UNRWA was created to punish Israel (TIMES OF ISRAEL OP-ED) Ted Belman 06/05/12)
Source: http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/unrwa-was-created-to-punish-israel/
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The problem with UNRWA goes way beyond counting or definition. It
should never have been created in the first place. So Senator Mark
Kirk’s amendment fails to address the fundamental problem.
He proposed an amendment to the 2013 Appropriations Bill that would
have changed the definition of a Palestinian refugee and required the
State Department to count heads and report back.
According to Shoshana Bryen, an aide to Kirk said:
Senator Kirk, a former prosecutor, has worked tirelessly for years to
force the State Department to quantify US assistance to the
Palestinians through UNRWA. He has been thwarted at every turn.
The bill that was passed unanimously on May 25 was a watered down
version of Kirk’s amendment, due to the strong objections of the
State Department set out in a letter to Sen. Patrick Leahy, which
read in part:
"This proposed amendment would be viewed around the world as the
United States acting to prejudge and determine the outcome of this
sensitive issue.
The Department of State cannot support legislation which would force
the United States to make a public judgment on the number and status
of Palestinian refugees.
This action would damage confidence between the parties at a
particularly fragile time, undercut our ability to act as a mediator
and peace facilitator, and generate very strong negative reaction
from the Palestinians and our allies in the region, particularly
Jordan…
But the question must be asked: How did this become a final status
issue in the first place? The international community has never
forced the repatriation of refugees to their former country following
a war, nor spearheaded their claims for compensation. It certainly
didn’t do either in the case of the Jewish refugees from Arab lands.
Nor has it ever demanded that a victorious country withdraw from land
it conquered in a defensive war as it has of Israel — countless times.
America has no qualms against demanding East Jerusalem as the capital
of Palestine, nor of demanding 100% withdrawal, nor of demanding that
settlement activity stop. Are not such positions prejudging the
outcome? Why doesn’t she similarly come out against any “right of
return?”
Usually the parties to a war are left to their own devices in
arriving at a peace agreement or avoiding it, but not here. America
was a player in the piece right from the beginning, and stood with
the Arabs all the way along.
On May 14, 1948, Israel declared the establishment of the State of
Israel, against the wishes of the surrounding Arab countries and the
US government. Immediately thereafter, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon,
Jordan and Saudi Arabia invaded Israel with the intention or
eradicating it. Either due to the fear of the Israelis or the urging
of the surrounding Arab countries, about 700,000 Arabs fled Israel
and the land she conquered.
In November of that year, the General Assembly passed a resolution
providing financial assistance for their immediate needs. Israel
passed a resolution barring their return. A few days later the UNGA
passed Resolution 194, which resolved, inter alia:
…that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at peace
with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the earliest
practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for the
property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or damage to
property which, under principles of international law or in equity,
should be made good by the Governments or authorities responsible…
This resolution, like all resolutions of the UNGA, is a
recommendation only — not binding in law. Furthermore the resolution
was unprecedented.
According to the late Ami Isseroff, “Resolution 194 was passed soon
after the assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte, attributed to the
LEHI, and partly expresses the anger of the UN member states over the
assassination.”
Thus its passage was intended to punish Israel.
That’s not surprising, as the US State Department was adamantly
opposed to the declaration of statehood by Israel and did everything
in its power to prevent it. As disclosed by recently unearthed
diplomatic cables, it even threatened to stoke anti-Semitism by
publishing documents that would “do great harm to the Jews” for doing
so. It tried unsuccessfully to force Ben-Gurion to return to the
original Partition lines when it was “mediating” the Armistice
Agreement.
But the question must be asked: How did this become a final status
issue in the first place? The international community has never
forced the repatriation of refugees to their former country following
a war, nor spearheaded their claims for compensation. It certainly
didn’t do either in the case of the Jewish refugees from Arab lands.
Nor has it ever demanded that a victorious country withdraw from land
it conquered in a defensive war as it has of Israel — countless times.
