Castello Devachan
stands on a hillside at the end of Corso degli Inglesi, overlooking the Italian
Riviera town of San Remo . The villa itself has a chequered history, including use as
the local Gestapo HQ during the Second World War, but its claim to fame dates
from April 1920 when it was used by the newly-formed League of Nations to house a conference to decide the future
of the Middle East in the aftermath of the First World War.
Here lie the beginnings of the re-born State of Israel, and the Agreements made
at that conference are still valid today and vital to a proper understanding of
Israel 's right to its land, including territory
currently occupied by Palestinian Arabs.
To celebrate the
90th Anniversary of the San Remo Agreement, the European Coalition for Israel held a commemorative event over the
weekend of 24th/25th April this year. This took place on the same dates, and in
the same place, as the original conference ninety years earlier. We came
together to declare that the original agreement still stands to day, and to
hear legal argument from international scholars concerning Israel 's current occupation of 'Palestine '. This article is a summary of the
information shared at the commemoration.
Before we examine
the Agreement made in 1920, let us back-track a few years. In November 1917
Britain issued what has come to be known as the Balfour Declaration, stating
that “His Majesty's Government view with favor the establishment in Palestine
of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavors to
facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that
nothing should be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of
existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political
status enjoyed by Jews in any other country.” At the time, the province of Palestine was still part of the Turkish Ottoman
Empire, with which Britain and her allies were at war.
The League
of Nations
Within weeks of
this Declaration being published, Britain had liberated Palestine from Turkish rule, and was therefore in a
position to implement its policy. Watching from the other side of the Atlantic , US President Woodrow Wilson issued what
has become known as the Fourteen
Points. Included
as part of point 12 was the statement that the “Turkish portion of the present Ottoman
Empire should be assured a secure sovereignty, but the other nationalities
which are now under Turkish rule should be assured an undoubted security of
life and an absolutely unmolested opportunity of autonomous development”. These
fourteen points became generally accepted by other nations following the end of
the War, and formed the basis for the League of Nations , which was established by the Treaty of Versailles.
We come now to the
San Remo Conference, held at Villa Devachan from 19th to 26th
April 1920 .
This was an
international meeting of the post-World War I Allied Supreme Council, attended
by the four Principal Allied Powers of World War I who were represented by the
Prime Ministers of Britain (David Lloyd George), France (Alexandre Millerand)
and Italy (Francesco Nitti) and by
This Conference
got to work on deciding the future of the Middle East following the collapse of the Ottoman Empire . In accordance with Woodrow Wilson's
fourteen points, the victorious allies were not going to acquire new colonies
in the area, but were going to establish new sovereign states there over a period
of time. The parties recognized that not all the areas of the Middle East were yet ready for full independence, so
they agreed to set up Mandates for each territory, with one of the Allied
Powers being put in charge of implementing each Mandate.
Initially there
were four Mandates agreed, for Lebanon , Syria , Mesopotamia (Iraq ) and Palestine . In the first three Mandates, it was
recognized that the indigenous people were able to govern themselves, with the
Mandatory Power assisting in setting up the institutions of government where
necessary.
The Mandate for Palestine
That was not true
of Palestine , as this was to become a homeland for the
Jewish people and the vast majority of them were not yet living in the Land.
The Mandate for Palestine was thus completely different from the others, and set out
how the Land was to be settled by Jews in preparation for when they could form
a viable nation there.
There are a number
of points which must be noted concerning this Mandate:
1. For the first
time in history, Palestine became a legal entity. Hitherto it had been just a geographical
area.
2. All prior
agreements before the San Remo conference were terminated. This includes both the
Sykes-Picot agreement and the Faisal-Weizmann agreement.
3. The Balfour
Declaration was recognised and incorporated into international law.
4. Sovereignty
over Palestine was vested in the Jewish people.
5. The Jewish
people became the national beneficiary, based on self-determination, even though
most of the Jews had not yet returned to their Land, because of their
historical connection to it.
6. Transfer of the
title on Palestine cannot be revoked, either by the League of Nations or the United Nations as its successor,
unless the people of Palestine want to give up their title.
7. The Mandate for
Palestine was to be given to Britain as the Mandatory Power.
8. The San Remo Agreement was included in the Treaty of
Sèvres and confirmed by the Council of the League of Nations on 24th July 1922 .
9. The Arabs
gained equivalent rights in Lebanon , Syria and Mesopotamia .
10. The San Remo Agreement marks the end of the longest colonized
period in history, lasting around 1,800 years.
It is therefore
very clear that the Jewish State draws its legal existence from the San Remo Agreement
of 1920, and not the United Nations Partition Plan of 1947 (Resolution 181
which is only a recommendation). All 51 nations of the League of Nations voted in favor of this Agreement.
