The five letters presented in the enclosed
booklet tell a story of utmost national significance, about which few have
any true knowledge. It is a historical fact that ever since June 7, 1967, when the IDF
overran Judea, Samaria
and Gaza in the
Six-Day War, we have wrongly applied international law to these repossessed
areas of the Land of Israel.
This resulted from a deliberate National Unity Government decision that
clashed with existing Israeli constitutional law and with the practice
followed in 1948 when other areas of the Land of Israel were repossessed by
the Israeli armed forces. The law wrongly applied at the close of the Six-Day
War was international law as embodied in the Hague Rules of 1907 and the
Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, both codices being classified as laws of
war, when Israeli constitutional law at the time required the application of the law of the
State of Israel to Judea, Samaria and Gaza.
This mis-application of law, a step taken by
the Eshkol Government on the basis of erroneous legal advice proffered by the
then Military Advocate-General and future President of the Supreme Court, Mr.
Justice Meir Shamgar, who was responsible for setting up the military
administration for the reconquered areas of the Land of Israel, is the
subject-matter of the five letters published here. It resulted in the
pernicious Occupation Myth and provided our enemies with an enormous propaganda
victory in the eyes of the world, for the term "occupation" implied
that Israel had taken over by war the land of another people to which it had
no right under international law, an absolutely false implication. This
widespread myth then received the stamp of approval from the Supreme Court of
Israel, especially from Mr. Justice Moshe Landau in the Eilon Moreh case and
from recently retired President Aharon Barak in cases dealing with Israel's
security fence and the implementation of the Sharon Disengagement Plan.
The author hopes that the publication of his
letters to Mr. Justice Meir Shamgar, the originator of the international law
thesis that gave direct rise to the Occupation Myth, despite Shamgar's
intentions, will enlighten the public about the violation of law committed 40
years ago, the effects of which are felt to this very day. Recognition of
this 1967 error is a vital first step in an attempt to undo the colossal
legal damage done to the rights of the People and State of Israel.
Howard
Grief
Jerusalem
May 2007
Jerusalem
30 Tishri, 5766 -- November 2, 2005
Mr.
Eliezer Dembitz, Attorney
Jerusalem
Dear
Eliezer,
Concerning
our two conversations on October 31st and November 1st, 2005, I firmly adhere
to my view that on June 7, 1967, when Brigadier-General Herzog issued
Proclamations Numbers 1 and 2 (Proclamation on the Assumption of Power by the
IDF in the Region of the West Bank; Proclamation on Law and Administration),
there was a clear violation of the existing constitutional law, as of that
date. Section 11B of the Law and Administration Ordinance was not enacted until
three weeks later, on June 27, 1967.
The
existing relevant constitutional law that was in force on June 7, 1967,
consisted of the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance of September 16,
1948, made retroactive to May 15, 1948, and the two Proclamations issued
thereunder by the Ben-Gurion Government, namely, the Israel Defense Forces
Government in the Land of Israel (hereafter the Land of Israel Proclamation) of
September 2, 1948, made retroactive to May 15, 1948, as well as the Israel Defense
Forces Government in Jerusalem of August 2, 1948 (which I call the Jerusalem
Proclamation), made retroactive to May 15, 1948.
When Israel liberated Judea and Samaria on June 7, 1967, and Gaza on June 6, 1967, the 1948 Ordinance and the two Proclamations
associated with it required the application of Israeli law, not international
law. The application of Israeli law was required even though the regions were
thenceforth governed by a military government, exactly as happened in 1948.
Thus, when Advocate-General Meir Shamgar in the early 1960s decided long before
the outbreak of the Six-Day War to apply international law concerning what he
called "enemy territory" (a strange non-Jewish and non-Zionist
reference to integral parts of the Land of Israel) if and when Israel acquired
such territory, he was in breach of the existing constitutional law.
Two
questions arise concerning Shamgar's decision to apply international law
instead of Israeli law in the early 1960s, at a time when David Ben-Gurion was
still Prime Minister:
1. Who gave Shamgar the right to violate the
existing constitutional law on the re-acquisition of areas of the Land of Israel in Arab hands?
2. Which government person or persons could
possibly have had the authority to back Shamgar in making this decision to
violate the existing constitutional law?
In the
period from 1961 until June 1963, i.e., the early sixties, when Shamgar
conceived his illegal plan, there was no Eshkol Government, no need to worry
about demography, no pressure on Israel to apply Jordanian law to Judea and
Samaria, which under Jordanian law was called the West Bank, a name
subsequently changed by the Menahem Begin Government to Judea and Samaria. The
only obligation then incumbent upon Shamgar was to obey the existing constitutional
law.
However,
Shamgar acted otherwise, contrary to the vaunted principle of the Rule of Law.
He admitted in the book he edited, entitled "Military Government in the
Territories Administered by Israel 1967-1980, The Legal Aspects" and
published in 1982, that he wrote a comprehensive vade mecum, the Manual for the Military Advocate in
Military Government, in the early sixties, when he was Military
Advocate-General (1961-1968) in which he detailed the laws of war which he
decided should be followed in the next war that he surmised would break out
with the surrounding Arab states. His plan was then implemented several years
later during and after the Six-Day War. For confirmation of this fact, I refer
you to Shamgar's footnotes, numbers 25, 27 and 28 of his article in the
aforementioned book, which he entitled "Legal Concepts and Problems of the
Israeli Military Government -- The Initial Stage", pages 13-60. These
footnotes are found on pages 25 and 27 of his article and are enclosed
herewith.
As a
direct result of Shamgar's conception adopted by the Eshkol Government in June
1967, every person in the world today outside Israel and indeed a very
substantial number of Israel's own population call Judea, Samaria and, until
very recently, Gaza "occupied territories", when they are in truth
integral parts of the Land of Israel and the Jewish National Home under both
Israeli constitutional law and international law, as I have made crystal clear
in several past articles I have written on the subject and in my forthcoming
book, The Legal Foundation and
Borders of Israel under International Law. Shamgar's conception, which
would never have seen the light of day had he abided by the prevailing
constitutional law dating back to Ben-Gurion's day, as was expected of him, has
backfired in the most hideous way: Israel is today seen as a violator of
so-called international law and as an occupying power that has taken over
(stolen!) another nation's patrimony, the so-called "Palestinians", a
term that was formerly reserved for the Jews of the Yishuv (1920-1948) living
in Mandatory Palestine, and not for a fake nation that has no right to this
designation. The entire judicial travesty that Shamgar created has now been
given the imprimatur of truth by none other than Justice Aharon Barak,
President of the Supreme Court, in his recent decisions on Israel's security fence. Barak constantly
repeats the theme in his judgments that Judea, Samaria and Gaza are governed by the rules of belligerent
occupation under international law, but refrains in a cagey, deliberate manner
from actually calling them "occupied territory", to avoid criticism
or bring undue attention to what he has farcically and incompetently done.
As to
Deputy-President Justice Moshe Landau's decision in the 1979 case of Dwaikat v
Government of Israel (the Elon Moreh case), Landau misstated the legal norm
that was then applicable, in June 1967. In fact, he mixed up two separate legal
norms, one dealing with the imposition of Military Government over re-acquired
areas of the Land of Israel and one dealing with the application of Israeli law and
sovereignty to those areas. The norm of Military Government was indeed applied,
both in 1948 and in 1967, but the other norm, that of Israeli law applying to
the IDF-held areas was disregarded in 1967, in violation of the existing
constitutional law, and replaced by the application of international law. It is
no credit to Landau that at a critical time in the settlement of the liberated
territories of the Land of Israel he continued and endorsed the outrageous violation of law
initiated over a decade and a half earlier by then-Advocate-General Shamgar,
that has since placed Israel in an untenable position making it a
target for worldwide censure.
You
have received two recent articles I wrote on the subject discussed here, one
dealing with the "Origin of the Occupation Myth" (published in Hebrew
in the September 2005 issue of Nativ)
and the other entitled "David Ben-Gurion's Forgotten 1948 Land of Israel
Proclamation for the Annexation of Judea and Samaria" (scheduled for
future publication). To refresh your memory and recapitulate what should have
been legally done on June 7, 1967, after the liberation of Judea and Samaria
from enemy occupation, instead of what was in fact illegally done by the Eshkol
Government, acting undoubtedly on the proffered advice of Meir Shamgar, Zvi
Terlo and others, I summarize the matter as follows:
1. In the first proclamation prepared by the
Military Advocate's Unit for Judea and Samaria formally issued by Haim Herzog,
the Commander of the Israel Defense Forces in this region, dated June 7, 1967,
it was announced to the inhabitants living there that the Israel Defense Forces
have "entered the region and assumed control", meaning that they have
set up a military government there. The establishment of military government
was in accordance with the 1948 Land of Israel Proclamation and the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers
Ordinance, except that it was supposed to have been issued by the Minister of
Defense (Moshe Dayan), not by the Military Commander.
2. In the second proclamation issued by
Herzog, entitled "Proclamation on Law and Administration", the region
over which military government was established was defined in the proclamation as the West Bank, a reference to what the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan called Judea
and Samaria. In defining this area as the West Bank, Herzog was acting unknowingly in
accordance with the requirement of the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers
Ordinance that said that the IDF held area must be defined by proclamation before the Ordinance
could be implemented. In contrast to the 1967 Proclamation, the 1948 Land of Israel Proclamation did the defining by drawing red lines on an
illustrative map of the Land of Israel, signed and dated by the Minister of
Defense, that accompanied the original proclamation, showing the area held by
the IDF. Without making use of any map, Herzog's proclamation simply described
sparingly the area that was now under IDF control -- the "Region of the West Bank", which in any event was already a
well-defined and well-known area that needed no particular delineation on a map
to identify it. In both cases, defining this area was not discretionary, but
obligatory, otherwise no one would have known that the IDF was in complete control
of the area establishing a military government that replaced the previous
government under Jordanian rule. Without such a proclamation, chaos and
confusion, both at home and abroad, would have prevailed.
It is true that international law does not absolutely require the
issuance of a proclamation, as soon as the territory of a foreign state is
occupied by hostile forces, though it is customary for this to be done.
However, the situation is entirely different under Israeli constitutional law
for areas of the Land of Israel liberated by the Israel Defense Forces that cannot be
labeled "occupied territories" under international law. The Area of
Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance was enacted for the sole purpose of
recovering for the Jewish State those lands that had been recognized as
integral parts of the Jewish National Home under international law in 1920 and
that had always been considered the patrimony of the Jewish People under Jewish
law. If the IDF achieved this purpose in regard to various regions of the Land of Israel and no proclamation had been issued under
the aforesaid Ordinance, then its very purpose would have been defeated and the
law left with neither meaning nor effect. Moreover, if the Minister of Defense
did not issue a proclamation defining the IDF-held areas, this would have meant
that the Jewish People, represented by the State of Israel, had no sovereign
right to the recovered areas and would have been required in due course to
restore these areas to the Arab states that had illegally occupied them in
1948, a requirement that negated the underlying assumption of the Ordinance
that they belonged to the Jewish People. To avoid these consequences, it was
therefore incumbent upon the Minister of Defense to issue a proclamation under
the Ordinance to define the area of the Land of Israel taken over by the IDF as soon as this
occurred. To underscore this point, this was the way the Ordinance was actually
interpreted and implemented throughout the War of Independence. It seems
logical to conclude that it was the obligatory nature of the Ordinance that
prompted the Eshkol Government in 1967, shortly after the end of the Six-Day
War, to devise an alternative law (Section 11B of the Law and Administration
Ordinance), to give the Government a choice in deciding whether or not to
incorporate into the State the areas of the Land of Israel liberated in that
war.
3. Once the foregoing proclamations
establishing military government in the West Bank region had been issued by
Herzog on June 7, 1967, both the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance and
the Land of Israel Proclamation required the application of the law of Israel
to the IDF-held region, which meant its incorporation into the State of Israel.
Instead, the Proclamation on Law and Administration approved by the Eshkol
Government and issued under Herzog's Command as Proclamation No. 2 applied the
local law of Jordan then in force in the West Bank, in accordance with Article 43 of the Hague Regulations, but absolutely contrary to
Israeli law, as already noted. Thus, the wrong source of law was used (Article
43 of the Hague Regulations, rather than the provisions of the Area of
Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance) and the wrong law applied to the region held
by the IDF (Jordanian law rather than the corpus of Israeli law). The
Government chose this short-sighted course to keep the option of
"peace" open and to avoid increasing the Arab population of the
State, which were considerations outside the realm of law and could have been
resolved by other means. The non-observance of the existing constitutional law
was the folly and root of all the trouble we face today in the battle to
preserve Jewish rights to the Land of Israel under the Rule of Law. Had the Eshkol
Government done what it was legally obligated to do, no one, apart from the
Arab states and their close supporters, would have falsely dared call Judea and
Samaria "occupied territories" subject, after the end of active
hostilities, to the laws of war embodied principally in the Hague Regulations
and the Fourth Geneva Convention. The folly of what was done in June 1967 has
been accepted by the Supreme Court and its underlying raison d'etre has never -- until recently, when
Justice Edmond Levi dissented in the case dealing with the constitutionality of
the Disengagement Implementation Law -- been challenged by anyone in Israel's legal Establishment, based on the
merits of the case.
It is
past time to denounce and renounce what Shamgar and Landau and now Barak have
done to the legal infrastructure that was created in 1948 by the Ben-Gurion
Government regarding the absorption of integral areas of the Land of Israel lying outside the de facto boundaries of the State that were
re-conquered by the IDF. We await a new Government that will overturn the
erroneous judicial decisions rendered by our esteemed jurists that clearly
contradicted Israel's rights to Judea, Samaria and Gaza and other regions of the Land of Israel.
Sincerely,
Howard
Copies
of this letter will be sent to:
1.Professor
Ya'akov Meron
2.Justice (Ret.) Meir Shamgar
3.Justice (Ret.) Moshe Landau
4.Justice Aharon Barak
5.Justice Edmond Levi
6.Military Judge (Ret.) Baruch Koroth
7.Professor Yuval Ne'eman
November 2, 2006. LETTER OCCASIONED BY THE PROPOSED
BUILDING OF A JEWISH CEMETERY ON THE MOUNT OF OLIVES
Howard
Grief
Attorney and Notary
13/2 David Goitein St.,
Pisgat Ze'ev Mizrah, Jerusalem 97782 Israel
Tel. (Fax) : 972-2-656-0085
Jerusalem
11 Heshvan, 5767 -- November 2, 2006
Mr.
Justice Meir Shamgar,
Shahar 12
96263 Jerusalem
Dear
Mr. Justice Shamgar,
I
enclose herewith for your attention and perusal the letter and attached
documents I have sent to the Jerusalem
Post columnist, Mrs. Sarah
Honig, concerning the proposed building of a Jewish cemetery on state land on
the Mount of Olives, situated in the region of Judea and Samaria, the
realization of which was prevented by then-State Attorney Dorit Beinisch, based
on an unfounded legal opinion submitted by Attorney Meni Mazuz, prior to his
being appointed Attorney-General.
This matter
relates directly to your original plan in the early 1960's, long before the
Six-Day War erupted, to treat any area beyond the armistice borders of the
State as occupied territory governed by the laws of warfare. The Eshkol
Government of National Unity accepted your plan in 1967, when Judea and Samaria
were restored to the Jewish People during the Six-Day War, and invoked the
Hague Rules in regard to this region. It was your advice to the Government in
1967, when you were Military Advocate-General, which created the world-wide
belief that Israel was occupying the land of another country, when in truth
this land (i.e., Judea and Samaria) was the sovereign patrimony of the Jewish
People under both Israeli constitutional law and international law, that devolved
upon the State of Israel upon its establishment. What you did has haunted Israel ever since and started the great divide
between those supporting the concept of the Land of Israel and those opposing it.
When
you launched your plan in the early 1960's, were you not aware that Israel's
first prime minister, David Ben Gurion, aided by Pinchas Rosen, had set up a
constitutional structure for reclaiming all parts of the Land of Israel that
had earlier been transferred or otherwise lost to neighboring Arab states? For
that purpose Ben-Gurion issued two separate proclamations in 1948, one
pertaining to Jerusalem and the other for the rest of the Land of Israel that required the immediate incorporation
into the borders of the State of any area of the Land of Israel conquered and effectively held by the
Israel Defense Forces. These two proclamations were officially called:
1. shilton tsva-hagana le-yisrael
biyrushalayim, minshar mispar 1, nittan ha-yom, kaf-vav be-tammuz 5708 -- Israel Defense Forces Government in Jerusalem, Proclamation No. 1.
2. shilton tsva-hagana le-yisrael
be-eretz-yisrael, nittan ha-yom, kaf-het be-av 5708 -- Israel Defense Forces Government in the Land of Israel, Proclamation No.1 (The Land of Israel
Proclamation).