America has no qualms against demanding East Jerusalem as the capital
of Palestine, nor of demanding 100% withdrawal, nor of demanding that
settlement activity stop. Are not such positions prejudging the
outcome? Why doesn’t she similarly come out against any “right of
return?”
Usually the parties to a war are left to their own devices in
arriving at a peace agreement or avoiding it, but not here. America
was a player in the piece right from the beginning, and stood with
the Arabs all the way along.
On May 14, 1948, Israel declared the establishment of the State of
Israel, against the wishes of the surrounding Arab countries and the
US government. Immediately thereafter, Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon,
Jordan and Saudi Arabia invaded Israel with the intention or
eradicating it. Either due to the fear of the Israelis or the urging
of the surrounding Arab countries, about 700,000 Arabs fled Israel
and the land she conquered.
In November of that year, the General Assembly passed a resolution
providing financial assistance for their immediate needs. Israel
passed a resolution barring their return. A few days later the UNGA
passed Resolution 194, which resolved, inter alia:
"…that the refugees wishing to return to their homes and live at
peace with their neighbours should be permitted to do so at the
earliest practicable date, and that compensation should be paid for
the property of those choosing not to return and for loss of or
damage to property which, under principles of international law or in
equity, should be made good by the Governments or authorities
responsible…
This resolution, like all resolutions of the UNGA, is a
recommendation only — not binding in law. Furthermore the resolution
was unprecedented.
According to the late Ami Isseroff, “Resolution 194 was passed soon
after the assassination of Count Folke Bernadotte, attributed to the
LEHI, and partly expresses the anger of the UN member states over the
assassination.”
Thus its passage was intended to punish Israel.
That’s not surprising, as the US State Department was adamantly
opposed to the declaration of statehood by Israel and did everything
in its power to prevent it. As disclosed by recently unearthed
diplomatic cables, it even threatened to stoke anti-Semitism by
publishing documents that would “do great harm to the Jews” for doing
so. It tried unsuccessfully to force Ben-Gurion to return to the
original Partition lines when it was “mediating” the Armistice
Agreement.
In essence, the State Department was siding with the Arabs, who
vastly outnumbered the Israelis and who possessed vast quantities of
oil. Even today, it is averse to upsetting its “allies in the region,
particularly Jordan,” as it stated in the letter above.
In April of the following year, Israel and Jordan signed an Armistice
Agreement that ended hostilities. Then, in December 1949, the UNGA
passed Resolution 320, which gave birth to UNRWA. Its purpose, as set
out in this resolution, was to carry out “direct relief and works
programmes.” Its contemporary mandate is “to provide relief, human
development and protection services to Palestine refugees and persons
displaced by the 1967 hostilities” in addition to the refugees from
the ’48 war. Although this agency was intended to be temporary, the
General Assembly has renewed it repeatedly pending the just
resolution of the question of the Palestine refugees.
Normally, refugees are handled by UNHCR, whose mandate is to resettle
them. In contrast, UNWRA’s mandate is to maintain them. Had the State
Department not wanted to punish Israel or reverse the result of the
war, the conflict would have long ago been settled.
Subsequent to the war, an equal, if not greater, number of Jews was
expelled by all Arab countries, which also confiscated their wealth.
In 1956, Egypt committed an act of war against Israel, namely closing
the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping. Israel’s response was to
conquer the Sinai. America’s response was to force Israel to retreat
to the Armistice Lines.
In 1967, the Arab countries once again massed their troops on
Israel’s borders, intending to drive the Jews into the sea. Once
again, they were defeated. But this time Israel had a friend in the
White House, namely President Johnson. He decided not to force a full
retreat on Israel and instead crafted UNSC Resolution 242 to allow
Israel to remain in possession until she had an agreement
for “recognized and secure borders.” There was no demand for Israel
to relinquish all the territories. This resolution also provided
for “achieving a just settlement of the refugee problem.” Not only
did it not reaffirm Resolution 194, it wasn’t limited to the
Palestinian refugees and included the Jewish refugees as well.
