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Jan-22-2009 07:27TweetFollow @OregonNews Obama's First Foreign Policy Challenge:
By William K. Barth Salem-News.com
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Gaza under attack. thenewermetaphysicals.blogspot.com |
(LOS ANGELES) - President Obama's most immediate foreign policy challenge is to determine how to deal with the recent Israeli action in Gaza, and with the broader conflict between the Israelis and Palestinians.
Israel’s partial-withdrawal from Gaza appears to have been timed to coincide with President Obama’s inauguration, rather than to answer any of Israel’s security concerns. Clear international standards for resolving intra-state group conflicts are required if the longest-standing problem in the Middle East is ever to be resolved.
While the application of international law is no panacea, nor an excuse for unlimited intrusion into a state’s sovereignty, what is beyond doubt is that the uncertain legal status of Palestinian residents makes continued violence in Gaza, the West Bank, and East Jerusalem likely. The Israeli attack on Gaza is an example of what happens in the absence of an international forum that can assist states to implement their human rights obligations.
The continued ethnic violence within Israeli jurisdiction begs the question: what exactly is the status of Palestinians who reside within so-called Occupied Palestinian Territories? Numerous international legal instruments have recognized the right of the Palestinians to self-determination. However, despite the publication of President Bush’s so-called Road Map for Peace, there remains ambiguity about the procedure by which Palestinians may obtain self-determination. The delay in implementing the Road Map has contributed to the cycle of Hamas-sponsored rocket attacks against Israel, and the retaliatory Israeli invasion of Gaza, which has produced yet another round of violence.
A brief review of history helps us to understand the confusing legal status of the Palestinians. Israel was established shortly after the end of the Second World War, with the support of the victorious Western Allies, as well as a majority the United Nations’ (UN) General Assembly, which in its Resolution 181 proposed a partition plan for the region. Currently, ‘the Quartet’ (Russia, the US, the European Union and the UN) plays an important mediating role for the area.
Early international efforts in the region proposed that Jews and Palestinians live together within a single state called Palestine. For example, the 1917 Declaration by the British Foreign Secretary and former Prime Minister Arthur Balfour, together with the Mandate for Palestine (24 July 1922), envisaged both groups being placed under the jurisdiction of a single state. It was not until 1937 that a British Royal Commission of Inquiry (the Peel Commission) concluded that it was necessary to sunder Jews and Palestinians into separate states. This was deemed necessary to prevent Palestinian opposition to the increasing Jewish migration from igniting inter-group violence. UN Resolution 181 (1947) authorized a partition of the region into separate Jewish (Israel) and Arab (Palestine) states.
Partition, or the so-called ‘two-state solution’, remains the goal of multiple UN Resolutions (181, 242, 338, & 3236), as well as the Camp David Accords (1978), the Oslo Accords (1993), and the current Roadmap for Peace.
Unfortunately, international law has failed to establish a procedure for qualified groups to pursue statehood. Although the UN Charter and two international human rights treaties provide for the right to self-determination, no international remedy exists to realize such claims. Peoples that exist under alien domination are trapped within what human rights jurists describe as the ‘iron cage’ of the domestic state laws which subjugate them. A central idea of human rights is that it permits individual(s) to appeal to a regional or international adjudication body for relief denied them by their host states. The lack of such a remedy, combined with the failure of current international initiatives, has stalled the realization of Palestinian statehood.
Enhancing the jurisdiction of treaty monitoring bodies such as the UN Human Rights Committee (HRC) will help states to understand their treaty obligations with regard to internal groups that jurists term ‘peoples’ and, therefore, qualified for self-determination. This is because adjudicative procedures offered by the HRC help ensure protection for ethnic, religious, national, and linguistic groups. At this time, the HRC does not take up claims for self-determination.
Thus far, nations have achieved statehood in only carefully prescribed situations. Some examples include European states created out of empires controlled by defeated Central and Axis powers after WWI and WWII; the grant of independence to the African, Asian and Caribbean colonies by the European powers ending the colonial era in the decades after WWII; the emergence of independent states from long-standing federations after 1990, 15 in the case of the Soviet Union in 1990-1991, and six in the case of Yugoslavia; and UN-supervised paths to independence for subjugated provinces, namely East Timor (formerly part of Indonesia) in 2002 and Kosovo (formerly part of Serbia) in 2008.
