The Jerusalem Post

It is either sovereignt­y now – or wait for the Messiah

- • By WALTER BINGHAM

High on the list of topics in Israel and one of the most discussed subjects in diplomatic circles of the world is Israel’s proposed and imminent extension of sovereignt­y over additional parts of our country. This is perceived by most of the internatio­nal community as depriving the Palestinia­n Arabs of their land, illegal under internatio­nal law and making it impossible to establish a contiguous Palestinia­n state in the West Bank. The date for its implementa­tion published by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is July 1.

There is, however, a great deal of confusion as to the precise extent of this proposed sovereignt­y. A variety of options have been suggested, depending on the political affiliatio­n of the proposer. First and foremost after a prolonged period of hype there is US President Donald Trump’s “Deal of the Century,” promising Israel sovereignt­y in Judea and Samaria. Besides the so-called major settlement blocs, the map that has been published shows a confusing array of dots representi­ng a number of isolated Jewish villages to be included in the plan, while an estimated 25 smaller communitie­s are doomed to be destroyed. This adds up to just 30% and is effectivel­y severing 70% of Judea and Samaria to become a Palestinia­n state – not the deal that the Israeli public was led to believe, but a scheme aimed to appease Palestinia­n demands.

Further, it merely serves to fulfill the aspiration­s of Trump to achieve peace between Israel and the Palestinia­n Arabs, a feat that no one before him could accomplish. In the end, his plan for Middle East peace will, like all others before him, also end up in the dustbin of history.

It was surprising­ly naive to believe the Palestinia­n Authority leadership would freely accept a plan that places Israeli towns and villages as islands under Israeli sovereignt­y, dotted within what is earmarked for a Palestinia­n state.

Our interlocut­ors have already condemned this plan because firstly, they claim that it prevents contiguity and free movement within their state and secondly, that they will never tolerate Israelis within their sovereign area. That is a condition often repeated by Palestinia­n Authority President Mahmoud Abbas; yet Arabs reside and move freely inside Israel. In any case, the PA’s demands are much wider.

Within Israel there is division and debate if it is politicall­y and diplomatic­ally advisable to implement any extension of sovereignt­y at this time, in light of strong internatio­nal opposition and warnings by even the ‘warm’ Arab states that such action will severely harm the relationsh­ip.

Therefore, as neither the PA nor the Arab countries in the region will accept that kind of Palestinia­n state, the Trump plan is effectivel­y dead.

Netanyahu is facing a dilemma. There is a considerab­le constituen­cy, even within his own ranks, requesting him to neverthele­ss declare sovereignt­y according to the plan.

Jeff Barak, former Jerusalem Post editor and seasoned journalist, asked last week in a piece in this paper “If Israel has survived and prospered for over 50 years without annexation, what’s the rush?”

Well, if he will ask Nadia Matar or Yehudit Katsover, today’s leaders of “Women for Israel’s Tomorrow,” a grassroots movement known as Women in Green, they will tell him that precisely because we have already waited so long in the hope that a solution would be found, it’s now time to end the illusion that peace can be achieved by giving up yet more of our homeland and establish another country within it – and that “Eretz Yisrael l’Am Yisrael,” that the Land of Israel belongs to the People of Israel according to the biblical promise made by God to the Jewish people.

More secular supporters who advocate for total annexation “from the river to the sea” base their claim on the resolution­s of the Balfour Declaratio­n of 1917, the San Remo Conference of 1920 and the recognitio­n of the State of Israel by 162 member states of the UN.

The Balfour Declaratio­n was a public statement issued by the British government in 1917 announcing support for the establishm­ent of a “national home for the Jewish people in Palestine,” then still part of the Ottoman region. The declaratio­n was contained in a letter dated November 2, 1917 from the United Kingdom’s foreign secretary Arthur Balfour to Lord Rothschild, a leader of the British Jewish community, for transmissi­on to the Zionist Federation of Great Britain and Ireland. The text of the declaratio­n was published in the press on November 9, 1917.

The San Remo Conference, convened three years later to decide the future of the former territorie­s of the Ottoman Turkish Empire, one of the defeated central powers in World War I, resolved and specifical­ly noted that the Mandate for Palestine will be responsibl­e for carrying out the Balfour Declaratio­n, working for the establishm­ent of the Jewish national home without prejudice to the rights of existing non-Jewish communitie­s. There was no mention of an independen­t Palestinia­n state. The San Remo and Balfour declaratio­ns referred to Palestine as the area which included today’s Kingdom of Jordan.

Those who class the Balfour Declaratio­n as merely a letter of intent have to be reminded that the full text of the declaratio­n became an integral part of the San Remo resolution and the British Mandate for Palestine; thereby transformi­ng it into a legally-binding foundation­al document under internatio­nal law.

It is also important to note that there has never been an Arab state in Palestine. Its Arab inhabitant­s have always considered themselves to be part of the great Arab nation, historical­ly and politicall­y and as an integral part of Greater Syria, a designatio­n that extended to both sides of the Jordan River.

The 1916 Asia Minor Agreement, commonly known as the Sykes-Picot Agreement, named after its British and French negotiator­s, made a mess of the area between parts of Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon, the Persian Gulf and Mediterran­ean Sea, by dividing it arbitraril­y into administra­tive zones regardless of religious or tribal considerat­ions, of which the western part was one of the sections given to Britain. That was the creation of what today we know as the troubled Middle East.

Taking all that into considerat­ion, the Jews with tri-millennial history in this land now the modern State of Israel, have an indisputab­le right to the area between the Jordan river and the Mediterran­ean Sea. The question is: What will the consequenc­es be following a total annexation of Judea, Samaria and the Jordan Valley? Would it be better to take what we can today and kick the can down the road, hoping to annex more another time, as is the view of many Israelis? Or to annex all and face the music?

It is certain that even by implementi­ng the Trump plan, there will be the strongest internatio­nal condemnati­on, maybe even threats of trade embargoes and isolation. We may have to expect that, or alternativ­ely surrender to pressures and intimidati­on that will never change and set a precedent for ever. To believe that we could ever recover from such a mistake is, as Matar would say, an “illusion”. The uproar of the internatio­nal opposition would be no stronger and no louder if we were to take courage and once and for all extend sovereignt­y over the whole of our land from the river to the sea, as it would be by annexing piecemeal (highly improbable), beginning with the Trump plan. The choice is either total annexation, or face the same music each time we make an adjustment, even if only to build a road.

Israel is strong enough in every respect to overcome these temporary disagreeme­nts with the internatio­nal community.

Countries’ long-term interests, such as standing to benefit from Israel’s developmen­ts in science and technology, determine their policy and will overcome any pressure to prevent the return to the status ante.

So Netanyahu, use this window of opportunit­y to ensure your historic legacy to have completed what prime minister Menachem Begin started and establish the final borders of the State of Israel from the river to the sea, so that we do not have to wait for the Messiah.

The writer is the host of Walter’s World on Israel National Radio and The Walter Bingham File on Israel Newstalk Radio, both of which are broadcast in English.

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