This
is how places such as Nahariya, Nazareth, Lod, Ramle, Beersheba, Ashdod, Ashkelon, etc. became part and parcel of the State
of Israel in 1948, even though they lay outside the boundaries of the Jewish
State recommended under the United Nations Partition Plan. No special proclamation
was needed for these places, for they all came under the scope and purview of
the open-ended Land of Israel Proclamation. This Proclamation was still in force in
1967 and applied directly to the repossessed region of Judea and Samaria, as well as that of Gaza, the Golan and even Sinai. You chose to
ignore this proclamation and, instead of advising the Government to apply the
law of Israel to the redeemed territories in accordance with Ben-Gurion's Land
of Israel Proclamation, you did the very opposite of what was legally required
in the circumstances and advised the application of foreign law in accordance
with Articles 42 and 43 of the Hague Rules, but contrary to Israeli
constitutional law. This advice was wrong, inappropriate and illegal. You have
much to answer for in ignoring Ben-Gurion's Land of Israel Proclamation that applied to the new situation created
by the Six-Day War, just as it had applied previously to the situation created
by the War of Liberation. The damage you have caused to Israel's legal position
in regard to the redeemed regions of the Land of Israel is incalculable and
reverberates to this very day in the minds of Israeli and foreign leaders, as
well as the world's press which maliciously depict Israel as an Occupying Power
of so-called "Arab land".
The
day is late to undo the damage you chiefly are responsible for, but we must try
to save what is left in our possession of patrimonial Jewish lands recaptured
in 1967. You would be able to help to save what can still be saved if you were
to issue a public statement restating your position on the legal status of Judea, Samaria and Gaza in conformity with Ben-Gurion's Land of Israel Proclamation. I, as a former legal adviser on matters
affecting Eretz-Israel to the late Professor Yuval Ne'eman whom you knew, and
as a friend of the great jurist Ya'akov Meron whom you know (he is presently
very ill), and as a friend of retired Military Court Justice, Eliezer Dembitz
whom you also know, ask you to consider doing this. However, I make this appeal
to you on my own initiative, without prompting or encouragement from any
person.
A
restatement by you, as I recommend, would do much to change public perceptions,
particularly in Israel, of the true legal status of Judea and Samaria.
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief, Attorney
November 22, 2006. WHY DID SHAMGAR GIVE SPECIAL
COURSES CONTRADICTING ISRAELI LAW?
Jerusalem
1 Kislev, 5767 -- November 22, 2006
Mr.
Meir Shamgar,
President (Retired) of the Supreme Court,
Rehov Shahar 12
96263 Jerusalem
Dear Mr.
Justice Shamgar,
I
thank you for acknowledging and replying in the briefest terms to my letter of November
2, 2006.
I do
not find it instructive when you state that I wrote you:
(1)without a
total knowledge of the facts;
(2)without bothering to check the information beforehand.
It
would have been more enlightening for me had you informed me what the true
facts were in regard to the legal status of Judea and Samaria and the rest of
the territories restored to the Jewish People in June 1967.
I read
your article entitled "Legal Concepts and Problems of the Israeli Military
Government -- The Initial Stage" in the book edited by you called Military Government in the
Territories Administered by Israel, 1967-1980, the Legal Aspects, Volume 1,
published in a reprint edition, 1988, by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem --
Faculty of Law and the Harry Sacher Institute for Legislative Research and
Comparative Law.
In
your article, you confirm the fact that everything was planned in advance as to
what must be done when the IDF entered Judea and Samaria and issued a proclamation for the
establishment of the Military Government in the West Bank, the name of which was subsequently
changed to Judea and Samaria. The planning for this eventuality took
final shape in the special courses you gave for the Military Advocate's Corps
that taught the laws of war to those who attended your courses. All the
material necessary for the performance of duties by officers of the platoon
(regular and reserve) was contained in a comprehensive vade mecum, known as the Manual for the Military Advocate in
Military Government, written and published in the early sixties by
yourself, when serving as the Military Advocate General. This Manual, containing military
instructions and guidelines to be applied to any territory conquered by the
IDF, was re-edited and enlarged by you as a result of the courses you gave to
the officers of the Military Advocate's Corps. All of the foregoing information
was gleaned from your article. That explains why the Israeli Military
Government in Judea and Samaria invoked the norms and principles of
international law to this single region, rather than Israeli law, as was done
by Prime Minister and Defense Minister, David Ben-Gurion, in 1948 when other
areas of the Land of Israel were conquered by the Defense Forces of Israel.
The
question to be answered is: why did you give special courses teaching the laws
of war when Ben-Gurion had promulgated a law and a proclamation in 1948 to
apply the law of the State whenever areas of the Land of Israel were re-possessed by the IDF? As I asked
you in my letter of November 2, 2006, were you not aware of this law and
proclamation, which were still in force when you were giving your courses? You
never answered this question and it still requires an answer.
Do you
think that in applying the norms and principles of international law, the
Israeli Military Government set up upon your advice did the right thing?
Ben-Gurion, too, set up a military government in 1948 for areas of the Land of
Israel conquered beyond the UN Partition lines of November 29, 1947, but he
never applied the norms and principles of international law that were applied
in 1967.
I have
studied the facts as they have been revealed by you in your article. I do not
know what other facts you are referring to when you say I lack total knowledge
of the situation in trying to understand what happened in 1967. If you would
kindly enlighten me about those facts, I would be very grateful. Of course, if
you truly believed in 1967 that the region of Judea and Samaria had to be governed under the rules of
belligerent occupation, no further explanation is needed!
If you
held the opinion in 1967 that the supposed expectation of Arab demography
overwhelming the Jewish population of Israel and the idea of possible peace
negotiations with the neighboring enemy Arab states prevented absolutely the
annexation of Judea, Samaria and Gaza to the State, then I can fully comprehend
what motivated you in advising the application of the laws of war to these two
regions, instead of Israeli law, as Ben-Gurion did not hesitate to do in 1948.
Of course, I assume that you advised the Eshkol National Unity Government to
adopt this course of action, because it corresponded perfectly with the plan
that you formulated in the early sixties. However, your plan violated existing
Israeli constitutional law (the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance;
Ben-Gurion's Proclamation of September 2, 1948) and therefore should have been
discarded. If I am mistaken about this central point and your personal role in
this matter, I stand to be corrected and would very much appreciate your
response.
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief
January 9, 2007. WHY HAGUE RULES DID NOT APPLY TO
THE TERRITORY REPOSSESSED IN 1967
Jerusalem
19 Tevet, 5767 -- January 9, 2007
Mr.
Justice Meir Shamgar,
President (Retired) of the Supreme Court,
Rehov Shahar 12
96263 Jerusalem
Dear
Mr. Justice Shamgar,
I
acknowledge, with many thanks, your letter dated December 1, 2006 explaining in
more detail your legal perspective on what had to be done in June 1967
following Israel's victory in the Six-Day War when the IDF took possession of
various areas of the Land of Israel that were not part of the State of Israel.
For
purposes of this letter, I have re-read your article entitled "Legal
Concepts and Problems of the Israeli Military Government -- The Initial
Stage", which only had the effect of confirming what I originally thought:
your great responsibility in introducing to Judea and Samaria and the rest of
the held or re-possessed territories the norms of international law pertaining
to the laws of war embodied in the Hague Rules and the Fourth Geneva
Convention, when this was completely unnecessary and contrary to existing
Israeli constitutional law.
Inasmuch
as you have divided your answer to me into several paragraphs to express
various points of substance, I will follow the same format in presenting my
reply:
1) In
paragraph aleph, you state
that "political decisions in a democratic state are not taken by a
military body but by the Government". In the context of your letter, this
appears to be a misleading statement because the application of international
law to Judea and Samaria on June 7, 1967 was not only a "political
decision", i.e., a matter of policy, but first and foremost a legal
decision, since there existed at the time two constitutional laws (apart from
the very important Law of Return) that directly governed the situation and that
had to be complied with: the statutory law called the Area of Jurisdiction and
Powers Ordinance (hereafter: Ben-Gurion's
law) and the non-statutory proclamation issued under its umbrella by means
of retroactivity, known as the Israel Defense Forces Government in the Land of
Israel Proclamation (hereafter:the Land of Israel Proclamation or, alternatively, Ben-Gurion's Proclamation) of
September 2, 1948. You state in your article (p. 46 of the First Reprint
edition, 1988), that "pending a political solution", the norms that
were applied to the areas not incorporated into Israel were drawn from the rules of
international law. This was the wrong thing to do, because it was the existing
constitutional law that required the application of Israeli law to those areas,
and not a political decision, as you claim in your letter. Pre-existing law
always supercedes policy, and is required to be implemented under the
"Rule of Law" principle. The norms of international law were not
applicable to the situation because those norms were based on the laws of
belligerent occupation that were irrelevant in regard to liberated Jewish
territories that were integral parts of the Land of Israel and the Jewish
National Home.
Applying
the
Hague
Rules to Judea and Samaria in June 1967 meant applying the foreign
law of Jordan. The National Unity Government of Levi
Eshkol acted illegally in following this course, in light of Ben-Gurion's law
and proclamation, but it probably would not have done so, had the Government
been given the proper legal advice by the highest legal officials in the
Ministry of Justice and the Ministry of Defense. Your personal role in all of
this appears critical and extensive. As Military Advocate-General from 1961 to
1968, that comes under the aegis of the Ministry of Defense, you gave special
courses to the legal officers of the Military Advocate's Corps which consisted,
after the Six-Day War, of various units attached to all regional headquarters
of the military government that were set up in Judea and Samaria, Northern
Sinai and Gaza, Central and Southern Sinai and, finally, the Golan Heights. As
stated in your article, the Military Advocate's Unit for Judea and Samaria was organized in three platoons under
your direct command. The express function of the Military Advocate's Unit for Judea and Samaria was to ensure that the military
government of this region conformed to the norms of international law.
According to your own words (p. 44), you
"repeatedly
admonished the Israeli legal authorities serving in the territories not to be
content with the minimum standards laid down by the rules of warfare on land,
but to be alert in ensuring that in any situation not foreseen or not provided
for in the customary rules [of international law, i.e., the Hague Regulations]
the solutions applied should accord with the consistent safeguarding of the
rule of law."
Instead
of admonishing the platoon officers to apply international law as it pertains
to the laws of warfare in Judea
and Samaria, after the re-capture of the region, you
should have admonished them to apply Israeli law in the redeemed Jewish lands
once the hostilities ceased and the region was in the effective possession of
the IDF.
Further
evidence of your personal role in advising the application of the norms of
international law to the redeemed territories was the fact that under your
direction, the legal officers of the platoons were provided with "movable
emergency kits" that contained precedents and forms, guidelines and
instructions for implementing these norms of international law. The kit
contained the manual or vade mecum, which they carried about detailing what
legally had to be done in administering the military government of a particular
region. This manual or ready-reference aid was written and re-edited by you
long before the outbreak of the Six-Day War that required the officers of the
Military Advocate's Corps to advise the Military Commander of the Region to
implement the Hague Regulations and the humanitarian norms or provisions of the
Fourth Geneva Convention. I quote directly from your article on this point (p.
31):
"The Manual
included the full text of the vital initial enactments [of military
government], in Hebrew and Arabic (e.g., Proclamations concerning the
Commencement of Occupation, concerning Law and Order and concerning the Entry
into Force of the Security Code; furthermore, different Orders relating to
security provisions, essential services, jurisdiction in relation to ordinary
criminal offences, etc.) [brackets in the original].
The
above-mentioned "Proclamations concerning the Commencement of
Occupation" -- your actual words -- were, according to your article,
prepared by the Military Advocate's Unit on the entry of the IDF into the
region originally denoted as the "West Bank" (p. 24). This Unit was under the
direct command of the Military Advocate-General, i.e., yourself (p. 25). This
confirms your personal role in overseeing and introducing Proclamation No. 1 on
the Assumption of Power by the Israel Defense Forces in Judea and Samaria, issued on June 7, 1967 in the name of the Commander of Forces of
the Israel Defense Army, General Haim Herzog, as well as Proclamation No. 2 on
Law and Administration. You were therefore instrumental in advising and
convincing the Government of Israel in June 1967 to apply the norms of
international law to all of the territories the IDF entered and took possession
of. Thanks largely to your plan and program, these territories became known to
almost everyone in the world as "occupied territories" instead of
what they actually represented, the restored territories and patrimony of the
Jewish People as originally envisaged by international law and embodied in
various documents subscribed to by the Principal Allied Powers in 1920 and
1922. Your plan and program were implemented by the Government not as a matter
of law, but as a matter of policy, and has haunted the State of Israel ever
since, causing it incalculable damage. This result was brought about by what
appears to be your fixation on applying the norms of international law to
redeemed Jewish territories, that contradicted Ben-Gurion's law and
proclamation. The Government took a political decision, it is true, but it was
not taken in a vacuum. As the evidence shows, i.e., the special courses you
gave, the movable emergency kit with all the material it contained relating to
international law, and your own articles on the subject, the government
decision was based largely on faulty legal advice that was not only terribly
wrong but violated the existing Israeli constitutional law, as noted above.
2) As
regards your allegation in paragraph beth that I overlooked section 11B of the
Law and Administration Ordinance (hereafter: section 11B), as well as section
8A(a) of the Municipalities Ordinance, it brought a smile to my lips for I
discussed these two laws in detail in a 1996 Petition to Annul the Interim
Agreement, submitted on behalf of eight Petitioners to the Supreme Court of
Israel (HCJ 3414/96). This Petition was subsequently published in English in
booklet form by the Ariel Center for Policy Research and I am forwarding
you a copy with this letter for your perusal. At the hearing, Judge Mishael
Cheshin informed my colleague, Att. David Heimowitz, that the Petition was too
long to be adjudicated and should be re-submitted in a more concise version, a
request that I accepted. A shorter version was then filed with the Court, but
to no avail, as it was dismissed by a panel of three judges on the ground that
it expressed a "political position". This was the excuse the Court,
including yourself, formulated to avoid judging violations of specific laws but
which also involved the "peace policies" undertaken by the Government
of Israel. The 1995 Interim Agreement with the PLO was replete with
illegalities, which I detailed in the Petition and in a subsequent shorter
version, but the Court refused to consider them and decide the merits of the
case, though it now rushes in to adjudicate military and security matters it
should rightfully abstain from judging. Everything is justiciable, it seems,
except the untouchable "peace process".
In my letters
to you, I did not discuss section 11B and the amended provision of the
Municipalities Ordinance that you refer to, for the simple reason that they did not exist on June 7, 1967 when international law was illegally
applied to Judea and Samaria. It was only, as you point out, on June
27, 1967, three
weeks after the entry of the IDF into the region, that they were enacted by the
Knesset. These laws thus have no relevance in replying to the question why
Ben-Gurion's law and proclamation, which were in force on June
7, 1967, were
never invoked. Had that law and proclamation been duly adhered to by the
Government, there would have been no need to enact section 11B. The enactment
of the new law was completely unnecessary and superfluous. I also wonder who the
people were who advised the Government to enact section 11B, rather than to
enforce the existing laws that were Ben-Gurion's legacy.
3) I
am very puzzled by what seems to be the unfounded distinction you make in
paragraph gimmel between the purpose of the Land of
Israel Proclamation (which I have also called "Ben-Gurion's
Proclamation" in this letter) -- incidentally, the date of its publication
in the Official Gazette is September 3, 1948, and not September 13 as your
typist wrote -- and the purpose of section 11B, as well as the distinction you
make in regard to Ben-Gurion's law (i.e., the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers
Ordinance) between the territory included in the State of Israel and the
territories held by the IDF. In all your articles, I do not find any mention of
the Land of Israel Proclamation, a fact which leads me to believe that
you were unaware of this proclamation at the time you gave your special courses
to the Military Advocate's Corps, beginning in the early 1960s. Unless you
explicitly tell me otherwise, I believe that you only much later gained
knowledge of Ben-Gurion's proclamation. Furthermore, had you known of this
proclamation in the 1960s, you would not, I believe, have advised the
application of the norms of international law in the event that areas of the
Land of Israel were re-possessed by the IDF in any future war, then as yet
unforeseen.
I do
not understand how you can say that the territory referred to in Ben-Gurion's
proclamation differs from the territory referred to in section 11B. The Land of Israel proclamation is to be read in conjunction
with Ben-Gurion's law. When the IDF took possession of areas in the Land of Israel in 1948 outside the UN Partition lines,
the held areas were joined to the State by applying the law of the State to
them. Hence the name given to Ben-Gurion's law: "Area of Jurisdiction and
Powers Ordinance" which extended the area of jurisdiction and powers of
the State to the newly possessed areas. There is no reason whatever to
differentiate the "held areas" added to the State under both the Land
of Israel Proclamation and Ben-Gurion' s law from the areas of the Land of
Israel re-conquered in the Six-Day War, both being part of the Land of Israel
and the Jewish National Home and both lying beyond the UN 1947 Partition lines.
Your distinction between two different kinds of territories, one relating to
Ben-Gurion's law and proclamation and the other to section 11B, never existed
at all.
While
there is no difference between the 1948 held-territories of Ben-Gurion's law
and the re-conquered Land of Israel territories of 1967 to which section 11B was meant to
apply, each of these laws can be characterized as laws of annexation in regard
to the Land of Israel. Yet there is a definite difference between the procedures
or methods used in applying the laws themselves. In the case of Ben-Gurion's
law, the decision to join the "held areas" to the State is made by
the Minister of Defense on behalf of the Government, while in the case of
section 11B, the decision is made not by one minister alone, but by the
Government as a collective body. Moreover, the principal difference is that
once the IDF effectively holds an area of the Land of Israel under Ben-Gurion's
law, it must indicate that fact in one of two ways: either (a) by marking the
held area in red on a map, accompanied by the signature of the Minister of
Defense and the date thereof; (b) by simply applying the law of the State to
the "held area", without the necessity of marking that area on a map.
In the case of section 11B, in contrast to Ben-Gurion's law, the Government has
a choice whether or not to issue an order to extend the law, jurisdiction and
administration of the State to any area of the Land of Israel repossessed by the IDF.
