MODERN SOURCES OF ISRAEL’S INTERNATIONAL RIGHTS IN
JERUSALEM
In 1970, three years after the 1967 Six-Day War, an article appearing in the most prestigious international legal periodical, The American Journal of International Law, touched directly on the question of Israel’s rights in Jerusalem.5 It became a critical reference point for Israeli ambassadors speaking at the UN in the immediate decades that followed and also found its way into their speeches. The article was written by an important, but not yet well-known, legal scholar named Stephen Schwebel. In the years that followed, Schwebel’s stature would grow immensely with his appointment as the legal advisor of the U.S. Department of State, and then finally when he became
the President of the International Court of Justice in
Schwebel wrote his
article, which was entitled “What Weight to Conquest,” in response to a statement
by then Secretary of State William Rogers that Israel was only entitled
to “insubstantial alterations” in the pre-1967 lines. The Nixon administration
had also hardened U.S. policy on Jerusalem as reflected in
its statements and voting patterns in the UN Security Council. Schwebel
strongly disagreed with this approach: he wrote that the pre-war lines were not
sacrosanct, for the 1967 lines were not an international border. Formally, they
were only armistice lines from 1949. As he noted, the armistice agreement
itself did not preclude the territorial claims of the parties beyond those
lines. Significantly, he explained that when territories are captured in a war,
the circumstances surrounding the outbreak of the conflict directly affect the
legal rights of the two sides, upon its termination.
Two facts from
1967 stood out that influenced his thinking:
First, Israel had acted in the
Six-Day War in the lawful exercise of its right of self-defense. Those familiar
with the events that led to its outbreak recall that Egypt was the party
responsible for the initiation of hostilities, through a series of steps that
included the closure of the Straits of Tiran to Israeli shipping and the
proclamation of a blockade on Eilat, an act that Foreign Minister Abba Eban would
characterize as the firing of the first shot of the war. Along Israel ’s eastern front, Jordan ’s artillery had
opened pre-pounding civilian neighborhoods in Jerusalem , despite repeated
warnings issued by Israel .
Given this
background, Israel had not captured
territory as a result of aggression, but rather because it had come under armed
attack. In fact, the Soviet Union had tried to have Israel labeled as the
aggressor in the UN Security Council on June 14, 1967, and then in the UN
General Assembly on July 4, 1967. But Moscow completely
failed. At the Security Council it was outvoted 11-4. Meanwhile at the General
Assembly, 88 states voted against or abstained on the first vote of a proposed
Soviet draft (only 32 states supported it). It was patently clear to the
majority of UN members that Israel
had waged a defensive war. 6
had waged a defensive war. 6
A second element
in Schwebel’s thinking was the fact Jordan ’s claim to legal
title over the territories it had lost to Israel in the Six-Day
War was very problematic. The Jordanian invasion of the West Bank – and Jerusalem – nineteen years
earlier in 1948 had been unlawful. As a result, Jordan did not gain legal
rights in the years that followed, given the legal principle, that Schwebel
stressed, according to which no right can be born of an unlawful act (ex
injuria jus non oritur) . It should not have come as a surprise that Jordan ’s claim to
sovereignty over the West Bank was not
recognized
by anyone, except forPakistan and Britain . Even the British
would not recognize the Jordanian claim in Jerusalem itself.
by anyone, except for
Thus, by comparing
Jordan’s illegal invasion of the West Bank to Israel’s legal exercise of its
right of self-defense, Schwebel concluded that “Israel has better title” in the
territory of what once was the Palestine Mandate than either of the Arab states
with which it had been at war. He specifically stated that Israel had better legal
title to “the whole of Jerusalem .”
Schwebel makes
reference to UN Security Council Resolution 242 from November 22, 1967 , which over the years would become the
main source for all of Israel ’s peace efforts,
from the 1979 Egyptian-Israeli Treaty of Peace to the 1993 Oslo Accords. In its
famous withdrawal clause, Resolution 242 did not call for a full withdrawal of
Israeli forces from all the territories it captured in the Six-Day War. There
was no effort to re-establish the status quo ante, which, as noted earlier, was
the product of a previous act of aggression by Arab armies in 1948.
As the U.S. ambassador to the
UN in 1967, Arthur Goldberg, pointed out in 1980, Resolution 242 did not even
mention Jerusalem “and this
omission was deliberate.” Goldberg made the point, reflecting the policy of the
Johnson administration for whom he served, that he never described Jerusalem as
“occupied territory,” though this changed under President Nixon.7 What Goldberg
wrote about Resolution 242 had added weight, given the fact that he previously
had served as a Justice on the U.S. Supreme Court.
Indeed, among the
leading jurists in international law and diplomacy, Schwebel was clearly not
alone. He was joined by Julius Stone, the great Australian legal scholar, who
reached the same conclusions. He added that UN General Assembly Resolution 181
from 1947 (also known as the Partition Plan) did not undermine Israel ’s subsequent
claims in Jerusalem . True, Resolution
181 envisioned that Jerusalem and its environs
would become a corpus separatum, or a separate international entity. But
Resolution 181 was only a recommendation of the General Assembly. It was
rejected by the Arab states forcibly, who invaded the nascent State of Israel
in 1948.
Ultimately, the
UN’s corpus separatum never came into being in any case. The UN did not protect
the Jewish population of Jerusalem from invading
Arab armies. Given this history, it was not surprising that Israel’s first
prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, announced on December 3, 1949, that
Revolution 181’s references to Jerusalem were “null and void,” thereby
anticipating Stone’s legal analysis years later. 8
There was also
Prof. Elihu Lauterpacht of Cambridge University , who for a time
served as legal advisor of Australia and as a judge ad
hoc of the International Court of Justice in the Hague . Lauterpacht
argued that Israel ’s reunification
of Jerusalem in 1967 was legally valid. He
explained 9 that the last state which had sovereignty over Jerusalem was the Ottoman Empire , which ruled it
from 1517 to 1917.
After the First
World War, the Ottoman Empire formally
renounced its sovereignty over Jerusalem as well as all
its former territories south of what became modern Turkey in the Treaty of
Sevres from 1920. This renunciation was confirmed by the Turkish Republic as well in the
Treaty of Lausanne of 1923. According to Lauterpacht, the rights of sovereignty
in Jerusalem were vested with the Principal
Allied and Associated Powers.
The Allied powers
assigned in 1920 the Mandate for Jewish Palestine to the Jewish people, which
became an international law that is in affect in perpetuity and the U.N. or any
other power cannot change it. The British were a trustee for the Jewish people
until they were able to set up the Jewish government.
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