|
1. The problem of the future
government of Palestine confronts the General Assembly of
the United Nations with a heavy and complex responsibility.
The General Assembly, having assumed responsibility for
making recommendations to the United Kingdom on the subject,
must do everything within its power to evolve a practical
solution consistent with the principles laid down in the
United Nations Charter.
2. The United States Delegation
feels that the urgency of the problem is so great that the
General Assembly must recommend a solution at this session.
The degree of urgency has been brought to our attention by
continued violence in Palestine, by the context of the
Special Committee's report,(3)
and by the statement of the delegate from the United Kingdom
regarding the recommendations of the Committee and future
British responsibilities in Palestine.
3. During the past weeks this
Committee has had the benefit of the views of several
members of this Committee, and has heard statements by the
representatives of the Arab Higher Committee and the Jewish
Agency for Palestine on behalf of the peoples primarily
concerned. The United States Delegation believes that this
discussion has been of material assistance and hopes that it
will continue on the broadest basis.
4. It may be recalled that as a
result of the First World War, a large area of the Near
East, including Palestine, was liberated and a number of
states gained their independence. The United States, having
contributed its blood and resources to the winning of that
war, felt that it could not divest itself of a certain
responsibility for the manner in which the freed territories
were disposed of, or for the fate of the peoples liberated
at that time. It took the position that, these peoples
should be prepared for self-government and also that a
national home for the Jews should be established in
Palestine. The United States Government has subsequently had
long and friendly relations with the independent states
which were created in the Near East and is happy to note
that most of them are members of the United Nations and have
representatives present at this meeting.
5. It may be recalled, with
regard to Palestine, that in 1917 the Government of the
United Kingdom, in the statement known as the
Balfour Declaration, announced that it viewed with favor
the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the
Jewish people and that it would use its best endeavors to
facilitate the achievement of that object, it being clearly
understood that nothing should be done which might prejudice
the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish
communities in Palestine or the rights and political status
enjoyed by Jews in any other country. In 1923 the objectives
stated in this Declaration were embodied in the
League of Nations Mandate for Palestine which was
entrusted to the Government of the United Kingdom as
mandatory. As the United States was not a member of the
League of Nations, a Convention was concluded between the
United States and the United Kingdom in 1924 with regard to
American rights in Palestine. The Palestine Mandate is
embodied in the Preamble to this Convention. The United
States consented to this Mandate. Members of this Committee
are aware of the situation which subsequently developed in
Palestine and of the many efforts which have been made to
achieve a settlement. We now have before us a report of the
Special Committee of the United Nations with regard to the
Palestine Question.
6. The United States Delegation
supports the basic principles of the unanimous
recommendations and the majority plan which provides for
partition and immigration. It is of the opinion, however,
that certain amendments and modifications would have to be
made in the majority plan in order more accurately to give
effect to the principles on which that plan is based. My
delegation believes that certain geographical modifications
must be made. For example, Jaffa should be included in the
Arab State because it is predominantly an Arab city.
My delegation suggests that the General
Assembly may wish to provide that all the inhabitants of
Palestine, regardless of citizenship or place of residence,
be guaranteed access to ports and to water and power
facilities on a non-discriminatory basis; that
constitutional guarantees, including guarantees regarding
equal economic opportunity, be provided for Arabs and Jews
alike, and that the powers of the Joint Economic Board be
strengthened. Any solution which this Committee recommends
should not only be just, but also workable and of a nature
to command the approval of world opinion.
7. The United States Delegation
desires to make certain observations on the carrying out of
such recommendations as the General Assembly may make
regarding the future government of Palestine. The General
Assembly did not, by admitting this item to its agenda,
undertake to assume responsibility for the administration of
Palestine during the process of transition to independence.
Responsibility for the government of Palestine now rests
with the mandatory power. The General Assembly, however,
would not fully discharge its obligation if it did not take
carefully into account the problem of implementation.
8. Both the majority report and
the statement of the United Kingdom representative in this
Committee raise the problem of carrying into effect the
recommendations of the General Assembly. We note, for
example, that the majority report indicates several points
at which the majority thought the United Nations could be of
assistance. It was suggested that the General Assembly
approve certain steps involved in the transitional period,
that the United Nations guarantee certain aspects of the
settlement concerning Holy Places and minority rights, that
the Economic and Social Council appoint three members of the
Joint Economic Board, and that the United Nations accept
responsibility as administering authority of the City of
Jerusalem under an international trusteeship.
9. The United States is willing
to participate in a U. N. program to assist the parties
involved in the establishment of a workable political
settlement in Palestine. We refer to assistance through the
U. N. in meeting economic and financial problems and the
problem of internal law and order during the transition
period. The latter problem might require the establishment
of a special constabulary or police force recruited on a
volunteer basis by the U. N. We do not refer to the
possibility of violation by any member of its obligations to
refrain in its international relations from the threat or
use of force. We assume that there will be
Charter observance.
10. In the final analysis the
problem of making any solution work rests with the people of
Palestine. If new political institutions are to endure, they
must provide for early assumption by the people themselves
of the responsibility for their own domestic order. Acts of
Violence against constituted authority and against rival
elements of the local population have appeared in Palestine
over a period of many years and have greatly increased the
difficulties of finding a workable solution to this complex
problem. Certain elements have resorted to force and terror
to obtain their own particular aims. Obviously, this
violence must cease if independence is to be more than an
empty phrase in the Holy Land.
11. Mr. Chairman, we must now
consider how this committee is to take the next step in
dealing with this question. If the committee favors the
principles of the majority plan, we should establish a
subcommittee to work out the details of a program which we
could recommend to the GA [General Assembly].
12. The recommendations reached
by the GA will represent the collective opinion of the
world. The problem has thus far defied solution because the
parties primarily at interest have been unable to reach a
basis of agreement. This is a problem in the solution of
which world opinion can be most helpful.
Notes:
(1) Department of State
Bulletin of October 19, 1947, pp. 761-762. The question of
Palestine was brought before the United Nations by the
Government of the United Kingdom in a letter to the
Secretary- General dated April 2, 1947, which requested the
Secretary-General to place the question of Palestine on the
agenda of the General Assembly at its next regular session.
Back
(2) Statement made at
meeting of the ad hoc Committee on Palestine of the General
Assembly on October 111 1947, and released to the press by
the United States Mission to the United Nations on the same
date. Herschel V. Johnson was the United States Deputy
Representative to the United Nations.
Back
(3) For recommendations
of this report (UN Doc. A/364, Sept. 3, 1947), see
Department of State Bulletin of September 21, 1947, p. 546. |