In
regard to the meaning of shetah
muhzak (or any variation
thereof) as used in both the Land of Israel Proclamation and Ben-Gurion's law
and the term shetah kavush,
I refer you to the legislative debate that took place on September 16, 1948
between the Minister of Justice Pinhas Rosen (then called Felix Rosenblueth)
and Zerah Wahrhaftig, of the Ha-Po'el Ha-Mizrahi party (later the National
Religious Party) -- see pp. 49-54 of the enclosed Petition to Annul the Interim
Agreement (see also "Proceedings of the Provisional State Council, Sitting
18, Sept. 16, 1948, pp. 7-8). Shetah
muhzak, before being corrupted by mis-translation, referred to an area of
the Land of Israel held or recovered by the IDF in
1948-1949, that was located beyond the UN Partition lines or not included in
the State when it was proclaimed on May 14, 1948. Shetah
kavush, on the other hand, refers to "occupied territory" or
foreign territory under the sovereignty of another state and not part of the Land of Israel. In his great wisdom, the then-Minister
of Justice, Pinhas Rosen, created a subtle distinction between the two terms
that was unknown or almost unknown in international law, but that important
distinction was subsequently spoiled by the mis-translation of shetah muhzak into English, not as "held
territory" or "repossessed Land of Israel territory", but as
"occupied territory", thus making it synonymous with shetah kavush and eliminating the distinction
altogether. Had the Eshkol Government kept this very fine and vital distinction
(between shetah muhzak and shetah
kavush) in mind in June 1967 and had most people in Israel not called both
of them "occupied territory" and had
the government received proper legal advice, it would not have decided to
apply the norms of international law to the liberated Jewish territories of the
Land of Israel, but rather the law of the State of Israel, as Ben-Gurion under
Pinhas Rosen's advice so wisely did in 1948.
Regarding
your point that the map attached to the Land of Israel Proclamation indicated only Lod and Ramlah and did not
show other areas in the Land of Israel that were in possession of the IDF, this,
in my opinion, does not prove that Lod and Ramlah were the only areas to which
Ben-Gurion's proclamation applied. The Proclamation and map were only issued
and attached to each other on September 2, 1948. All areas captured by Jewish forces,
excluding Jerusalem, before this date, that were part of the Land of Israel but
outside the U.N. Partition lines, such as Jaffa (captured May 13, 1948), Acco
(captured May 17, 1948 after a Hagana onslaught that began 4 days earlier, that
gave Israel tentative control of Acco and caused most of its Arab inhabitants
to flee) and Nahariya in western Galilee (captured in May 1948 after the fall
of Acco), would not have been included on a map delineated in red, signed and
dated by the Defense Minister, when those areas had already become integral
parts of the State of Israel by the immediate application of Israeli law. It
would have been redundant to do so. Most of western and southern Galilee, destined
for the proposed Arab state under the UN Partition Plan, was taken by Jewish
forces between May and July 1948, including such places as Hanita and nearby
villages, as well as Yehi'am, Zippori (Sepphoris) and Nazareth. These areas,
located in the proposed Arab state, as also in the cases of Jaffa, Acco and
Nahariya, were all included in the State of Israel, not by marking their
location on a map as provided for in Ben-Gurion's proclamation, but, as already
noted, by applying the law of the State to them, as provided for in
Ben-Gurion's law. In this matter, due attention must be paid to the fact that
once Ben-Gurion's Proclamation was issued on September 2, 1948, it was
open-ended in nature and therefore applied to all areas -- apart from Jerusalem
and its environs -- of the Land of Israel then not part of the State of Israel,
without specifically naming these areas in compliance with Ben-Gurion's law
which required a proclamation to be issued to define the area of the Land of
Israel being held by the IDF.
Ben-Gurion's
proclamation also provided for supplementary maps for areas of the Land of
Israel held by the IDF after September 2, 1948 (see Article 1 of the
Proclamation as regards its Interpretation, and Article 5 dealing with the
validity of the Proclamation), a situation which would have applied to
Beersheba (captured Oct. 21, 1948), Ashkelon (Majdal -- captured in October
1948 from the Egyptian army), Ashdod (Isdud -- captured in October 1948 after
the Egyptian forces were cut off and the local Arabs left) and Eilat (Umm
Rashrash, taken by Israel on March 13, 1949, and originally included within the
UN Partition lines). Ben-Gurion's law and proclamation were definitely in force
on June 7, 1967, which meant that Judea and Samaria, Gaza, the Golan Heights
and the Sinai Peninsula (assuming it is part of the Land of Israel, as
Ben-Gurion believed in 1956), should have been automatically incorporated into
the State. That was the law, and that was not done. The Government of Israel
has violated the sacred "Rule of Law" ever since.
Incidentally,
I have twice written to the Ministry of Defense in Tel-Aviv to obtain the map
or maps referred to in Ben-Gurion's Proclamation of September 2,
1948. They sent
me a copy of the map attached to the Jerusalem Proclamation of August
2, 1948 but could
not locate the map or maps attached to the Land of Israel Proclamation of September 2, 1948. If you have the citation for obtaining
the latter map, I would greatly appreciate getting it from you, to enable me
obtain this map.
4)
There is no disagreement as far as paragraph daleth is concerned, relating to the
Jerusalem Proclamation of August 2, 1948, that was also promulgated by Prime
Minister and Defense Minister David Ben-Gurion.
5) In
paragraph heh you mention your position about the
inapplicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention. Though you hold this position
in theory, you as a judge -- and the Government as a matter of policy --
actually implemented the humanitarian provisions of the Fourth Geneva
Convention in practice, especially its penal provisions. There seems therefore
to be a great contradiction between what you profess to be the situation in law
and what you actually did in conforming to the Convention during your terms of
office as Military Advocate General, Attorney-General and Supreme Court
Justice. In fact, it would have served no purpose for you to give courses on
the Fourth Geneva Convention in anticipation of a possible war and also have
the Convention included in the movable emergency kit of each platoon officer in
the Military Advocate's Corps -- if you, as the superior in charge, did not
think that the Convention applied. Why prepare these legal officers regarding
the ins and outs of the Convention if it was inapplicable to the regions of the
Land of Israel? Your action in this regard seems to
place a heavy cloud over what you say in your letter.
You
were meticulous in assuring the rights of Arabs in the held or repossessed
territories and in urging the Government to grant them a right of appeal to the
Supreme Court, even though such rights have never been granted to enemy aliens
in the courts of other countries. You were so concerned with the observance of
the Geneva Convention de facto and applying the norms of international law, but
at the same time you did not express any special concern about preserving the Land of Israel for the benefit of the Jewish People.
Where was your empathy for the Jews who wished to re-establish vibrant Jewish
life in the areas of the Jewish National Home, the cradle of the Jewish nation?
Instead of showing such empathy, you applied international law which, for all
intents and purposes, viewed the land on which the Jews settled to be
"occupied Arab land" because the law of the previous ruler was still
in force -- in conformity with Article 43 of the Hague Rules and Article 64 of
the Fourth Geneva Convention -- the international law that you seem to have
proudly advised the Government to adopt when the IDF entered Judea and Samaria
and issued Military Proclamation No. 2.
To my
thinking, it should have been inconceivable or repugnant for you as a former
member of the underground movement in pre-State Israel, the Irgun Zvai Leumi,
who supposedly was not hindered by a ghetto mentality, to be so ready to honour
the Arabs of Judea and Samaria, who wanted nothing more than to destroy the
Jewish State, by gratuitously applying to them the norms of international law
so that they were thus able afterwards to protest vociferously the settling of
Jews in this region as being "illegal" and to denounce Israel's
so-called "occupation" of "their" land. By applying the
Convention to the local Arabs, they were also empowered to claim the status of
"protected persons" under the Convention, and this in turn allowed
the International Committee of the Red Cross and the hostile United Nations to
monitor their treatment and intervene in Israel's domestic affairs. Your judicial legacy,
as well as that of your colleagues, Justices Landau and Barak, is the
protection you accorded the Arabs of this region rather than upholding the
rights of the Jewish People in the whole of the Land of Israel. By urging the application of
international law to Judea
and Samaria, and then endorsing it as a judge, you
prevented the unification of the Land of Israel under de
facto Jewish sovereignty
insofar as Cisjordan is concerned.
These
are simple truths that you and your fellow justices on the Supreme Court should
be truly remorseful for. You undoubtedly and understandably do not like to hear
or read what I have to say on this subject, but this is the terrible end result
of what you and your colleagues on the bench caused the people of Israel and their country -- that embraces not
merely the State of Israel, but the wider Land of Israel.
6) In
paragraph vav of your letter, you seem to take
liberties with Ben-Gurion's view of retaining Judea and Samaria when you state that he expressed his
"clear opinion" in a television interview in the wake of the Six-Day
War. That "clear opinion" was that we should give up all the held
territories in return for peace, except for Jerusalem. This was not only Ben-Gurion's position
at the time, but that of most members of the Eshkol Government, weary of war
and expressing a great yearning for peace with the surrounding Arab countries
which were still intent on wiping Israel off the map, as you well noted in your
article. The Ben-Gurion quotation you cite was nothing more than a pro forma mantra or sacred incantation
equivalent to a daydream, that was prevalent among members and supporters of
the Labour Alignment after the end of the Six-Day War and before the Arab
Summit Conference held in Khartoum on September 1, 1967, which dispelled the
idea that the Arab states truly wanted peace with Israel.
Ben-Gurion
uttered this opinion when he was no longer active in public life and had
already begun to fall ill, according to what the late Professor Yuval Ne'eman,
who knew him well, told me. On other occasions, he expressed a diametrically
opposite opinion, once in 1937 and once again in 1956. In 1937, at the 20th
Zionist Congress (August 3-16, 1937, Zurich), he gave a speech at Basel in commemoration of the first Zionist
Congress which had taken place there in 1897, where he said in part:
No Jew is
entitled to give up the right of establishing (settling) the Jewish nation in
the Land of Israel. No Jewish body has such power. Not even
all the Jews alive have the power to cede any piece of land or part of the
homeland. This is a right vouchsafed or reserved for the Jewish Nation
throughout all generations... Our right to the whole of this country is valid,
in force and endures forever.
In
1948, when Ben-Gurion became Prime Minister of the State of Israel, he provided
for the eventual expansion of the boundaries of the State to encompass all of
the Land of Israel by having the Provisional State Council
enact the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance and by issuing the Land of Israel Proclamation. Ben-Gurion's strong stance on
Eretz-Israel in 1937 was thus followed by equally strong legislative action
when the Jewish State came into being.
On November
7, 1956,
Ben-Gurion delivered an address to the Knesset which is sometimes called his
"Third Kingdom of Israel" speech, although he did not use those
actual words. In that speech, coming after the capture of the Sinai Peninsula in a seven-day campaign code-named
Operation Kadesh, Ben-Gurion stated clearly and repeatedly that Israel had not attacked the land of Egypt. He did not consider Sinai to be a part
of Egypt and he intended to annex Sinai and Gaza to Israel, as well as the
adjoining islands of Yotvata (Tiran) and Sanafir in the Red Sea where,
according to the 6th century Byzantine historian, Procopius, a Hebrew state had
existed for many centuries, until it was destroyed by the Eastern Roman Emperor
Justinian. If Ben-Gurion thought that Sinai and Gaza should be part of the
State of Israel -- and this, according to Professor Ne'eman, is what he thought
before U.S. and Russian threats forced him to retreat from his stated view on
November 7, 1956, a fortiori he would have never given up Judea and
Samaria had he been Prime Minister and in vigorous health in 1967. More likely,
he would have applied Israeli law and not international law to the newly
recovered Jewish territories, just as he did in 1948.
As I
write this letter, the former long-serving Mayor of Jerusalem, Theodor (Teddy)
Kollek, has passed away. In reading his obituary, I noticed a striking parallel
between the position he held for many years in regard to Jerusalem but which he subsequently abandoned in
retirement and the position Ben-Gurion held for many years in regard to the Land of Israel, but subsequently abandoned in
retirement. While in office, Kollek vowed that Jerusalem would always remain united under Israel's sovereignty, but seven years after
losing the mayoralty race to then Likud M.K., Ehud Olmert, Kollek astonishingly
supported Prime Minister Ehud Barak's plan to re-divide Jerusalem during the Camp David Summit in 2000.
This switch of opinion by Kollek corresponds in nature to what Ben-Gurion admittedly
did when he advocated giving up all of the liberated territories of the Land of Israel in 1967 to achieve peace with Israel's Arab enemies, completely contrary to
what he had always advocated.
Despite
Ben-Gurion's change of heart in 1967, I prefer to think of him as a pragmatic
exponent and loyalist of the Land of Israel who was loath to surrender any part
of the Land of Israel unless compelled to do so under duress, as occurred in
1956 immediately after the capture of Sinai and Gaza. John Foster Dulles, the
then-U.S. Secretary of State, threatened to cut off all financial aid to Israel, from all sources, in addition to having Israel expelled from the United Nations. Russia threatened to attack Israel with nuclear weapons. Under these ominous
circumstances, involving the opposition of two super-powers, Ben-Gurion thought
it was more prudent to retract his stated views and thus agreed to return Sinai
and Gaza to Egypt. However, Ben-Gurion did not do what
Prime Ministers Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon did later. Begin, acting on the
belief that Sinai was not part of the Land of Israel, voluntarily parted with this territory
that historically is connected more with the Land of Israel than with the Land of Egypt. In the case of Sharon, he unilaterally
abandoned an integral part of the Land of Israel to the Arab side, and evilly
uprooted about 9,000 Jews from their homes and farmsteads -- an act that I
believe fits the definition of treason under Article 97(a) and 97(b) of the
Penal Code.
I wish
to conclude my letter by referring to the 1979 landmark case of Dvikat (or
Dwaikat) v. Government of Israel et
al., famously known as the Elon Moreh case, that you favourably cite in
your article. This judgment, rendered by Deputy-President Moshe Landau, is a
judicial travesty directly traceable to your doorstep, that serves today as a
pillar for labeling Judea and Samaria as "occupied territories" under
international law. While this judgment does mention the Area of Jurisdiction
and Powers Ordinance, 1948, it betrays complete ignorance of the Land of Israel Proclamation that is governed by this Ordinance,
issued for the purpose of extending the boundaries of the State to those parts
of the Land of Israel theretofore not included in the State. Justice Landau's
lack of knowledge of this proclamation led him to reach untenable conclusions
about the legal status of Judea
and Samaria which persist to this day. Justice Landau
based his conclusions on the fact that Israeli law has never been applied to Judea and Samaria, not realizing that such a step was
legally required under the precedent of the Land of Israel Proclamation and Ben-Gurion' s law. He relied on the
two Military Proclamations actually issued on June 7, 1967 by Brigadier-General Haim Herzog which,
he thought, exclusively determined the legal status of Judea and Samaria. Those proclamations were based upon and
inspired by the precedents and forms you drafted and published in the Military
Manual or vade mecum given to all the legal officers in the Military Advocate's
Corps. In his judgment, Justice Landau admits that in deciding the Elon Moreh
case, he relied on the sources of customary international law (the Hague
Regulations) and two aforementioned Military Proclamations to determine the
legality of the military order requisitioning private Arab land on which the
new settlement was to be built. That would have been the proper procedure if it
could be correctly assumed that Judea and Samaria were indeed "occupied
territories", within the ambit of Articles 42 and 43 of the Hague
Regulations, but that was never the case since these territories are and have
always been integral parts of the Jewish National Home, in regard to which
Jordan was an illegal occupier and enjoyed no recognized sovereignty under
international law. I found it extraordinary to read Justice Landau's comments
(pp. 421-422 in Appendix A of your book) that the right of the Jewish People to
establish settlements in Judea and Samaria rests, not on any law he strongly
intimates, either internal law or international law, but rather on
"Zionist doctrine" or ideology. Did Justice Landau never hear of the
Law of Return enacted on July 5, 1950, which overrides the Hague Regulations
that permit requisition of land only for military needs. The Law of Return and Article
6 of the Mandate for Palestine sanction Jewish settlement not merely on land
located in the State of Israel, whether publicly or privately owned or simply
ownerless, but also in the rest of the Land of Israel, outside the State's
boundaries, in IDF or Jewish possession, as indicated by use of the Hebrew word artza in section 1 of the Law of Return and
also by what Ben-Gurion said in personally introducing this law in the Knesset
on July 3 and July 5, 1950. When Ben-Gurion explained that every Jew has the
right to come and settle in Israel, he certainly did not mean to limit this
right to the existing boundaries of the State of Israel, otherwise the Law of
Return, read in conjunction with the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance
and the Land of Israel Proclamation, would have made no sense nor served any
purpose. When Ben-Gurion further said that this right was recognized in the law
of nations and existed even before the State did, and was, in fact, that which
built the State, he undoubtedly had in mind Article 6 of the Mandate for Palestine and the unbroken historical link of the
Jewish People with the Land of Israel throughout the ages. How then was it possible for Justice
Landau and the other judges who concurred with his opinion in the Elon Moreh
Case to overlook the Jewish right of return to the Land of Israel as embodied in the Law of Return and say
that this right of Jewish settlement rested solely on "Zionist
doctrine" or ideology? What utter nonsense that shamefully ignores or
renders inoperative the Jewish right to settle the Land of Israel! This half-truth of Justice Landau
amounts to judicial misfeasance.