The Palestinians current legal existence is statu nascedi, meaning that they are at the beginning of a process that is leading to statehood. However, self-determination is not necessarily co-terminus with statehood, and may be achieved through a variety of means that protect group autonomy. The preferred type of self-determination, i.e. autonomy or statehood, is a question decided by the group itself. Palestinians can realize their right to self-determination in either of the single-state, or two-state forms.
The plan to disassociate Israelis and Palestinians into separate states raises another theoretical question, namely, should international bodies incorporate new states based upon the national, ethnic, religious or linguistic identity of a single group?
The classic formula of nationalism, to make ‘every nation a state and every state a nation’, results in what the Minorities Section Director of the League of Nations, P. de Arcarate, described as an international “crisis”. This is because the world contains 3,000-8,000 ethnic groups living in 192 UN member-states. How do international organizations go about determining which of these human communities are deserving of statehood?
The League of Nations’ Mandate for Palestine proposed that Israelis and Palestinians live together within a single, bi-national state. The Mandate established a Jewish national home located within Palestine with self-governing institutions while guaranteeing the civil, political, and cultural rights of Palestinians, as well as other minority groups. Moreover, even in present-day Israel, Arabic is an official language alongside Hebrew, bearing testimony to the state’s bi-national character. However, the Mandate’s single-state solution never received much support from Israelis or Palestinians, and now languishes in obscurity in most of the international discourse.
It is surprising that, given the historic failures of partition, most Israelis and most Palestinians prefer separation over integration. For example, the partition of India (Hindu) to create Pakistan (Islamic) produced inter-group violence, which continues to this day. Witness the recent terror attacks on Mumbai’s Taj Mahal Hotel and Oberoi-Trident Hotel.
Furthermore, a partition of the region will be no simple matter, given the dispersion of Israelis within Occupied Palestinian Territory. Although Israel withdrew from its settlements in Gaza several years ago, it has long encouraged settlement in both the West Bank and East Jerusalem. We must remember that Palestinians reside in non-contiguous areas, namely, the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem. As a result, Israelis and Palestinians are inter-dispersed, creating an obstacle to partition and separation.
Resolution of the Middle East conflict necessarily requires that international and regional powers complete the process that began with the post-WWII establishment of Israel. That is, a political framework must be created either for Israelis and Palestinians to live together, or to separate them. The lack of an international forum that could oversee this process has prevented the creation of a Palestinian state. Clearly, both Israelis and Palestinians are unable to resolve the conflict in the absence of international participation.
The international Quartet has an obligation to assist the Palestinians to realize their right to self-determination in a responsible fashion, by creating such a forum. It is to be hoped that President Obama will encourage new international standards on self-determination that will assist Israelis and Palestinians to recognize each other in an atmosphere characterized by what Ronald Dworkin describes as equal concern and respect.
Dr William K. Barth is a lawyer who researches the politics of minority rights. His new book, On Cultural Rights: The Equality of Nations and the Minority Legal Tradition, is published by Martinus Nijhoff.
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Dr. William K. Barth is a graduate of the University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. Dr. Barthʼs doctoral thesis entitled On Cultural Rights: The Equality of Nations and the Minority Legal Tradition, was recently published by Martinus Nijhoff. Prior to initiating his research in Oxford, Dr. Barth served as a senior lawyer for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. He received his Master of Public Administration Degree from Harvard Universityʼs John F. Kennedy School of Government (ʼ86) and his Juris Doctor from Loyola University School of Law (ʼ79). He has been a member of the California State Bar in good standing since 1979. .
Dr. William K. Barth's book link is: brill.nl/default.aspx?partid=210&pid=30599
You can visit his blog page at this address: thebarthreport.com/
All comments and messages are approved by people and self promotional links or unacceptable comments are denied.
