July 09, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - Wednesday, July 1,
was meant to be the day on which the Israeli government
officially annexed 30% of the occupied Palestinian West
Bank and the Jordan Valley. This date, however, came and
went and annexation was never actualized.
“I don’t know if there
will be a declaration of sovereignty today,” said Israeli
Foreign Minister, Gabi Ashkenazi, with reference to the
self-imposed deadline declared earlier by Israeli Prime
Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu. An alternative date was
not immediately announced.
But does it really matter?
Whether Israel’s illegal
appropriation of Palestinian land takes place with
massive media fanfare and a declaration of sovereignty,
or whether it happens incrementally over the course of
the coming days, weeks, and months, Israel has, in
reality, already annexed the West Bank – not just 30% of
it but, in fact, the whole area.
It is critical that we
understand such terms as ‘annexation’, ‘illegal’,
‘military occupation’, and so on, in their proper
contexts.
For example, international
law deems that
all of Israel’s Jewish settlements, constructed anywhere
on Palestinian land occupied during the 1967 war, are
illegal.
Interestingly, Israel,
too, uses the term ‘illegal’ with reference to
settlements, but only to ‘outposts’
that have been erected in the occupied territories
without the permission of the Israeli government.
In other words, while in
the Israeli lexicon the vast majority of all settlement
activities in occupied Palestine are ‘legal’, the rest
can only be legalized through official channels. Indeed,
many of today’s ‘legal’ 132 settlements in the West Bank
and Jerusalem, housing over
half a million Israeli Jewish settlers, began as
‘illegal outposts’.
Though this logic may
satisfy the need of the Israeli government to ensure its
relentless colonial project in Palestine follows a
centralized blueprint, none of this matters in
international law.
Article 49 of the Fourth Geneva Conventions states
that “Individual or mass forcible transfers, as well as
deportations of protected persons from occupied
territory to the territory of the Occupying Power or to
that of any other country, occupied or not, are
prohibited, regardless of their motive”, adding that
“The Occupying Power shall not deport or transfer parts
of its own civilian population into the territory it
occupies.”
Israel has violated its
commitment to international law as an ‘Occupying Power’
on numerous occasions, rendering its very ‘occupation’
of Palestine, itself, a violation of how military
occupations are conducted – which are meant to be
temporary, anyway.
Military occupation is
different from annexation. The former is a temporary
transition, at the end of which the ‘Occupying Power’ is
expected, in fact, demanded, to relinquish its military
hold on the occupied territory after a fixed length of
time. Annexation, on the other hand, is a stark
violation of the Geneva Conventions and the Hague
Regulations. It is tantamount to a war crime, for the
occupier is strictly prohibited from proclaiming
unilateral sovereignty over occupied land.
The international
uproar generated by Netanyahu’s plan to annex a
third of the West Bank is fully understandable. But the
bigger issue at stake is that, in practice, Israel’s
violations of the terms of occupation have granted it a
de facto annexation of the whole of the West Bank.
So when the European
Union, for example, demands that Israel abandons its
annexation plans, it is merely asking Israel to
re-embrace the status quo ante, that of de facto
annexation. Both abhorring scenarios should be rejected.
Israel began utilizing the
occupied territories as if they are contiguous and
permanent parts of so-called Israel proper, immediately
following the June 1967 war. Within a few years, it
erected illegal settlements, now thriving cities,
eventually moving hundreds of thousands of its own
citizens to populate the newly acquired areas.
This exploitation became
more sophisticated with time, as Palestinians were
subjected to slow, but irreversible, ethnic cleansing.
As Palestinian homes were
destroyed, farms confiscated,
and entire regions depopulated,
Jewish settlers moved in to take their place. The
post-1967 scenario was a repeat of the post-1948
history, which led to the establishment of the State of
Israel on the ruins of historic Palestine.
Moshe Dayan, who served as
Israel’s Defense Minister during the 1967 war, explained
the Israeli logic best in a historical address at
Israel’s Technion University in March 1969. “We came to
this country which was already populated by Arabs, and
we are establishing a Hebrew, that is a Jewish state
here,” he said.
“Jewish villages were
built in the place of Arab villages. You do not even
know the names of these Arab villages, and I do not
blame you, because these geography books no longer
exist; not only do the books not exist, the Arab
villages are not there, either … There is no one place
built in this country that did not have a former Arab
population,” he added.
The same colonial approach
was applied to East Jerusalem and the West Bank after
the war. While East Jerusalem was
formally annexed in 1980, the West Bank was annexed
in practice, but not through a clear legal Israeli
proclamation. Why? In one word: demographics.
When Israel first occupied
East Jerusalem, it went on a population transfer frenzy:
moving its own population to the Palestinian city,
strategically expanding the municipal boundaries of
Jerusalem to include as many Jews and as few
Palestinians as possible, slowly reducing the
Palestinian population of Al Quds through numerous
tactics, including the revocation of residency and
outright ethnic cleansing.
And, thus, Jerusalem’s
Palestinian population, which once constituted the
absolute majority, has now been reduced to a dwindling
minority.
The same process was
initiated in parts of the West Bank, but due to the
relatively large size of the area and population, it was
not possible to follow a similar annexation stratagem
without jeopardizing Israel’s drive to maintain Jewish
majority.
Dividing the West Bank into Areas A, B, and C as a
result of the disastrous Oslo accords has given Israel a
lifeline, for this allowed it to increase settlement
activities in Area C – nearly 60% of the West Bank –
without stressing too much about demographic imbalances.
Area C, where the current annexation plan is set to take
place, is ideal for Israeli colonialism, for it includes
Palestine’s most arable, resource-rich, and sparsely
populated lands.
It matters little whether
the annexation will have a set date or will take place
progressively through Israel’s declarations of
sovereignty over smaller chunks of the West Bank in the
future. The fact is, annexation is not a new Israeli
political agenda dictated by political circumstances in
Tel Aviv and Washington. Rather, annexation has been the
ultimate Israeli colonial objective from the very onset.
Let us not get entangled
in Israel’s bizarre definitions. The truth is that
Israel rarely behaves as an ‘Occupying Power’, but as a
sovereign in a country where racial discrimination and
apartheid are not only tolerated or acceptable but are,
in fact, ‘legal’ as well.
– Ramzy Baroud is a journalist and the Editor of
The Palestine Chronicle. He is the author of five books.
His latest is “These
Chains Will Be Broken: Palestinian Stories of
Struggle and Defiance in Israeli Prisons” (Clarity
Press, Atlanta). Dr. Baroud is a Non-resident Senior
Research Fellow at the Center for Islam and Global
Affairs (CIGA), Istanbul Zaim University (IZU). His
website is
www.ramzybaroud.net- "Source"
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