The
recently retired President of the Supreme Court, Justice Aharon Barak, has
proceeded along the same path as Justice Landau and gone even further, basing
several of his recent judgments on the false premise that Judea and Samaria are
governed by the rules of belligerent occupation, including the Fourth Geneva
Convention and even the Geneva Protocols of 1977, which eradicates the rights
of the Jewish People and its assignee, the State of Israel, to Judea, Samaria
and -- formerly -- Gaza. This I stress and repeat is the dire consequence of
your original plan and program to apply the norms of international law to the
areas of the Jewish homeland lying outside the technically temporary borders of
the State. I have written to Justices Landau and Barak in the same vein that I
wrote to you, even sending Justice Landau a copy of Ben-Gurion's Proclamation,
but neither he nor Justice Barak have bothered to respond or even acknowledge
my letters.
With
all due respect to you as a learned and eminent judge and jurist, I ask you
once again in all earnestness to reconsider and restate your position on the
legal status of Judea and Samaria, even at this extremely late date. If you
wish to make amends, at least in part, for the incalculable damage you have
caused in advising and urging the application of international and foreign law
to Judea and Samaria instead of Israeli law, what you can now do is to renounce
the position you adopted previously as to which law ought to have been applied
to Judea and Samaria in 1967. Had the proper decision been taken back then by
the Eshkol Government, it is reasonable to assume that Israel would not have been subjected in later
years to all of the international pressure to "return" so-called
"Arab land" to its "owners". For the sake of future
generations, I ask you to recant your earlier position and correct the
aberration of 1967 that led to the application of the Hague Rules and Geneva Convention to Judea and Samaria.
In
closing, I may not know, as you state, all the facts of inner government
workings and decisions that took place in 1967 as I was not privy to them, as
you were. Your reproach that I also lack knowledge of the relevant law to
support my position is refuted, as can be judged by this letter and my
published Petition. Anyone, like myself, who has observed and studied the
results of what was done by the decision-makers of that time can only gasp in
disbelief at the errors and violations of law that were made at the highest
levels. Instead of following Ben-Gurion's wise and patriotic path as expressed
in the laws he was responsible for enacting in 1948 and 1950, that embraced the
Land of Israel as the eternal treasure and patrimony of the Jewish People, the
Eshkol Government and you included appear to have embraced a non-Zionist,
bizarre and illegal policy to treat the Land of Israel as part of foreign
territory, the rights to which were viewed, in the eyes of most people in the
world, as being vested not in the Jewish People but in Arab pretenders. This
shame must be expunged, and you, who inspired the application of international
law to liberated Jewish territories, are the one person who can make that
happen!
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief
February 27, 2007. APPLYING ISRAELI LAW TO AN AREA
OF ERETZ-ISRAEL MAKES SUCH AN AREA AN INTEGRAL PART OF THE STATE OF ISRAEL
Howard
Grief
Attorney and Notary
13/2 David Goitein St.,
Pisgat Ze'ev Mizrah, Jerusalem 97782 Israel
Tel. (Fax) : 972-2-656-0085
Jerusalem
9 Adar, 5767 -- February 27, 2007
Mr.
Justice Meir Shamgar,
President (Retired) of the Supreme Court,
Rehov Shahar 12
96263 Jerusalem
Dear
Mr. Justice Shamgar,
I
thank you for your letter of January 21, 2007, and for the time you have
evidently taken to present further explanations and elaborations of your
position in regard to the exact meaning of the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers
Ordinance of September 22, 1948 (hereafter: the AJPO) and the proclamation validated
by the AJPO, namely, Proclamation No. 1 of the Israel Defense Forces Government
in the Land of Israel, of September 2, 1948 (hereafter: the Land of Israel
Proclamation). I sharply disagree with your interpretation of these two
constitutional enactments by the Provisional State Council and hereby provide
you again with my own exposition as to their true meaning and import.
My
first disagreement with you centers on your argument that the "area of
application of law" is not the same as "an area within the State of
Israel". This distinction of yours harks back to an old legal controversy
that has been dealt with in the case-law of the Supreme Court and the legal
literature. Please see the excellent article pertaining to this controversy in
regard to the Golan Heights Law of December 14, 1981 and the Law and
Administration Order (No. 1), 5727-1967, in regard to eastern Jerusalem,
applying Israeli law to both these territories -- written by Professor Asher
Maoz of Tel-Aviv University, Faculty of Law (Asher Maoz, "Application of
Israeli Law to the Golan Heights is Annexation", Brooklyn Journal of International
Law, 1994, Number 2, pp. 355 to 396). The opposite view is taken by
Professor Leon Sheleff in an adjoining article ("Application of Israeli
Law to the Golan
Heights is not
Annexation", op. cit., pp. 333 to 353).
The
distinction that you cite between the "area of application of law",
which is the heading of section 1 of the AJPO and the "area of the State
of Israel" was explained by the Minister of Justice, Pinchas Rosen (then
Felix Rosenbleuth), in the legislative debate on the AJPO that took place on
September 16, 1948 (the 12th of Elul, 5708), at the 18th Session of the
Provisional State Council. Here is what Rosen said about this law (in English
translation):
"By virtue
of this law, we are setting up a kind of administrative unity by creating a
concept which is in the nature of a legal fiction, which is 'the whole of the
area' -- ha-shetah ha-kolel,
-- also to be translated as "the over-all area" or "the
comprehensive area" [defined as] an area including both the area of the
State of Israel and the re-possessed area or the held area [please note: I
translate the Hebrew term ha-shetah
ha-muhzak as either the
"re-possessed area" or "held area"; the "re-" as
used in "re-possessed" means that that area of the Land of Israel was
part of the Jewish National Home that was restored to the Jewish People and the
State of Israel; for the same reason I use the word "re-conquered"
and never "conquered" to refer to the territories restored in 1967].
And this law states that a person appointed to any position [or office],
meaning principally a central or high position -- le-tafkid merkazi -- who is located in the area of the
State, will be competent to act also in the re-possessed (held) area. Were it
not for this law, doubts might arise, whether, for example, the
Attorney-General is able to institute lawsuits and criminal complaints in Nazareth or Jerusalem. Were it not for this law, the question
could arise, whether there is a direct appeal from the District Court in Jerusalem to the Supreme Court of the State, which
commenced a few days ago.
For
the purpose of clarifying the situation and for removing all doubts, we have
found it proper, and the Legislation Committee has approved this position, to
propose to the [Provisional State] Council this Ordinance..."
Further
on in the legislative debate, Pinchas Rosen replied to a proposed amendment
made by Zerah Warhaftig of the Ha-Po'el Ha-Mizrahi party, who asked that the words
in sections 1 and 2 of the AJPO, i.e., "the area including both the area
of the State of Israel and also any part of Palestine [Eretz-Israel],
etc." be deleted and replaced by the words "any law applying to the
whole of the State of Israel shall be deemed to apply to any part of Palestine
[Eretz-Israel] which the Minister of Defense has defined by Proclamation as
being held, etc.". Warhaftig's proposed amendment was rejected by Rosen
and the Provisional State Council, on the ground that the Land of Israel
Proclamation of September 2, 1948, issued two weeks before the discussion on
the AJPO took place, said exactly what Warhaftig was proposing and therefore
there was no need to repeat the same thing in the law. Rosen added the
following comment concerning the need to enact the AJPO:
...For purposes
of administration and law, there is a need for an innovation regarding what was
said in the Proclamations [these Proclamations to which Rosen referred were the
Jerusalem Proclamation of August 2, 1948 and the Land of Israel Proclamation of September 2, 1948, both of which were validated by the
AJPO]. There is a need to create the concept of an area, which includes the
held area -- ha-shetah
ha-muhzak -- and the area of
the State -- hetah ha-medina.
From
the foregoing two quotations of Pinchas Rosen, we learn the real reason why an
apparent distinction was made between the "area of application of
law" and the "area of the State". It was for the purpose of
creating a uniformity of law as well as an administrative unity between these
two areas. The totality of the two areas -- described in the AJPO by the term
"the whole of the area" -- was, according to Rosen, a "legal
fiction", an "innovation" or a new legal "concept".
This concept of the "whole of the area" covered not only the area of
the State of Israel allocated in the U.N. General Assembly Partition Plan of
November 29, 1947, but also part of the area that was intended for inclusion in
the proposed Arab State but was re-possessed by the IDF in the War of Independence,
to which was also added the city of western Jerusalem and its approaches. This
new concept was, in my opinion, a "sleight of hand", or clever
deception to mislead the U.N. by feigning compliance with the Partition
Resolution that the Jewish Agency had accepted before the State was proclaimed.
By phrasing the AJPO in this way, it gave Israel deniability that it was not violating
this Resolution, but was merely applying Israeli law to create administrative
unity between the area of the State of Israel, the borders of which were those
proposed in the Partition Resolution, and the areas re-possessed by the IDF.
But in applying Israeli law to these areas what was the practical and legal
result? The re-possessed areas to which the AJPO applied were henceforth
included in the borders of Israel even though this was not explicitly
stated in this law. That is how western Jerusalem and Nazareth came to be included in the State and, as
will be documented more fully below, this is the case with all other parts of the
Land of Israel that came into the possession of the IDF
as well. Justice Minister Rosen was at pains to deny that the new legislation
contained political ramifications which could be interpreted as violating the
Partition Resolution.
If we
are to accept your interpretation of the AJPO and the two proclamations of
August 2, 1948 and September2, 1948 that the application of Israeli law to any
area of the Land of Israel outside the U.N. Partition line was not equivalent
to making that area a part of the State of Israel, then western Jerusalem and
its approaches would not have been part of the State as soon as it came under
Israel's full control. Nor would Jaffa have become part of the State. Nor Nazareth. Nor Lod nor Ramla. Nor Beersheba. Nor Ashkelon and Ashdod. You would then be faced with the
unsolvable question of what the legal status of these areas was after Israeli
law and administration was applied to them. Certainly, such areas were then
regarded as within the purview of the State and no one will contest that fact.
As I said in my last letter to you, these areas of the Land of Israel and the Jewish National Home became part
of the State by either of two methods:
1. by marking a map of the Land of Israel in
red with the names of the re-possessed areas, as was done in the specific cases
of Jerusalem, Lod and Ramla, in conformity with the method set out in the
Jerusalem Proclamation and the Land of Israel Proclamation;
2. by application of the law of the State to
the repossessed area, without delineating this area on a map of the Land of
Israel, as also provided for in the aforementioned Proclamations, as well as in
the AJPO. Concerning this method, I venture to say that the words "defined
by proclamation" -- asher
sar ha-bitahon higdir otan be-minshar ke-muhzak 'al-yedei tzva-hagana
le-yisrael -- as appears in
sections 1 and 2 of the AJPO are a direct reference to any past (the two
proclamations already issued) or future proclamations applying the law of the
State to the held areas wherever situated in the Land of Israel beyond the U.N.
Partition line.
The
phrase "area of application of law" was a euphemism or semantic
invention to conceal the fact that the repossessed areas were being annexed to
the State of Israel. The name of the law -- the AJPO -- did not reflect its
true purpose. It was really intended to be a law of annexation, as proved by
the result that followed its implementation, but was adroitly drafted by Rosen
and his team in the Ministry of Justice as a law to extend Israel's "Area of Jurisdiction and
Powers". If Rosen and his associates had not been deceptive, and refrained
from using convoluted language, he would have called this law by a far more
suitable name: a law of annexation, or a law to extend the borders of the State
to encompass all areas of the Land of Israel re-possessed by the I.D.F.
Applying
the law of the State to an area not previously included within it is certainly
an act to assert sovereignty over that area, or, as Justice Haim Cohn called
it, "an act of state" (quoted in the article by Professor Maoz, p.
361, footnote 31; see also p. 369, footnote 71). The consequence of this act of
sovereignty is to join that area to the State of Israel. According to Justice
Cohn (as quoted by Professor Maoz):
Both the
proclamation of the Minister of Defense according to the Order issued in 1948
and the order of the government according to the law passed in 1967, are both
acts of state par excellence,
and as such require prior consideration as well as a political decision, for
both of the actions were intended to convert the areas to which they related
into part of the area of the State of Israel.
The
citation for Justice Cohn's statement is given by Professor Maoz as: The Status of Jerusalem in the
Legal System of the State of Israel, 1967-1987, at 246, 249 (Joshua Prawer
& Ora Ahimeir, eds., 1988), reprinted in 1 HAIM H. COHN SELECTED ESSAYS 361
(1991).
An act of state
is defined as an assertion of sovereign power by the Government on the
international level, and this is exactly what occurred when Israel applied its law to the held areas. That
naturally had the effect of incorporating these areas into the State as soon as
they became subject to Israeli law.
Justice
Cohn had apparently changed his mind on this subject, for in an earlier
statement he made in the case of Ravidi v. Military Court, Hebron Zone, [24] 2
P.D. 419 (1969), he stated:
the thesis that
the application of Israeli law to a particular area, is equivalent to the
annexation of the area to the State of Israel still requires proof. In the
Justice's opinion "there is ...nothing to prevent the application of the
law of Israel to the occupied territories even in the
absence of any intention to annex them to the area of the state."
What
Justice Cohn said in the Ravidi case in 1969 would agree with your own
distinction, but what he later said in his above-quoted article in 1988 agrees
with my opinion that annexation is the legal result of applying Israeli law to
an area of the Land of Israel that was previously outside the borders of the State.
In
this regard, Professor Maoz also cites the statement of Justice Yitzhak Kahan
in the above-noted Ravidi case as to the consequence of the government order
under the Law and Administration Order (No. 1), 5727-1967 applying Israeli law
to eastern Jerusalem that had been illegally ruled by Jordan from May 15, 1948
to June 7,1967.Justice Kahan maintained that eastern Jerusalem was annexed to
the State of Israel as a result of the application of Israeli law to eastern
Jerusalem, a statement which "echoed opinions voiced by other justices of
the Supreme Court" (pp. 361-362 of Prof. Maoz's article). The "other
justices" mentioned by Prof. Maoz included Justice Halevi, Justice
Berenzon and President Justice Agranat. Moreover, a majority of constitutional
or academic jurists in Israel are of the opinion that the application
of Israeli law to eastern Jerusalem resulted in its annexation. This view is
represented by Professors Yehuda Zvi Blum, Amnon Rubinstein, Claude Klein,
Menachem Hofnung and Asher Maoz. Dissenting from this view are Professors Yoram
Dinstein, Leon Sheleff and the late Nathan Feinberg.
After
the judgment rendered by Justice Barak in the case of Awad v. Prime Minister
and Minister of the Interior, [42] 2 P.D. 424 (1988), it is now settled case-law
that the application of Israeli law, jurisdiction and administration to any
area of the Land of Israel, outside its present borders, effectively annexes
that area to the State, making it a part thereof, whether the area in question
is eastern Jerusalem, the Golan Heights or any other area of the Land of
Israel.
That
also appears to be the strong underlying assumption of the new law passed in
1999 entitled the Law and Administration Law (Cancellation of the Application
of the Law, Jurisdiction and Administration), 5759-1999: hok sidrei ha-shilton u-mishpat -
bittul hehalat ha-mishpat, ha-shipput ve-ha-minhal, 5759. Under this law, a
decision taken by the Government as set down in an international treaty or
agreement, the purpose of which is to cancel or withdraw the application of the
law, jurisdiction or administration of the State of Israel to an
"area", as it is termed simply in the law, presumably an area located
anywhere in the State, needs both the approval of the majority of the Knesset
members, as well as the approval of the majority of votes cast by the
participants in a public referendum or plebiscite. The entire basis of this law
is to remove or "de-annex" a pre-existing "area" from the
State to which the law, jurisdiction and administration of Israel already applies. The "area" is,
by definition, an "area of the State", otherwise this law would not
make any sense at all. The very fact that the law provides for such a double
majority in order for it to be passed means that the law is dealing with a subject
of great importance, namely that of reducing the borders of the State by
withdrawing an area from it, but not particularly limited to the Golan Heights.
This law settles conclusively the question regarding the effect and result of
applying or not applying Israeli law to an area within the State: on the one
hand, the "application of law" to an area automatically makes that
area a part of the State as seen in the context of the State of Israel's
experience and history, and, on the other hand, by doing the very opposite,
i.e., "withdrawing the application of law", to a particular area
excludes that area from the State. That is as clear as I can enunciate this
point which you have raised twice in your letters to me, concerning which your
position is diametrically opposed to what I have just stated.
One
final observation concerning the definition of "an area of the State of
Israel" should be brought to your attention. This phrase was actually
defined in the 2001 law called the "Denial of the Right of Return
Entrenchment Law" -- hok
shiryun shelilat zechut ha-shiva, 5761 --
as follows:
Area of the State
of Israel: "an area located within the borders of the sovereign rule of Israel" -- - shetah medinat yisrael - shetah
ha-nimtza bit-hum shelitatah ha-ribbonit shel medinat yisrael
In my
opinion, this would equate the "application of law" to an area of the
State of Israel with the sovereign rule of Israel over that area. When this definition is
read in combination with the 1999 law cited above, the area of sovereignty of
the State is identical to the area where the law, jurisdiction and
administration of the State of Israel is in force.
I have
written elsewhere that Israeli sovereignty also extends to Judea, Samaria and Gaza, where in fact the corpus of Israeli law
is not in force because the Government of Israel, acting through the Minister
of Defense, failed to invoke the AJPO and Land of Israel Proclamation to these areas when they were repossessed
in June 1967. Judea, Samaria and Gaza are integral parts of the Jewish National
Home assigned to the Jewish People at the San Remo Peace Conference on April
25, 1920, but the
regrettable fact is that the State of Israel has never formally acknowledged or
asserted its own inherited sovereignty over these areas. I treat this subject
in my forthcoming book on The
Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel under International Law, and
therefore refrain from further discussing this question here.
