Everything about Borders Of Israel totally explained
==The British Mandate=====The Sykes-Picot Line===
The
Sykes-Picot agreement of 1916 divided the Middle East between British and French spheres of influence. "Palestine" was designated as an "international enclave".
This agreement was revised by Britain and France in 1919. It was agreed that Palestine and the
Vilayet of Mosul in modern-day
Iraq would be part of the British sphere in exchange for British support of French influence in Syria and Lebanon. According to historian Ilan Pappe,
"The borders of mandatory Palestine, first drawn up in the Sykes-Picot Agreement, were given their definitive shape during lengthy and tedious negotiations by British and French officials between 1919 and 1922...In October 1919 the British envisaged the area that's today southern Lebanon and most of southern Syria as being part of British mandatory Palestine...In the East, matters were more complicated...[Transjordan] was part of the Ottoman province of Damascus which in the Sykes-Picot agreement had been allocated to the French."
At the
San Remo Conference (19–
26 April 1920) the Allied Supreme Council granted the mandates for Palestine and Mesopotamia to Britain without precisely defining the boundaries of the mandated territories. Although the land east of the Jordan had been part of the Syrian administrative unit under the Ottomans, it was excluded from the French Mandate at the San Remo conference, "on the grounds that it was part of Palestine."
Franco-British Boundary Agreement
The
Franco-British Boundary Agreement of 1920 contained the principles for the boundary between the
Mandates of
Palestine and
Mesopotamia, attributed to Great Britain, and the Mandate of
Syria and the
Lebanon, attributed to France.
The boundary between the forthcoming
British and
French mandates was defined in broad terms.. That agreement placed the bulk of the Golan Heights in the French sphere. The treaty also established a joint commission to settle the border and mark it on the ground. In accordance with the same process, a nearby parcel of land that included the ancient site of
Dan was transferred from Syria to Palestine early in 1924. In this way the Golan Heights became part of the
French Mandate of Syria.
In 1923, after he'd left office,
American President
Woodrow Wilson protested British concessions in a cable to the British Cabinet: "The Zionist cause depends on rational northern and eastern boundaries for a self-maintaining, economic development of the country. This means, on the north, Palestine must include the Litani River and the watersheds of the Hermon, and on the east it must include the plains of the Jaulon and the Hauran. Narrower than this is a mutilation… I need not remind you that neither in this country nor in Paris has there been any opposition to the Zionist program, and to its realization the boundaries I've named are indispensable".
When the French Mandate of Syria ended in 1944, the Golan Heights remained part of the newly independent state of Syria.
Transjordan
In March
1921 Colonial Secretary,
Winston Churchill, visited Jerusalem. After a discussion with
Emir Abdullah it was agreed that the Jewish National Home objective for the proposed Palestinian Mandate territory wouldn't apply to the Mandate territory east of the
Jordan River. In accordance with that agreement, the
Churchill White Paper of
June 3,
1922 stated explicitly that "the terms of the [Balfour]
Declaration referred to don't contemplate that Palestine as a whole should be converted into a Jewish National Home, but that such a Home should be founded
'in Palestine'."
In June 1922 the
League of Nations approved the
Palestine Mandate, to come into effect automatically when a dispute between France and Italy over the Syria Mandate was settled. The Mandate also stated that Britain could ‘postpone or withhold’ application of the provisions dealing with the 'Jewish National Home' in the territory east of the
Jordan River, then called
Transjordan. In September 1922, the British government presented a memorandum to the League of Nations stating that Transjordan would be excluded from all the provisions dealing with Jewish settlement, and this memorandum was approved on
23 September. The French/Italian dispute was resolved on
September 29 1923 and both Mandates came into force on that date.
Britain administered the part west of the Jordan as Palestine, and the part east of the Jordan as Transjordan, with the border being the Jordan River. Palestine comprised 23% of the Mandate territory and Transjordan comprised 77%. Technically they were one mandate but most official documents referred to them as two separate mandates. Transjordan remained under British control until 1946, when it gained independence.
Border with Lebanon
The
United Nations in June
2000 was called upon to decide the border between
Lebanon and
Israel, in order to determine whether Israel had fully withdrawn from Lebanon in compliance with
Security Council Resolution 425. This line came to be called the
Blue Line. At the same time, the United Nations didn't have to considered the legally demarcated international boundary between Lebanon and the Israeli-controlled
Golan Heights, as that wasn't required for the purpose of
Resolution 425. Accordingly, the border between Lebanon and the Israeli-controlled
Golan Heights is expressly not to be called the
Blue Line.
The
Blue Line which the UN had to determine was the line of deployment of the
IDF prior to
March 14 1978, when Israel invaded Lebanon. In effect that line was recognised by both Lebanon and by Israel as the international border, and not just as the armistice line of 1949 (what is commonly called the
Green Line) following the
1948 Arab-Israeli War.
Background
On
March 14 1978, Israel launched
Operation Litani, occupying the area south of the
Litani River, excepting
Tyre (see map). In response to the invasion, the UN Security Council passed
Council Resolution 425 and Resolution 426 calling for the withdrawal of Israeli forces from Lebanon. Israeli forces withdrew later in 1978, but turned over their positions inside Lebanon to their ally, the
South Lebanon Army (SLA).
