Who can speak for Palestine? The West Bank Palestinians are
economically and politically separated from their relatives in Gaza,
and both operate separately from the Palestinian community in the
Diaspora. Hamas is divided. Fatah is divided. The Palestinians have no
cohesion to create a unified voice, no power to present a coherent
voice, no means to manage a compromising voice. It seems that the
Palestinians have no voice, but the appearance is deceiving; the
Palestinians have potent voices of international law and international
reason. A major problem is they lack active support from an
international community that has been negligent in providing the
necessary means to implement United Nations (UN) resolutions and
mandating accepted international laws.
Legal voices have been quietly suppressed; their arguments confined to
conferences and journals. These voices are receiving a renewed impetus
to take the stage in this decades old struggle and be heard before
international institutions, and for good reason; the route described by
international law might be the only road that has a solution which
brings peace with justice to the Middle East. A disparity between
contenders that does not allow for meaningful negotiations has provoked
the international community to re-examine resolutions that censored
Israel’s checkered development.
Several interlocutors have presented the need for intercession of
international law in the Palestinian/Israeli dispute. (Isn’t the use of
law the accepted measure for resolving international disputes?) Many of
the legal opinions support the Palestinian case before the court of
law. These opinions from respected international legal experts, which
give a voice to the Palestinians, cannot be conveniently summarized.
Nevertheless, some of their more cogent arguments illuminate the legal
thrust.
Note: The specific arguments are only presented in order to demonstrate
that the legal aspect is most important in resolving the struggle and
that the Palestinians have a sympathetic legal voice. There is no
intent to conclude these are the only legal opinions and that these
opinions are the final conclusions from international laws governing
the dispute.
Ohio State University Law Professor John Quigley, in a lecture at a
1999 Case University symposium: The Legal Foundations of Peace, and
prosperity in the Middle East: The Role of Law in a Palestinian-Israeli
Accommodation, explored the issues to be addressed in final status
negotiations.
“The United Nations had long viewed the rights of the Palestinians as
being in jeopardy, particularly since the 1967 war, when Israel
occupied the Gaza Strip and the West Bank of the Jordan River, two
sectors of historic Palestine that it had not occupied in 1948. As
suggested by the United Nations General Assembly, an international
conference would be convened with certain principles understood in
advance to protect the rights of the Palestinians. These rights would
include the right of return for displaced Palestinians, the right of
self-determination of the Palestinian people and their right to
establish a state, an Israeli withdrawal from the Gaza Strip and West
Bank, including Jerusalem, and a rejection of the permissibility of
Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip and West Bank. The United Nations
had previously determined Israel to be in violation of international
law on these issues. Thus, protection of rights was built into the
contemplated peace process.
That approach was abandoned, however, in 1991, when the United States
and the Soviet Union hosted a conference in Madrid to promote instead a
negotiation between the two parties alone, rather than an international
conference, and with no explicit prior specification of the rights to
be protected.”
Borders – “Belligerent occupation yields only a right of temporary
possession, not title to territory. The sovereign right of the
legitimate sovereign remains intact, even though it is not able to
exercise control. Thus, even apart from what Resolution 242 may mean,
Israel is under an obligation to withdraw from the Gaza Strip and West
Bank.”
Settlements – “Under the law of belligerent occupation, the
establishment of civilian settlements is unlawful. Article 49 of the
Geneva Civilians Convention states, "The Occupying Power shall not . .
. transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies “
Displaced Persons – “The only exception to a right of return is that in
which a person voluntarily takes on a new citizenship in a manner that
indicates a renunciation of residency rights in the former locale. The
right of return is not defeated by a change in sovereignty in the
territory from which a person was displaced…This norm requiring a state
to repatriate the displaced is followed in international practice. In
dealing with military conflict situations, the United Nations Security
Council requires states to repatriate the displaced.”
“An Israel-P.L.O. agreement that fails to vindicate the legally
protected interests of Palestinians would leave claims of individuals
to be resolved by whatever international mechanisms that may be in a
position to consider them. Rather than resolving the outstanding
issues, such an agreement would let these issues fester, causing
difficulties for decades to come.”
Jerusalem - “In the absence of any legal base put forward by Israel
itself, various scholars have argued, in support of Israel's claim to
sovereignty in Jerusalem, that Palestine had no sovereignty when Great
Britain abandoned in 1948 its League of Nations role as mandatory power
in Palestine. According to this argument, Palestine was open to
occupation by whoever might take it, and on this basis Israel has
sovereignty over whatever territory it controls, including west
Jerusalem from 1948, and east Jerusalem from 1967. This theory enjoys
little following, however, because under the League of Nations
arrangement, sovereignty lay in the community of citizens of Palestine,
not in Great Britain. A population under a League mandate was deemed to
be a subject of international law with a legal interest in the
territory that was separate from that of the mandatory power. In
Palestine under the mandate, the inhabitants carried a Palestinian
citizenship. When Britain withdrew, the community of citizens was
entitled to exercise sovereignty. The majority of that community of
citizens was represented by a political organization, the Arab Higher
Committee, that was recognized by the United Nations, and which
asserted a right to establish a government for Palestine. Thus,
Britain's departure left no void of sovereignty…The international
community has given little support to Israel's claims over Jerusalem.