The
fact that the AJPO was amended in 1956 to include section 2 A, which uses the expression
"shall be deemed to be part of the area of the State of Israel" in
regard to any vessel (ship) or aircraft, wherever situated, does not prove what
you strongly impute to it, that the legislator deliberately avoided the use of
the same expression in AJPO as is found in section 2A, because "the area
of application of law" was not tantamount to "the area of the State
of Israel". However, in the case of a ship or aircraft, an express
identification was needed to prove that the ownership of the vessel or aircraft
was that of the State of Israel and not of another, foreign state, for the
purpose of determining the jurisdiction of the courts of Israel in the event
that a crime is committed on board the vessel or aircraft or if a lawsuit for
damages was brought by an injured passenger or his heirs, etc. This case
obviously differs from sections 1 and 2 of the AJPO where the law is talking
about dry land and not about movable property (wood and iron) located outside
the boundaries of the State. The legislator acted wisely in identifying these
carriers or public conveyances as being a part of the State of Israel, to
remove any doubts about their legal status. Consequently, an attack on an
Israeli vessel or aircraft that takes place outside Israel is an attack on the State itself, as is
also the case if an Israeli embassy in a foreign country suffers an attack on
its premises or property.
You
tell me in your letter that only the Government of Israel has the authority to
decide if an area or region of the Land of Israel shall be joined to the State, and that
this cannot be done by the Minister of Defense alone. It is true that this is
what was said by the Minister of Justice, Ya'akov Shimshon Shapiro, when he
introduced the bill to amend section 11 of the Law and Administration Ordinance
of 1948. However, this was an innovation in the law, since prior to June 27,
1967, the date section 11B was enacted by the Knesset, all areas outside the
U.N. Partition line that were joined to the State, such as western Jerusalem
and Nazareth, were annexed by a proclamation issued in the name of the Minister
of Defense, who acted in the name of the Government pursuant to the authority
vested in the Minister by the AJPO. This is clear from the definition of the
term "proclamation" in the Interpretation Ordinance (New Version) of
1967. This ordinance defines the term as "a proclamation -- minshar -- or declaration -- akhraza -- by or with the authority of the
Government". Under the Interpretation Ordinance, a proclamation is also
included in the definition of a "law" -- din -- as well as that of an
"enactment" -- hikkuk -- and "regulation" -- takkana. Each of these acts of
subordinate or secondary legislation is presumed to be an act of the
Government, even though this is a rebuttable presumption, and if the act is not
made or issued under proper authority it can be annulled by the courts. There
can be little doubt that when Defense Minister Ben-Gurion issued the two
proclamations in 1948, he was neither acting unilaterally nor illegally, but by
or with the authority of his Government and in prior consultation with it.
It is
not my intention or wish to embarrass you about who originated the term the
"held areas" -- shetahim
muhzakim -- but it was first
used in 1948 in the two afore-mentloned Proclamations and could not therefore
have originated with you. You can verify for yourself that this term was
specifically defined in section 1 of Proclamation No. 1 of the IDF Government
in the Land of Israel and also in section 1 of Proclamation No.1 of the IDF
Government in Jerusalem. In the legislative debate preceding the enactment of the
AJPO, both Pinchas Rosen and Zerah Warhaftig spoke about the "held
areas" in contradistinction to "occupied areas" to which the law
and administration of Israel would be applied. The AJPO used a
slightly different phrase in the text of the law, "any part of Palestine... held by the Defense Army of
Israel", but it was equivalent to the term "held areas". Your
use of the same term in 1967 was therefore only a continuation of the same
phraseology begun in 1948.
English
translations of the Hebrew legal terms shetah
muhzak and shetah kavush are, it is agreed, irrelevant from the
point-of-view of Israeli law, but on the contrary they are of utmost importance
from the point-of-view of international law and also popular understanding of
what Israel did in 1967. Had the term shetah
muhzak been correctly
translated as a "held area" and not as an "occupied area",
there would probably not have arisen such a fierce world outcry against Israel's "occupation" of so-called
Arab territory under international law. The words "occupation",
"occupied territories", "occupier", etc. have become the
single greatest accusation hurled against Israel since 1967, not only by Arab states and their
allies but also by the United Nations, the European Union and the United States, as well as by the unthinking Left inside
the country. It was therefore an act of self-abasement and a self-inflicted
wound to translate shetahim
muhzakim into "occupied
areas" or "occupied territories", instead of "held
areas" of the Land of Israel that should have been annexed immediately to the State of
Israel under the AJPO and Land of Israel Proclamation. If that had been done in June, 1967, no
one would have called these territories "occupied", as they were
recognized parts of the Jewish National Home that had been illegally detached
in various partitions in the proceeding decades and were under illegal Arab
(Jordanian and Egyptian) occupation.
I also
take issue with your statement that the law in force in Israel on September 22,
1948, the date when the AJPO came into operation, was completely identical to
the law that applied in the other areas of the Land of Israel which were part
of the Mandate, the implication being that it did not matter whether Israeli
law or international law was applied since they were both the same. This is an
intriguing argument, but it, too, falls apart upon closer examination. First,
the corpus of law in the new State of Israel was not identical to the
pre-existing law, because important changes were introduced right at the
inception of the State of Israel, as set out in section 13 of the Law and
Administration Ordinance and also in the Proclamation issued by the Provisional
Council of State on May 14, 1948 that accompanied the Declaration of the
Establishment of the State. These changes were necessitated by the continued
existence of several provisions of laws dating from the White Paper of May 17,
1939, that would have remained in force had not the new legislative authority,
the Provisional State Council, declared them null and void. These provisions of
law were: sections 13 to 15 of the Immigration Ordinance, 1941; Regulations 102
to 107C of the Defence (Emergency) Regulations, 1945; and the Land Regulations,
1940. In addition, the Law and Administration (Further Provisions) Ordinance of
July 1, 1948 stated as follows:
Construction of
laws
Section 2: For the removal of doubts it is hereby declared:
(a)
where any law enacted by or on behalf of the Provisional Council of State is
repugnant to any law which was in force in Palestine on the 5th of Iyar, 5708
(14th May, 1948), the earlier law shall be deemed to be repealed or amended
even if the new law contains no express repeal or amendment of the earlier law.
By
passing this kind of legislation the Provisional State Council made it clear
that the body of law that was in force prior to the establishment of the State
was not identical to the law that existed afterwards.
Moreover,
if international law had been applied to the "held areas" in 1948,
instead of the law of the State, this would have created the same type of legal
damage and controversy as occurred in 1967 when this is what was actually done,
apparently on your advice and based on your preparatory work. The laws and
customs of war as embodied in the Hague Rules of 1907 would then have applied
to all territories beyond the UN Partition line for the Jewish State held by
the IDF, based on the premise that they were "occupied territories"
or were acquired through war, especially if the Arab state proposed in the
Partition Plan had come into existence in the areas not held by the IDF, or
also if Trans-Jordan, as Jordan was then called, had purported to act on behalf
of this aborted Arab state. In seizing the land allotted for the proposed Arab
state under the UN Partition Plan, the Arab state of Trans-Jordan effectively
replaced the aborted Arab state with the consent of the Arab notables living in
Judea and Samaria, thus giving it a supposed right to argue that "Arab
land" held by Israel that had been earmarked for the Arab state was being
occupied by the Jewish State under the Hague Rules of international law. We are
talking here only of theoretical possibilities, but since you raised this
subject, a future mess could have been created if the Government of Israel had
acted in 1948 as it did in 1967 by applying international law to areas of the
Land of Israel not included in the State's boundaries under the UN Resolution
of November 29, 1947.
Of course,
Israel wisely did not do so, thanks to
Ben-Gurion and his two Proclamations of August 2, 1948 and September 2, 1948, but it cannot be denied that this kind
of Arab complaint supported by the U.N. could have theoretically popped up and
weakened Israel's rights to all of the Land of Israel. By applying the law of the State to
western Jerusalem and other held areas of the Land of Israel, the Government
warded off other possible claimants to these lands, namely, the UN
vis-Ã -vis Jerusalem, Lebanon vis-Ã -vis Upper Galilee and Egypt
vis-Ã -vis the Negev. It therefore mattered a great deal that
international law was not applied in 1948 to the held areas by the Minister of
Defense on behalf of the Government, but rather the law of the State.
In
summary, this application of Israeli law to the held areas avoided the
application of British Mandatory enactments that were discriminatory against
Jews and contrary to the provisions of the Mandate, and also avoided the
possible invocation of the Hague Rules to the held areas, or as the Arabs may
have called them, the "occupied areas" of the proposed Arab state,
seized by Transjordan in the name of that state.
As to
section 2 of the AJPO, this provision extends Israel's administration to the "whole of
the area". It constitutes further evidence that the held areas became part
of the State, otherwise what right would Israeli officials or office-holders
sitting in Tel-Aviv have either prior to September 22, 1948 when the AJPO
became law or afterwards, to exercise their duties and powers in the held areas
(including Jerusalem, Yaffo, Nazareth, Lod, Ramla, etc.) if these areas were
not part of the State? If that was really so, as you maintain, then section 2
would constitute extra-territorial legislation, meaning that Israel would be
exercising its sovereignty outside its own territory, contrary to international
law. However, this is nonsense, since the held areas did truly become part of
the State. Section 2 also applied to court proceedings and appeals taken from
the Magistrate's Court in the held areas to the District Court or to the
Supreme Court in the State of Israel, as stated by Minister of Justice Pinchas
Rosen, in the legislative debate on this section.
In our
correspondence, I have staked my whole argument as to why the law of the State
had to be applied in regard to all areas of the Land of Israel re-possessed in the Six-Day War, on the
centrality and significance of the precedent-setting Land of Israel Proclamation. In your letter dated January
21, 2007 you
adopt a very restrictive view of the meaning of this pivotal Proclamation when
you affirm that it related only to Ramla and Lod and that my assumptions
regarding the scope of its applicability have no factual foundation. You base
your interpretation on the map attached to this Proclamation which depicted
only Ramla and Lod. However, if we take a good look at the legislative debate
on the AJPO and also examine the language of the text of the Land of Israel Proclamation, it will be conclusively demonstrated
that your interpretation of the limited scope of the Proclamation is unfounded
and my view of the open-ended nature of the Proclamation is justified.
In the
legislative debate on the bill containing the AJPO before it became law, the
following are the exact words of Justice Minister Pinchas Rosen explaining its
meaning and scope:
pekuda zo,
she-'avra et va'adat ha-hakika ve-ushra 'al-yadah peh ehad, ba'a kedei
le-faresh uke-hashlim et ha-minsharim, she-lefihem hutal hok ha-medina 'al
ha-shetahim ha-muhzakim/ attem be-vaddai zokhrim ahe-pursemu shnei minsharim
ka-elleh, minshar ehad she-hetil et hok ha-medina 'al shetah yerushalayim,
u-minshar sheni she-hetil et hok medinat yisrael 'al yeter ha-shetahim
ha-muhzakim.
In the
above-quoted paragraph, Rosen states explicitly, first that the Jerusalem
Proclamation imposed the law of the State on the area of Jerusalem and second that the Land of Israel Proclamation imposed the law of the State on the rest
of the held areas. The held areas that Rosen specifically names in the legislative
debate were Jerusalem and Nazareth, the former governed by the Proclamation
of August 2, 1948, and the latter -- by the Proclamation of September
2, 1948. He does
not specifically mention Ramla and Lod, but they are naturally included when he
refers to "the rest of the held areas". Zerah Warhaftig, who
participated actively in the debate, mentions the area of Jaffa, which was re-possessed on May
13, 1948, two
days prior to the establishment of the State, after its Arab inhabitants
abandoned the city.
Warhaftig
also spoke directly about the question whether or not the held areas outside
the U.N. lines were part of the State. Here is what he said on the subject:
shama'nu kama hatzharot bishivot mo'etzet-ha-medina
u-mi-hutza lah mi-pi sar ha-hutz ve-gam mi-pi rosh ha-memshala 'atzmo,
she-anahnu lo kibbalnu et ha-gevulot shel kaf-tet be-November ke-muhlatim,
ve-she-be'ekev ha-devarim she-halu me-az ve-'ad ha-yom nidrosh shinui
ba-gevulot im ha-davar yuva bifnei ha-um. be-khol ofen, ha-shetahim ha-nimtza'im
mi-hutz la-gevulot halalu einam mi-hutz li-gevulot medinat yisrael. yeshnam
sham halakim she-yihyu kelulim bim'dinat yisrael.
There
was no doubt in Warhaftig's mind that Jerusalem, Jaffa, Nazareth and the rest
of the held areas were part of the State of Israel and that the provisional
borders of the State as delineated in the UN Partition Plan no longer coincided
with those borders, but had been expanded to include the held areas.
It
will be recalled, as previously discussed in this letter, that Warhaftig wanted
to amend the bill for the AJPO to include the words "any law applying to
the whole of the State shall be deemed to apply to all parts of the Land of Israel...". Rosen rejected the proposed
amendment on the ground that what Warhaftig wanted to include in the AJPO was
exactly what the Jerusalem Proclamation and Land of Israel Proclamation had contemplated and therefore there was
no need to repeat the same wording in the AJPO. The rejection of the proposed
amendment is further substantiation that the Land of Israel Proclamation applied to all areas of the Land of Israel re-possessed by the IDF outside the
borders of the Jewish State fixed by the U.N. in the Partition Resolution.
In
addition to the foregoing evidence of the wide scope of the Land of Israel Proclamation, an analysis of the text of the
Proclamation also confirms its extended applicability to all areas of the Land of Israel excluding Jerusalem. The opening words in the preamble of the
proclamation state that "various areas in the Land of Israel are in the possession of the Israel
Defense Forces". The phrase "various areas" is broad enough to
cover all the held areas, not just Ramla and Lod. This phrase would not have
been used if the intention had been to limit the meaning to only these two
areas.
Moreover,
Article 1 of the Land of Israel Proclamation refers to the held areas that may
be delineated on any other map replacing the map attached to the proclamation
of September 2, 1948, and the concluding part of Article 5 refers to the held areas
the possession of which passed to the IDF afterwards, i.e., after September
2,1948. The wording of the proclamation in Articles 1 and 5 makes it evident
that it applies to all areas held by the IDF that were either recovered in
battle or abandoned or surrendered by their Arab inhabitants, whether such
areas were re-captured prior to September 2, 1948 or after that date, and not
just to the held areas of Ramla and Lod.
It
seems to me that the delineation of areas re-conquered by the IDF as shown on a
map of the Land of Israel and then incorporated into the State was a makeshift
or temporary method, that was replaced by a better method for accomplishing the
same purpose, which was simply to apply the law of the State to the held areas,
as provided for in Article 2 of the Land of Israel Proclamation and Article 1
of the AJPO. This is exactly what happened when Beersheba, Ashdod and Ashkelon were repossessed by the IDF more than a
month after the Proclamation was originally issued. There is no disputing the fact
that this proclamation, the scope of which I have shown is open-ended, applied
to these newly re-conquered areas and would also have applied to other areas of
the Land of Israel such as Ramallah or Hebron or, for that matter, to all of
Judea and Samaria had they too been re-conquered in the War of Independence.
The same method of annexing areas of the Land of Israel to the State of Israel should have been
followed in 1967 when in fact Judea
and Samaria and other areas of the Land of Israel came into the possession of the IDF as a
result of the Six-Day War. But this was not done! The application of
international law, instead of Israeli law, was a monumental violation of the
existing constitutional law pioneered by Ben-Gurion and Rosen, a violation that
had tragic consequences and severely weakened Israel's rights to the Land of Israel. What appears to be your legal advice to
the Eshkol Government in bringing about this violation is a terrible stain on
your good name that seems to call for an act of atonement on your part.
Moving
on to your next point, you refer to "the end of section 3 of the
Ordinance" as being derived from customary public international law. This
provision of law validated retroactively all acts done "which but for the
provisions of this Ordinance would be without effect". This section
validated the two proclamations issued by the Minister of Defense, which
extended the law of the State to all the held areas. However, I am mystified by
your statement that section 3 represents customary public international law. In
any event, I agree with you that customary international law is part of the law
of the State which is taken from English common law. This is independent of the
fact that the Hague Rules, having the status of customary international law,
were inapplicable to any area of the Land of Israel re-conquered by the IDF,
both in 1948 and in 1967, since such areas were not occupied lands governed by
international law.
As to
your final point, you reiterate that section 11B of the Law and Administration
Ordinance, 1948 deals with the inclusion of territory in the State of Israel,
in supposed contrast to the AJPO which, in your opinion, does not. I believe
that in its essence Section 11B is hardly different from the AJPO, except that
the former is implemented by the Government as a whole and is optional in
nature, while the latter is implemented by the Minister of Defense on behalf of
the Government and is mandatory. Section 11B never explicitly states that an
area of the Land of Israel, to which the law, jurisdiction and administration will
apply by order of the Government becomes part of the State. I agree that this
order does make such an area part of the State, but that is also what the AJPO
does when a proclamation has been duly issued. Thus I do not understand why you
attribute this result only to section 11B but deny it for the AJPO. That
appears to me to be illogical.
