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Source: Americans for Middle East Understanding (AMEU)
URL: http://www.ameu.org
Type: Web Pointer; Sample
Date: 20 Jan 2002
Title: Prof. Francis Boyle: Law and Disorder in the Middle East

TEXT:

Americans for 
Middle East Understanding 
(AMEU)

The LINK
http://www.ameu.org/summary.asp

January 2002

Law and Disorder in the Middle East
by: Francis A. Boyle
http://www.ameu.org/page.asp?iid=79&aid=118&pg=1

The Participants 

The Palestinian delegation entered the negotiations in good faith in order
to negotiate an interim peace agreement with Israel that would create a
Palestinian interim self-government for a transitional five-year period.

Immediately following the ceremonial opening at Madrid on 30 October 1991,
I was instructed to draft several position papers on numerous issues that
were expected to come up during the first round of negotiations scheduled
to begin a month later in Washington, D.C. But when we got to our
headquarters at the Grand Hotel in Washington, nothing happened. At the
U.S. State Department headquarters, which served as the venue for all
tracts of the Middle East peace negotiations, the Israeli team offered no
reasonable good-faith proposals for dealing with the Palestinians.

At that time the Israeli government was headed by the Likud party under
Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir. Later on, Shamir admitted that his strategy
at the peace negotiations was to drag them out for the next decade. Having
been personally subjected to this process, I can assure you that Prime
Minister Shamir accomplished his objective for as long as he was in power.

Most distressing of all, however, was that the United States State
Department went along with Shamir's strategy. It soon became obvious that
U.S. officials had no intention whatsoever to pressure Israel to negotiate
in good faith. To the contrary, they usually sided with the Israeli
delegation against the Palestinian delegation in support of Shamir's
stall-strategy. Furthermore --- having done some work at the request of
the Syrian delegation to the peace negotiations --- I can certify that the
same stall-strategy was operative during the first round of the
Israeli-Syrian negotiations in Washington.

When the Likud party lost the elections in June of 1992, the Labor party
came to power under Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin. One of the first changes
Rabin made in the negotiations was to fire the Israeli-Syrian team and
bring in new and dynamic leadership under Professor Itimar Rabinowitz,
generally considered to be Israel's top expert on Syria. With the new
Syrian team in place, substantial progress was made during the course of
the Israeli-Syrian track to such an extent that, if Labor had won the next
round of Israeli elections, there would have been an Israeli-Syrian peace
agreement along the lines of the Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty. This still
could happen now if Israel ever becomes willing to implement U. N.
Security Council Resolution 242 (1967), which Israel is obligated to do in
any event.

By comparison, Prime Minister Rabin kept the Likud team for negotiating
with the Palestinian delegation. This was a most inauspicious sign. Soon
thereafter, in the late summer of 1992, the Israeli team tendered a
proposal to the Palestinian delegation for an interim peace agreement that
included a draft Palestinian interim self-government.

Israel's Bantustan Proposal

Because of its importance, the head of the Palestinian delegation, Dr.
Abdel Shafi, asked me to fly to Washington to analyze the Israeli proposal
in situ for the Palestinian delegation. Part of my responsibilities was to
review all preceding peace proposals put forward by Israel with respect to
the Palestinians, going back to the original Camp David Accords, including
the "Linowitz negotiations" that took place thereafter under the Carter
Administration. 

Upon my arrival at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Pentagon City, where the
Palestinian delegation was headquartered, I was ushered into a suite where
the delegation leaders had assembled. There I was instructed by one of its
accredited negotiators to tell them what was the closest historical
analogue to what they were being offered.

I returned to my hotel room and spent an entire day analyzing the Israeli
proposal. When I finished, I returned to the same suite and reported to
the delegation: "A bantustan. They are offering you a bantustan. As you
know, the Israelis have very close relations with the Afrikaner Apartheid
regime in South Africa. It appears that they have studied the bantustan
system quite closely. So it is a bantustan that they are offering you."

I proceeded to go through the entire Israeli proposal in detail to
substantiate my conclusion. I pointed out that this proposal basically
carried out Prime Minister Menachim Begin's disingenuous misinterpretation
of the Camp David Accords --- rejected by U.S. President Jimmy Carter ---
that all they called for was autonomy for the Palestinian people and not
for the Palestinian land as well. 

Worse yet, Israel's proposed Palestinian interim self-government would be
legally set up to function as the civilian arm of the Israeli military
occupation forces! 

Not surprisingly, after consultations among themselves, and under the
chairmanship of Dr. Abdel Shafi, the members of the Palestinian delegation
rejected Israel's bantustan proposal.

The Palestinian Anti-Bantustan Proposal 

Shortly thereafter, Dr. Abdel Shafi requested that I return to Washington
to consult with the entire Palestinian delegation for a second time. I had
a series of sequential meetings with the different members of the
delegation in order to understand their basic concerns about negotiating
an interim peace agreement with Israel. I was then invited into Dr. Abdel
Shafi's private suite. It was just the two of us.

Dr. Abdel Shafi quite solemnly instructed me: "Professor Boyle, we have
decided to ask you to draft this interim peace agreement for us. Do
whatever you want! But do not sell out our right to our state!" The
emphasis was that of Dr. Abdel Shafi.

