Friday, May 20, 2011

Oh-Oh: A Palestinian Agreement To Demilitarize Their State Is Not Legally Binding

Daled Amos


Thank you to My Right Word, who pointed me to this paper.

Louis Rene Beres, author on International Law, explains--Why Palestinian Demilitarization Won’t Work [PDF]--addressing Netanyahu's speech where he allowed for a second Palestinian state, with one of the conditions being the demilitarization of the proposed state.

According to Professor Beres, such a condition would not be legally binding:

Here is the core of the demilitarization argument problem: International law would not necessarily require Palestinian compliance with pre-state agreements concerning the use of armed force. From the standpoint of international law, enforcing demilitarization upon a sovereign state of Palestine would be problematic. As a
now independent state, any preindependence compacts would not bind Palestine, even if these agreements were to include fully codified Quartet assurances. Because true treaties can be binding only upon states,5 an agreement between a non-state Palestinian National Authority (PNA) and an authentic sovereign state(Israel) 6 could also have little real effectiveness.7
And here is the rest of it.

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