On
this point, you justify your position by referring to the statement made by the
Minister of Justice, Ya'akov Shimshon Shapiro, in the Knesset debate when
section 11B was presented as an amendment to the Law and Administration
Ordinance. I have read Shapiro's speech. He said in effect that to join an area
of the Land of Israel to the State, in particular to an existing municipality
under section 8A(a) of the Municipalities Ordinance, an act of sovereignty was
required, and that could be accomplished by applying the law of the State to
any part of the Land of Israel actually under the de facto control of the State. What Shapiro was
saying in 1967 -- about applying Israeli law, jurisdiction and administration
to liberated areas beyond the borders of the State was really no different from
what Rosen said in 1948 about applying Israeli law and administration to the
held areas. Shapiro was even more emphatic than Rosen in this matter because he
said that not only had the IDF taken control of considerable, but not
contiguous areas of the Land of Israel in the Six-Day War, but had
"liberated" them "from the yoke of foreigners" ...
...hu she-tzva
hagana le-yisrael shihrer me-'ol zarim halakim nikkarim me-eretz yisrael, lav
davka retzufim' ve-ha-nimtza'im zeh le-ma'ala mi-shevu'ayim bishelitat tzahal
To
conclude this letter, I feel I understand fully your reluctance to admit any
error in your legal position affecting the Land of Israel. You have laboured several decades as a
distinguished Military Advocate General, Attorney General, Judge and President
of the Supreme Court in propounding the view that bears your trademark, the
view that the areas of Judea, Samaria, Gaza, the Golan Heights and Sinai
re-possessed in 1967 were destined to be governed by international law and not
by the law of the State. Though you think otherwise, I perceive that your legal
perspective was not in accord with the constitutional structure created in 1948
in regard to expanding the borders of the State to encompass all of the Land of
Israel as originally envisaged in various acts of international law in 1920 and
1922 and by David Ben-Gurion in the legislation he was responsible for enacting
as Prime Minister and Defense Minister.
You
have also greatly influenced other members of the judiciary, particularly
Justices Moshe Landau and Aharon Barak in their judgments that served to
reinforce your original view that the liberated Jewish territories of Judea and Samaria are governed by international law. This
opinion of yours was, as already noted, apparently passed along to the Eshkol
National Unity Government, and the State of israel has been burdened with its
dire consequences ever since. The Government's acceptance of this advice
created the occupation myth that is exploited daily by all Arab and Moslem
states and by the Arabs of Israel, as well as a plethora of Jewish leftists who
have been educated in accordance with your unfortunate view on the subject, to
denounce Israel's control of Judea and Samaria or what is left of it today. If
the occupation myth is ever to be ended, it will take a very courageous step by
you personally that is also long overdue: to admit that the application of
international law, specifically the application of the Hague Rules to Judea and
Samaria in 1967, instead of Israeli law, was a colossal mistake that altered
and badly damaged our constitutional structure for the unification of the Land
of Israel under Jewish rule.
I
continue to hope that you will realize the truth of what I have written and
will decide to act accordingly.
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief
Editor's Comment: For technical reasons words originally
written in Hebrew have been transliterated. The original Hebrew may be obtained
by writing Attorney Grief at 13/2 David Goitein
St., Pisgat Ze'ev Mizrah, Jerusalem 97782 Israel.
From Yoel Lerner,
Editor of the "Howard Grief Eretz-Israel Letters"
The Howard Grief Letters to Meir Shamgar,
being one side of the correspondence conducted by the author, a Jerusalem
attorney specializing in Israeli constitutional law and international law
regarding Eretz-Israel, and Meir Shamgar, President (Emeritus) of the Israeli
Supreme Court, focus on the part played by the latter in the crucial years
between 1961 and 1968 when Shamgar served as Military Advocate General and
Israel came into de facto possession of much of the land
outside the borders of the State but already allocated to the Jewish People
at the conclusion of the First World War in the global settlement that
brought into existence many states in South East Europe as well as in the
predominantly Arab Middle East. These Letters, written in the English
language in which Howard Grief expresses himself most eloquently, provide the
basis for a desperately-needed thorough revision of the Israeli legal
treatment of Yehuda v'Shomron -- Judea
and Samaria.
The Howard Grief Letters to Meir Shamgar
were written in two stages, the first being an abortive stage (November 2005)
where Attorney Grief sent President (Emeritus) Shamgar a copy of a letter he
had written to a mutual acquaintance, Mr. Eliezer Dembitz, a former Military
Court Judge appointed to his post by Shamgar himself, "in which [Grief] amplif[ies]
the point why [Shamgar] was... in breach of the existing constitutional law
when [he, Shamgar] conceived the plan in the early 1960s to apply
international law, instead of Israeli law, to re-conquered areas of the Land
of Israel and the Jewish National Home," actually repossessed in 1967.
No comment on the contents of the letter, with which the Correspondence
begins, was forthcoming from President Shamgar at that time.
The second and far more fruitful stage of
this unique Correspondence began a year later when Howard Grief wrote
directly to President [Emeritus] Shamgar. Shamgar's reply initiated a
fascinating exchange of letters and of thoughts that took place over a period
of several months. It was President [Emeritus] Shamgar's categorical
objection to the publication of the letters he himself had contributed to the
Correspondence that led to the decision to publish Howard Grief's letters in
the present format. The discerning reader will be able to reconstruct many of
the arguments made by President [Emeritus] Shamgar, to which Howard Grief has
responded.
Yoel
Lerner, Editor
April, 2007
|
Howard Grief was
born in Montreal, Canada, educated in law at McGill University and made aliyah in 1989. He served as international law
advisor to Professor Yuval Ne'eman, the then Minister of Energy and
Infrastructure on matters pertaining to the Land of Israel and Jewish rights thereto. He is a Jerusalem-based
attorney and notary, as well as a specialist in Israeli constitutional law. In
October 1993, he wrote the first of several articles denouncing the illegal
agreements Israel made with the PLO; these appeared in the pages of Nativ and elsewhere. He is the founder and
director of the Office for Israeli Constitutional Law.
He formulated the
original thesis that sovereignty over the entire Land of Israel and Palestine
was devolved upon the Jewish People at the San Remo Peace Conference in April
1920 as part of the global settlement that dismembered the
Ottoman Turkish Empire and created the Middle Eastern states of today; as a
consequence, the British White Papers published during the Mandate period, as
well as the UN General Assembly Partition Plan of 1947, were illegal. He is the
author of two forthcoming books on The
Legal Foundation and Borders of Israel under International Law, which deal with his thesis in an
orderly and comprehensive fashion
The "Howard
Grief Eretz-Israel Letters to Meir Shamgar, 2005-2007 -- on Eretz-Israel and
Israeli Constitutional Law" edited by Yoel Lerner was published by the
Office For Israeli Constitutional Law (Registered Amuta), Iyar 5767 -- May
2007. It was submitted to Think-Israel by Yoel Lerner, editor of The Grief Letters on September 2, 2007.
[Editor's
note: You can read Howard Grief, "The Origin of the Occupation Myth,"
by clicking here. And his article on "Legal Rights
and Title of Sovereignty of the Jewish People to the Land of Israel and Palestine under International Law" can be read here.]
THE ORIGIN OF THE OCCUPATION MYTH
by Howard Grief
Inasmuch
as Israel is always unjustly condemned by the United Nations as an occupier of
"Arab land" in regard to Judea, Samaria and Gaza, a condemnation that
has no basis in either fact or law, it is important to trace the origin of this
pernicious myth. This myth has provided the world body with the necessary
pretext to intervene constantly in the internal affairs of these Jewish lands.
The myth originated and has persisted to this very day, astonishingly enough,
with the aid of Israel's legal establishment or coterie of eminent jurists
ensconced in several centers of authority, notably (1) the Supreme Court of
Israel; (2) the Attorney-General's Office; (3) the Ministry of Justice; (4) the
International Law section of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF), operating under
the Military Advocate-General's Command; and (5) the Law faculties of Israel's
universities.
The
individual who bore the greatest responsibility for this myth was Meir Shamgar,
who was Military Advocate-General from 1961 to 1968, and later the
Attorney-General of Israel and the President of the Supreme Court.
He was at the epicenter of the decision made by Prime Minister Levi Eshkol's
National Unity Government during the Six Day War to apply not Israeli law but
the laws of war to all the liberated Jewish territories, in particular the
provisions of the Hague Regulations of 1907, as well as the Fourth Geneva
Convention of 1949. This application was completely inappropriate to the
situation considering the historical connection and sanctity of these
territories to the Jewish People and their legal inseparability from the Jewish
National Home.
What
moved Meir Shamgar to invoke the laws of war? He described what he did without
providing the rationale for doing so in an article he wrote called, "Legal
Concepts and Problems of the Israeli Military Government -- the Initial
Stage".[1] Shamgar did not conceal his belief that military government
based on international law relating to occupied territories was the proper
course to follow in regard to Judea, Samaria, Gaza, Golan and Sinai. He
referred in a general sense to these territories as "enemy territory"
or "occupied enemy territory".[2] Elsewhere he called the same
territories "occupied", "under military occupation" or
"administered", but he never called them "liberated territories
of the Jewish National Home", which was their true legal status under
international law after their liberation from the illegal Jordanian and
Egyptian occupation respectively lasting from May 15, 1948 to June 6-8,
1967.[3] In two revealing and significant footnotes, Shamgar admitted that he
had planned the entire legal framework for any
territories Israel conquered in a future war with Arab states. He formulated
his plan in the early 1960s before the Six Day War was either foreseen or its
results imagined. He did this to avoid the situation of a supposed legal vacuum
that had prevailed in Sinai after Israel's lightning victory in the 1956 war, when
no plan existed for the legal administration of the peninsula during Israel's three month stay there.
He
conducted special courses for platoon officers belonging to the Military
Advocate's Corps. All military advocates carried with them "movable
emergency kits" which contained the laws of war (Hague 1907, Geneva IV
1949 etc.) and a large set of precedents of military government proclamations
and orders, as well as detailed legal and organizational instructions and
guidelines. In addition, Shamgar wrote and published a comprehensive vade-mecum which he called, "Manual for the
Military Advocate in Military Government".
As a
direct result of Shamgar's ill-conceived plan of what Israel was supposedly
obliged to do under international law in the event that the IDF re-captured or
liberated any territories of the Land of Israel in Arab hands, a regime of
military government based upon the provisions of the Hague Regulations of 1907,
specifically Articles 42 and 43, was immediately established in the wake of
Israel's total victory on three fronts in the Six Day War. Military Government
was defined by Shamgar as "the form of government established by a country
which has occupied enemy territory, whether the [occupied land] was formally
under the sovereignty of such enemy or whether it could be regarded as former
sovereign territory of the occupying power or any of its allies".[4]
Despite Shamgar's disclaimer that in establishing a military government, Israel
was not necessarily occupying enemy territory that was truly under the
sovereignty of the enemy state, especially in regard to Judea, Samaria and
Gaza. That was in fact the general perception in the rest of the world, made
even more believable by the very application of the provisions of the Hague Regulations relating to "occupied
territories".
The
military government was made up of four regional entities covering 1) the Gaza
Strip and northern Sinai; 2) central and southern Sinai; 3) Judea and Samaria; and 4) the Golan Heights. The application of Articles 42 and 43 of
the Hague Regulations meant that in the case of the (single) region of Judea
and Samaria, Jordanian law as it existed on June 7, 1967 that included
unrepealed provisions of Mandatory law and remnants of Ottoman law would
continue to be enforced unless amended or repealed by new security enactments
of the Military Government. In the case of Gaza, this meant that Egyptian military
regulations that had been in force in the period from May 15, 1948 to June 6, 1967 would also continue to be applied, as
well as unrepealed Mandatory provisions unless the law was also amended or
repealed by the Military Government. In regard to northern Sinai, which was
linked to Gaza to form a single administrative unit, the
pre-1967 legal system remained in effect under the Military Government. Even Jerusalem came for a brief time under a military
government from June 7 to June 28, 1967, that ceased to exist only after
"East" and "West" Jerusalem were finally reunited by virtue of a
government order and proclamation.
The Golan Heights indeed presented a unique problem. As a
result of the fighting that took place there in the Six Day War, none of the
judges or lawyers remained in the region after June 10, 1967 to administer the local Syrian law, nor
were any Syrian law books available for use. With the breakdown of the
previously existing judicial administration, and in accordance with the
accepted principles of international law applicable to occupied territories,
Israel created new courts for both civil and criminal proceedings under
military administration.[5] Security enactments were formulated setting out the
substantive law, procedure and law of evidence in civil matters that followed
the laws and practice in Israel, and this was also done for criminal offenses
and trials. The military administration of the Golan Heights came to an abrupt end with the passage of
a Knesset law on December 14, 1981, that henceforth applied the law,
jurisdiction and administration of the State of Israel to this territory, thus
in effect annexing it.
The
setting up of a military government for all the liberated territories of the Land of Israel formerly under illegal Jordanian or
Egyptian occupation was incredible in the extreme. As noted above, despite
Shamgar's disclaimer, its effect was to delegitimize or deny the rights of the
Jewish People and its assignee, the State of Israel, to permanently govern
these precious Jewish territories recognized by the Principal Allied Powers in
1920 as belonging to the Jewish People. The person mainly responsible for this
outrageous, ignorant and unforgivable legal conception that has caused untold
damage to the Jewish Zionist case to this very day was Meir Shamgar, one of Israel's most eminent jurists.
The
fatal flaw in Shamgar's plan that should have flashed a red light was that
there was never any true obligation incumbent upon Israel to apply
international law to the areas of the Land of Israel recaptured in a defensive
war by the Israel Defense Forces. This was because Judea,
Samaria and Gaza were previously designated by
international law in 1920 and 1922 as integral parts of the Jewish National
Home under the Mandate for Palestine read in conjunction with the
Franco-British Boundary Convention of December 23, 1920 and hence were being legally repossessed
by Israel. The Golan Heights were also to be considered an integral
part of the Jewish National Home, though illegally removed from the Home by Britain in a trade-off agreement with France dated February 3, 1922, which took effect only on March
10, 1923.
Sinai
was illegally excluded from the Jewish National Home which was supposed to
include all territories to which Jews had a proven historical connection and
had settled or governed in the days of the First and Second Temple Periods,
when Palestine's borders were first delineated on December
23, 1920. It was
excluded because Britain had decided in 1906 to attach Sinai to Egypt to protect the Suez Canal which it controlled from possible Turkish
attack. Egypt had been under the sovereignty of the Ottoman Empire since 1517, but in 1882 it was occupied
by Britain which ruled it until Egypt attained its independence by a treaty
concluded in 1922. The British were apprehensive about the earlier
administrative border extending from Rafiah in the north to the city of Suez at the southern exit-point of the Suez Canal, since this border afforded the Turks
easy access to the Canal, especially at the southern end.
To
change the administrative border between the Sanjak of Jerusalem and the
Province of Hedjaz, on the one hand, and the Sinai Peninsula, on the other,
Britain deliberately fomented a crisis with Ottoman Turkey called the Aqaba
Incident, in which they delivered an ultimatum to Sultan Abd-al-Hamid II on May
3, 1906, demanding a new border in Sinai from Rafiah to the head of the Gulf of
Aqaba (Gulf of Eilat), near Taba. The British backed up their ultimatum by
sending military and naval forces to the area, one gunboat dropping anchor at
Rafiah and another off Taba. Under an imminent threat of war, the Sultan,
acting under duress without the support of any foreign state, had no choice but
to accede to the new administrative dividing line demanded by the British. An
agreement was quickly negotiated and concluded on October 1, 1906, in which (italics in the original)
"Egypt was granted administrative rights in Sinai up to a line drawn from Rafa
to the head of the Gulf of Akaba, Turkey expressly retaining the right of sovereignty."[6]
Meinertzhagen further observed in his Diary that in 1917, General Allenby,
unaided by the Egyptian Army, conquered and occupied Turkish Sinai, which, by
right of conquest, was at Britain's disposal.
In
actual fact, since Britain was then acting on behalf of the Principal Allied
Powers (the wartime coalition of Britain, France, Italy and Japan), Sinai was
at the disposal of these Powers as a group rather than of Britain alone, and
since at least half of Sinai was part of the Land of Israel, it should have
been attached to Palestine, i.e., the Jewish National Home, in 1920 when its
borders were demarcated for the first time in accordance with the spirit and
intent of the San Remo Resolution.
Sinai
was in fact administered until 1892 from what later became Palestine, and about half of Sinai was included in
the Sanjak of Jerusalem until 1906. In any event, Egypt was never recognized as the sovereign of
Sinai under international law, but at best its administrator. In fact, in 1906,
the Egyptian National Movement under its leader Mustafa Kamil, opposed British
attempts to annex Sinai to Egypt. Furthermore, until 1948, Egypt never
claimed Sinai as part of its sovereign territory except for the northwestern,
triangular area, which the Turkish Sultan had permitted Egypt to administer
during the 19th century, to compensate it for relinquishing its administration
of Crete and not because it was within Egypt's "ancient
boundaries".[7] The whole of Sinai was subsequently appropriated by Egypt
before its exact status under international law could be ascertained, in order
to prevent the emerging Jewish state from claiming or annexing it.
Prime
Minister Menahem Begin erred grievously in 1978 when, during the peace
negotiations with Egypt at Camp David, he did not challenge President Anwar
Sadat's false assertion that Sinai was "sacred Egyptian soil" though
it was nothing of the kind. Begin, the erstwhile champion of the Greater Land
of Israel, let Israel's right to Sinai be lost by default. His
costly blunder and probable violation of law resulted in Israel's complete and unnecessary withdrawal from
Sinai that has had a long and important historical connection with the Jewish
People.
