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  The Truth About the MideastFourteen fundamental facts about Israel and Palestine
 By David G. Littman October 7, 2002 It's time to look back on 14 fundamental                           geographical, historical, and diplomatic facts from                           the last century relating to the Middle East. These                           basic facts and figures were stressed in recent statements                           to the U.N. Commission on Human Rights and its subcommission,                           to the surprise of representatives of both states and                           non-governmental organizations (NGOs). 1) After World War I Great Britain accepted                           the 1922 Mandate for Palestine, and then — with                           League of Nations approval — used its article                           25 to create two distinct entities within the Mandate-designated                           area.  2) The territory lying between the Jordan                           River and the eastern desert boundary "of that                           part of Palestine which was known as Trans-Jordan"                           (nearly 78 percent) thus became the Emirate of Transjordan.                           This new entity was put under the rule of Emir Abdullah,                           the eldest son of the Sharif of Mecca, as a recompense                           for his support in the war against the Turks, and of                           Ibn Saud's seizure of Arabia (Faisal, Abdullah's brother,                           later received the even vaster Mandate area of Iraq). 3) Turning a blind eye to article 15,                           Great Britain also decided that no Jews could reside                           or buy land in the newly created Emirate. This policy                           was ratified — after the emirate became a kingdom                           — by Jordan's law no. 6, sect. 3, on April 3,                           1954, and reactivated in law no. 7, sect. 2, on April                           1, 1963. It states that any person may become a citizen                           of Jordan unless he is a Jew. King Hussein made peace                           with Israel in 1994, but the Judenrein legislation remains                           valid today. 4) The remaining area west of the Jordan                           River (comprising about 22 percent of the original Mandate)                           was then officially designated "Palestine"                           by Great Britain. As stated in the 1937 Royal Commission                           Report, "the primary purpose of the Mandate, as                           expressed in its preamble and its articles, is to promote                           the establishment of the Jewish National Home."                           This was now greatly restricted. 5) U.N. General Assembly Resolution                           181 (November 29, 1947) authorized a Partition Plan                           in this area: for an Arab and a Jewish state —                           and for a corpus separatum for Jerusalem. The plan was                           rejected by both the Arab League and the Arab-Palestinian                           leadership. Aided and abetted by the neighboring Arab                           countries, local armed Arab Palestinian forces immediately                           began attacking Jews, who counterattacked. On May 15,                           1948, the armies of five Arab League states joined these                           militias in the invasion of Israel, but their armies                           failed in their goal of eradicating the fledgling state. 6) The armistice boundaries (1949-1967)                           left Israel with roughly 16.5 percent, or 8,000 sq.                           miles, of the original 1922 Mandate area (about 48,000                           sq. miles), while about five percent — less Gaza,                           which was occupied by the Egyptians — was conquered                           and occupied in 1948 by British General Glubb Pasha,                           the commander of Abdullah's Arab Legion. The historic                           regions of "Judea and Samaria" — their                           official names as indicated on all British mandate maps                           until 1948 — were annexed and became the "West                           Bank" of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in 1950.                           All the Jews were expelled from the area and from the                           Old City of Jerusalem; their synagogues, and even tombstones                           on the Mount of Olives, were destroyed. 7) Until King Hussein attacked Israel                           on June 6, 1967, Jordan's recognized de facto boundaries                           covered 83 percent of Palestine (78 percent east of                           the Jordan river, and five percent to the west). Following                           its military defeat in the Six Day War, the Hashemite                           Kingdom of Jordan lost the "West Bank," which                           it had illegally annexed 19 years earlier, retaining                           the huge "Transjordan" portion (78 percent)                           of the original League of Nations territory. 8) Of Jordan's current population of                           five million, about two-thirds (over three million)                           consider themselves "Arab Palestinians." They                           are the descendants either of the original Arab Palestinian                           inhabitants of the Trans-Jordan region, or of roughly                           550,000 Arab refugees from west Palestine who lost their                           homes after the Arab League armies failed to eradicate                           Israel first in 1948, and again in 1967. Nearly two                           million Jordanian Bedouin citizens and others do not                           identify themselves as Palestinians. 9) After the 1967 disaster, an Arab                           League Summit Conference held in Khartoum that November                           reacted negatively to U.N. Security Council Resolution                           247: "No peace with Israel, no recognition of Israel,                           no negotiations with Israel, no concessions on the questions                           of Palestinian national rights." This was also                           the determined position of the PLO. Apart from Egypt's                           1981 peace treaty with Israel, there was little change,                           for the next two decades, in this refusal to negotiate                           according to U.N. Resolution 242. 10) In those "West Bank and Gaza"                           areas, designated by the Oslo Accords of 1994 to be                           placed under the administration of the Palestinian Authority                           (covering about 5.5 percent of the "Greater Palestine"                           area on both sides of the Jordan), there is now a population                           of over 3,200,000, of whom about 35,000 are Christians,                           but none are Jews. 11) The population of the Jewish state                           — a state envisaged in the 1922 League of Nations                           Mandate, and confirmed by the U.N.'s 1947 decision —                           is now roughly 6,500,000, of whom roughly 20 percent                           are Arabs (120,000 Christians), Druze, and Bedouin citizens                           of Israel. Of the more than five million Jewish citizens,                           about one-half are those Jewish refugees from Arab countries,                           and their descendants, who fled or left their ancient                           homeland when massacres, arrests, and ostracism made                           life impossible (a further 300,000 emigrated to Europe                           and the Americas, where they number over a million). 12) Today, a tiny, vulnerable Jewish                           remnant — scarcely 5,000 persons — remains                           in all the Arab world, less than half of one percent                           from the near million who were there in 1948 (this does                           not include the 50,000 in Turkey and Iran, left of about                           200,000 in 1945). These are the forgotten Jewish refugees                           from Arab lands, from countries that will soon be totally                           judenrein just as Jordan has been since 1922. 13) The 22 Arab League countries cover                           a global surface of over six million square miles, over                           ten percent of the land surface on earth. Israel, by                           contrast, covers barely 8,000 sq. miles. 14) Security Council Resolution 242                           has now become the panacea for Arab states, yet their                           interpretation of its key operative paragraph does not                           correspond to the English original, which version alone                           is binding. In March 2002, a Saudi "peace plan"                           was approved by the Arab League in Beirut, but behind                           it lurks the former 1981 "Fahd Plan" —                           with a facelift — that would leave Israel with                           impossible borders. After the Iraqi menace has been                           resolved one way or another, what is needed for the                           "Middle East peace process" is a concerted                           effort to support the Mitchell plan, which could one                           day lead to true peace and reconciliation for the whole                           region. But the Palestinian Authority will only become                           a genuine partner with Israel, alongside Jordan and                           Egypt, if there is a radical break with the past, and                           a new spirit of mutual acceptance prevails between the                           Arab world and Israel — with individual and collective                           security and dignity for all. This will only be feasible                           if democratic institutions and a respect for human rights                           and the rule of law become the norm, as they now are                           not. And it will only be feasible if the Arab world                           recognizes the inalienable legitimacy of Israel's existence                           in a part of its historical land. — David G. Littman is a historian.                           Since 1986, he has been active on human-rights issues                           at the U.N. Commission on Human Rights in Geneva. His                           recent statements on this subject were made as a representative                           of the World Union for Progressive Judaism, a nongovernmental                           organization.
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