Henry Ruark January 24, 2009 8:17 am (Pacific time)
To all: Old editor-habit to re-read any comment leads me to add to mine above to "Anon": There is an attack underway nationally paid for by same perverted billionaire funding as for past thirty years. It is directed at every open and honest-information channel that can be so reached. Purpose is to continue the same heavy flood of distorted misinformation, with perversion added as possible, that made "liberal" bad-word, and succeeded for some years in selling concept that "Govt. IS the problem !--key misconcept of the Reagan era misconstrued mission insisting that "Greed is GOOD ! - Get YOURS while you can !!" Costly undertaking now continues since false-flag concepts once considered as "conservative" have now been shown to aroused public as just what they really are: neocon nonsense wrapped in whatever will sell to naive citizens uninformed by failing "free press." "See with owne eyes" via your own experience and search for solid values reflected in honest, open, democratic dialog, to "evaluate with own mind" rather than simply swallow all that's pushed out from perverted providers.
Henry Ruark January 23, 2009 8:04 pm (Pacific time)
"Anon": Whether or not your very confused and complex statement rings historically true in every detail, as you obviously claim, fact of your nonentity here hinges on your failure to provide even the beginnings of real identity to build any trust and confidence in what you state. Author of this report, in contrast, has a distinguished record of service, and signs his stuff openly for all to see. WHY bother to report in depth and detail, as you did, while concealing the strongest reason we should trust what you write, via facts of your special training, experience, and/or whatever-else ? For all we know, you act for one or the other of the groups involved; or for an agency with a reason for interference in any open dialog channel. NO quarrel with your content; only with your very naive no-name approach, which warns off anyone with working mental capacity. SO stand-up, snatch away that mask, tell us WHO you are, and that will aid us to accept WHAT you claim since it also aids the essential-WHY. That's what professional writers do, called a by-line, used for some centuries now since essential for ANY trust.
Henry Ruark January 23, 2009 9:21 am (Pacific time)
S-W: What do you propose ? Simple murder of the entire Hamas group ? Other than that solution, all that is left is rational, reasonable further international dialog and some final compromise so negotiated, then enforced by stronger international means. UN was so intended, now made impotent largely by lack of support from major nations. In the 21st Century we can remake that deplorable history beginning with same-work on our own government system.
Vic January 23, 2009 5:59 am (Pacific time)
"the Palestinians were offered everything they could hope for by Israel, but it was rejected" Oh really? When did this take place? The Israelis offered them their land back? Offered to stop shooting their children and destroying their villages? Offered to stop starving them with a blockade? Offered to allow them to come and go like the rest of the world does? Offered to stop bulldozing homes, crops and orchards? Israel claims to "offer", but all it does is take. SayWhat obviously does not know that Hamas provides many social services and the military/security part is a very small part of Hamas.Hamas runs food production and distribution centers, schools,day care centers,medical clinics and even garbage removal services. I suspect that SayWhat is part of the Israeli PR machine, trying to make a massacre look like the victims fault. Kinda hard, tho when you have tanks against kids with rocks and starving families and you are trying to portray the tanks as the victims. Israelis love their David and Goliath story, now they are the Goliath and the ragtag Palestinians are David.
