http://www.jewishworldreview.com/0511/jkelly052711.php3

 

May 27, 2011 / 23 Iyar, 5771 

Putting 'Palestinian' claims under the microscope called history 

By Jack Kelly 

 

Arabs say Israel's present borders are illegitimate because they are the
product of conquest. Israel took the Golan Heights from Syria, the West Bank
from Jordan, and the Gaza Strip from Egypt in the Six Day War (5-10 June,
1967). 

Arabs - and apparently President Barack Obama - think Israel's borders
should revert to essentially what they were before the Six Day War. 

Those borders too were a product of conquest - Arab conquest. And if
Israel's borders are illegitimate, so, too, are the borders of Syria,
Lebanon, Iraq and Jordan. 

Israel declared its independence on May 15, 1948. The next day five Arab
armies invaded to try to strangle the infant nation in its crib. They failed
- but not entirely. Egypt seized the Gaza Strip and Jordan seized the West
Bank during this war. Israel's borders from 1949 to 1967 were the
UN-brokered armistice lines from the 1948 war. 

But the legal history of Israel's borders - and those of Lebanon, Syria,
Iraq and Jordan - go back to the end of World War I. For 500 years before
then, all these lands had been provinces of the Ottoman (Turkish) Empire. 

The League of Nations, predecessor to the United Nations, carved out of the
corpse of the Ottoman Empire four "Mandates" - for Syria, Lebanon,
Mesopotamia (Iraq) and Palestine, which was later subdivided between what
was intended to be the "Jewish National Home" and Transjordan (now Jordan). 

"Recognition has been given to the historic connection of the Jewish people
with Palestine and to the grounds for reconstituting their national home in
that country," all 51 countries in the League of Nations declared on July
24, 1922. 

The "Mandate for Palestine" gave Jews the legal right to settle anywhere in
western Palestine, an area of 10,000 square miles stretching from the Jordan
River to the Mediterranean Sea. The area set aside for "Jewish Palestine"
included the Golan Heights, all of the West Bank, and the Gaza Strip. 

The League guaranteed the right to self government for Jews in the Mandate
for Palestine, for Arabs in the other three. The League gave responsibility
for administering the mandates in Lebanon and Syria to the French; in
Palestine and Iraq to the British. 


"The mandate (for Palestine) implicitly denies Arab claims to national
political rights in the area in favor of the Jews," wrote international law
expert Eugene Rostow in 1993. "The mandated territory was in effect reserved
to the Jewish people for their self determination and political development,
in acknowledgement of the historic connection of the Jewish people to the
land." 

So, according to the borders established by the League of Nations' Mandates,
Israeli settlers in the West Bank aren't squatting on Arab land. The Arabs
in the West Bank and Gaza are squatting on Jewish land. 

There'd been a Jewish state for more than 1,000 years in "Jewish Palestine,"
but there was never a sovereign Arab state in the region, which was known as
"Judea" until the Romans changed the name in the year 135 after crushing a
Jewish revolt. The Jews in "Jewish Palestine" started calling themselves
"Israelis" after independence in 1948. Before then, it was they who
customarily were referred to as "Palestinians." 

I have some sympathy for the argument these boundaries were drawn by
European colonialists with little regard for the desires of the inhabitants,
and ought no longer to be valid. But that would apply as well to the borders
of Lebanon, Syria, Iraq and Jordan. Iraq and Jordan didn't exist until the
League of Nations Mandates created them. 

Most Israelis wish neither to incorporate the 4.2 million Arabs who live in
the West Bank and Gaza into Israel, or to expel them by force from "Judea
and Samaria." The best solution, from an Israeli perspective, would be for
Jordan to take back the West Bank, and for Egypt to take back Gaza. But
neither Jordan nor Egypt want much to do with today's "Palestinians." 

So most Israelis support creation of a Palestinian state. They ask only as a
precondition that Palestinian leaders recognize the right of Israel to
exist, and stop making terror attacks against Israelis. Legally and morally,
it should pretty much be up to the Israelis to determine what the borders of
a Palestinian state should be. 

President Obama's understanding of Middle Eastern history seeems to go back
no further than 1967. If he learned a little more, he'd make fewer mistakes.


 



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