by Eli E. Hertz
In
 1947 the British put the future of western Palestine into the hands of 
the United Nations, the successor organization to the League of Nations 
which had established the Mandate for Palestine. A UN Commission recommended partitioning what was left of the original Mandate – western Palestine – into two new states, one Jewish and one Arab. [1] Jerusalem and its surrounding villages were to be temporarily classified as an international zone belonging to neither polity. 
What resulted was Resolution 181 [known also as the 1947 Partition Plan], a non-binding recommendation
 to partition Palestine, whose implementation hinged on acceptance by 
both parties – Arabs and Jews. The resolution was adopted on November 
29, 1947 in the General Assembly by a vote of 33-12, with 10 
abstentions. Among the supporters were the United States and the Soviet 
Union, as well as other nations including France and Australia. The Arab
 nations, including Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Saudi Arabia denounced the 
plan on the General Assembly floor and voted as a bloc against 
Resolution 181 promising to defy its implementation by force.
The
 resolution recognized the need for immediate Jewish statehood (and a 
parallel Arab state), but the blueprint for peace became a moot issue 
when the Arabs refused to accept it. Subsequently, de facto
 [In Latin: realities] on the ground in the wake of Arab aggression (and
 Israel’s survival) became the basis for UN efforts to bring peace.
Aware of Arabs’ past aggression, Resolution 181, in paragraph C, calls on the Security Council to:
“Determine as a threat to the peace, breach of the peace or act of aggression, in accordance with Article 39 of the Charter, any attempt to alter by force the settlement envisaged by this resolution.” [italics by author]
The ones who sought to alter the settlement envisioned in Resolution 181 by force, were the Arabs who threatened bloodshed if the United Nations was to adopt the Resolution:
“The
 [British] Government of Palestine fear that strife in Palestine will be
 greatly intensified when the Mandate is terminated, and that the 
international status of the United Nations Commission will mean little 
or nothing to the Arabs in Palestine, to whom the killing of Jews now transcends all other considerations. Thus, the Commission will be faced with the problem of how to avert certain bloodshed
 on a very much wider scale than prevails at present. … The Arabs have 
made it quite clear and have told the Palestine government that they do 
not propose to co-operate or to assist the Commission, and that, far 
from it, they propose to attack and impede its work in every possible way. We have no reason to suppose that they do not mean what they say.” [2] [italics by author] 
Arabs’ intentions and deeds did not fare better after Resolution 181 was adopted: 
“Taking
 into consideration that the Provisional Government of Israel has 
indicated its acceptance in principle of a prolongation of the truce in 
Palestine; that the States members of the Arab League have rejected 
successive appeals of the United Nations Mediator, and of the Security 
Council in its resolution 53 (1948) of 7 July 1948, for the prolongation
 of the truce in Palestine; and that there has consequently developed a 
renewal of hostilities in Palestine." [3] 
The conclusion:
“Having
 constituted a Special Committee and instructed it to investigate all 
questions and issues relevant to the problem of Palestine, and to 
prepare proposals for the solution of the problem, and having received 
and examined the report of the Special Committee (document A/364). … Recommends
 to the United Kingdom, as the mandatory Power for Palestine, and to all
 other Members of the United Nations the adoption and implementation, 
with regard to the future Government of Palestine, of the Plan of 
Partition with Economic Union set out below;” [italics by author].
In
 the late 1990s, more than 50 years after Resolution 181 was rejected by
 the Arab world, Arab leaders suddenly recommended to the General 
Assembly that UN Resolution 181 be resurrected as the basis for a peace 
agreement. There is no foundation for such a notion.
Resolution 181 was the last of a series of
 recommendations that had been drawn up over the years by the Mandator 
and by international commissions, plans designed to reach an historic 
compromise between Arabs and Jews in western Palestine. The first was in
 1922 when Great Britain unilaterally partitioned Palestine, which did 
not satisfy the Arabs who wanted the entire country to be Arab. 
Resolution 181 followed such proposals as the Peel Commission (1937); the Woodhead Commission (1938); two
 1946 proposals that championed a bi-national state; one proposed by the
 Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry in April 1946 based on a single 
state with equal powers for Jews and Arabs; and the Morrison-Grady Plan 
raised in July 1946 which recommended a federal state with two provinces
 – one Jewish, one Arab. Every scheme since 1922 was rejected by the 
Arab side, including decidedly pro-Arab ones merely because these plans 
recognized Jews as a nation and gave Jewish citizens of Mandate 
Palestine political representation.