"Do not worry," I assured him. "As you know, I was the one who first
called for the creation of the Palestinian state back at United Nations
Headquarters in June of 1987, and then served as the legal adviser to the
P.L.O. on its creation. I will do nothing to harm it!" 

I then went back to my hotel room to work on the Palestinian approach to
negotiating an interim peace agreement with Israel that was designed to
get the Palestinians eventually from where they were then to a free,
viable, democratic, independent nation-state on the West Bank and Gaza
Strip with their capital in Jerusalem, and to do this by the required
intermediate means of establishing a genuine Palestinian interim
self-government, which was not a bantustan. I spent the entire day
sketching out what I shall call here my "anti-bantustan" proposal for the
Palestinian delegation to consider.

I met with Dr. Abdel Shafi to brief him on it. Then, at his instruction,
the entire Palestinian delegation assembled to hear me. During the course
of this briefing, an extremely high-level and powerful P.L.O. official
began to yell at me at the top of his lungs: "Professor Boyle, what good
has the Fourth Geneva Convention ever done for my people!" I replied:
"Without the Fourth Geneva Convention the Israelis would have stolen all
your land and expelled most of your people years ago." From my other
sources I already knew that the P.L.O. had been putting enormous pressure
upon Dr. Abdel Shafi and the rest of the Palestinian delegation to accept
Israel's bantustan proposal right then and there in Washington. This Dr.
Abdel Shafi adamantly refused to do!

After this meeting, I commented to a very prominent and now powerful
Palestinian lawyer from Gaza, who had heard my briefing: "My instructions
from Dr. Abdel Shafi were to figure out how to square the circle. I
believe I have accomplished this objective." He replied laconically: "Yes,
you have."

I next met with Dr. Abdel Shafi to report to him about the vociferous
opposition by the top P.L.O. official to my anti-bantustan proposal. He
instructed me to write up my proposal as a Memorandum for consideration
and formal approval by the Palestinian delegation in Washington as well as
by the P.L.O. leadership in Tunis. Having rejected the Israeli bantustan
proposal, Dr. Abdel Shafi had to come up with an anti-bantustan proposal
both to negotiate in good faith with the Israelis, and to convince the
P.L.O. leadership in Tunis that a viable interim peace agreement did exist
that would not sell out the right of the Palestinian people to an
independent nation-state of their own.

My Memorandum, entitled "The Interim Agreement and International Law," was
completed on 1 December 1992. I sent it off by couriers to Dr. Abdel Shafi
and the Palestinian delegation in Washington, and to the political leaders
of the Palestinian people in Tunis and elsewhere in their diaspora.

The Memorandum was approved by both the Palestinian delegation in
Washington and by the political leadership in Tunis. The Memorandum has
been published in Vol. 22 of "Arab Studies Quarterly," Number 3, pp. 1-45,
Summer 2000. Readers should be aware that the Israeli bantustan model I
critiqued therein would later become the Oslo Agreement of 13 September
1993, as I explain below. [An excerpt from this Memorandum is reprinted on
page 5.] 

Shortly after submitting my Memorandum to Tunis, I received a fax from an
extremely powerful and prominent P.L.O. lawyer living in the Palestinian
diaspora, who personally thanked me for "showing the way forward to our
people." After what we had been through together in the past, my friend's
commendation meant a great deal to me. But five years later he would quit
his high-level positions in both the P.L.O. and the provisional government
of the state of Palestine because of his disgust over the subsequent
course of the so-called Oslo Process.

Norway 

While all this was going on, and unbeknownst to Dr. Abdel Shafi and
myself, the Israeli government opened up a secret channel of
communications in Norway with P.L.O. emissaries who reported personally
and in private to President Yasir Arafat. Eventually, during the course of
these negotiations, the Israeli team re-tendered its original bantustan
proposal that had already been rejected by the Palestinian delegation in
Washington. It was this proposal that became known as the Oslo Agreement,
and which was signed on the White House Lawn on 13 September 1993.

Dr. Abdel Shafi and I knew full well that we were engaged in a most
desperate struggle against the Israelis --- working hand-in-hand with the
Americans --- to prevent the Palestinian leadership in Tunis from
accepting Israel's bantustan proposal. Of course we lost. 

In the summer of 1993, the wire services reported that a secret agreement
between Israel and P.L.O. emissaries had been reached in Norway. Soon
thereafter, Dr. Abdel Shafi phoned me from Washington and asked if I could
analyze the Norwegian document for him immediately. He faxed it to my
office. 

After a detailed study, I called him back with my report: "This is the
exact same document we have already rejected in Washington!" 

Dr. Abdel Shafi responded in his customarily low-key manner: "Yes, that
was my impression too." Then he added: "I will call Abu Amar and demand
that he get a written opinion from you on this document before he signs
it! Can you give me that opinion right away?" Once again, the emphases
were that of Dr. Abdel Shafi. 

"Yes, of course, you can count on me," I replied.

"I will call Abu Amar immediately," said a determined Dr. Abdel Shafi.

Abu Amar is the nom-de-guerre of Yasir Arafat. The two men go all the way
back to the founding of the P.L.O. So that must have been one tumultuous
conversation. 

