Occupied Territories or Disputed Territories? (JCPA JERUSALEM CENTER PUBLIC AFFAIRS) Vol. 1, No. 1 09/02/01)
Source: http://www.jcpa.org/art/brief1-1.htm
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Last month´s Palestinian draft resolution at the UN Security Council
again described the West Bank and Gaza Strip as "occupied Palestinian
territories." References to Israel´s "foreign occupation" also appear
in the Durban Draft Declaration of the UN World Conference Against
Racism. This language was not just chosen for rhetorical purposes but
in order to invoke specific legal claims: For example, Palestinian
insistence on using the term "occupied territories" is usually
connected to the assertion that they fall under the 1949 Fourth
Geneva Convention. Yet, Palestinian spokesmen also speak about
Israeli military action in Area A as an infringement on Palestinian
sovereignty: If Israel "invaded Palestinian territories," then they
cannot be regarded as "occupied"; however, if the territories are
defined as "occupied," Israel cannot be "invading" them.
Israel´s Traditional Definitions
Israel entered the West Bank and Gaza Strip in the 1967 Six-Day War.
Israeli legal experts traditionally resisted efforts to define the
West Bank and Gaza Strip as "occupied" or falling under the main
international treaties dealing with military occupation. Former Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court Meir Shamgar wrote in the 1970s that
there is no de jure applicability of the 1949 Fourth Geneva
Convention regarding occupied territories to the case of the West
Bank and Gaza Strip since the Convention "is based on the assumption
that there had been a sovereign who was ousted and that he had been a
legitimate sovereign." In fact, prior to 1967, Jordan had occupied
the West Bank and Egypt had occupied the Gaza Strip; their presence
in those territories was the result of their illegal invasion in
1948. Jordan´s 1950 annexation of the West Bank was recognized only
by Great Britain and Pakistan and rejected by the vast majority of
the international community, including the Arab states.
International jurists generally draw a distinction between situations
of "aggressive conquest" and territorial disputes that arise after a
war of self-defense. Former State Department Legal Advisor Stephen
Schwebel, who later headed the International Court of Justice in the
Hague, wrote in 1970 regarding Israel´s case: "Where the prior holder
of territory had seized that territory unlawfully, the state which
subsequently takes that territory in the lawful exercise of self-
defense has, against that prior holder, better title." Israel only
entered the West Bank after repeated Jordanian artillery fire and
ground movements across the previous armistice lines; additionally,
Iraqi forces crossed Jordanian territory and were poised to enter the
West Bank. Under such circumstances, even the UN rejected Soviet
efforts to have Israel branded as the aggressor in the Six-Day War.
In any case, under UN Security Council Resolution 242 from November
1967, that has served as the basis of the 1991 Madrid Conference and
the 1993 Declaration of Principles, Israel is only expected to
withdraw "from territories" to "secure and recognized boundaries" and
not from "all the territories" captured in the Six-Day War. This
language resulted from months of painstaking diplomacy. Thus, the UN
Security Council recognized that Israel was entitled to part of these
territories for new defensible borders. Taken together with UN
Security Council Resolution 338, it became clear that only
negotiations would determine which portion of these territories would
eventually become "Israeli territories" or territories to be retained
by Israel´s Arab counterpart.
The last international legal allocation of territory that includes
those strategic zones of what is today the West Bank and Gaza Strip
occurred with the 1922 League of Nations Mandate for Palestine which
recognized Jewish national rights in the whole of the Mandated
territory. Moreover, these rights were preserved under the United
Nations as well, according to Article 80 of the UN Charter, despite
the termination of the League of Nations in 1946. Given these
fundamental sources of international legality, Israel cannot be
characterized as a "foreign occupier" with respect to the West Bank
and Gaza Strip.
The Impact of Oslo: Are the West Bank and Gaza Strip "Occupied" From
a Legal Standpoint?
Under the Oslo Agreements, Israel transferred specific powers from
its military government in the West Bank and Gaza to the newly
created Palestinian Authority. Already in 1994, the legal advisor to
the International Red Cross, Dr. Hans-Peter Gasser, concluded that
his organization had no reason to monitor Israeli compliance with the
Fourth Geneva Convention in the Gaza Strip and Jericho area, since
the Convention no longer applied with the advent of Palestinian
administration in those areas. Since that time, 98 percent of the
Palestinian population in the West Bank and Gaza Strip have come
under Palestinian jurisdiction. Israel transferred 40 spheres of
civilian authority, as well as responsibility for security and public
order, to the Palestinian Authority, while retaining powers for
Israel´s external security and the security of Israeli citizens.
These residual powers have only been employed extensively, in recent
months, in response to the escalation of violence and armed attacks
imposed on Israel by the decision of the Palestinian Authority.
The 1949 Fourth Geneva Convention itself (Article 6) states that the
Occupying Power would only be bound to its terms "to the extent that
such Power exercises the functions of government in such
territory...." Under the earlier 1907 Hague Regulations, as well, a
territory can only be considered occupied when it is under the
effective and actual control of the occupier. Thus, according to the
main international agreements dealing with military occupation,
Israel´s transfer of powers to the Palestinian Authority under the
Oslo Agreements has made it difficult to continue to characterize the
West Bank and Gaza as occupied territories.
It is not surprising that at the United Nations, the U.S. has opposed
the phraseology of "occupied Palestinian territories." In March 1994,
U.S. Ambassador to the UN Madeleine Albright stated: "We simply do
not support the description of the territories occupied by Israel in
the 1967 War as occupied Palestinian territory."
Describing the West Bank and Gaza Strip as "occupied Palestinian
territories" is incorrect and misleading. Israel´s transfer of
government functions under the Oslo Agreements greatly strengthens
Israel´s case that the main international conventions relevant to
military occupations do not apply. Describing these territories
as "Palestinian" may serve the Palestinians´ political agenda but
prejudges the outcome of future territorial negotiations that were
envisioned under UN Security Council Resolution 242. It also serves
the current Palestinian effort to obtain international affirmation of
Palestinian claims and a total denial of Israel´s fundamental rights
in every international forum. It would be far more accurate to
describe the West Bank and Gaza Strip as "disputed territories" to
which both Israelis and Palestinians have claims. Additionally, UN
resolutions that characterize these territories as "Palestinian"
clearly undermine the foundations of the peace process for the
future. (www.jcpa.org. © Copyright 09/02/01)
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