Arabs Rejected the “Unbalanced” Partition Plan
The
 UN International Court of Justice (ICJ) uses the term “unbalanced” in 
describing the reason for Arab rejectionism of Resolution 181, [4] which does not exactly fit reality. Seventy-seven percent of the landmass of the original Mandate for the Jews was excised in 1922 to create a fourth Arab state – Trans-Jordan (today Jordan). 
In a statement by Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, the
 representative of the Jewish Agency for Palestine to the United Nations
 Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP), he had that to say about 
fairness, balance, and justice: [5] 
“According
 to David Lloyd George, then British Prime Minister, the Balfour 
Declaration implied that the whole of Palestine, including Transjordan, 
should ultimately become a Jewish state. Transjordan had, nevertheless, 
been severed from Palestine in 1922 and had subsequently been set up as 
an Arab kingdom. Now a second Arab state was to be carved out of the 
remainder of Palestine, with the result that the Jewish National Home 
would represent less than one eighth of the territory originally set 
aside for it. Such a sacrifice should not be asked of the Jewish 
people." [6] 
Referring to the Arab States established as independent countries since the First World War, he said:
“17,000,000
 Arabs now occupied an area of 1,290,000 square miles, including all the
 principal Arab and Moslem centres, while Palestine, after the loss of 
Transjordan, was only 10,000 square miles; yet the majority plan 
proposed to reduce it by one half. UNSCOP proposed to eliminate Western 
Galilee from the Jewish State; that was an injustice and a grievous handicap to the development of the Jewish State." [7] [italics by author]. 
Arab Aggression Before and After the Adoption of Resolution 181
Following
 passage of Resolution 181 by the General Assembly, Arab countries took 
the dais to reiterate their absolute rejection of the recommendation and
 intention to render implementation of Resolution 181 a moot question by
 the use of force. These examples from the transcript of the General Assembly plenary meeting on November 29, 1947 speak for themselves: 
“Mr.
 JAMALI (Iraq): … We believe that the decision which we have now taken …
 undermines peace, justice and democracy. In the name of my Government, I
 wish to state that it feels that this decision is antidemocratic, 
illegal, impractical and contrary to the Charter … Therefore, in the 
name of my Government, I wish to put on record that Iraq does not 
recognize the validity of this decision, will reserve freedom of action 
towards its implementation, and holds those who were influential in 
passing it against the free conscience of mankind responsible for the 
consequences.”
“Amir.
 ARSLAN (Syria): … Gentlemen, the Charter is dead. But it did not die a 
natural death; it was murdered, and you all know who is guilty. My 
country will never recognize such a decision [Partition]. It will never 
agree to be responsible for it. Let the consequences be on the heads of 
others, not on ours.” 
“H.
 R. H. Prince Seif El ISLAM ABDULLAH (Yemen): The Yemen delegation has 
stated previously that the partition plan is contrary to justice and to 
the Charter of the United Nations. Therefore, the Government of Yemen 
does not consider itself bound by such a decision … and will reserve its
 freedom of action towards the implementation of this decision." [8] 
The Partition Plan was met not only by verbal rejection
 on the Arab side but also by concrete, bellicose steps to block its 
implementation and destroy the Jewish polity by force of arms, a goal 
the Arabs publicly declared even before Resolution 181 was brought to a 
vote.
Arabs
 not only rejected the compromise and took action to prevent 
establishment of a Jewish state but also blocked establishment of an 
Arab state under the partition plan not just before the Israel War of Independence, but also after the war when they themselves controlled the West Bank (1948-1967), rendering the recommendation ‘a still birth.’
