From BESA Center Perspectives Paper No. 176, July 31, 2012, by Avi Bell:
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
The Commission to Examine the Status of Building in Judea and Samaria (the
“Levy report”) has drawn a flurry of overwrought criticism due to its
inclusion of a section concerning the lawfulness of Israeli settlement
activity. But the report’s argument is surprisingly modest in substance; it
does little more than endorse the traditional official Israeli position that
the Fourth Geneva Convention does not apply de jure to the West Bank,
and in any event does not bar Israeli settlements. Some
have argued that the Levy report is foolish politically, arguing that by
asserting its legal rights, Israel will signal that it is unwilling to
entertain “land for peace” compromises. This seems a doubtful thesis. Israel
has asserted its legal rights to Jerusalem for decades, but yet repeatedly
offered compromises on its rights in the city. What the Levy report has done is
to reinvigorate the discussion of the legitimacy of Israel’s position under
international law after many years in which Israel has been silent about its
legal rights. That is a welcome development.
Earlier this month, Prime
Minister Binyamin Netanyahu was presented with the report of the Commission to Examine
the Status of Building in Judea and Samaria, headed by former Supreme Court
Justice Edmond Levy (the “Levy report”). The report has drawn a flurry of
overwrought criticism due to its inclusion of a section concerning the
lawfulness of Israeli settlement activity.
In contrast with the
misinformed and sometimes outright disingenuous criticism, the report’s
discussion of the lawfulness of settlements is surprisingly modest in
substance. The report does little more than endorse the traditional official
Israeli position that the Fourth Geneva Convention does not apply de jure
to the West Bank, and in any event does not bar Israeli settlements...
The Levy report adduces
one of two fairly compelling reasons for concluding that the laws of
belligerent occupation do not apply de jure to Israel’s presence in the
West Bank. One of the sine quibus non of belligerent occupation, as
reaffirmed recently in an expert conference organized by the International
Committee of the Red Cross, is that the occupation take place on foreign
territory. While recent years have seen some debate on the meaning of
foreign territory, considerable state practice supports the traditional view
that captured territory is “foreign” only when another state has sovereignty.
The Levy Commission is on solid ground in observing that neither Jordan nor any
other foreign state had territorial sovereignty over the West Bank in 1967 and
that the territory cannot therefore be “foreign” for purposes of the law of
belligerent occupation. Indeed, had the Levy Commission chosen to so argue, it
could have argued cogently that Israel itself was already the lawful sovereign
over the West Bank in 1967.
Unmentioned by the report,
Israel’s peace agreement with Jordan constitutes a second reason for
questioning the de jure application of the laws of belligerent
occupation to the West Bank. As Yoram Dinstein wrote some time ago, the rules
of belligerent occupation cannot be applied to Israel’s presence in the West
Bank “in light of the combined effect of ... the Jordanian-Israeli Treaty of
Peace of 1994 and the series of agreements with the Palestinians. There is
simply no room for belligerent occupation in the absence of belligerence,
namely, war.” While Dinstein qualified his observation by holding several
idiosyncratic views regarding the definition of occupation and the status of
the Palestinians, as well as by joining a small group of legal scholars who
believe in a “post-belligerent occupation” that shares many of the rules of
belligerent occupation, the majority position is still clearly that the rules
of belligerent occupation do not apply to an agreed-upon peacetime presence.
On settlements, the Levy
report likewise adduces several strong arguments to the effect that even if the
laws of belligerent occupation applied to Israel’s presence in the West Bank,
the Fourth Geneva Convention poses no bar to the kinds of actions that are
subsumed under the term “settlement activities.”
The Fourth Geneva
Convention forbids “transfers” and “deportations” by the occupying state of
parts of its population into occupied territory, but not “settlements.”
Officials of the state of Israel have provided services to settlers and
sometimes encouraged them, but the state of Israel has not transferred any
Israeli to the West Bank against his or her will. In fact, as even
anti-settlement activists like Talia Sasson acknowledge, “there was never a
considered, ordered decision by the state of Israel, by any Israeli government”
on settlements. While some governments of Israel have favored the physical expansion
of settlements or the increase of their population, settlement growth has been
driven by the preferences of private citizens not by official Israeli
population transfers. There is no precedent for any other state being adjudged
to have violated the Fourth Geneva Convention simply on the basis of permitting
or facilitating private preferences in the way Israel has done. Indeed, this is
the reason that the Arab states sought to redefine the bar on “transfers” in
international law by including a crime of “indirect” transfers in the Rome
Statute creating the International Criminal Court. However, Israel is not a
party to the Rome Statute and it is therefore not bound by the alternative,
more restrictive standard.
...Some have argued that the Levy report is foolish
politically, arguing that by asserting its legal
rights, Israel will signal that it is unwilling to entertain “land for peace”
compromises. This seems a doubtful thesis. Israel has asserted its legal rights
to Jerusalem for decades, but yet repeatedly offered compromises on its rights
in the city.
Others have objected that the Levy
report’s conclusions can be disputed by international jurists, including by a
controversial and non-binding advisory opinion of the International Court of
Justice. It is true that like many legal controversies, the questions addressed
by the Levy Commission are capable of being analyzed in a number of ways. The
Levy Commission’s conclusions are logical applications of reasonable
understandings of the rules in an area where no authoritative resolution of the
dispute has yet been rendered.
The Levy report has
reinvigorated the discussion of the legitimacy of Israel’s position under
international law after many years in which Israel has been silent about its
legal rights. That is a welcome development.
*Avi Bell is a
professor in the Rackman Faculty of Law at Bar-Ilan University and the
University of San Diego School of Law.
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