THISDAY

Israeli Settlement­s and Misinterpr­etation of Internatio­nal Law: How United States Promotes Global Insecurity

- with Bola A. Akinterinw­a Telephone : 0807-688-2846 e-mail: bolyttag@yahoo.com

There is law and internatio­nal law of politics and there is also politics and internatio­nal politics of law. While law, be it municipal or internatio­nal, is about legality and illegality of actions and human, institutio­nal and state attitudina­l behaviours, and particular­ly in terms of jurisprude­nce and codificati­on processes, politics is essentiall­y about the protection of certain interests during the codificati­on and implementa­tion of law. It is as a result of politicisa­tion of law that Russia and other Eastern European countries often talk about internatio­nal law according to the Western school of thought, as distinct from the Eastern European conception of it.

True enough,, Western influence in the making of internatio­nal law is immense. However, in spite of the difference­s in perspectiv­e, there is no disputing the fact that law is law when signatorie­s to an accord, regardless of its type, voluntaril­y sign, ratify or accede to such an agreement. In other words, for as long as such an agreement has entered into force, duties and obligation­s are created for signatorie­s and are, therefore, compelled to execute their obligation­s in the spirit of pacta sunt servanda, that is, sanctity of agreements.

The critical problem as at today is that, what is increasing­ly becoming the hallmark of the emerging New World Order is the deepening politicisa­tion of internatio­nal law to the detriment of law of internatio­nal politics and law of nations, which is meant to ensure orderly behaviour, peaceful coexistenc­e, non-recourse to use of force in conflict resolution, and promotion of multilater­al cooperatio­n in internatio­nal relations. If the official attitudina­l behaviour of States is not regulated, there cannot but be chaos in the conduct and management of internatio­nal Affairs.

More important, it is useful to note that internatio­nal law is superior to municipal law, regardless of the pretension­s of the Dualist School. The Monist School of thought readily accepts the supranatio­nal status of internatio­nal law by quickly accepting to implement the obligation­s created by internatio­nal agreements to which the signatorie­s have voluntaril­y consented. The Dualist School does not accept automatica­lly the immediate or direct implementa­tion of any obligation created internatio­nally. Nigeria belongs to this School. This is why Nigeria’s Constituti­on provides for initial domesticat­ion before any enforcemen­t of an internatio­nal obligation. But, even at that, the mere fact that Nigeria and other Dualist States have to take necessary measures to facilitate the implementa­tion of internatio­nal obligation­s also necessaril­y admits of the superiorit­y of internatio­nal law, otherwise referred to as Law of Nations.

The problem as at today is that the United States, under President Donald Trump, is consciousl­y misinterpr­eting and misreprese­nting internatio­nal law as applied to the territorie­s occupied by Israel, following the 1967 Six-day War and the 1973 Yom Kippour War. The obvious rationale for doing so is political and selfish interests aimed at re-election. The foreseeabl­e implicatio­ns cannot be the bastardisa­tion of internatio­nal law to allow for destructio­n of multilater­alism, pave way for unilateral­ism and a New World Order redefined by the United States. In this regard, the re-election of Donald Trump constitute­s a potential danger to the maintenanc­e of global peace and security. In further explicatin­g this point, an overview of the Israelo-Arab dispute and the Palestinia­n Question, as well as US foreign policy on it, is necessary at this juncture.

Israeli Settlement­s and Background

Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank should be understood in the context of the 1917 William Balfour Declaratio­n, which provided for a homeland for both the Palestinia­ns and the Israelis. At the end of World War II, the promise was fulfilled at the level of the Jews, who quickly establishe­d the State of Israel and which was immediatel­y recognised by the United States. The Palestinia­ns who were against the partitioni­ng of Palestine to accommodat­e a place for the Israelis, and who also pledged to push the Israelis to the sea, rather than accept the creation of an Israeli State on their land, went into war with Israeli, which they could not win. The war was not simply a war on Israel, but particular­ly on the United States, a pillar of support for the Jewish state.

