70 Years of Broken Promises to the Palestinian
People: The Untold Story of the Partition Plan
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN,
November 27, 2017
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1947 UN Partition of Palestine Map:
Yellow areas:
Palestine Blue areas: Israel White: Al-Quds (Jerusalem)
International area |
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In a recent talk before Chatham House think-tank in London,
Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu, approached the issue of a
Palestinian state from an intellectual perspective.
Before we
think of establishing a Palestinian state, he
mused, "it is time we reassessed whether the modern model we have of
sovereignty, and unfettered sovereignty, is applicable everywhere in the
world."
It is not the first time that Netanyahu discredits the
idea of a Palestinian state. Despite clear Israeli intentions of
jeopardizing any chances for the creation of such a state, the US
Administration of Donald Trump is, reportedly, finalizing plans for an
'ultimate peace deal'. The New
York Times suggests that "the anticipated plan will have to be built
around the so-called two-state solution."
But why the wasted
effort, while all parties, Americans
included know that Israel has no intention of allowing a Palestinian
state and the US has no political capital, or desire, to enforce one?
The answer may not lie in the present, but in the past.
A Palestinian Arab state had initially been proposed as a
political tactic by the British, to provide a legal cover for the
establishment of a Jewish state. It continues to be used
as a political tactic, though never with the aim of finding a ‘just
solution’ to the conflict, as is often propagated.
When British
Foreign Secretary, Arthur James Balfour, made
his promise, in November 2, 1917, to the Zionist movement to grant
them a Jewish state in Palestine, the once distant and implausible idea
began taking shape. It would have been effortlessly achievable, had the
Palestinians not rebelled.
The 1936-1939 Palestinian rebellion
revealed an impressive degree of collective political awareness and
ability to mobilize, despite British violence.
The British
government then dispatched the Peel Commission to Palestine to examine
the roots of the violence, hoping to quell the Palestinian revolt.
In July 1937, the commission published its report, which immediately
ignited the fury of the native population, who were already aware of the
British-Zionist collusion.
The Peel Commission concluded that
“underlying causes of the disturbances” were the desire of the
Palestinians for independence, and their “hatred and fear of the
establishment of the Jewish national home.” Based on that view, it
recommended the partition of Palestine into a Jewish state and a
Palestinian state, the latter to be incorporated into Transjordan, which
was itself under the control of the British.
Palestine, like
other Arab countries, was supposedly being primed for independence,
under the terms of the British Mandate, as granted by the League of
Nations in 1922. Moreover, the Peel Commission was recommending partial
independence for Palestine, unlike the full sovereignty granted to the
Jewish state.
More alarming was the arbitrary nature of that
division. The total Jewish land ownership then did not exceed 5.6
percent of the total size of the country. The Jewish state was to
include the most strategic and fertile regions of Palestine, including
the Fertile Galilee and much of the water access to the Mediterranean.
Thousands of Palestinians were killed in the rebellion as they
continued to reject the prejudicial partition and the British ploy aimed
at honoring the Balfour Declaration and rendering Palestinians
stateless.
To strengthen its position, the Zionist leadership
changed course. In May 1942, David Ben-Gurion, then the representative
of the Jewish Agency, attended a New York conference which brought
together leading American Zionists. In his speech, he demanded that all
of Palestine become a “Jewish Commonwealth.”
A new powerful
ally, President Harry Truman, began filling the gap left open, as the
British were keen on ending their mandate in Palestine. In ‘Before Their
Diaspora,’ Walid
Khalidi writes:
“(US President Harry Truman) went a step
further in his support of Zionism by endorsing a Jewish Agency plan for
the partition of Palestine into a Jewish state and a Palestinian state.
The plan envisaged the incorporation into the Jewish state about 60
percent of Palestine at a time when the Jewish landownership in the
country did not exceed 7 percent.”
On November 29, 1947 the UN
33-member state General Assembly, under intense pressure from the US
administration of Truman, voted
in favor of Resolution 181 (II) calling for the partition of
Palestine into three entities: a Jewish state, a Palestinian state and
an international regime to govern Jerusalem.
If the British
partition proposal of 1937 was bad enough, the UN resolution was a
reason for total dismay, as it allocated 5500 square miles to the
proposed Jewish state, and only 4500 square miles to Palestinians – who
owned 94.2 of the land and represented over two-thirds of the
population.
The ethnic cleansing of Palestine began in earnest
after the Partition Plan was adopted. In December 1947, organized
Zionist attacks on Palestinian areas resulted in the exodus of 75,000
people. In fact, the Palestinian Nakba – Catastrophe – did not begin in
1948, but 1947.
That exodus of the Palestinians was engineered
through Plan Dalet, which was implemented in stages and altered to
accommodate political necessities. The final stage of that plan,
launched in April of 1948, included six major operations. Two of them,
Operation Nachshon and Harel, aimed at destroying the Palestinian
villages in and around the Jaffa-Jerusalem border. By cutting off the
two-main central mass that composed the proposed Palestinian Arab state,
the Zionist leadership wanted to break up any possibility of Palestinian
geographical cohesion. This continues to be the aim to this day.
The Israeli achievement after the war was hardly guided by the Partition
Plan. The disjointed Palestinian territories of Gaza, the West Bank and
East Jerusalem made up 22 percent of the historic size of Palestine.
The rest is painful history. The carrot of the Palestinian state is
dangled from time to time, by the very forces that partitioned Palestine
70 years ago, yet worked diligently with Israel to ensure the demise of
the political aspirations of the Palestinian people.
Eventually,
the partitioned discourse was remolded into that of ‘two-state
solution’, championed in recent decades by various US administrations,
who exhibited little sincerity of ever making such a state a reality.
And now, 70 years after the partition of Palestine, there is only
one state, although governed by two different sets laws, one that
privileges Jews and discriminates against Palestinians.
“A
single state has already existed for a long time,” wrote Israeli
columnist Gideon
Levy in a recent Haaretz column. “The time has come to launch a
battle over the nature of its regime.”
Many Palestinians already have.
- Ramzy Baroud is a
journalist, author and editor of Palestine Chronicle. His forthcoming
book is ‘The Last Earth: A Palestinian Story’ (Pluto Press, London).
Baroud has a Ph.D. in Palestine Studies from the University of Exeter
and is a Non-Resident Scholar at Orfalea Center for Global and
International Studies, University of California Santa Barbara. His
website is www.ramzybaroud.net.
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