Boundaries of the Land
The exact
boundaries of the Land covered by the Mandate for Palestine were not defined at San Remo , and neither were the boundaries for the
other Mandate territories. A map agreed by Emir Faizal and Chaim Weizmann prior
to the conference had placed the eastern border along roughly the same line as
the border from Second Temple times, but Britain decided that it should be the
Jordan River instead.
Article 25 of the
Mandate for Palestine gave the Mandatory Power permission to postpone or withhold
most of the terms of the Mandate in the area of land east of the Jordan river , if it did not consider them to be
applicable. Britain exercised that power in a memorandum to
the League
of Nations on 16th
September 1922 ,
which the League subsequently approved. This brought into being a new Mandate,
for Trans-Jordan, also to be administered by Britain . It is interesting to note that the League of Nations referred to this territory as "The
Trans-Jordan Province of
Since then there
have been no other modifications to the Mandate for Palestine, and thus the provisions
of the Mandate are still applicable to the whole of the land of Palestine west
of the Jordan river, including what is today referred to as the 'West Bank' and
Gaza Strip.
The end of the Mandate
History
demonstrates clearly that Britain failed miserably to carry out the sacred
trust invested in it by the League of Nations . After the Second World War, the League of Nations was disbanded and a new organization, the
United Nations, set up. This new body inherited all the agreements made by its
predecessor, including the Mandate for Palestine . In 1947 Britain decided to terminate and abandon her
stewardship of the Mandate, and notified the United Nations accordingly. It
should be noted that the Mandate itself was not terminated, but only Britain 's stewardship of it. In a similar way, Britain 's stewardship of the Mandate for
Trans-Jordan had been terminated the previous year by that country being
granted independence.
The UN proposed a
Partition Plan for Palestine , recommending the setting up of an Arab state, a Jewish
state and an international zone to include Jerusalem . This Resolution (181) was only a
recommendation to consider partition. It was not an injunction that must be
obeyed. The recommendation was accepted
by the Jewish leadership but rejected by the Arabs, and had no legal validity
once rejected.
When the State of
Israel was declared at the end of the British Mandate period, it became the fulfillment
of the Mandate for Palestine , which had been created in order to bring about this outcome
in due course. Although the manner by which the fulfillment came about left
much to be desired, the Jewish State of Israel was what was envisaged by the
writers of the San Remo Agreement nearly thirty years earlier. Effectively, this
was recognized by the United Nations when it accepted Israel into membership on 11th
May 1949 .
Immediately after Israel 's Declaration of Independence, five
surrounding Arab nations invaded the new state. By the time that hostilities
ceased, Israel had lost some of its territory to the attackers
- the Golan Heights to Syria , Judea and Samaria (including the eastern part of Jerusalem ) to Trans-Jordan, and the Gaza Strip to Egypt . It is universally accepted that it is inadmissible
to acquire territory by attacking another country, so the actions of the Arab
nations were in fact illegal under international law. Whereas Syria and Egypt only occupied their captured territories,
Trans-Jordan annexed Judea
and Samaria and called it the West Bank , in order to link the territory with the
East Bank of the Jordan . This annexation was only recognized by
two countries in the world, Britain and Pakistan , and has no effect upon the illegality of
Trans-
The Six Day War
1. The territories
belonged to Israel , as the fulfillment of the Mandate for Palestine , in the first place, so they were only
retaking what already belonged to them anyway.
2. Israel was not acquiring territory as an
aggressor, but in a defensive war forced upon it by the surrounding Arab
nations.
After returning
the Sinai to Egypt in the peace agreement of 26th
March 1979 , the
territory under Israeli control was almost identical to that which comprised
the Mandate for Palestine .
Subsequently, Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip on 12th
September 2005 ,
but did not pass control to any other state. Thus, legally, the Gaza Strip
remains part of Israel 's territory, even though not occupied by
it at this point.
Illegally Occupied Territory?
It should be
obvious from all this that the expression “illegally occupied territory” is
totally inapplicable to Israel 's presence in, for example, Judea and Samaria (the 'West Bank '). A state cannot 'illegally occupy' a
territory that belongs to it in the first place!
I am sure that we
are all well aware from the Bible that God has granted to the Jewish people the
whole of the land currently comprising the State of Israel, as well as Judea , Samaria and the Gaza Strip. Israel 's legal entitlement to these lands
confirms the Word of God on the matter for those of us who believe the Bible.
For others, and particularly for those who would deny Israel 's right to the territories it recaptured
in 1967, the legal case set out here is a challenge that needs to be addressed.
Acknowledgments
I am indebted to
Jacques Gauthier BA, LLB, PhD; Howard Grief, author of "The Legal
Foundation and
Borders of Israel under International Law"; Salomon Benzimra P.Eng; and
Eli Hertz, President of Myths and Facts Inc, for material used in the
preparation of this article.
Further
information is available on www.mythsandfacts.org
Roy Thurley
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