Arab League and the Arab-Israeli conflict

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
This article is part of the
Arab-Israeli conflict series.
History
Views of the conflict
International law
Facts and figures
Related
Israeli-Palestinian conflict
Arab League
Soviet Union, Russia
Israel and the United Nations
Iran-Israel relations
Israel-United States relations
Boycott of Israel
Peace treaties and proposals
Israel-Egypt
Israel-Jordan
This box: view  talk  edit
This article discusses the role of the Arab League in the Arab-Israeli conflict.

Contents

[edit] Before 1948

The Arab League was established on March 22, 1945. When the League founding pact was signed in Cairo, Egypt, "[t]he Arab League states collectively put their weight behind the basic demands of Palestine's Arabs but arrogated to themselves the right to select who would represent the Palestinians in their councils, so long as their country was not independent."[1]

By the end of World War II, the Palestinian Arabs were left leaderless. The mufti of Jerusalem Hajj Amin al-Husayni had been in exile since 1937 and spent the war years in Nazi-occupied Europe, actively collaborating with German National Socialist leadership. As the war ended, he managed to escape to Egypt and stayed there until his death in 1974. His brother Jamal al-Husayni was interned in Southern Rhodesia during the war.

In November 1945, the Arab League reestablished the Arab Higher Committee as a supreme executive body of Palestinian Arabs in the territory of the British Mandate of Palestine, but it fell apart due to infighting. In June 1946, the Arab League imposed upon the Palestinians the Arab Higher Executive, renamed into "Arab Higher Committee" in 1947, with Amin al-Husayni as its chairman and Jamal al-Husayni as vice-chairman.

Since 1945 King Abdullah of Jordan had been negotiating in secret with the Jewish Agency on plans for partition of Palestine between the Jews and Transjordan. At a clandestine meeting on 17 November 1947 between Golda Meir and Abdullah she confirmed that Transjordan's takeover of the Arab part of Palestine would be viewed favourably. At a second meeting on 10 May 1948 Abdullah declined to confirm his commitment to the existing agreement, but left Meir with the impression that he would make peace with a Jewish state after the impending war[2]

[edit] Arab League boycott

On December 2, 1945, the Arab League Council declared a formal boycott to any Jewish owned business operating in the British Mandate of Palestine: "Jewish products and manufactured goods shall be considered undesirable to the Arab countries." All Arab "institutions, organizations, merchants, commission agents and individuals" were called upon "to refuse to deal in, distribute, or consume Zionist products or manufactured goods."[3]

[edit] 1948-1949

The day after the state of Israel was proclaimed, the British rule over Palestine ended, and six League members, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, Transjordan, Egypt, and Saudi Arabia, supported by other members (notably Yemen), coordinated the attack on the State of Israel in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War and explicitly stated the destruction of the newly-formed Jewish state, and its replacement by a democracy, as their goal. On May 15, 1948, the Arab League Secretary General Abdul Razek Azzam Pasha announced the intention to wage "a war of extermination and a momentous massacre which will be spoken of like the Mongolian massacres and the Crusades."[4] However, despite the rhetoric Arab leaders were disunited. The Egyptians knew of Abdullah's agreement with Meir and were determined to thwart Transjordan's territorial ambitions, "thus the Arab war plan changed in conception and essence from a united effort to conquer parts of the nascent Jewish state and perhaps destroy it, into a multilateral land grab focussing on the Arab areas of the country."[5]

"A key feature of the Arabs' plans was the complete marginalization of the Palestinians... This aptly reflected the political reality: The military defeats of April-May had rendered them insignificant. The Arab League through the first half of 1948 had consistently rejected Husseini's appeals to establish a government-in-exile... Under strong pressure from Egypt, which feared complete Hashemite control over the Palestinians, the League Political Committee in mid-September authorized the establishment of a Palestinian 'government.'"[6]

On September 22, 1948, the All-Palestine Government was established in Gaza, and on September 30, the rival First Palestinian Congress, which promptly denounced the Gaza "government", was convened in Amman.