Regarding the eastern sector, it has considered it to be under
belligerent occupation, and therefore not subject to appropriation by
Israel. Regarding the western sector, it has continued to view the
proposal for an internationalized status as viable, and nearly all
states that maintain diplomatic relations with Israel have declined to
locate their embassies in Jerusalem.”
In another article "International Law and the Palestinian
Refugees," Hastings International and Comparative Law Review, 2005
Professor Quigley argues “that the conflict is best understood – and
poses the greatest chance of ultimate resolution – in the context of
international law.”
“that under the established norms of international law, the
Palestinian people have been unlawfully displaced and have a right to
repatriation that is not able to be negotiated away through the
international political process…The displaced Palestinians should not
have to lobby for their right of return vis-ŕ-vis Israel or vis-ŕ-vis
the Palestinian leadership. The right is guaranteed by human rights
norms. Just as a state that tortures is obliged to desist without being
cajoled and without negotiation, so a state that refuses to repatriate
is obliged to desist, namely, by repatriating.”
Anthony D'Amato, Leighton Professor of Law, Northwestern University
School of Law presents controversial opinions in his legal survey of
the conflict in an article:
The Legal Boundaries of Israel in International Law, JURIST, April 8, 2002
“…the Kellogg-Briand Peace Pact of 1928, as definitively glossed by the
International Tribunal at Nuremberg in 1948, has abolished forever the
idea of acquisition of territory by military conquest. No matter who
was the aggressor, international borders cannot change by the process
of war. Resort to war is itself illegal, and while self-defense is of
course legal, the self-defense cannot go so far as to constitute a new
war of aggression all its own. And if it does, the land taken may at
best be temporarily occupied, but cannot be annexed. Thus after all the
wars, the bloodshed, aggressions and counter-aggressions, acts of
terror, reprisals, and attendant UN resolutions, nothing has changed
the legal situation as it existed after Resolution 181 in 1947. The
legal boundaries of Israel and Palestine remain today exactly as they
were delimited in Resolution 181.”
Professor D’Amato examines another aspect of the controversy in an article,
THE WEST BANK WALL, JURIST Guest Columnist, February 24, 2004
“In my view, the controversy does not solely concern Israel and
Palestine. Palestine, it will be recalled, was a Mandate under the
League of Nations. Unlike the League’s other mandated territories, it
was not transferred to the UN Trusteeship Council when the League
dissolved in 1946. But the lack of transfer does not mean that the
mandate expired, any more than the death of a trustee would terminate a
trust. The “administration” of the Palestine Mandate legally devolved
upon the General Assembly. In 1947, the General Assembly passed a
resolution partitioning the Mandate into two areas, one to be governed
by a new Jewish state and the other to be governed by a new Arab state.
Although Israel became a state in 1948, Palestine did not become a
state. In my reading of this (admittedly complex) history, the
Palestine Mandate has therefore never legally been terminated. Until it
is terminated-that is, until a new Arab state is created-the General
Assembly retains its supervisory powers over the Palestine territory.
While the extent of that supervisory power is disputable given all the
events that have occurred since 1947, at the very minimum it entitles
the General Assembly to retain a legal interest in the proper
disposition of the mandated territory.”
International law is neither precise nor entirely accepted by all
nations. Nevertheless, it has been used together with other means to
resolve similar conflicts in South Africa, Rwanda, Bosnia and Kosovo.
The Palestinian/Israel conflict begs for the force of de jure and the
forces of nations; the same economic, political, material and military
forces used to resolve previous disputes. Those who are concerned with
the effects on Israel by imposition of international law should realize
that if Israel is lessened by international law, it will only be due to
Israel having ignored international law; if Israel is reshaped by the
context of international law, it will only be due to Israel having
distorted the context of international law in order to reshape the
Middle East in accord with its own vision.
Everyone should realize that the conflict goes beyond the Israelis and
Palestinians. This conflict has bred terrorism, caused other severe
conflicts, stimulated arms races, strengthened religious extremists;
brought death and destruction to many parts of the globe and has a
tendency to engulf our entire civilization in a cataclysm. The
international community must be assured that the solution is not worked
to suit the agenda of a relatively few; but correctly responds to the
alarms of all.
The inability to force responses to UN resolutions and provide a legal
context to the Israeli/Palestinian conflict is a principal reason for
continuation of the decades old conflict. The corollary is that only
enforcement of UN resolutions and adherence to international law will
resolve the conflict.