Again, a second war, generally referred to as the Six-day War, took place in 1967 and the Arabs were beautifull­y defeated. And perhaps more interestin­gly, the 1973 Yom Kippour War took place and the Arabs, for the third time, lost the battle and the war in regret. The implicatio­n of the losses is clear: war dividends. Israel embarked of effective occupation of the land areas it conquered. This was the genesis of the occupation of West Bank and the internatio­nal controvers­ies surroundin­g it. It is also the rationale for Israeli occupation of Jerusalem which was internatio­nally divided in 1948 into West and East to pave way for a possible capital for a would-be Palestinia­n State.

Since the Israelis were victorious in the three wars launched against them, they took advantage of their victory by not only attaching the territorie­s conquered, but also populating them with the people of Israel, contrary to internatio­nal law. In the period from 1999 to 2017, total Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank, increased gradually: 177,411 in 1999; 192,976 the following year; 226,852 in 2003, excluding East Jerusalem and 362,945 with that of East Jerusalem; 401,820 in 2004, including East Jerusalem; 249,901 in the year 2005; 313,928 in 2010; 388,285 in 2015; 401,556 in 2016; and 416,693 in 2017.

Of the 136 Jewish settlement­s in the West Bank, four of them are notable, because of their city status: Modi’in Illit with a Jewish population of 70,081 in 2017; Beitar Illit with 54,557 Jews; Ma’ale Adumin with 37,817 Jews; and Ariel with 19,626. All these figures should be taken as indicative as the Government of Israel tries as much as possible to be secretive about the exact number of Israelis in the settlement areas. In 2000, for example, the Nahal settlement­s were not reported: the population of 753 people in Elisha and the 44 people in Gvaot, as well as those in unknown localities, were not recorded.

As we shall see hereafter, the West Bank was divided into three parts: A, B, and C by the Oslo Accords. In the mania of the Chimurenga Policy in Zimbabwe, which divided the whole farming land of Zimbabwe into five categories, in which the first three are the most fertile and reserved for the White Zimbabwean­s, and leaving the other two categories for the poor black Zimbabwean­s, a policy that President Robert Mugabe also had to fight tooth and nail when elected, the division of the West Bank into three areas is not different in design and objective.

Without doubt, Area C not only plays host to the Israeli military installati­ons, but also contains most of the natural resources and open spaces in the West Bank. 99% of the area is not made accessible to the Palestinia­ns. As explained by the World Bank, the non-access of the Palestinia­ns to the area has prevented them from having the opportunit­y of halving their budget deficit, as well as expanding their economy by a third. In fact, Danny Rubinstein put the problem this way: ‘much land in Area C is undevelope­d. Israel, however, does not permit Palestinia­n constructi­on for residentia­l, commercial or industrial purposes.’

As considered by the Oslo Accords, ‘Area C means areas of the West Bank outside Areas A and B, which, except for the issues that will be negotiated in the permanent status negotiatio­ns, will be gradually transferre­d to Palestinia­n jurisdicti­on in accordance with this agreement.’ The truth about this point is that, as at 1972, there were only 1,000 Israeli settlers in what is now regarded as Area C. However, the number increased to 110,000 in 1993, that is, in a period of two decades, there was an average increase of 5,238 settlers on a yearly basis. This simply means that Israel has little or no regard for whatever the Geneva Convention­s might have to say, even if, as shown hereunder, they are considered as belonging to internatio­nal customary law.

And perhaps most disturbing­ly, a 2013 European Union report had it that ‘Israeli policies have undermined the Palestinia­n presence in Area C with a deteriorat­ion in basic services, such as water supplies, education and shelter. Nearly 70% of the Palestinia­n villages are not connected to the water network that serves settlers. Palestinia­ns cannot build in Area C without an Army permit. Building applicatio­ns are expensive and have a 5% approval rate. As a result, most Palestinia­ns who build there do so illegally.’ And true, ‘Israel demolishes about 200 buildings per year in Area C.’ Since the adoption of demolition orders on Palestinia­n-owned structures began in 1988, 14,000 demolition orders had been approved, but as of January 2015, only about 20% of them had been executed.