Anonymous January 23, 2009 2:51 am (Pacific time)
Dr William K. Barth may be a lawyer but he is no historian. He makes too many errors of fact and he's lucky this appears in a newspaper and not in a court of record. Some comments: "Early international efforts in the region proposed that Jews and Palestinians live together within a single state called Palestine." Not only are "Palestinians" not mentioned in any of the documents he quotes and more (Balfour Declaration, 1917; Versailles Peace Conference, 1919; San Remo Conference, 1920; League of Nations decision on Mandate, 1922-23), but not even the word "Arabs" appears. Only "non-Jews" and the reason is that the country was intended as the "reconstituted Jewish national home", not some vague multi-ethnic, multi-national entity. The 1937 partition "was deemed necessary to prevent Palestinian opposition to the increasing Jewish migration from igniting inter-group violence." Now, why should that be if the Mandate guaranteed "immigration facilitation and close settlement on the land" for Jews? And why did that Arab terror start in 1920 before any real large-scale immigration begin (in the 1930s, Hitler's rise was a major reason for the increasing numbers)? Or could it have been, like Hamas today, that the Mufti El-Husseini could not counter any Jewish presence anywhere in the country? And let's not forget the first partition when in 1923, Gt. Britain lopped off TransJordan from the original "Palestine Mandate", some 70% of the land area the Jews were promised. It is not true that the "UN Resolution 181 (1947) authorized a partition of the region into separate Jewish (Israel) and Arab (Palestine) states." Just Jewish and Arab. For the UN, there was a Jewish Palestine and an Arab Palestine and the Zionist Movement agreed to that compromise. But for the Arabs, there was to be no Jewish Palestine at all. In asserting that "Peoples that exist under alien domination are trapped within what human rights jurists describe as the ‘iron cage’...", a misconception is being promoted. Did not the Arabs arrive in the area the world knows as the Land of Israel in 638, invade it, conquer it and then occupy it, while the Jews, those there and those in exile caused by the Roman conquest, were in a state of lost political independence and sovereignty which they never yielded upon, constantly returnly to their homeland, a natural right eventually recognized by the highest international legal body: the Supreme Council of the League of Nations? While "Palestinians can realize their right to self-determination in either of the single-state, or two-state forms", is there not right now three Arab states in the former area of the Palestine Mandate? One is in what is termed the West Bank or Judea and Samaria to use the 1947 UN nomenclature with Fatah authority; another is in Gaza under Hamas and yet a third is east of the Jordan River under the Hashemite Family, political refugees from Saudi Arabia who fled their homeland after Ibn Saud was finally victorious in the early 1920s? He properly asserts that "a partition of the region will be no simple matter, given the dispersion of Israelis within Occupied Palestinian Territory. Although Israel withdrew from its settlements in Gaza several years ago, it has long encouraged settlement in both the West Bank and East Jerusalem. We must remember that Palestinians reside in non-contiguous areas, namely, the West Bank, Gaza, and East Jerusalem. As a result, Israelis and Palestinians are inter-dispersed, creating an obstacle to partition and separation." This is correct but there is another possibility or another perspective: could it not be that there is an Arab population dispersion within Israel and that if Jews need to be evacuated from Judea and Samaria, would not a proper quid pro quo be the same for the Arabs of Israel, at least in theory? I do not support such a population exchange but if one pursues one demographic replacement, another surely looms up. The resolution that is proferred, that "necessarily requires that international and regional powers complete the process that began with the post-WWII establishment of Israel" I would suggest cannot succeed until two things are agreed upon: the Arabs must renounce their rejection of 181 which led to the conflict. The second is the so-called 'right of return' which is no right, for otherwise, what the Arabs couldn't achieve by diplomatic rejection and war will be accomplished by demography and that cannot be allowed to happen for, after all, the UN recognized Israel, a state constantly threatened not only by terror throughout its existence (fedayeen in the 1950s, the PLO starting in 1964 - exactly what "Palestine" were they intent upon liberating? - and now Hamas).
SayWhat? January 22, 2009 9:53 pm (Pacific time)
The only thing Obama needs to do is figure out how to get rid of HAMAS. HAMAS is the most destructive force to ever harm the Palestinians. Bloodthirsty, savage, cruel, and evil, they have done nothing but kill and commit and incite violence to NO worthy end. The Palestinians were offered everything they could hope for by Israel, but it was rejected. Why? Because if they have a reason to live in peace, they have no reason to want or even be influenced by HAMAS or Fatah...
Vic January 22, 2009 8:54 am (Pacific time)
The Zionist dreams of Greater Israel need to be abandoned, AIPAC needs to be registered as an "agent of a foreign country", Israel needs to declare its nuclear weapons, allow inspections of the Dimona nuclear weapons plant and sign and abide by the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. Legally, we are not supposed to have any kind of trade or interaction with nuclear armed countries that have not signed and abided by the NPT. And Israel needs to go back to the pre 67 borders. This would all be great, but dont hold your breath.
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