The
foregoing pertinent facts concerning Judea, Samaria, Gaza, Golan and Sinai should have been uppermost in the mind of anyone
given the task to decide whether to apply international law or Israeli law to
these territories. This task was executed by Meir Shamgar, who made the wrong
decision for reasons known only to himself. He was apparently not adequately
familiar with some of the cardinal legal documents in the post World War I
period, which affirmed Jewish legal rights and title of sovereignty to all of
Palestine, as the Jewish National Home, particularly the Smuts Resolution of
January 30, 1919 which became Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of
Nations, the San Remo Resolution of April 25, 1920, the Franco-British Boundary
Convention of December 23, 1920, the Mandate for Palestine confirmed on July
24, 1922 and finally, the Anglo-American Convention of December 3, 1924
respecting the Mandate for Palestine.
What
is even more puzzling and legally very grave, which reflects badly on Shamgar's
reputation as a jurist, was the manner in which he overlooked or neglected two
fundamental Israeli constitutional laws that exclusively governed the post-Six
Day War situation before the enactment two and a half weeks later on June 27,
1967 of Section 11B of the Law and Administration Ordinance. This was not only
stupendously wrong, but also a staggering violation of the Rule of Law. Had he
been more aware of the true significance of these constitutional laws, they
would undoubtedly have steered him in the right direction, or at least warned
him against the application of international law pertaining to the rules of
warfare to the liberated Jewish territories of Judea, Samaria, Gaza, Golan and Sinai. These laws were the
Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance used in 1948 by Prime Minister David
Ben-Gurion and Justice Minister Pinhas Rosen in applying the corpus of law of
the State of Israel to territories of the Land of Israel beyond the UN
Partition lines, repossessed by the IDF in the War of Independence, as well as
the ubiquitous Law of Return, which entitled Jews to settle in all parts of the
Land of Israel under Israel's expanded jurisdiction.
It is
really dumfounding that Shamgar who was so preoccupied with observing
international precedents and guidelines regarding the procedure to be followed
after the effective conquest of what he perceived was "enemy
territory", failed at the appropriate moment to utilize the leading precedent
established in his own country when, during the War of Independence, additional
areas of the Land of Israel were recovered by the IDF, that were thenceforth
subject to the law of the State. The above facts and precedent were simply
ignored or never even thought of by either Shamgar or any members of the team
of military advocates who participated in his training program.
In
several conversations the present writer has had with the jurist Eliezer
Dembitz, who attended the training courses organized by Shamgar and served as a
Justice Ministry official, as well as a senior legal adviser to the Knesset
Finance Committee, Dembitz has confirmed that, to his knowledge, no one who
attended these courses ever propounded the argument that there was no legal necessity
to apply the laws of war to the territories liberated in the Six Day War. By
his unwise actions calling for and resulting in the application of the norms of
international law to these territories, Shamgar entangled Israel in the morass
and endless dispute about the applicability of the Fourth Geneva Convention and
the Hague Regulations, and moreover, gave credence to the mislabeling of the
territories as being "occupied" and the consequent libeling of Israel
as an "occupier" of "Arab land". This proved to be an
enormous propaganda coup for the Arab cause, while severely undermining Israel's legal argument that the liberated
territories were the patrimony of the Jewish People as enunciated in the
Biblical record and confirmed in several post-World War I documents.
Subsequently,
Shamgar seems to have had some second thoughts about what he had planned and
overseen to fruition. While he concurred in the application of the Hague
Regulations, which he viewed as customary international law that was always binding
on Israel, in regard to the conquest of "enemy territory", he did not
accept the fact that Israel was likewise bound by the Fourth Geneva Convention
since the latter represented conventional international law that the Knesset
had never introduced into Israel's legal system and in any case applied only to
"occupied territories" over which neither Jordan nor Egypt had been
recognized sovereigns with a valid title. Nevertheless, Shamgar's second
thoughts on the subject were of no avail since he had already created the mold
of a military administrative framework that (except in the cases of Jerusalem and the Golan Heights) was never subsequently repudiated or
converted into Israeli civilian administration governed in all cases by Knesset
statutory law.
The
first two proclamations that were issued by Brigadier-General Chaim Herzog, the
future President of the State, regarding the region of Judea and Samaria that
resulted in the application of Jordanian law and drafted[8] by the
Director-General of the Ministry of Justice, Zvi Terlow, based on the
organizational legal guidelines and arrangements compiled by Shamgar in the vade-mecum, are still in effect
in those parts of this region not governed by the "Palestinian
Authority".
The
fact that Israel never incorporated Judea, Samaria and Gaza into the State,
which since 1967, has been viewed by foreign opinion and most jurists in Israel
as "occupied territory", is directly traceable to the Government's
implementation of Shamgar's plan, guidelines and arrangements. The "Manual
for the Military Advocate in Military Government" written and expanded by
Shamgar proves beyond reasonable doubt that he is the one most responsible both
for the establishment of a military government in Judea, Samaria and Gaza and the pernicious notion that Israel is an occupying power. This so bedevils
us today.
The
tragic mistake and violation of law committed by Shamgar has now become
immeasurably worse by two recent Supreme Court judgments,[9] rendered by the
President of the Supreme Court and former Attorney-General, Aharon Barak, who
decided, without reference to any of the aforementioned laws or international
documents that indicated otherwise, that Judea, Samaria and Gaza are indeed
territories held by Israel under "belligerent occupation". Barak, in
his clever, off-the-mark judgments, did not specify the states or people whose
land Israel has been occupying or when such states or
people were recognized under international law as having the sovereign right to
Judea, Samaria and Gaza.
His
judgments which bind the Government of Israel, unless overturned by
legislation, and give great comfort to Israel's enemies and detractors both
within and without, are therefore even more damaging than the non-binding,
non-enforceable advisory opinion of the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in
the case involving the legality of Israel's security fence being constructed in
Judea and Samaria. The Court, sitting in The Hague, established by the Charter of the United
Nations (Article 92) as the principal judicial organ of the UN, in a biased,
legally unsupportable opinion delivered on July 9, 2004, declared the security fence illegal
under a false reading of international law. It disregarded the cardinal fact
that the whole of Palestine was set aside by international law in 1920 and 1922 as the
Jewish National Home.
The
relevant documents of international law noted above were either completely
ignored or, in the case of the Mandate for Palestine, while mentioned, its purpose and
principal provisions were not discussed at all. At the same time, the ICJ
recognized the fictitious national and political rights of a fictitious nation
that calls itself "the Palestinians", a term that earlier identified
the Jews of Palestine prior to 1948, and was scornfully rejected by the Arabs
of the country. The ICJ further stated that Judea and Samaria are "Occupied Palestinian Territory" and that Israel has the status of an "Occupying
Power".
This
opinion gives the Arabs a public-relations bonanza, but has absolutely no legal
merit or validity. It reflects only the twisted, baseless views of the Arab
League and the "Palestinian Authority" as well as the dozens of
Islamic nations represented at the United Nations. The ICJ opinion proves how
some respected jurists who had not already committed themselves to favoring the
Arab cause prior to giving their opinion can be hoodwinked into swallowing
nonsensical, illogical arguments, based on irrelevant UN resolutions and data
that lack the force of law in deciding the issue at hand.
Yet
this unconscionable advisory opinion has been praised by none other than the
most revered figure in Israel's judiciary, Aharon Barak, who found that
the ICJ opinion "also contains many things that are favorable to Israel". He added, "I can definitely
see the possibility in the not-too-distant future when the State will base many
of its arguments [apparently concerning the route of the fence] on this
opinion."[10] Never has Shamgar's 1967 folly reached such heights of
absurdity! If Israel's leading jurists treat Judea, Samaria and Gaza as
"occupied territories" and discount Jewish legal rights and title of
sovereignty over them, or believe such rights do not exist at all, little can
be expected from leaders and media figures in foreign countries who have expressed
themselves in a similar manner or have maliciously accused Israel of
"stealing" the land of another people.
The
tremendous legal and political harm which these jurists have caused to the
Jewish legal case cannot be rectified or reversed in a single stroke. However,
a beginning can certainly be made to overcome this damage by having the Knesset
pass a special law declaring that Judea, Samaria and Gaza are definitely not occupied territories, but rather the
patrimony of the Jewish People.
Endnotes
1.
See the volume entitled Military Government in the Territories Administered by Israel 1967-1980: The Legal Aspects, edited by
Meir Shamgar, Hebrew University Jerusalem -- Faculty of Law, Harry Sacher
Institute for Legislative Research and Comparative Law, Jerusalem (1982), Hemed Press, reprinted 1988, pp.
13-60.
2. Ibid., pp. 13, 28, 31.
3.
Shamgar did make one scant reference to "liberated areas" on p. 14 of
his article, but this reference was not explicitly linked to the liberated
areas of the Jewish National Home, but to liberated areas in a broader or
general sense.
4. Ibid., p. 28.
5. Ibid., p. 55, and also p. 453
which contains the Court's Order for Ramat HaGolan (Order 273) issued by the
Military Government.
6.
See Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen's book, Middle East Diary 1917-1956, Thomas Yoseloff, Publisher, New York (1960), pp. 17-19.
7.
See "Myths and Facts 1978, A Concise Record of the Arab-Israeli
Conflict", published by Near
East Report, Washington, DC (1978), pp. 41-42.
8.
The information regarding the drafting of the first two military proclamations
for Judea and Samaria was conveyed to the present writer by
Professor Ya'akov Meron, an accomplished legal expert and jurist who served in
the Ministry of Justice for 30 years as the adviser on Muslim Law in Arab
countries.
9.
See the case of Beit Sourik Village Council v. the Government of Israel, HCJ
2056/04 (rendered on June 30, 2004); see also the case of Gaza Coast
Regional Council v. Knesset of Israel, HCJ 1661/05 (rendered on June
9, 2005).
10. The Jerusalem Post, May 10, 2005.
Howard Grief was
born in Montreal, Canada and made aliyah in 1989. He served as a legal advisor to
Professor Yuval Ne'eman at the Ministry of Energy and Infrastructure in matters
of international law pertaining to the Land of Israel and Jewish rights thereto. He is a Jerusalem-based
attorney and notary, as well as a specialist in Israeli constitutional law. In
October 1993, he wrote the first of several articles denouncing the illegal
agreements Israel made with the PLO that appeared in the pages of Nativ and
elsewhere. He is the founder and director of the Office for Israeli
Constitutional Law.
This article
appeared in Nativ, Volume 8, October 2005
(http://www.acpr.org.il/ENGLISH-NATIV/08-issue/grief-8.htm). Nativ is a journal
of politics and the arts. It is published by the Ariel Center for Policy Research (ACPR), which is based in Jerusalem. It can be reached by email at info@acpr.org.il or go to
its website, www.acpr.org.il
Thanks
are due Ted Belman of IsraPundit for bringing this article to our attention.
APPLYING CONSTITUTIONAL LAW TO THE 1967
LIBERATION OF JUDEA, SAMARIA AND GAZA (BIBLICAL ISRAEL)
by Howard Grief
The five letters presented in the enclosed
booklet tell a story of utmost national significance, about which few have
any true knowledge. It is a historical fact that ever since June 7, 1967, when the IDF
overran Judea, Samaria
and Gaza in the
Six-Day War, we have wrongly applied international law to these repossessed
areas of the Land of Israel.
This resulted from a deliberate National Unity Government decision that
clashed with existing Israeli constitutional law and with the practice
followed in 1948 when other areas of the Land of Israel were repossessed by
the Israeli armed forces. The law wrongly applied at the close of the Six-Day
War was international law as embodied in the Hague Rules of 1907 and the
Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, both codices being classified as laws of
war, when Israeli constitutional law at the time required the application of the law of the
State of Israel to Judea, Samaria and Gaza.
This mis-application of law, a step taken by
the Eshkol Government on the basis of erroneous legal advice proffered by the
then Military Advocate-General and future President of the Supreme Court, Mr.
Justice Meir Shamgar, who was responsible for setting up the military
administration for the reconquered areas of the Land of Israel, is the
subject-matter of the five letters published here. It resulted in the
pernicious Occupation Myth and provided our enemies with an enormous
propaganda victory in the eyes of the world, for the term
"occupation" implied that Israel had taken over by war the land of
another people to which it had no right under international law, an absolutely
false implication. This widespread myth then received the stamp of approval
from the Supreme Court of Israel, especially from Mr. Justice Moshe Landau in
the Eilon Moreh case and from recently retired President Aharon Barak in
cases dealing with Israel's security fence and the implementation of the
Sharon Disengagement Plan.
The author hopes that the publication of his
letters to Mr. Justice Meir Shamgar, the originator of the international law
thesis that gave direct rise to the Occupation Myth, despite Shamgar's intentions,
will enlighten the public about the violation of law committed 40 years ago,
the effects of which are felt to this very day. Recognition of this 1967
error is a vital first step in an attempt to undo the colossal legal damage
done to the rights of the People and State of Israel.
Howard
Grief
Jerusalem
May 2007
|
PRESENTING THE TERMS OF THE ARGUMENT
Jerusalem
11 Heshvan 5766 -- November 13, 2005
The Honourable
Mr. Justice Meir Shamgar
Rehov Shahar 12
Jerusalem 96263
Dear Mr. Justice
Shamgar,
Please find
enclosed a copy of a letter dated November 2, 2005 I have sent to Mr. Eliezer
Dembitz, in which I amplify the point why you were, in my opinion, in breach
of the existing constitutional law when you conceived the plan in the early
1960s to apply international law, instead of Israeli law, to re-conquered
areas of the Land of Israel and the Jewish National Home that were placed
under military government.
Any reply you
may wish to make would be most welcome and instructive.
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief
|
Jerusalem
30 Tishri, 5766 -- November 2, 2005
Mr.
Eliezer Dembitz, Attorney
Jerusalem
Dear
Eliezer,
Concerning
our two conversations on October 31st and November 1st, 2005, I firmly adhere
to my view that on June 7, 1967, when Brigadier-General Herzog issued
Proclamations Numbers 1 and 2 (Proclamation on the Assumption of Power by the
IDF in the Region of the West Bank; Proclamation on Law and Administration),
there was a clear violation of the existing constitutional law, as of that
date. Section 11B of the Law and Administration Ordinance was not enacted until
three weeks later, on June 27, 1967.
The
existing relevant constitutional law that was in force on June 7, 1967,
consisted of the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance of September 16, 1948,
made retroactive to May 15, 1948, and the two Proclamations issued thereunder
by the Ben-Gurion Government, namely, the Israel Defense Forces Government in
the Land of Israel (hereafter the Land of Israel Proclamation) of September 2,
1948, made retroactive to May 15, 1948, as well as the Israel Defense Forces
Government in Jerusalem of August 2, 1948 (which I call the Jerusalem
Proclamation), made retroactive to May 15, 1948.
When Israel liberated Judea and Samaria on June 7, 1967, and Gaza on June 6, 1967, the 1948 Ordinance and the two
Proclamations associated with it required the application of Israeli law, not
international law. The application of Israeli law was required even though the
regions were thenceforth governed by a military government, exactly as happened
in 1948. Thus, when Advocate-General Meir Shamgar in the early 1960s decided
long before the outbreak of the Six-Day War to apply international law
concerning what he called "enemy territory" (a strange non-Jewish and
non-Zionist reference to integral parts of the Land of Israel) if and when
Israel acquired such territory, he was in breach of the existing constitutional
law.
Two
questions arise concerning Shamgar's decision to apply international law
instead of Israeli law in the early 1960s, at a time when David Ben-Gurion was
still Prime Minister:
1. Who gave Shamgar the right to violate the
existing constitutional law on the re-acquisition of areas of the Land of Israel in Arab hands?
2. Which government person or persons could
possibly have had the authority to back Shamgar in making this decision to
violate the existing constitutional law?
In the
period from 1961 until June 1963, i.e., the early sixties, when Shamgar
conceived his illegal plan, there was no Eshkol Government, no need to worry
about demography, no pressure on Israel to apply Jordanian law to Judea and
Samaria, which under Jordanian law was called the West Bank, a name
subsequently changed by the Menahem Begin Government to Judea and Samaria. The
only obligation then incumbent upon Shamgar was to obey the existing
constitutional law.
However,
Shamgar acted otherwise, contrary to the vaunted principle of the Rule of Law.
He admitted in the book he edited, entitled "Military Government in the
Territories Administered by Israel 1967-1980, The Legal Aspects" and
published in 1982, that he wrote a comprehensive vade mecum, the Manual for the Military Advocate in
Military Government, in the early sixties, when he was Military
Advocate-General (1961-1968) in which he detailed the laws of war which he
decided should be followed in the next war that he surmised would break out
with the surrounding Arab states. His plan was then implemented several years
later during and after the Six-Day War. For confirmation of this fact, I refer
you to Shamgar's footnotes, numbers 25, 27 and 28 of his article in the
aforementioned book, which he entitled "Legal Concepts and Problems of the
Israeli Military Government -- The Initial Stage", pages 13-60. These
footnotes are found on pages 25 and 27 of his article and are enclosed
herewith.