But President Arafat had already made up his mind to sign the bantustan
proposal, now emanating from Norway instead of Washington. Dr. Abdel
Shafi, the head of the Palestinian delegation in Washington, could do
nothing to change his mind.

When the proposal was signed on the White House Lawn on 13 September 1993,
Dr. Abdel Shafi did not attend. He knew Oslo was a bantustan and he wanted
nothing to do with it. 

As for me, on that day I had to be in the International Court of Justice
in The Hague in order to accept the second World Court Order I would win
for the Republic of Bosnia and Herzegovina against the rump Yugoslavia to
cease and desist from committing all acts of genocide against the Bosnian
people. So I had to watch the ceremony on television in my Amsterdam hotel
room. "This will never work," I reflected with a heavy heart, "but perhaps
President Arafat knows something that I do not." 

Still, the question remains: Why would President Arafat accept and sign an
Israeli proposal that he knew would constitute a bantustan for the
Palestinian people? I really do not know the answer to that question.
President Arafat did not discuss this matter with me. He did discuss it
with Dr. Abdel Shafi. But I was not privy to that conversation, and I have
never asked Dr. Abdel Shafi about it. 

In fairness to President Arafat, I believe he felt that he must take what
little was offered, even if he knew it was nothing more than a bantustan.
Perhaps he thought that Palestinians would live in peace with Israel
throughout the trial period of five years, under their bantustan model, at
the end of which he would negotiate a legitimate, free, viable, and
independent Palestinian state on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, with its
capital in Jerusalem. 

Also, in fairness to President Arafat, the Oslo Agreement made it quite
clear that all issues would be open for negotiations in the so-called
final status negotiations. And this included Jerusalem, despite the
massive Israeli rhetoric and propaganda that Jerusalem was "their,"
"eternal," "undivided," "capital." You do not agree in writing to
negotiate over "your," "eternal," "undivided," "capital," if it is really
yours. 

Finally, in fairness to President Arafat, there was already on the books a
resolution that had been adopted by the Palestine National Council that
authorized the P.L.O. to take control of any portion of occupied Palestine
that was offered to them by Israel. This is precisely what President
Arafat and the Tunisian P.L.O. leaders did. 

For the record, though, it should be noted that the Palestinian delegation
to the Middle East peace negotiations --- all of whom lived in occupied
Palestine, not in Tunis --- had explicitly rejected this Israeli bantustan
proposal during the course of the formal negotiations in Washington. For
that reason, in addition to Dr. Abdel Shafi, other accredited Palestinian
negotiators refused to attend the signing ceremony on the White House
Lawn, including my friend who had personally instructed me to analyze the
Israeli bantustan proposal for the delegation. Like Dr. Abdel Shafi, they
knew full well that Oslo was a bantustan, and they wanted nothing to do
with it. 

President Arafat had assumed a modicum of good faith on the part of Israel
and the United States. My 1 December Memorandum did not. As it happened,
Israel and the United States proceeded to stall and delay the
implementation of the bantustan model throughout the entire five-year
course of the Oslo process, and even after its expiration. Never was a
realistic hope provided that at the end of the road the Palestinians would
have their free, viable, genuinely independent state on the West Bank and
Gaza, with its capital in Jerusalem. 

Hence, I will not waste time analyzing the numerous post-Oslo agreements
between Israel and the P.L.O. that were "brokered " by the United States.
For they all constitute nothing more than implementation and refinements
of Israel's original bantustan proposal that the Palestinian delegation
had rejected in Washington. I am a Professor of International Law, not of
Bantustan Law. From the perspective of public international law, however,
numerous provisions of all these agreements were void ab initio under
articles 7, 8, and 47 of the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, inter alia. 

Camp David II, the Al Aqsa Intifada, and 
U.N. Security Council Resolution 1322 

This brings the story up to the summer of 2000, to the so-called Camp
David II negotiations. This proposed conclusion to the final status
negotiations was not the idea of the Palestinian leadership. Rather, it
was the brainchild of Israeli prime minister General Ehud Barak, with the
full support of President Clinton, who fully intended to pressure
President Arafat into permanently accepting the Oslo bantustan
arrangement. To his everlasting credit, President Arafat refused to accept
Oslo as his people's "final solution." But it was a near-death experience. 

True to his pro-Israeli stance, President Clinton publicly blamed
President Arafat and the Palestinian leadership for their alleged
intransigence. He also threatened to illegally move the United States
Embassy from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem unless President Arafat succumbed to
permanently accepting Israel's bantustan model. This President Arafat
still refused to do. 

When it became clear to the Israeli government that it could not impose
Oslo on the Palestinians by means of negotiations and U.S. bullying, Prime
Minister Barak and Likud leader General Ariel Sharon reverted to
inflicting raw, brutal, military force on the Palestinians in order to get
their way. Hence the Israeli origins of what has come to be known as the
Al Aqsa Intifada. 

