Alan M. Dershowitz
The General Assembly vote declaring that Palestine, within the
pre-1967 borders, is a "state", at least for some purposes, would have
nasty legal implications if it were ever to be taken seriously by the
international community. It would mean that Israel, which captured some
Jordanian territory after Jordan attacked West Jerusalem in 1967, is
illegally occupying the Western Wall (Judaism's holiest site), the
Jewish Quarter of old Jerusalem (where Jews have lived for thousands of
years), the access road to the Hebrew University (which was established
well before Israel even became a state) and other areas necessary to the
security of its citizens. It would also mean that Security Council
Resolution 242, whose purpose it was to allow Israel to hold onto some
of the territories captured during its defensive 1967 war, would be
overruled by a General Assembly vote—something the United Nations
Charter explicitly forbids. It would be the first time in history that a
nation was required to return all land lawfully captured in a defensive war.
If all the territory captured by Israel in its defensive war is being
illegally occupied then it might be open to the newly recognized
"Palestinian State" to try to bring a case before the International
Criminal Court against Israeli political and military leaders who are
involved in the occupation. This would mean that virtually every Israeli
leader could be placed on trial. What this would entail realistically
is that they could not travel to countries which might extradite them
for trial in the Hague.
These absurd conclusions follow from the theater of the absurd that
occurred when the General Assembly, for the thousandth time, issued an
irrelevantly one sided declaration on Palestine. As Abba Eban once put
it: "If Algeria introduced a General Assembly Resolution that the world
was flat and that Israel had flattened it, it would pass 100 to 10 with
50 abstentions." That's pretty much what happened the other day. I
wonder whether the European countries that voted for the Resolution knew
what a tangled web they were weaving.
Nor was this Resolution a recognition of the two-state solution,
since a considerable number of states who voted for it have refused to
recognize Israel's right to exist. What they were looking for was
a one-state resolution—that one state being yet another Islamic country
that voted for Hamas in the last election and that is likely to be
governed by Sharia Law that will not allow Jews or Christians equal
rights.
Neither will the General Assembly's actions move the Palestinians
closer to accepting the ongoing Israeli offer to begin negotiations
toward a two-state solution with no prior conditions. The Palestinians
now have little incentive to negotiate a state, which would require
considerable compromise and sacrifice on all sides. They now think they
can get their state recognized without the need to give up the right of
return or to make the kinds of territorial compromises necessary for
Israel's security. The United Nations action will only discourage the
Palestinians from entering into serious negotiations with Israel.
The United Nations' action will also incentivize Hamas to continue
firing rockets into Israel on a periodic basis in order to provoke
Israeli retaliation. Many in Hamas believe that the recent fighting in
Gaza actually helped the Palestinians get more votes in the General
Assembly. They are certainly taking some of the credit for these votes.
All in all, the United Nations vote will make it harder to achieve a
peaceful two state solution, acceptable to both sides. But that has been
the history of General Assembly actions with regard to Israel,
beginning with the lopsided vote in 1975 that challenged Israel's very
existence by declaring Zionism—the national liberation movement of the
Jewish people—to be a form of racism. Although the General Assembly was
ultimately pressured into rescinding that blood libel, its bigoted
spirit still hovers over numerous United Nations agencies which continue
to regard Israel as a pariah. It could be felt in the General Assembly
hall when so many countries that refused to recognize Israel voted to
recognize Palestine.
This is all a prescription for continued warfare, lawfare and enmity.
It is not a prescription for resolving a complex and difficult issue in
a realistic manner. But what else is new at the United Nations?
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