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Saturday, 18 May. 2024
 
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In his article “Syrian chutzpah,” published in Ha’aretz on Thursday Jan. 6, 2000, Meron Benvenisti launches a vicious attack against the “infuriating arrogance” and the “outrage” of Syrian Foreign Minister Farouq Shara’a for daring to insist that Israel should withdraw to the June 4, 1967 lines rather than the “geopolitical arrangements” of 1923.

Benvenisti claims that this “international border between Syria and mandatory Palestine” as drawn by Col. Stuart Newcombe in 1922 is binding and must not be reshaped.

Beyond its “legal and territorial significance,” such a border also “has the dimensions of time and historical significance,” according to Benvenisti.

The reason is, of course, quite evident. Benvenisti attributes the motive to Newcombe as wanting to “make sure the Jewish homeland would have enough water.”

The 1923 border differs from the 1967 border in that the latter would give Syria 18 square kilometers of the land delineated as belonging to mandatory Palestine.

The substance of these 18 square kilometers includes control of the Banias springs, part of the eastern bank of the Jordan River, the northeast shore of Lake Tiberias, and the northern bank of the Yarmuk River.

Thus, the issue is not just one of boundaries, but also the control of the most vital sources of water in the region and the whole issue of water rights.

In this context, and from a Palestinian point of view, it is important to point out the following:

UN Resolution 242, which forms the basis of the talks, addresses the lands that Israel occupied in the June 5, 1967 war. It makes no reference whatsoever to the 1923 borders. Thus Israel is to return the land it occupied then.

In 1923, the state of Israel did not exist. The borders alluded to were those of Palestine, which the Council of the League of Nations placed under British mandatory rule on July 24, 1922 without the consent of the Palestinians.

The British mandate over Palestine came into force officially on Sept. 29, 1923. The borders were those of Palestine, and not of a non-existent Israel.

The official census of 1922 described the population of Palestine as being 757,182 of which only 11% were Jewish.

With the stepped-up Jewish immigration into Palestine, by 1947 the Jewish proportion of the population of Palestine had reached almost one third, while owning about 7% of the total land.

Thus the UN partition plan of Palestine (Res. 181) had given a minority population a majority of the land of Palestine (56%) instead of the 7% that they actually owned, without the consent of the real owners.

By the end of the 1948 war, Israel came to control 77.4% of Palestine, while over 750,000 Palestinians were forcibly dispossessed and evicted from their own homes and over 418 Palestinian villages were totally destroyed.

Nobody appointed Israel as the heir to Palestine, whether by law or by force, and Israel has no claim whatsoever to the boundaries of historical Palestine.

The only boundaries for Israel that have any international recognition are those of 1947. All other territorial expansions were carried out by the use of military force.

Thus when the PLO accepted the two-state solution and recognized the 1967 boundaries, it actually granted Israel the land it occupied in 1948—21.5% additional Palestinian territory.

In its negotiations with the Palestinians, Israel is currently haggling over the remaining 22% of Palestine (the West Bank and Gaza), laying claim to an illegal legacy of land confiscation and settlement building under the pretext of taking into account “existing facts on the ground.”

With Syria, it is laying claim to Palestinian land dating back to 1923 as a self-appointed substitute for Palestine.

This is real chutzpah!

Any Palestinian-Syrian land issue will be discussed and solved at the bilateral level between the two parties involved.

In the whole history of Palestine, there is no record of any Palestinian, individual or body that has appointed Israel as the custodian, representative, or legal heir to Palestinian land and legal rights.

The real outrage and arrogance is in claiming a 1923 border for a country that was non-existent at the time.

If Benvenisti and his ilk want to “erase the blackboard” and return to the 1923 realities, they would find no resistance among the Palestinians. It would be a supreme act of self-negation on the part of the Israelis should they wish a return to mandatory Palestine of that era with all its implications.

An “absent state” at that time would find it difficult to claim any territory, let alone the legal boundaries of another.

Selectivity and distortion in applying international legality are neither wise nor acceptable.

Fortunately also the Palestinians have neither disappeared nor are they suffering from collective amnesia.

We are perfectly capable of claiming our own inheritance.

A word of caution to Benvenisti and others of his opinion—be careful what you wish for!

 
 
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