General Ariel Sharon --- the architect of the Israeli invasion of Lebanon
that exterminated an estimated 20,000 Arabs, the man personally
responsible for the massacre of about 2,000 Palestinian and Lebanese
civilians at the refugee camps in Sabra and Shatilla, a man cashiered by
his own government --- on 28 September 2000 appeared at Al-Haram al-Sharif
in Jerusalem, the third holiest site in Islam. Here stand the Al Aqsa
Mosque and the magnificent Dome of the Rock, where Mohammed (May Peace Be
Upon Him) ascended into Heaven. Sharon, with Barak's full approval,
arrived surrounded by about 1,000 armed Israeli forces. The two former
generals knew exactly what the Palestinian reaction would be to this
deliberate desecration of, and provocation at, their sacred shrine. And if
there had been any lingering doubt about the matter, Israeli armed forces
returned the next day to the site and shot dead several unarmed
Palestinians, thus setting off what has come to be known as the Al Aqsa
Intifada. 

On 7 October 2000, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution
1322, which is critical for this analysis. The vote was 14 to 0, with the
United States abstaining. The U.S. could have vetoed this Resolution, but
did not. So the Resolution became a matter of binding international law. I
will not go through the entire Resolution here, but I do want to comment
on its most important provisions. 

In paragraph 1, the Security Council "Deplores the provocation carried out
at Al-Haram al-Sharif in Jerusalem on 28 September 2000 and the subsequent
violence there." Notice, the Security Council, by a vote of 14 to 0, made
it crystal clear that it was Sharon's desecration of the Al-Haram
al-Sharif that is responsible for the start of the current round of
warfare and bloodshed perpetrated by Israel against the Palestinian people
living in occupied Palestine. Even the United States did not vote against
that determination, deliberately letting it pass into binding
international law. 

In paragraph 3 of Resolution 1322, the Security Council, again 14 to 0,
"Calls upon Israel, the occupying Power." "Occupying Power" has a definite
meaning in public international law. Israel only "occupies" the West Bank,
the Gaza Strip, and the entire city of Jerusalem. It is what international
lawyers call a "belligerent occupant." As such, Israel has no sovereignty
over the West Bank, or the Gaza Strip, or the entire city of Jerusalem.
Hence, what is being waged there is a war by the belligerent occupant,
Israel, against a people living on their own land, the Palestinians. Under
international law and practice, a people living on their own land is the
essence of sovereignty. This has been the case for the West Bank and Gaza
Strip and East Jerusalem since the war of 1967. 

As for West Jerusalem, the world has never recognized Israel's annexation
of it as valid either. That is why the U.S. Embassy and the embassies of
almost every country in the world that has diplomatic relations with
Israel--- except for the few banana republics that have been bought and
paid for---have their embassies in Tel Aviv and not Jerusalem. That is
also why President Clinton's threat to move the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem
was clearly illegal.

Belligerent occupation is governed by the Hague Regulations of 1907, as
well as by the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, and the customary laws of
belligerent occupation. Security Council Resolution 1322, paragraph 3:
"Calls upon Israel, the occupying Power, to abide scrupulously by its
legal obligations and its responsibilities under the Fourth Geneva
Convention relative to the Protection of Civilian Persons in a Time of War
of 12 August 1949;." Again, the Security Council vote was 14 to 0, making
it obligatory under international law. 

The Fourth Geneva Convention applies to the West Bank, to the Gaza Strip,
and to the entire city of Jerusalem. The Palestinian people living in
occupied Palestine are "protected persons" within the meaning of the
Fourth Geneva Convention. All of their rights are sacred under
international law. 

The fact is, there are 149 substantive articles of the Fourth Geneva
Convention that protect the rights of almost every one of these
Palestinians living in occupied Palestine. The Israeli government is
currently violating, and has been since 1967, almost each and every one of
these sacred rights of the Palestinians. 

Nor should we forget that violations of the Fourth Geneva Convention are
war crimes. This is not a symmetrical situation. As matters of fact and of
law, the gross and repeated violations of Palestinian human rights by the
Israeli army and by Israeli settlers living illegally in occupied
Palestine constitute war crimes. Put another way, the Palestinian people
are defending themselves and their land and their homes against Israeli
war crimes and Israeli war criminals, both military and civilian. 

On 5 December 2001, 114 states, all parties to the Fourth Geneva
Convention --- including Britain and the rest of the European Union ---
issued a declaration urging Israel to abide by international laws
enshrined in the 1949 accord seeking to protect civilians in wartime or
under occupation. Israel, the United States and Australia, also parties to
the Convention, boycotted the session. The declaration expressed deep
concern about a "deterioration of the humanitarian situation" in
Palestinian areas, condemned Israeli settlements there as illegal and
urged Israel to refrain from "grave breaches" of the Fourth Geneva
Convention, "such as wilful killing, torture, unlawful deportation, wilful
depriving of the rights of fair and regular trial, extensive destruction
and appropriation of property not justified by military necessity and
carried out unlawfully and wantonly." 

Israel's War Crimes Against Palestinians 

On 19 October 2000, a Special Session of the U.N. Commission on Human
Rights adopted a Resolution set forth in U.N. Document E/CN.4/S-5/L.2/Rev.
1, "Condemning the provocative visit to Al-Haram al-Sharif on 28 September
2000 by Ariel Sharon, the Likud party leader, which triggered the tragic
events that followed in occupied East Jerusalem and the other occupied
Palestinian territories, resulting in a high number of deaths and injuries
among Palestinian civilians." 

