Please visit to our Middle East Books page to buy books about the Middle East.

Jewish News
 

Support MEF


Buy a book


More books





 

Random Fact

 

During 20 years of Arab rule Palestinian cruse death rate decreased from 21 per thousand to 19 per thousand. During next 20 years of Israeli rule Palestinian infant mortality rate decreased from 19 per thousand to 6 per thousand.
More Facts

 

 

Special features

 

Prayers for Israel!

Have a comment? Visit our guestbook or send us feedback.

Join our mailing list.

 
 

MEF Webring

Truth in the Middle East
by mef
Join Now | Ring Hub
< Prev | Random | Next >

 

Jewish National Rights and the Road Map

Jewish National Rights and the Road Map

By: Dr. Yoram Shifftan

It is remarkable that Tony Blair and George W. Bush, who are currently under intense pressure for what some say is a transgression of international law in going to war against Iraq without the blessing of the United Nations, are seeking to be involved in a real transgression of international law.

Setting aside the question of the importance of the settlements, opposition to the road map arises from its being a transgression of law in general, and international law in particular, and a violation of basic common sense. A fundamental principle of law is that if a trustee ceases to be a trustee, the purpose of the trust and the rights it confers on the beneficiary persist. This applies whether the beneficiary of the trust is an individual or a nation. Indeed, the rights of nations obtained by virtue of a League of Nations mandate are enshrined in the Charter of the United Nations, and this has also been confirmed by the International Court of Justice.

The Mandate of the League of Nations on Palestine is not only compatible with the settlements, but actually calls for the encouragement and facilitation of "close settlement" by Jews on the lands of all of Western Palestine. The original Mandate included the Golan and Transjordan, but later Jewish national rights there were "withheld" or "posponed". The Mandatory took upon itself to build in Palestine the infrastructure needed for a Jewish national home, which also involved facilitation of Jewish immigration to Palestine and the submission of an annual report to the Council of the League of Nations satisfying the Council that measures had been taken during the year to carry out the provisions of the Mandate. The Mandate forbids the ceding or leasing of the land destined for a Jewish state to the "Government of any foreign Power". All these rights of the Jewish people are currently still valid and binding in international law.

But if the Road Map is implemented then the continuing obligations of the Mandate will be violated. The Road Map is clearly a transgression of international law. Thus whereas the Road Map calls for the freezing of settlements and the dismantling of some, international law as expressed in the Mandate calls for the opposite, namely for the facilitation and encouragemnt of Jewish settlements.

It may be argued that Israel is entitled to give away what belongs to it just as an individual is entitled in law to give a gift. But here we come to the second major transgression of law and common sense arising from the Road Map. It is a principle of law that the donor of a gift shall do so from his free will and will not be under duress. A gift or a promise made under duress is not binding. Now, it is clear that when George Bush Senior connected the granting of loan guarantees with the settlements, this introduced an element of duress.

But now duress is the main feature of the Road Map. The requirement, emanating from a campaign of terror against Israel, to create another Palestinian state in Palestine by December 2003 - a requiremnt that if fulfilled will irreversibly take away the national rights of the Jewish people that were valid according to international law for almost a century - is unparalleled in the annals of nations. No nation has been asked to do anything like it. It also introduces a timescale that in itself constitutes a major source of duress. This is true in particular in view of Palestinian violations of all the Oslo requirements and the additional violence that erupted following Barak's generous offer, and also in view of decades of anti-Jewish violence in Palestine.

There should be enough time not only to conduct full internal Israeli discussions on the matter but also - if Israel were to unwisely decide that it is willing to consider making a gift of the little that remains of its national heritage as recognized by international law, for the sake of 'peace' - to check the sincerity of the other side before any further concessions are made. In view of past experience, this is of paramount importance.

The expression of sincerity would need to include a complete cessation of anti-Semitic incitement and the teaching (with success) of the Arab population that the Jews deserve at least one Jewish state, as is indeed also required by international law. Such a re-education program (which is comparable to the denazification program after WW2) would have to be maintained over a number of years, and not simply be a temporary tactical deception of the kind that happened at the beginning of Oslo and which made Israel give so much (out of its own initiative and compelling the Americans to accept it), only to be rewarded by a much worse situation than that existing at the beginning of the process.

Anything short of this would be the imposition on Israel of such a degree of duress that would make any subsequent Israeli commitments not binding in law.

###

Submitted July 29, 2003

Dr. Yoram Shifftan has published many articles on Israeli hasbara, in publications such as Ha'aretz, Ma'ariv, Hatzofeh, Hamodia and Ha'Uma. He has also presented a special series about hasbara on Arutz7 radio.

Search MEF

 

 

Random Quote

 

"Yes, brothers, with our souls and blood we redeem you, O Palestine. This is the decision of the people of exceeding strength. This is a sacred bond. We are up to this duty. You know I am saying this because I know our people. I know what it means that in the midst of this economic crisis, yet none of them complained. However, they said: Allah is great! Glory to Allah and his prophet! Jihad, jihad, jihad, jihad, jihad!"
Yasser Arafat - Palestinian 'President', Jan. 6, 2002, West Bank, to delegation of Arab leaders

More Quotes

 
 

Help MEF

 

Click an advertisement (please tell us if an ad is out of place. Thanks!):

 

Jewsgroups - All your Jewish News in One Location

 

Donations help us pay for our costs, including web site hosting, software costs, research, content development and attracting more users to this site. To donate to MEF, please contact us.


For tips about Working with the Internet please click here.

 

You are visitor #:

 

Vote

The polls are open - vote for your favourite Jew at My Favourite Jew.

 


 

Main Page | 20 Truths | The Basics | Quotes from Palestinian Leaders and Media

UN Resolutions 194/242Pictorial Sites and Videos | Truth and Lies | Horrors of the Middle East

Statistics |What the Koran says | Maps of the Middle East | Buy Israeli Products | Guest Columns

SITEMAP | Other Links | Activism | Old/New Guest Book | WebLog | Feedback Form | Mailing List

America and China

© 2001-2008 Middle East Facts

 Palestine