The
 UN itself recognized that Resolution 181 had not been accepted by the 
Arab side, rendering it a dead issue: On January 29, 1948, the First 
Monthly Progress Report of the UN-appointed Palestine Commission, 
charged with helping put Resolution 181 into effect was submitted to the
 Security Council (A/AC.21/7). Implementation of Resolution 181 hinged 
not only on the five member states appointed to represent the UN 
(Bolivia, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Panama, Philippines) and Great 
Britain, but first and foremost on the participation of the two sides who were invited to appoint representatives. The Commission then reported:
“The
 invitation extended by the [181] resolution was promptly accepted by 
the Government of the United Kingdom and by the Jewish Agency for 
Palestine, both of which designated representatives to assist the 
commission. … As regards the Arab Higher Committee, the following 
telegraphic response was received by the Secretary-General on 19 
January:
ARAB
 HIGHER COMMITTEE IS DETERMINED PRESIST [PERSIST] IN REJECTION PARTITION
 AND IN REFUSAL RECOGNIZE UN[O] RESOLUTION THIS RESPECT AND ANYTHING 
DERIVING THEREFROM [THERE FROM]. FOR THESE REASONS IT IS UNABLE [TO] 
ACCEPT [THE] INVITATION." [9] 
The
 UN Palestine Commission’s February 16, 1948 report (A/AC.21/9) to the 
Security Council noted that Arab-led hostilities were an effort
“To
 prevent the implementation of the [General] Assembly’s plan of 
partition, and to thwart its objectives by threats and acts of violence,
 including armed incursions into Palestinian territory.”
On May 17, 1948 – after the invasion began, the Palestine Commission designed to implement 181 adjourned sine die [Latin: without determining a date] after the General Assembly appointed a United
 Nations Mediator in Palestine, which relieves the United Nations 
Palestine Commission from the further exercise of its responsibilities.
Some
 thought the Partition Plan could be revived, but by the end of the war,
 Resolution 181 had become a moot issue as realities on the ground made 
the establishment of an armistice-line (the “Green Line”) – a temporary 
ceasefire line expected to be followed by peace treaties – the most 
constructive path to solving the conflict.
A July 30, 1949 working paper of the UN Secretariat entitled The Future of Arab Palestine and the Question of Partition noted further that: 
“The
 Arabs rejected the United Nations Partition Plan so that any comment of
 theirs did not specifically concern the status of the Arab section of 
Palestine under partition but rather rejected the scheme in its 
entirety." [10] 
By
 the time armistice agreements were reached in 1949 between Israel and 
its immediate Arab neighbors (Egypt, Lebanon, Syria and Trans-Jordan) 
with the assistance of UN Mediator Dr. Ralph Bunche, Resolution 181 had 
become irrelevant, and the armistice agreements addressed new realities 
created by the war. Over subsequent years, the UN simply abandoned the 
recommendations of Resolution 181, as its ideas were drained of all 
relevance by subsequent events. Moreover, the Arabs continued to reject 
181 after the
 war when they themselves controlled the West Bank (1948-1967) which 
Jordan invaded in the course of the war and annexed illegally.
Attempts
 by Palestinians to roll back the clock and resuscitate Resolution 181 
more than six decades after they rejected it as if nothing had happened 
are a baseless ploy designed to use Resolution 181 as leverage to bring 
about a greater Israeli withdrawal from parts of western Palestine and 
to gain a broader base from which to continue to attack an Israel with 
even less defendable borders. Both Palestinians and their Arab brethren 
in neighboring countries rendered the plan null and void by their own 
subsequent aggressive actions.
Professor Stone wrote about this novelty of resurrection in 1981 when he analyzed a similar attempt by pro-Palestinian experts at the UN to rewrite the history of the conflict (their writings were termed “studies”). Stone called it “revival of the dead.”
“To attempt to show … that Resolution 181(II) ‘remains’ in force in 1981 is thus an undertaking even more miraculous than would be the revival of the dead.
 It is an attempt to give life to an entity that the Arab states had 
themselves aborted before it came to maturity and birth. To propose that
 Resolution 181(II) can be treated as if it has binding force in 1981, 
[E.H., the year the book was written] for the benefit of the same Arab 
states, who by their aggression destroyed it ab initio, [In 
Latin: From the beginning] also violates ‘general principles of law,’ 
such as those requiring claimants to equity to come ‘with clean hands,’ 
and forbidding a party who has unlawfully repudiated a transaction from 
holding the other party to terms that suit the later expediencies of the
 repudiating party." [11] [italics by author]. 
Resolution 181 had been tossed into the waste bin of history, along with the Partition Plans that preceded it.