The U.N. Human Rights Commission went on to say that it was "[g]ravely
concerned" about several different types of atrocities inflicted by Israel
upon the Palestinian people, which it denominated "war crimes, flagrant
violations of international humanitarian law and crimes against humanity." 

In operative paragraph 1 of its 19 October 2000 Resolution, the U.N. Human
Rights Commission then "Strongly condemns the disproportionate and
indiscriminate use of force in violation of international humanitarian law
by the Israeli occupying Power against innocent and unarmed Palestinian
civilians.including many children, in the occupied territories, which
constitutes a war crime and a crime against humanity." 

And in paragraph 5, the Commission "Also affirms that the deliberate and
systematic killing of civilians and children by the Israeli occupying
authorities constitutes a flagrant and grave violation of the right to
life and also constitutes a crime against humanity."

We all have a general idea of what a war crime is, so I will not elaborate
upon the term. There are, however, different degrees of heinousness for
war crimes. In particular are the more serious war crimes denominated
"grave breaches" of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Since the start of the
Al Aqsa Intifada, the world has seen those heinous war crimes inflicted
every day by Israel against the Palestinians in occupied Palestine: e.g.,
willful killing of Palestinian civilians by the Israeli army and by
Israel's illegal paramilitary settlers. These Israeli "grave breaches" of
the Fourth Geneva Convention mandate universal prosecution for their
perpetrators, whether military or civilian, as well as universal
prosecution for their commanders, whether military or civilian, including
and especially Israel's political leaders. 

But it is Israel's "crime against humanity" against the Palestinian
people, as determined by the U.N. Human Rights Commission itself, that I
want to focus on here.

What is a "crime against humanity"? This concept goes back to the
Nuremberg Charter of 1945 for the trial of the major Nazi war criminals in
Europe. And in the Nuremberg Charter of 1945, drafted by the United States
government, a new type of international crime was created specifically
intended to deal with the Nazi persecution of the Jewish people.

The paradigmatic example of a "crime against humanity" is what Hitler and
the Nazis did to the Jewish people. This is where the concept of crime
against humanity came from. And this is what the U.N. Human Rights
Commission determined that Israel is currently doing to the Palestinian
people: crimes against humanity. Legally speaking, it is just like what
Hitler and the Nazis did to the Jews.

Moreover, a crime against humanity is the direct historical and legal
precursor to the international crime of genocide as defined by the 1948
Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. The
theory here was that what Hitler and the Nazis did to the Jewish people
required a special international treaty that would codify and universalize
the Nuremberg concept of "crime against humanity." And that treaty
ultimately became the 1948 Genocide Convention.

It should be noted that the U.N. Human Rights Commission did not go so far
as to condemn Israel for committing genocide against the Palestinian
people. It condemned Israel for committing crimes against humanity, which
are the direct precursor to genocide. And I submit that if something is
not done quite soon by the American people and the international community
to stop Israeli war crimes and crimes against humanity against the
Palestinian people, it could very well degenerate into genocide, if Israel
is not there already. In this regard, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon
is what international lawyers call a genocidaire, one who has already
committed genocide in the past. Sharon is ready, willing, and able to
inflict genocide yet again upon the Palestinians, unless we stop him! 

Peace Is Possible, If . . . 

The goal of obtaining peace with justice for all peoples in the Middle
East can only be achieved on the basis of a two-state solution for the
Palestinian people and the Jewish people, the right of return for
Palestinian refugees, and an equitable solution to the question of
Jerusalem:

The Two-State Solution: On November 15, 1988, the independent state of
Palestine was proclaimed by the Palestine National Council (P.N.C.),
meeting in Algiers, by a vote of 253 to 46. On the same day it was also
proclaimed in front of Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem, the capital of the new
state, after the close of prayers. Notice the monumental importance of Al
Aqsa Mosque to the Palestinian people. A remarkable opportunity for peace
was created by the Palestinian Declaration of independence because therein
the P.N.C. officially endorsed this two-state solution in order to resolve
the basic conflict.

This Declaration of Independence explicitly accepted the U.N. General
Assembly's Partition Resolution 181 (II) of 1947, which called for the
creation of a Jewish state and an Arab state in the former Mandate for
Palestine, together with an international trusteeship for the city of
Jerusalem. The significance of the P.N.C.'s acceptance of partition cannot
be overemphasized. Prior thereto, from the perspective of the Palestinian
people, the Partition Resolution had been deemed to be a criminal act that
was perpetrated upon them by the United Nations. Today, the acceptance of
the Partition Resolution in their actual Declaration of Independence
signals a genuine desire by the Palestinian people to transcend the past
century of bitter history with the Jewish people living in their midst in
order to reach an historic accommodation with Israel on the basis of a
two-state solution. The Declaration of Independence is the foundational
document for the State of Palestine. It is determinative, definitive, and
irreversible.

In this regard, it should be emphasized that Israel officially accepted
the U.N. Partition Resolution in its own Declaration of Independence and
as a condition for its admission to membership in the United Nations
Organization. The 1947 U.N. Partition Plan called for the Palestinian
people to have 44% of historic Palestine for their state, a much larger
share than the 20% contemplated by U.N. Security Council Resolutions 242
of 1967 and 338 of 1973. Today the Palestinian people would be prepared to
accept the 1967 boundaries for the state of Palestine, which would consist
essentially of the West Bank, Gaza Strip and East Jerusalem. The P.N.C.'s
solemn acceptance of Resolutions 242 and 338 represented a significant
concession by the Palestinian people for the benefit of the Israeli
people.