In the Khartoum Conference, which followed shortly thereafter, the
Arabs emphatically rejected this resolution and embraced a policy of
no negotiations, no recognition and no peace. A year later, President
Nixon attempted to placate the Arabs by proposing the Rogers Plan,
which required full withdrawal, as demanded by the Arabs, rather than
the partial withdrawal set out in Resolution 242.
Although this plan didn’t get traction, the US continued to support
the Arabs and specifically the newly invented Palestinians, giving
them legitimacy even though they were represented by a terrorist
organization. Arafat the arch terrorist was invited to speak at the
UN, which he did while sporting a gun holster. When Israel tried to
destroy the PLO in Lebanon in the early eighties, and was about to
deliver the coup de grâce, President Reagan saved the Palestinians by
evacuating them to Tunisia. It was American policy to use the refugee
problem to force Israel to retreat. She needed the PLO to spearhead
the Palestinian political movement.
The pressure on Israel continued, resulting in her having secret
negotiations with the PLO which lead to the Oslo Accords of ’93
and ’95. Pursuant to these accords, Arafat and the PLO leadership
were allowed back into the territories. The Declaration of Principles
signed in ’93 provided that “negotiations regarding the permanent
status were to commence no later than the third year of the interim
period.” These negotiations were supposed to bring about a final
settlement between the two parties. It was understood that these
negotiations would cover “the refugee issue, positions on Jerusalem,
issue of borders and settlements as well as security arrangements and
other issues of common interest.”
It is important to note that the US had no part in drafting this
agreement, as it was done without its knowledge. As a result, its
terms are favorable to Israel. That is not to say that allowing
Arafat and his minions back into Israel was a smart thing to do, but
the US was pushing Israel to do it.
Thereafter, the US forced on Israel acceptance of the Roadmap in
2002. It went far beyond the Oslo Accords and provided many terms
adverse to Israel’s interests including provisions for:
-“The emergence of an independent, democratic, and viable Palestinian
state”
-“Land for peace”
-The Saudi Plan calling for 100% withdrawal
-“GOI immediately dismantles settlement outposts erected since March
2001.”
-“Consistent with the Mitchell Report, GOI freezes all settlement
activity (including natural growth of settlements).”
Although the Roadmap mentioned the refugee issue as a final status
issue and nothing more, the Saudi Plan, which it referenced,
required “a just solution to the Palestinian Refugee problem to be
agreed upon in accordance with UN General Assembly Resolution 194”
and “Assures the rejection of all forms of Palestinian patriation
which conflict with the special circumstances of the Arab host
countries.” So, not only was Israel back to square one on the refugee
issue, but each Arab country could reject the patriation agreed upon
if it didn’t like it.
PM Sharon wanted the removal of any reference to the Saudi Plan, but
the State Department adamantly refused and demanded Israel accept it.
Israel did so subject to 14 reservations that the US pledged
to “fully and seriously address,” a pledge she never honored. One
reservation demanded the rejection of any references other than to
the requirements of Res. 242. It is time for her to seriously address
this issue.
It is the requirements of the Roadmap, drafted by the State
Department, that make a peace agreement unachievable.
As Shoshana Bryen points out:
"The possible outcomes of the Palestinian refugee issue are three: to
allow them to go to Israel (the so-called “right of return”); to
formulate their resettlement (and compensation) in the new State of
Palestine; or formulate their resettlement (and compensation)
somewhere else. The first means the dissolution of the State of
Israel – which cannot possibly be among the State Department’s
acceptable outcomes. (Can it?) In either of the other two scenarios,
counting would be a prerequisite to resettlement.
The problem for the State Department is that the Palestinians have
rejected the second and third outcomes."
The State Department has put itself in an untenable position. It
cannot satisfy the demands of the Arabs and achieve a peace
agreement. Nor can it force Israel to make further concessions. Had
the State Department stayed out of it, peace would have been achieved
decades ago. Its policy of supporting the Arabs diplomatically and
financially has resulted in the intransigence of the Arabs in general
and the PA in particular. The PA is now rejecting the US demands.
The Kirk amendment, watered down or otherwise, avoids the root of the
problem and won’t solve anything. (© 2012 THE TIMES OF ISRAEL
06/04/12)
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