As a
direct result of Shamgar's conception adopted by the Eshkol Government in June
1967, every person in the world today outside Israel and indeed a very
substantial number of Israel's own population call Judea, Samaria and, until
very recently, Gaza "occupied territories", when they are in truth
integral parts of the Land of Israel and the Jewish National Home under both
Israeli constitutional law and international law, as I have made crystal clear
in several past articles I have written on the subject and in my forthcoming
book, The Legal Foundation and
Borders of Israel under International Law. Shamgar's conception, which
would never have seen the light of day had he abided by the prevailing
constitutional law dating back to Ben-Gurion's day, as was expected of him, has
backfired in the most hideous way: Israel is today seen as a violator of
so-called international law and as an occupying power that has taken over
(stolen!) another nation's patrimony, the so-called "Palestinians", a
term that was formerly reserved for the Jews of the Yishuv (1920-1948) living
in Mandatory Palestine, and not for a fake nation that has no right to this
designation. The entire judicial travesty that Shamgar created has now been
given the imprimatur of truth by none other than Justice Aharon Barak,
President of the Supreme Court, in his recent decisions on Israel's security fence. Barak constantly
repeats the theme in his judgments that Judea, Samaria and Gaza are governed by the rules of belligerent
occupation under international law, but refrains in a cagey, deliberate manner
from actually calling them "occupied territory", to avoid criticism
or bring undue attention to what he has farcically and incompetently done.
As to
Deputy-President Justice Moshe Landau's decision in the 1979 case of Dwaikat v
Government of Israel (the Elon Moreh case), Landau misstated the legal norm
that was then applicable, in June 1967. In fact, he mixed up two separate legal
norms, one dealing with the imposition of Military Government over re-acquired
areas of the Land of Israel and one dealing with the application of Israeli law and
sovereignty to those areas. The norm of Military Government was indeed applied,
both in 1948 and in 1967, but the other norm, that of Israeli law applying to
the IDF-held areas was disregarded in 1967, in violation of the existing
constitutional law, and replaced by the application of international law. It is
no credit to Landau that at a critical time in the settlement of the liberated
territories of the Land of Israel he continued and endorsed the outrageous violation of law
initiated over a decade and a half earlier by then-Advocate-General Shamgar,
that has since placed Israel in an untenable position making it a
target for worldwide censure.
You
have received two recent articles I wrote on the subject discussed here, one
dealing with the "Origin of the Occupation Myth" (published in Hebrew
in the September 2005 issue of Nativ)
and the other entitled "David Ben-Gurion's Forgotten 1948 Land of Israel
Proclamation for the Annexation of Judea and Samaria" (scheduled for
future publication). To refresh your memory and recapitulate what should have
been legally done on June 7, 1967, after the liberation of Judea and Samaria
from enemy occupation, instead of what was in fact illegally done by the Eshkol
Government, acting undoubtedly on the proffered advice of Meir Shamgar, Zvi
Terlo and others, I summarize the matter as follows:
1. In the first proclamation prepared by the
Military Advocate's Unit for Judea and Samaria formally issued by Haim Herzog,
the Commander of the Israel Defense Forces in this region, dated June 7, 1967,
it was announced to the inhabitants living there that the Israel Defense Forces
have "entered the region and assumed control", meaning that they have
set up a military government there. The establishment of military government
was in accordance with the 1948 Land of Israel Proclamation and the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers
Ordinance, except that it was supposed to have been issued by the Minister of
Defense (Moshe Dayan), not by the Military Commander.
2. In the second proclamation issued by
Herzog, entitled "Proclamation on Law and Administration", the region
over which military government was established was defined in the proclamation as the West Bank, a reference to what the Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan called Judea
and Samaria. In defining this area as the West Bank, Herzog was acting unknowingly in
accordance with the requirement of the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance
that said that the IDF held area must be defined by proclamation before the Ordinance
could be implemented. In contrast to the 1967 Proclamation, the 1948 Land of Israel Proclamation did the defining by drawing red lines on an
illustrative map of the Land of Israel, signed and dated by the Minister of
Defense, that accompanied the original proclamation, showing the area held by
the IDF. Without making use of any map, Herzog's proclamation simply described
sparingly the area that was now under IDF control -- the "Region of the West Bank", which in any event was already a
well-defined and well-known area that needed no particular delineation on a map
to identify it. In both cases, defining this area was not discretionary, but
obligatory, otherwise no one would have known that the IDF was in complete
control of the area establishing a military government that replaced the
previous government under Jordanian rule. Without such a proclamation, chaos
and confusion, both at home and abroad, would have prevailed.
It is true that international law does not absolutely require the
issuance of a proclamation, as soon as the territory of a foreign state is
occupied by hostile forces, though it is customary for this to be done.
However, the situation is entirely different under Israeli constitutional law
for areas of the Land of Israel liberated by the Israel Defense Forces that cannot be
labeled "occupied territories" under international law. The Area of
Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance was enacted for the sole purpose of
recovering for the Jewish State those lands that had been recognized as
integral parts of the Jewish National Home under international law in 1920 and
that had always been considered the patrimony of the Jewish People under Jewish
law. If the IDF achieved this purpose in regard to various regions of the Land of Israel and no proclamation had been issued under
the aforesaid Ordinance, then its very purpose would have been defeated and the
law left with neither meaning nor effect. Moreover, if the Minister of Defense
did not issue a proclamation defining the IDF-held areas, this would have meant
that the Jewish People, represented by the State of Israel, had no sovereign
right to the recovered areas and would have been required in due course to
restore these areas to the Arab states that had illegally occupied them in
1948, a requirement that negated the underlying assumption of the Ordinance
that they belonged to the Jewish People. To avoid these consequences, it was
therefore incumbent upon the Minister of Defense to issue a proclamation under
the Ordinance to define the area of the Land of Israel taken over by the IDF as soon as this
occurred. To underscore this point, this was the way the Ordinance was actually
interpreted and implemented throughout the War of Independence. It seems
logical to conclude that it was the obligatory nature of the Ordinance that
prompted the Eshkol Government in 1967, shortly after the end of the Six-Day
War, to devise an alternative law (Section 11B of the Law and Administration
Ordinance), to give the Government a choice in deciding whether or not to
incorporate into the State the areas of the Land of Israel liberated in that
war.
3. Once the foregoing proclamations
establishing military government in the West Bank region had been issued by
Herzog on June 7, 1967, both the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance and
the Land of Israel Proclamation required the application of the law of Israel
to the IDF-held region, which meant its incorporation into the State of Israel.
Instead, the Proclamation on Law and Administration approved by the Eshkol
Government and issued under Herzog's Command as Proclamation No. 2 applied the
local law of Jordan then in force in the West Bank, in accordance with Article 43 of the Hague Regulations, but absolutely contrary to
Israeli law, as already noted. Thus, the wrong source of law was used (Article
43 of the Hague Regulations, rather than the provisions of the Area of
Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance) and the wrong law applied to the region held
by the IDF (Jordanian law rather than the corpus of Israeli law). The
Government chose this short-sighted course to keep the option of
"peace" open and to avoid increasing the Arab population of the
State, which were considerations outside the realm of law and could have been
resolved by other means. The non-observance of the existing constitutional law
was the folly and root of all the trouble we face today in the battle to
preserve Jewish rights to the Land of Israel under the Rule of Law. Had the Eshkol
Government done what it was legally obligated to do, no one, apart from the
Arab states and their close supporters, would have falsely dared call Judea and
Samaria "occupied territories" subject, after the end of active
hostilities, to the laws of war embodied principally in the Hague Regulations
and the Fourth Geneva Convention. The folly of what was done in June 1967 has
been accepted by the Supreme Court and its underlying raison d'etre has never -- until recently, when
Justice Edmond Levi dissented in the case dealing with the constitutionality of
the Disengagement Implementation Law -- been challenged by anyone in Israel's legal Establishment, based on the
merits of the case.
It is
past time to denounce and renounce what Shamgar and Landau and now Barak have
done to the legal infrastructure that was created in 1948 by the Ben-Gurion
Government regarding the absorption of integral areas of the Land of Israel lying outside the de facto boundaries of the State that were
re-conquered by the IDF. We await a new Government that will overturn the
erroneous judicial decisions rendered by our esteemed jurists that clearly
contradicted Israel's rights to Judea, Samaria and Gaza and other regions of the Land of Israel.
Sincerely,
Howard
Copies
of this letter will be sent to:
1.Professor
Ya'akov Meron
2.Justice (Ret.) Meir Shamgar
3.Justice (Ret.) Moshe Landau
4.Justice Aharon Barak
5.Justice Edmond Levi
6.Military Judge (Ret.) Baruch Koroth
7.Professor Yuval Ne'eman
November 2, 2006. LETTER OCCASIONED BY THE PROPOSED
BUILDING OF A JEWISH CEMETERY ON THE MOUNT OF OLIVES
Howard
Grief
Attorney and Notary
13/2 David Goitein St.,
Pisgat Ze'ev Mizrah, Jerusalem 97782 Israel
Tel. (Fax) : 972-2-656-0085
Jerusalem
11 Heshvan, 5767 -- November 2, 2006
Mr. Justice
Meir Shamgar,
Shahar 12
96263 Jerusalem
Dear
Mr. Justice Shamgar,
I
enclose herewith for your attention and perusal the letter and attached
documents I have sent to the Jerusalem
Post columnist, Mrs. Sarah
Honig, concerning the proposed building of a Jewish cemetery on state land on
the Mount of Olives, situated in the region of Judea and Samaria, the
realization of which was prevented by then-State Attorney Dorit Beinisch, based
on an unfounded legal opinion submitted by Attorney Meni Mazuz, prior to his
being appointed Attorney-General.
This
matter relates directly to your original plan in the early 1960's, long before
the Six-Day War erupted, to treat any area beyond the armistice borders of the
State as occupied territory governed by the laws of warfare. The Eshkol
Government of National Unity accepted your plan in 1967, when Judea and Samaria
were restored to the Jewish People during the Six-Day War, and invoked the
Hague Rules in regard to this region. It was your advice to the Government in 1967,
when you were Military Advocate-General, which created the world-wide belief
that Israel was occupying the land of another country, when in truth this land
(i.e., Judea and Samaria) was the sovereign patrimony of the Jewish People
under both Israeli constitutional law and international law, that devolved upon
the State of Israel upon its establishment. What you did has haunted Israel ever since and started the great divide
between those supporting the concept of the Land of Israel and those opposing it.
When
you launched your plan in the early 1960's, were you not aware that Israel's
first prime minister, David Ben Gurion, aided by Pinchas Rosen, had set up a
constitutional structure for reclaiming all parts of the Land of Israel that
had earlier been transferred or otherwise lost to neighboring Arab states? For
that purpose Ben-Gurion issued two separate proclamations in 1948, one
pertaining to Jerusalem and the other for the rest of the Land of Israel that required the immediate incorporation
into the borders of the State of any area of the Land of Israel conquered and effectively held by the
Israel Defense Forces. These two proclamations were officially called:
1. shilton tsva-hagana le-yisrael
biyrushalayim, minshar mispar 1, nittan ha-yom, kaf-vav be-tammuz 5708 -- Israel Defense Forces Government in Jerusalem, Proclamation No. 1.
2. shilton tsva-hagana le-yisrael
be-eretz-yisrael, nittan ha-yom, kaf-het be-av 5708 -- Israel Defense Forces Government in the Land of Israel, Proclamation No.1 (The Land of Israel
Proclamation).
This
is how places such as Nahariya, Nazareth, Lod, Ramle, Beersheba, Ashdod, Ashkelon, etc. became part and parcel of the State
of Israel in 1948, even though they lay outside the boundaries of the Jewish
State recommended under the United Nations Partition Plan. No special
proclamation was needed for these places, for they all came under the scope and
purview of the open-ended Land of Israel Proclamation. This Proclamation was still in force in
1967 and applied directly to the repossessed region of Judea and Samaria, as well as that of Gaza, the Golan and even Sinai. You chose to
ignore this proclamation and, instead of advising the Government to apply the
law of Israel to the redeemed territories in accordance with Ben-Gurion's Land
of Israel Proclamation, you did the very opposite of what was legally required
in the circumstances and advised the application of foreign law in accordance
with Articles 42 and 43 of the Hague Rules, but contrary to Israeli
constitutional law. This advice was wrong, inappropriate and illegal. You have
much to answer for in ignoring Ben-Gurion's Land of Israel Proclamation that applied to the new situation created
by the Six-Day War, just as it had applied previously to the situation created
by the War of Liberation. The damage you have caused to Israel's legal position
in regard to the redeemed regions of the Land of Israel is incalculable and
reverberates to this very day in the minds of Israeli and foreign leaders, as
well as the world's press which maliciously depict Israel as an Occupying Power
of so-called "Arab land".
The
day is late to undo the damage you chiefly are responsible for, but we must try
to save what is left in our possession of patrimonial Jewish lands recaptured
in 1967. You would be able to help to save what can still be saved if you were
to issue a public statement restating your position on the legal status of Judea, Samaria and Gaza in conformity with Ben-Gurion's Land of Israel Proclamation. I, as a former legal adviser on matters
affecting Eretz-Israel to the late Professor Yuval Ne'eman whom you knew, and
as a friend of the great jurist Ya'akov Meron whom you know (he is presently
very ill), and as a friend of retired Military Court Justice, Eliezer Dembitz
whom you also know, ask you to consider doing this. However, I make this appeal
to you on my own initiative, without prompting or encouragement from any
person.
A
restatement by you, as I recommend, would do much to change public perceptions,
particularly in Israel, of the true legal status of Judea and Samaria.
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief, Attorney
November 22, 2006. WHY DID SHAMGAR GIVE SPECIAL
COURSES CONTRADICTING ISRAELI LAW?
Jerusalem
1 Kislev, 5767 -- November 22, 2006
Mr.
Meir Shamgar,
President (Retired) of the Supreme Court,
Rehov Shahar 12
96263 Jerusalem
Dear
Mr. Justice Shamgar,
I
thank you for acknowledging and replying in the briefest terms to my letter of November
2, 2006.
I do
not find it instructive when you state that I wrote you:
(1)without a
total knowledge of the facts;
(2)without bothering to check the information beforehand.
It
would have been more enlightening for me had you informed me what the true
facts were in regard to the legal status of Judea and Samaria and the rest of
the territories restored to the Jewish People in June 1967.
I read
your article entitled "Legal Concepts and Problems of the Israeli Military
Government -- The Initial Stage" in the book edited by you called Military Government in the
Territories Administered by Israel, 1967-1980, the Legal Aspects, Volume 1,
published in a reprint edition, 1988, by the Hebrew University of Jerusalem --
Faculty of Law and the Harry Sacher Institute for Legislative Research and
Comparative Law.
In
your article, you confirm the fact that everything was planned in advance as to
what must be done when the IDF entered Judea and Samaria and issued a proclamation for the
establishment of the Military Government in the West Bank, the name of which was subsequently
changed to Judea and Samaria. The planning for this eventuality took
final shape in the special courses you gave for the Military Advocate's Corps
that taught the laws of war to those who attended your courses. All the
material necessary for the performance of duties by officers of the platoon (regular
and reserve) was contained in a comprehensive vade
mecum, known as the Manual
for the Military Advocate in Military Government, written and published in
the early sixties by yourself, when serving as the Military Advocate General.
This Manual, containing
military instructions and guidelines to be applied to any territory conquered
by the IDF, was re-edited and enlarged by you as a result of the courses you
gave to the officers of the Military Advocate's Corps. All of the foregoing
information was gleaned from your article. That explains why the Israeli
Military Government in Judea
and Samaria invoked the norms and principles of
international law to this single region, rather than Israeli law, as was done
by Prime Minister and Defense Minister, David Ben-Gurion, in 1948 when other
areas of the Land of Israel were conquered by the Defense Forces of Israel.
The
question to be answered is: why did you give special courses teaching the laws
of war when Ben-Gurion had promulgated a law and a proclamation in 1948 to
apply the law of the State whenever areas of the Land of Israel were re-possessed by the IDF? As I asked
you in my letter of November 2, 2006, were you not aware of this law and
proclamation, which were still in force when you were giving your courses? You
never answered this question and it still requires an answer.
Do you
think that in applying the norms and principles of international law, the
Israeli Military Government set up upon your advice did the right thing?
Ben-Gurion, too, set up a military government in 1948 for areas of the Land of
Israel conquered beyond the UN Partition lines of November 29, 1947, but he
never applied the norms and principles of international law that were applied
in 1967.
I have
studied the facts as they have been revealed by you in your article. I do not
know what other facts you are referring to when you say I lack total knowledge
of the situation in trying to understand what happened in 1967. If you would
kindly enlighten me about those facts, I would be very grateful. Of course, if
you truly believed in 1967 that the region of Judea and Samaria had to be governed under the rules of
belligerent occupation, no further explanation is needed!
If you
held the opinion in 1967 that the supposed expectation of Arab demography
overwhelming the Jewish population of Israel and the idea of possible peace
negotiations with the neighboring enemy Arab states prevented absolutely the
annexation of Judea, Samaria and Gaza to the State, then I can fully comprehend
what motivated you in advising the application of the laws of war to these two
regions, instead of Israeli law, as Ben-Gurion did not hesitate to do in 1948.
Of course, I assume that you advised the Eshkol National Unity Government to
adopt this course of action, because it corresponded perfectly with the plan
that you formulated in the early sixties. However, your plan violated existing
Israeli constitutional law (the Area of Jurisdiction and Powers Ordinance;
Ben-Gurion's Proclamation of September 2, 1948) and therefore should have been
discarded. If I am mistaken about this central point and your personal role in
this matter, I stand to be corrected and would very much appreciate your
response.
Yours
truly,
Howard Grief
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