The Refugee Question: As another express condition for its admission to
the United Nations Organization, the government of Israel officially
endorsed and agreed to carry out U.N. General Assembly Resolution 194
(III) of 1948, which determined that Palestinian refugees have a right to
return to their homes, or that compensation should be paid to those who
choose not to return. Furthermore, that same article 13 (2) of the 1948
Universal Declaration of Human Rights which Soviet Jews relied upon to
justify their emigration from the former Soviet Union provides that
Everyone has the right...to return to his country."

That absolute right of return clearly applies to Palestinian refugees
living in their diaspora who want to return to their homes in Israel and
Palestine. The state of Israel owes a prior legal obligation to resettle
Palestinian refugees who want to return home before it undertakes the
massive settlement of Jews and others from around the world.

The Legal Status of Jerusalem: Reportedly, it was the question of
Jerusalem that led to the breakdown of the Camp David II negotiations,
though the negotiating situation was far more complicated than that. A
brief review of the historical record can shed light upon Jerusalem's
legal status, and point the way towards an ultimate solution for this
city, so revered by three monotheistic faiths.

On 25 September 1971, then-Ambassador George H. W. Bush, speaking as U.S.
Representative to the United Nations, delivered a formal "Statement on
Jerusalem" before the U.N. Security Council explaining the official
position of the U.S. government with respect to the city of Jerusalem.
Therein, Ambassador Bush specifically endorsed and repeated a 1969
statement made before the Security Council by his predecessor, Charles
Yost, criticizing Israeli occupation policies in East Jerusalem in the
following terms:

The expropriation or confiscation of land, the construction of housing on
such land, the demolition or confiscation of buildings, including those
having historic or religious significance, and the application of Israeli
law to occupied portions of the city are detrimental to our common
interests in the city. 
Ambassador Bush then reaffirmed Yost's prior statement that the United
States government considers East Jerusalem to be "occupied territory and
thereby subject to the provisions of international law governing the
rights and obligations of an occupying power."

Succinctly put, these latter obligations can be found in the Fourth Geneva
Convention of 1949, which expanded upon and improved --- but did not
displace --- the 1907 Hague Regulations on Land Warfare. The United States
government is a party to both the Fourth Geneva Convention and the Hague
Regulations. Israel is bound by the terms of both treaties as well.

Ambassador Bush concluded his 1971 "Statement" as follows:

We regret Israel's failure to acknowledge its obligations under the Fourth
Geneva Convention as well as its actions which are contrary to the letter
and spirit of this Convention. We are distressed that the actions of
Israel in the occupied portion of Jerusalem give rise to understandable
concern that the eventual disposition of the occupied section of Jerusalem
may be prejudiced. The Report of the Secretary General on the Work of the
Organization, 1970-71, reflects the concern of many Governments over
changes in the face of this city. We have on a number of occasions
discussed this matter with the Government of Israel, stressing the need to
take more fully into account the sensitivities and concerns of others.
Unfortunately, the response of the Government of Israel has been
disappointing. All of us understand.that Jerusalem has a very special
place in the Judaic tradition, one which has great meaning for Jews
throughout the world. At the same time Jerusalem holds a special place in
the hearts of many millions of Christian and Moslems through the world. In
this regard, I want to state clearly that we believe Israel's respect for
the Holy Places has indeed been exemplary. But an Israeli occupation
policy made up of unilaterally determined practices cannot help promote a
just and lasting peace any more than that cause was served by the status
quo in Jerusalem prior to June 1967 which, I want to make clear, we did
not like and we do not advocate reestablishing. 
Ambassador Bush's 1971 "Statement" has always represented the United
States government's official position on the numerous illegalities
surrounding Israel's occupation and illegal annexation of East Jerusalem
since 1967.

For similar reasons, the United States government has never recognized
Israel's annexation of West Jerusalem as valid or lawful either. That is
why the U.S. Embassy to Israel still remains in Tel Aviv, not Jerusalem.

Both Bush's 1971 "Statement" and similar comments he later made as
President in 1990 are fully consistent with and indeed required by Article
1 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, which requires the United States
government not only to respect but also to ensure respect for the terms of
this Convention by other parties such as Israel "in all circumstances." As
treaties, both the Fourth Geneva Convention and the Hague Regulations are
deemed to be the "supreme Law of the Land" by Article VI of the United
States Constitution. Contrary to the public suggestions made in the United
States by the Israel lobby and its supporters, the United States
government must support the vigorous application of the international laws
of belligerent occupation to produce the termination of all illegal
Israeli practices in Jerusalem as well as in the West Bank and Gaza Strip,
together with the Golan Heights, including and especially Israeli settlers
and settlements.

