to the existing local conditions, and to make such provision for the administration of the territories as he may consider suitable to those conditions”
Pursuant to this paragraph, Britain severed all lands lying east of the Jordan River from the Palestine Mandate and gave the lands to the Hashemites. It was first renamed Trans-Jordan and then just Jordan,
When the League of Nations was replaced by the United Nations in 1945, the Charter of the United Nations described “Mandates” as “Trusteeships” and specifically included in Article 80, the following,
    “…nothing in this Chapter shall be construed in or of itself to alter in any manner the rights whatsoever of any states or any peoples or the terms of existing international instruments to which Members of the United Nations may respectively be parties.”
in order to preserve the rights the Jews had acquired under the League of Nations.
There followed many White Papers, resolutions, wars and peace processes, all designed to erode Jewish rights to the land described in the Palestine Mandate, all to no avail, For all intents and purposes, the peace process is dead and Abu Mazen, otherwise known as Mahmoud Abbas, the leader of the PA, has been refusing to negotiate for the last three years.
This futile effort has resulted in a search for alternate solutions. Newt Gingrich went public with his newsworthy statement “”We’ve had an invented Palestinian people, who are in fact Arabs, and were historically part of the Arab community,”. Gov Romney did him one better and said “It’s the Palestinians who don’t want a two-state solution; they want to eliminate the State of Israel,” Didn’t they know that in our PC world, one is not supposed to declare that the Emperor has no clothes. The fiction underlying the failed peace process is more important than the truth.
Just a couple of weeks ago the Republican National Committee passed aresolution  providing that  “.. peace can be afforded the region only through a united Israel governed under one law for all people.”
The Florida Senate just filed a similar resolution with some important changes. It was preceded by these recitals, inter alia:
    “WHEREAS, the legal basis for the establishment of the State of Israel was a binding resolution under international law,  which was unanimously adopted by the League of Nations in 1922     and subsequently affirmed by both houses of the United States Congress, and
“WHEREAS, this resolution affirmed the establishment of a national home for the Jewish people in the historical region of the Land of Israel, including areas of Judea, Samaria, and Jerusalem, “
In it, the Members of the Senate affirmed that they
    “support Israel in its legal, historical, moral, and God-given right of self-governance and self-defense upon the entirety of its own lands, recognizing that Israel is neither an attacking force nor an occupier of the lands of others, and that peace can be afforded the region only through a whole and united Israel governed under one law for all people”.
Of particular interest is the fact that the Florida Senate is affirming that the San Remo Resolution  was a binding resolution, under international law, for the legal basis for the establishment of the State of Israel.  This flies in the face of all attempts by the international community to deny Israel those rights by asserting their interpretation of the provisions of the Fourth Geneva Convention as making the settlements, or the “occupation”, illegal.  It does no such thing.  Nor has anything else, since the Mandate in 1922, derogated from such rights. Futhermore, UN Res 181 , which was the basis of the Partition Plan, was a recommendation only. Also SC Res 242 didn’t contradict the original rights of the Jews.
This resolution is expected to pass and also to be incorporated into the Republican Party platform.
If not the two-state solution, then what?
The “Jordan is Palestine” solution has been mooted for decades. It is now gaining traction due in part to the Arab Spring which began a year ago.  Jordan now is feeling the tremors.  The majority of Palestinian leaders in Jordan, favour Jordan becoming a democratic/secular state. They have watched in dismay as similar forces in Egypt were overwhelmed by the Muslim Brotherhood and the Salafists. They are determined not to share their fate. They are lead by Mudar Zahran the author of Jordan’s King and the Muslim Brotherhood: An Unholy Marriage.
Zahran in his ground-breaking article, “Jordan is Palestine” published byMiddle East Forum in December 2011, argues:
    “Empowering Palestinian control of Jordan and giving Palestinians all over the world a place they can call home could not only defuse the population and demographic problem for Palestinians in Judea and Samaria but would also solve the much more complicated issue of the “right of return” for Palestinians in other Arab countries. Approximately a million Palestinian refugees and their descendants live in Syria and Lebanon, with another 300,000 in Jordan whom the Hashemite government still refuses to accept as citizens. How much better could their future look if there were a welcoming Palestinian Jordan?
“The Jordanian option seems the best possible and most viable solution to date. Decades of peace talks and billions of dollars invested by the international community have only brought more pain and suffering for both Palestinians and Israelis—alongside prosperity and wealth for the Hashemites and their cronies.”
The rationality and achievability of this solution, needs no elucidation.  It only needs the US to get behind it. While such an initiative by the US would be a departure from the position it has held since the founding of the State of Israel, it would not be a departure from her original position. As noted in the proposed Florida Senate resolution mentioned above, such a position was “affirmed by both houses of the United States Congress,” in 1922. These resolutions unanimously endorsed the “Mandate for Palestine,” confirming the irrevocable right of Jews to settle in the area of Palestine – anywhere between the Jordan River and the Mediterranean Sea”
And Zahran’s brave stance in which he wants the new Jordan, governed by Palestinians, to embrace Israel in true friendship, is also not new or novel.  It is a return to Emir Feisal’s warm embrace of the Jews in 1919.
Thus we are returning to our future.
- – -
Author, Ted Belman is Chief Editor athttp://www.israpundit.com/

1 comment:

  1. He also wrote this...

    "Provided the Arabs obtain their independence as demanded in my [forthcoming] Memorandum dated the 4th of January, 1919, to the Foreign Office of the Government of Great Britain, I shall concur in the above articles. But if the slightest modification or departure were to be made [regarding our demands], I shall not be then bound by a single word of the present Agreement which shall be deemed void and of no account or validity, and I shall not be answerable in any way whatsoever."

    Of course, as we know, the British and French had their own ideas about how to carve up the Ottoman Empire, and so the agreement only lasted a few months.

    --David

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