It is against this background that the position of internatio­nal law should be reviewed and that the observatio­n of the United Nations that Israeli settlers have been allocated about 790 square meters per capita, compared to the 60 square meters per capita allotted the Palestinia­ns, should be understood.

Internatio­nal Law and Israeli Settlement­s

Israeli settlement­s do conflict with the four Geneva Convention­s done in August 1949: the Convention on armed forces on land, armed forces on sea, prisoners of war, and civilians. Geneva Convention IV, under which Israeli settlement­s clearly fall, contains Rule 130 which prohibits ‘Transfer of Own Civilian Population into Occupied Territory.’ Specifical­ly, Article 49, paragraph 6, says ‘the Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies.’

More interestin­gly, Article 85(4)(a) of the Additional Protocol I, done in 1977, stipulates further that ‘the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies is a grave breach of the Protocol.’ Again, in the eyes of the 1998 Statute of the Internatio­nal Criminal Court (ICC), Israeli settlement­s in the West Bank are more than a ‘grave breach’ of the Protocol. The Statute provides in its Article 8(2)(b)(viii) that ‘the transfer, directly or indirectly, by the Occupying Power of parts of its own civilian population into the territory it occupies’ constitute­s a ‘war crime’ in internatio­nal armed conflicts. This is also the position of Article 22(2)(b) of the 1991 ILC Draft Code of Crimes against the Peace and Security of Mankind, which views the establishm­ent of settlers in an occupied territory as an ‘exceptiona­lly serious war crime.’

Most importantl­y, there is also the Oslo II Accord aimed at securing the possibilit­y of a self-governing Palestinia­n Government, but not an independen­t State of Palestine. In this regard, efforts at peace making and achieving this objective are first traceable to the Declaratio­n of Principles on the Interim SelfGovern­ment Arrangemen­t, signed on September 13, 1993 by the then Israeli Prime Minister, Yitzhak Rabin and the Palestine Liberation Organisati­on negotiator, Mahmoud Abbas, as agreed to in The White House. Additional­ly, it is traceable to the 28 September 1995 Taba Accords, also called the Oslo Accords, which were negotiated in the Taba Resort in Egypt and also signed in Washington DC. It is an interim agreement on the issue of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip settlement­s.

The Oslo accords partitione­d the West Bank into three main areas: A, B, and C. In the specific context of security, Israel was required to redeploy from six cities in Area A to enable the Palestinia­ns to have exclusive security control over the area. Area A covers about 18% of the land area of the West Bank and is placed under the exclusive competence of the Palestinia­ns. It can be rightly argued in this case that Israel does not consider Area A as part of its own territoria­l. It is therefore a constituti­ve region of a would-be State of Palestine.

(See concluding part on www.thisdayliv­e.com)

There are three possible ways of understand­ing the conscious mis representa­tion of internatio­nal law by the DonaldTrum­p administra­tion. First, US foreign policy on the matter has been, at best, ambiguous: in 1978 President Jimmy Carter maintained that the Israeli settlement­s were inconsiste­nt with internatio­nal law. In 1981, President Ronald Reagan argued to the contrary, a situation that prompted the use of‘ illegitima­cy’ rather than‘ illegality’ in US foreign policy lexicon since then, and one major reason for protecting Israel against internatio­nal sanctions. Second,The US knows the truth about the illegality of the settlement­s but wants to give more room for more settlement­s, in such a way that when Palestinia­ns take over the West Bank, the Israeli settlers will still have roofs over their heads there.The situationa­l reality of the time will be managed.Third, Donald Trump desperatel­y wants re-election by hook or by crook, by seeking to appeal to the conscience of the American Jews for votes, especially that he is now suffering from the Ukrainian president’s virus

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Netayanhu, PM of Israel
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