| USJ professor proposes different tack to resolve dispute over Golan
pullout
Kim Ghattas
Special to The Daily Star
While most eyes following the Israeli-Arab conflict are rivetted on
Camp David and a last-ditch US effort to broker peace between Israelis
and Palestinians, participants in a conference at Universite Saint
Joseph on Thursday focused on the border issues which doomed recent
peace talks between the Jewish state and Syria.
One of the most interesting ideas put forward at the conference was USJ
law professor Chibli Mallat’s suggestion that the two sides use the
1949 Armistice Agreement for a basis of discussion, rather than the June
4, 1967 line, favored by the Syrians, and the 1923 border delineated by
the colonial powers, which Israel wants to adopt.
The June 4 line, marking the boundary before the outbreak of the 1967
war, brings Syria to the northeastern shore of Lake Tiberias. The
Israelis, who want to retain sovereignty over the lake, want to follow
the 1923 border, known as the Paulet-Newcombe line, which puts the
border “on a line (with) the shore parallel to and … 10 meters from
the edge of Lake Tiberias.”
But while both positions have proper backing, Mallat believes that they
are difficult to reconcile and bring legal uncertainties.
“The authority of mandatory powers to fix separate sovereignty in
areas without boundaries and with open access over centuries, is open to
questioning, especially since no consultation of the local population or
ratification by free legislatures has ever accompanied such grave acts
as the delimitation of frontiers,” he said of the 1923 line.
The 1949 line is clearly drawn and documented with the United Nations
and therefore leaves no room for contention between the two parties,
unlike the 1967 line claimed by Syria, for which no authoritative map is
available.
“There are certainly Syrian and Israeli military maps which would
provide detailed indications of the positions of the two countries’
respective armies just before the 1967 war, and some maps may well be in
the possession of the United States … or the United Nations. (But)
none of these detailed maps have so far been publicly produced,” he
said.
Following the 1949 Armistice Demarcation line, Syria would have access
to the southeastern bank of Lake Tiberias, although it would be a
smaller access than that it claims on the northeastern bank of the lake
according to the June 4, 1967 line.
However, Syria would also extend to 10 meters away from the northeastern
bank of the lake, where the Armistice Demarcation Line meets with the
1923 line.
Mallat said that it would also have been better if in the case of
Lebanon, the withdrawal line had been based on the 1949 Armistice
Demarcation Line instead of the 1923 border.
“Although they are the same in the case of Lebanon, they are not in
the case of Syria and it would have been more advantageous for all if
the withdrawal had been said to be verified according to the 1949 line,
as this would have opened new possibilities for Syria,” he said.
Mallat, however, seems to think that the Israelis’ first reaction
would be to reject the 1949 line, based on the fact that it is initially
based on Syrian force exercised against the 1923 border.
But Israel’s arguments against the line can be easily countered on a
legal basis, he argued. He also said that a “compromise away from the
strictures of the 1923 line would be easier to justify to the Israeli
public, in view of the violence exercised against the demilitarized
zones in 1951, when Israel expelled between 2,000 and 3,000 Arab
civilians north and south of the lake, as well as human-rights exactions
against civilian populations on the Syrian side of the ADL.
“One could hope that the revival of the 1949 line and principles
established in the Armistice Agreement both with regards to the
protection of civilians and the rejection of acquisition of territory by
war would render arbitration easier and herald the end of the
zero-sum game logic in the Middle East,” Mallat said.
“It’s a mystery to me why the Syrians insist on the line of 1967 and
not that of 1949,” the professor added.
Asked whether it might not be easier to start by solving the issue of
water between the Syrians and the Israelis as it seemed to be a major
sticky point, Mallat said that he believed that once the issue of the
territory was solved it would be easier for the Syrians or the Israelis
to relinquish some water.
Indeed, in April, Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk al-Sharaa said that if
territory was not negotiable, water was.
A complete, exact replica of the 1949 map can be found at www.mallat.com
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