The 1947 United Nations Partition Plan for the Mandate of Palestine called
for the creation of an international trusteeship for the city of
Jerusalem, that would be administered as a corpus separatum apart from
both the Jewish state and the Arab state contemplated therein. Today,
however, it would not be necessary to go so far as to establish a separate
United Nations trusteeship for the city of Jerusalem alone under Chapter
XII of the U.N. Charter. Rather, all that would need to be done is for the
Israeli army to withdraw from Jerusalem and a United Nations peacekeeping
force to be substituted in its place. This U.N. force would maintain
security within the city while the provision of basic services to all the
inhabitants could be enhanced, especially for the Palestinians.

The simple substitution of a U.N. peacekeeping force for the Israeli army
would have the virtue of allowing both Israel and Palestine to continue
making whatever claims to sovereignty they want with respect to the city
of Jerusalem. Thus, Israel could continue to maintain that Jerusalem is
the sovereign territory and united capital of Israel, the Israeli Knesset
could remain where it is as a capital district, and the Israeli flag could
be flown anywhere throughout the city of Jerusalem.

Likewise, the state of Palestine could maintain that Jerusalem is its
sovereign territory and capital. Palestine would be entitled to construct
a parliament building and capital district within East Jerusalem. The
Palestinian flag could be flown anywhere within the territorial confines
of the city.

Both Israel and Palestine would be entitled to maintain ceremonial honor
guards, perhaps with revolvers, at their respective capital districts. But
no armed troops from either Israel or Palestine would be permitted within
Jerusalem.

The residents of Jerusalem would be citizens of either Israel, or
Palestine, or both, depending upon the respective nationality laws of the
two states involved. Residents of Jerusalem would be issued a United
Nations identity card to that effect, which would give them and only them
the right to reside within the city of Jerusalem. Nevertheless, all
citizens of the state of Palestine would be entitled to enter Jerusalem
through U.N. checkpoints at the eastern limits of the city. Likewise, all
citizens of the state of Israel would be entitled to enter Jerusalem at
U.N. checkpoints located at the western limits of the city. Mutual rights
of access for their respective citizens to the two states through
Jerusalem would be subject to whatever arrangements could be negotiated
between the government of Israel and the government of Palestine as part
of an overall peace settlement.

In addition, both Israel and Palestine would have to provide assurances to
the United Nations Security Council that religious pilgrims (Moslems,
Christians, and Jews) would be allowed access through their respective
territories in order to visit and worship at the holy sites in the city of
Jerusalem. Some type of U.N. transit visa issued by the U.N. peacekeeping
force should be deemed to be sufficient for this purpose by both
governments. Of course this right of transit could not be exercised in a
manner deleterious to the security interests of the two states.

Thus, Jerusalem would become a free, open, and undivided city for
pilgrimage and worship by people of the three monotheistic faiths from
around the world. Neither Israel nor Palestine would have to surrender
whatever rights, claims, or titles they might assert to the City. Security
would be maintained by the United Nations peacekeeping force. And the city
of Jerusalem would remain subject to this U.N. regime for the indefinite
future.

If a comprehensive Middle East peace settlement were to be negotiated
along these lines, then it would be perfectly appropriate under
international law for the United States to move its Embassy in Israel from
Tel Aviv to Jerusalem. The U.S. Embassy could be simultaneously accredited
to the state of Palestine as well as to the state of Israel. The same
could be done by all other states in the international community. The
presence of these embassies in Jerusalem under such circumstances would
permit both Israel and Palestine to claim that the entire international
community has now recognized Jerusalem as its capital.

There are many other historical precedents that could be drawn upon to
produce a mutually acceptable arrangement for Jerusalem: e.g., the Free
City of Danzig, the Vatican City State, the District of Columbia, etc. So
determining the final status of Jerusalem is not and never has been an
insuperable obstacle to obtaining a comprehensive Middle East peace
settlement. If the will for peace is there on the part of the Israeli
government, then creative lawyers on each side can devise an artful
arrangement for the city of Jerusalem that would allow both peoples to
claim victory while achieving peace.

Prologue: New Direction for the Palestinians 

Just before the September 13, 1993 Oslo Agreement signing on the White
House Lawn, I commented to a high-level official of the P.L.O., "This
document is like a straight-jacket. It will be very difficult to negotiate
your way out of it!" This official readily agreed: "Yes, you are right. It
will depend upon our negotiating skill."

I have great respect for Palestinian negotiators. They have done the very
best they can negotiating in good faith with an Israeli government that
has been invariable backed up by the United States. But there has never
been any good faith on the part of the Israeli government either before,
during, or after Oslo. The same is true for the United States.

Even if Oslo and Camp David II had succeeded, they would have resulted in
the permanent imposition of a bantustan upon the Palestinian people. But
Oslo has run its course. Therefore, it is my purpose here to sketch out a
new direction for the Palestinian people and their supporters around the
world to consider as an alternative to the Oslo process.

First: We must immediately move for the de facto suspension of Israel
throughout the entirety of the United Nations system, including the
General Assembly and all U.N. subsidiary organs and bodies. We must do to
Israel what the U.N. General Assembly has done to the genocidal rump
Yugoslavia and to the criminal apartheid regime in South Africa. Here the
legal basis for the de facto suspension of Israel at the U.N. is quite
simple:

As a condition for its admission to the United Nations Organization,
Israel formally agreed, inter alia, to accept General Assembly Resolution
181 (II) (1947) (on partition and Jerusalem trusteeship) and General
Assembly Resolution 194 (III) (1948) (Palestinian right of return).
Nevertheless, Israel has violated its conditions for admission to U.N.
membership and thus must be suspended on a de facto basis from any
participation throughout the entire United Nations system.