[edit] 1949-1967

As a result of 1949 Armistice Agreements, the West Bank and East Jerusalem were ruled by Jordan, while the Gaza Strip was occupied by Egypt until the 1967 Six Day War. During the first few months of 1950, Israel and Jordan came very close to creating a separate "five-year non-aggression agreement," however in April of that year, "the Arab League decided to expel any Arab state which reached a sepearte economic, political or military agreement with Israel."[7] Therefore, due to pressure from the Arab League, as well as the assassination of King Abdallah, this agreement never came to pass.

The Palestinian National Charter of 1964 stated: "This Organization does not exercise any territorial sovereignty over the West Bank in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, on the Gaza Strip or in the Himmah Area."[8]

According to Yaacov Lozowick, "It was not the Palestinians themselves who decided to create the PLO after their defeat in 1948; The Arab League set it up in 1964 to attack Israel. For years, Palestinian independence was off the Arab agenda; now it was back. Inventing the PLO was a prelude to war, not a result of it; the goal was to destroy Israel, not to rectify the misfortune of the Palestinians, which still could have been done by the Arab states irrespective of Israel." [9]

[edit] 1967-2000

On September 1, 1967, in the wake of the Six-Day War, the Khartoum Resolution was issued at the meeting between the leaders of eight Arab countries. The paragraph 3 of the resolution became known as the Three No's:

  1. No peace with Israel
  2. No recognition of Israel
  3. No negotiations with Israel

During the years 1979-1989, Egypt was suspended from the Arab League in the wake of President Anwar Sadat's visit to Jerusalem and 1978 Camp David Peace Accords between Egypt and Israel. (See also: Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty.)

The Arab League immediately recognized the State of Palestine unilaterally proclaimed on November 15, 1988, by the Palestinian National Council. At the time, the PLO was based in Tunis and did not have control over any part of Palestine.

[edit] After 2000

In 2002, Saudi Arabia offered a peace plan in The New York Times and at a summit meeting of the Arab League in Beirut. The plan, based on UN Security Council Resolution 242 and Resolution 338, but making more demands, essentially calls for full withdrawal to the 1949 Armistice line in return for fully normalized relations with the whole Arab world. This proposal received the unanimous backing of the Arab League for the first time.

In response, Israeli Foreign Minister Shimon Peres stated: "... the Saudi step is an important one, but it is liable to founder if terrorism is not stopped... It is ... clear that the details of every peace plan must be discussed directly between Israel and the Palestinians, and to make this possible, the Palestinian Authority must put an end to terror, the horrifying expression of which we witnessed just last night in Netanya", referring to the Netanya suicide attack.[10]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Benny Morris, Righteous Victims, 1999. p.173
  2. ^ Morris, 1999. p.221
  3. ^ The Arab Boycott by Mitchell Bard Officially, the boycott covers three areas:
    • Products and services which originate in Israel (referred to as the primary boycott and still enforced in many Arab states)
    • Businesses that operate in Israel (the secondary boycott)
    • Businesses which have relationships with other businesses which operate in Israel (the tertiary boycott)
    In 1951, the Arab League established the Office of the Arab Boycott of Israel (OABI) based in Damascus, Syria in order to boycott companies that do business with Israel from operating in the Arab world. In its heyday, the Arab boycott office blacklisted more than 8,500 companies, including The Coca-Cola Company and http://web.israelinsider.com/Articles/AntiSemi/5690.htm Arab world urges EU to impose commercial embargo on Israel] (Israel Insider) May 27, 2005
  4. ^ Morris, 1999. p.219
  5. ^ Morris, 1999. p.221
  6. ^ Morris, 1999. p.222
  7. ^ Oded, Eran. "Arab-Israel Peacemaking." The Continuum Political Encyclopedia of the Middle East. Ed. Avraham Sela. New York: Continuum, 2002.
  8. ^ Article 24 of the Palestinian National Charter of 1964
  9. ^ Yaacov Lozowick, "Right to Exist: A Moral Defense of Israel's Wars", 2003. p.126
  10. ^ Response of FM Peres to the decisions of the Arab Summit in Beirut March 28, 2002 (Israeli MFA)

[edit] See also

[edit] Arab-Israeli peace diplomacy and treaties

[edit] Further reading

  • Avraham Sela (1998). The Decline of the Arab-Israeli Conflict: Middle East Politics and the Quest for Regional Order. State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-7914-3538-5. 
Personal tools