How Britain Became An Obstacle To Peace
07 November 2017By Ramzy Baroud
Arthur James Balfour's wrote 84 words that sealed the fate of the Palestinian
people by ultimately displacing most of them from their historical homeland to
live in permanent exile.
"His Majesty's government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a
national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavors to
facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that
nothing shall be done which may 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. I should be grateful if you would
bring this declaration to the knowledge of the Zionist Federation."
That was it. The letter was sent to one of the leaders of the Jewish community
in Britain, Walter Rothschild, who needed the British assurance to rally the
leaders of the Jewish community behind Britain in the First World War.
Balfour was anti-Semitic. But that was beside the point. At the time, the man
was the Foreign Secretary of His Majesty's government. He later became a Prime
Minister. His clout, and the powerful interests he represented, made his
statement the first and most serious commitment made by any government to
build a 'home' for Jews in Palestine, at the expense of the land's native
inhabitants.
Speaking recently in New York University, Palestinian professor Rashid Khalidi
described the British commitment then as an event that "marked the beginning
of a century-long colonial war in Palestine supported by an array of outside
powers which continues to this day".
The fact that the British government remains committed to Israel after all of
these years is irrefutable proof of that country's complicity in Israeli
crimes. It should not take a century for a country to reexamine and apologize
for its immoral past. But for Britain, it has, and no apology seems to be
coming any time soon.
Starting with the Balfour statement, coupled with the aiding of Israel in the
ethnic cleaning of Palestinians in the 1940s, to the sale of heavy water,
which Israel required to build its nuclear reactor in the late 1950s, Britain
was on Israel's side from the very beginning. The blind support provided to
Israel by former prime minister Tony Blair, or present leader Theresa May are
by no means an exception to the norm.
The inescapable fact is this: without Britain, six million Palestinian
refugees, now scattered around the world, would have remained in their own
homeland.
The Balfour Declaration tried and failed to mask its colonial intentions
behind contradictory terms, as in "the establishment in Palestine" - the
Palestinian homeland - a "Jewish homeland", without prejudicing "the civil and
religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine".
"The national home it promised to the Jews was never clearly defined and there
was no precedent for it in international law," wrote Avi Shlaim, in Wm. Roger
Louis' book Yet More Adventures with Britannia.
Shlaim, an Israeli professor, described the declaration as "arrogant,
dismissive, and even racist … and the worse kind of imperial double standard,
implying that there was one law for the Jews, and one law for everybody else".
This arrogance and racism continue unabated.
In a recent statement, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu confirmed his
November visit to Britain with the intention of 'celebrating' the 100th
anniversary of the Balfour Declaration.
How could the vanquishing of a nation, the destruction of every path leading
to a possible peaceful and just resolution of a bloody conflict, the incessant
violations of human rights be an event worthy of celebration?
In a visit to occupied Jerusalem last March, British Foreign Secretary Boris
Johnson proved a worthy descendant of Arthur James Balfour as he declared his
government to be "rock-like supporters" of Israel.
And like Balfour he spoke with a forked tongue, and followed the same
contradiction of terms.
"I should remind you the policy of our government is for a two-state solution
and we hope to help bring it about in a modest and humble way. Obviously, we
want to remove the obstacles to that," he told Netanyahu.
But Netanyahu and his rightwing government are the main "obstacle to that".
The British blind support, as a representation of the wider, equally blind
support of Israel by western governments, led by the United States, is another
"obstacle".
The Arabs were never the obstacle for they neither invited British
colonialism, armed and funded Israeli occupation, supported and defended the
illegal colonies or empowered notorious Israeli leaders to flout international
law.
It was Britain under Balfour that acted outside the rule of law, and Britain,
and other western countries that continue to support Israel in violation of
international law.
It is this mindset that had rendered international law mere ink on paper, and
relegated the UN into a platform for inconsequential speeches and reports,
rarely read or implemented.
One such report was issued last September. Published by the UN Conference on
Trade and Development (UNCTAD), the report described Israel's occupation of
Palestinian land as the "longest occupation in recent history".
"For the Palestinian people, these were five decades of de-development,
suppressed human potential, and denial of the basic human right to
development, with no end in sight," the report said.
Sustained by unconditional British, US and western support, which remain
committed to the Balfour legacy of 100 years ago, Israel is no rush to end the
suffering of Palestinians.
Meanwhile, Netanyahu is gearing up for his upcoming celebration in London,
while Israel's friends continue to speak of the 'miracle' of Israel.
Conveniently, they overlook the fact that millions of Palestinians and other
Arabs paid a heavy price to sustain that supposed miracle; that the entire
Middle East has been in a perpetual state of war ever since; that the future
looks bleak and unpromising.
It is as if nothing has changed and that no lessons were ever learned in the
100 years since Balfour made his promise to establish a Jewish state.
But this also rings true for Palestinians. Their commitment to fight for
freedom, also remains unchanged, and neither Balfour, nor Johnson and all the
British Foreign Secretaries in between managed to break the will of the
Palestinian nation.
That too is worth pondering.
- Dr Ramzy Baroud is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media
consultant, an author of several books and the founder of
PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter:
Gaza's Untold Story.
©
EsinIslam.Com
Add Comments