Israel’s Independence is not a Result of a Partial Implementation of the Partition Plan
Resolution 181 has no legal ramifications – that is,
 Resolution 181 recognized the Jewish right to statehood, but its 
validity as a potentially legal and binding document was never 
consummated. Like the proposals that preceded it, Resolution 181’s validity hinged on acceptance by both parties of the General Assembly’s recommendation. 
Cambridge
 Professor, Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, Judge ad hoc of the International 
Court of Justice, a renowned expert on international law, clarified that
 from a legal standpoint, the 1947 UN Partition Resolution had no 
legislative character to vest territorial rights in either Jews or Arabs.
 In a monograph relating to one of the most complex aspects of the 
territorial issue, the status of Jerusalem, Judge, Sir Lauterpacht wrote
 that any binding force the Partition Plan would have had to arise from 
the principle pacta sunt servanda, [In Latin: treaties must be honored – the first principle of international law] that is, from agreement of the parties at variance to the proposed plan. In the case of Israel, Judge, Sir Lauterpacht explains:
“The
 coming into existence of Israel does not depend legally upon the 
Resolution. The right of a State to exist flows from its factual 
existence-especially when that existence is prolonged shows every sign 
of continuance and is recognised by the generality of nations." [12] 
Reviewing
 Lauterpacht’s arguments, Professor Stone, a distinguished authority on 
the Law of Nations, added that Israel’s “legitimacy” or the “legal 
foundation” for its birth does not reside with the United Nations’ 
Partition Plan, which as a consequence of Arab actions became a dead 
issue. Professor Stone concluded: 
“The
 State of Israel is thus not legally derived from the partition plan, 
but rests (as do most other states in the world) on assertion of 
independence by its people and government, on the vindication of that 
independence by arms against assault by other states, and on the 
establishment of orderly government within territory under its stable 
control." [13] 
This
 document uses extensive links via the Internet. If you experience a 
broken link, please note the 5 digit number (xxxxx) at the end of the 
URL and use it as a Keyword in the Search Box at www.MEfacts.com 
[1] For an overview, of the history, see Ian J. Bickerton and Carla L. Klausner, A Concise History of the Arab Israel Conflict,
 4th ed. (New York, Prentice Hall, 2002). The mandate territories in the
 Middle East also included Syria and Lebanon (awarded to France); and 
Iraq (awarded to Britain). 
[2] United
 Nations Palestine Commission. First Monthly Progress Report to the 
Security Council. A/AC.21/7, January 29, 1948. See: 
www.mefacts.com/cache/html/un-resolutions/10923.htm. (10923)
[3] See among others, Security Council Resolution S/RES/ 54 (1948) at: www.mefacts.com/cache/html/un-resolutions/10894.htm. (10894)
[4] ICJ
 discussion on the Partition Plan in paragraph 71 of the Court’s ruling.
 See: http://middleeastfacts.org/content/ICJ/ICJ-Ruling-HTML.htm. 
(10908)
[5] Delivered by Dr. Abba Hillel Silver, October 2, 1947.
[6] Yearbook
 of the United Nations 1947-48. 1949.I.13. December 31, 1948. See: 
www.mefacts.com/cache/html/un-documents/11270.htm. (11270)
[7] Ibid
[8] UN
 GA “Continuation of the discussion on the Palestinian question.” 
Hundred and twenty-eighth plenary meeting. A/PV.128, November 29, 1947. 
(11363)
[9] United
 Nations Palestine Commission. First Monthly Progress Report to the 
Security Council, a/ac.21/7, January 29, 1948. See: 
http://middleeastfacts.org/content/UN-Documents/A-AC-21-7-29-January-1948.htm.
[10] UN document A/AC.25/W.19, at: http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/4ecbf3578b6149c50525657100507fab?OpenDocument.
[11] Professor Julius Stone, Israel and Palestine, Assault on the Law of Nations (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981) p. 128.
[12] Professor, Judge Sir Elihu Lauterpacht, Jerusalem and the Holy Places, Pamphlet No. 19 (London: Anglo-Israel Association, 1968).
[13] Professor Julius Stone, Israel and Palestine, Assault on the Law of Nations (Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1981) p. 127.
Eli E. Hertz
Source: http://www.mythsandfacts.org/article_view.asp?articleID=135
Copyright - Original materials copyright (c) by the authors.
 
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