Second: Any further negotiations with Israel must be conducted on the
basis of Resolution 181 (II) and the borders it specifies; Resolution 194
(III); subsequent General Assembly resolutions and Security Council
resolutions; the Third and Fourth Geneva Conventions of 1949; the 1907
Hague Regulations; and other relevant principles of public international
law.

Third: We must abandon the fiction and the fraud that the United States
government is an "honest broker" in the Middle East. The United States
government has never been an "honest broker" since from well before the
very outset of the Middle East peace negotiations in 1991. Rather, the
United States has invariably sided with Israel against the Palestinians,
as well as against the other Arab States. We need to establish some type
of international framework to sponsor these negotiations where the
Palestinian negotiators will not be subjected to the continual bullying,
bribery, and outright deceptions perpetrated by the United States working
in conjunction with Israel.

Fourth: We must move to have the U.N. General Assembly adopt comprehensive
economic, diplomatic, and travel sanctions against Israel according to the
terms of the Uniting for Peace Resolution (1950). Pursuant thereto, the
General Assembly's Emergency Special Session on Palestine is now in recess
just waiting to be recalled.

Fifth: The Provisional Government of the state of Palestine must sue
Israel before the International Court of Justice in The Hague for
inflicting acts of genocide against the Palestinian people in violation of
the 1948 Genocide Convention.

Sixth: We must pressure the Member States of the U.N. General Assembly to
found an International Criminal Tribunal for Palestine (ICTP) in order to
prosecute Israeli war criminals, both military and civilian, including and
especially Israeli political leaders. The U.N. General Assembly can set up
this ICTP by a majority vote pursuant to its powers to establish
"subsidiary organs" under U.N. Charter article 22. This International
Criminal Tribunal for Palestine should be organized by the U.N. General
Assembly along the same lines as the International Criminal Tribunal for
the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) that has already been established by the U.N.
Security Council.

Seventh: Concerned citizens and governments all over the world must
organize a comprehensive campaign of economic disinvestment and divestment
from Israel along the same lines of what they did to the former criminal
apartheid regime in South Africa. This original worldwide
disinvestment/divestment campaign played a critical role in dismantling
the criminal apartheid regime in South Africa. For much the same reasons,
a worldwide disinvestment/divestment campaign against Israel will play a
critical role in dismantling its criminal apartheid regime against the
Palestinian people living in occupied Palestine as well as in Israel
itself.

During the course of a public lecture at Illinois State University in
Bloomington-Normal on 30 November 2000, I issued a call for the
establishment of a nationwide campaign of divestment/disinvestment against
Israel, which was later put on the internet. In response thereto, Students
for Justice in Palestine at the University of California at Berkeley
launched a divestment campaign against Israel there. Right now the city of
Ann Arbor Michigan is also considering divesting from Israel. And just
recently the Palestinian Students at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign (whom I am privileged to advise) launched an Israeli
divestment campaign here. This movement is taking off. 

These seven steps taken in conjunction with each other should provide the
Palestinian people with enough political and economic leverage needed to
negotiate a just and comprehensive peace settlement with Israel.

By contrast, if the Oslo process is continued, it will inevitably result
in the permanent imposition of a bantustan upon the Palestinian people
living in occupied Palestine, as well as the final dispossession and
disenfranchisement of all Palestinian people living in their diaspora.

Consequently, I call upon all Palestinian People living everywhere, as
well as their supporters around the world, to consider and support this
"New Direction." 

Free Palestine! 



*****************************************************

         <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>
         <>                                        <>
         <>  ... On that account: We ordained for  <>
         <>  the Children of Israel that if anyone <>
         <>  slew a person - unless it be for      <>
         <>  murder or for spreading mischief      <>
         <>  in the land - it would be as if       <>
         <>  he slew the whole people: and if      <>
         <>  any one saved a life, it would        <>
         <>  be as if he saved the life of         <>
         <>  the whole people.                     <>
         <>  Holy Qur'an, Surah al-Maidah 5:32.    <>
         <>  URL: http://quran.al-islam.com/       <>
         <><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><><>

*****************************************************

  "And the mind - may God preserve you - is more
  prone to deep sleep than the eye. Neediest of
  sharpening than a sword. Poorest to treatment.
  Fastest to change.  Its illness, the deadliest.
  Its doctors, the rarest.  And its cure, the
  hardest. Whoever got a hold of it, before the
  spread of the disease, found his sake. Whoever
  tried to wrestle it after the spread would not
  find his sake. The greatest purpose of knowledge
  is the abundance of inspiring thoughts. Then,
  the ways to go about one's needs are met." 
    -- Al-Jahiz ("Puffy"), 9th Century Baghdad, 
    Kitab at-Tarbi` wat-Tadweer ("Squaring 
    the Circle"), p. 101, Edited by Prof. Charles 
    Pellat, Institut Francais de Damas, 1955.

READ THE TEXT, IN THE LANGUAGE OF THE PEOPLE OF THE
DESERT, AT URL: http://msanews.mynet.net/books/ajaib/

*****************************************************



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