On
17 April 2000, Israel announced that it'll withdraw its forces from Lebanon. The Lebanese government refused to take part in marking the border. The
UN thus conducted its own survey based on the line for the purpose of
UN Security Council Resolution 425 (1978).
From
24 May to
7 June 2000, the
UN Special Envoy heard views in
Israel,
Lebanon and
Syria. The United Nations cartographer and his team, assisted by UNIFIL, worked on the ground to identify a line to be adopted for the practical purposes of confirming the Israeli withdrawal. While it was agreed that this wouldn't be a formal border demarcation, the aim was to identify a line on the ground closely conforming to the internationally recognized boundaries of Lebanon, based on the best available cartographic and other documentary evidence.
On
25 May 2000, Israel notified the
Secretary-General that it had redeployed its forces in compliance with
Council Resolution 425, that's to the international border.
On
7 June the completed map showing the withdrawal line was formally transmitted by the Force Commander of UNIFIL to his Lebanese and Israeli counterparts. Notwithstanding their reservations about the line, the Governments of Israel and Lebanon confirmed that identifying this line was solely the responsibility of the United Nations and that they'd respect the line as identified.
On
8 June, UNIFIL teams commenced the work of verifying the Israeli withdrawal behind the line.
The Blue Line
The
Blue Line identified by the United Nations in 2000 as the border between
Lebanon and
Israel, from the
Mediterranean Sea to the
Hasbani River, closely approximates the
Green Line set under the
1949 Armistice Agreement between Lebanon, and Israel. The area east of the Hasbani River, is considered part of
Syria(External Link
) and included in the
Golan Heights.
The armistice agreement between Lebanon and Israel was signed on
March 23 1949. The main points were:
- The armistice line (for example "Green Line") was the international border, which corresponds to the 1923 Mandate border between the French Mandate of Lebanon and the British Mandate of Palestine (see: Treaty of Sèvres).
- Unlike the other Green Line agreements, it contains no clause disclaiming this line as an international border, and was thereafter treated as it had been previously, as a de jure international border.
- Israel withdrew its forces from 13 villages in Lebanese territory, which were occupied during the war.
In 1923 38 boundary markers were placed along the 49 mile boundary and a detailed text description was published.
(External Link
) The 2000 Blue Line differs in about a half dozen short stretches from the 1949 line, though never by more than 475 meters.
Between 1950 and 1967, Israeli and Lebanese surveyors managed to complete 25 non-contiguous kilometers and mark (but not sign) another quarter of the international border.
Conclusion
On
16 June, the
Secretary-General reported to the
Security Council that Israel had withdrawn its forces from Lebanon in accordance with
Council Resolution 425 and met the requirements defined in his report of
22 May 2000.
(External Link
)
The withdrawal line has been termed the
Blue Line in all official UN communications since.
Border with Syria
In
1923 an agreement between the
United Kingdom and
France established the border between the
British Mandate of Palestine and the
French Mandate of Syria. The British handed over the southern
Golan Heights to the French in return for the northern
Jordan Valley. The border was re-drawn so that both sides of the
Jordan River and the whole of the Sea of Galilee, including a 10-metre wide strip along the northeastern shore, were made a part of Palestine. The
1947 UN Partition Plan put this territory area inside the Jewish state.
During the 1990s, there were constant negotiations between Israel and Syria regarding a mediation of conflicts and an Israeli withdrawal from the
Golan Heights but a peace treaty didn't come to fruition. The main stumbling block seems to involve 25 square kilometers of territory in the Jordan River Valley that lays west of the international Israel-Syrian border, but which had been seized by Syria in the
1948 Arab-Israeli War and retained by it under the
1949 Armistice Agreement with Israel.
Arab countries support Syria's position in the formula which calls on Israel "to return to the 1967 borders". (See 2002
Arab Peace Initiative)
Conflict Over The Shebaa Farms
It must be remembered that both Lebanon and Syria were within the French Mandate Territory between 1920 and the end of the French Mandate in
1946.
The dispute over the sovereignty of the
Shebaa Farms resulted in part from the failure of French
Mandate administrations, and subsequently from the failure of the
Lebanon and
Syria to properly demarcate the border between them.
Documents from the
1920s and
1930s indicate that some local inhabitants regarded themselves as part of Lebanon, for example paying taxes to the Lebanese government. But French officials at times expressed confusion as to the actual location of the border. One French official in
1939 expressed the belief that the uncertainty was sure to cause trouble in the future.
The region continued to be represented in the
1930s and
1940s as Syrian territory, under the French Mandate. Detailed maps showing the border were produced by the French in
1933, and again in
1945. They clearly showed the region to be in Syria.
After the French Mandate ended in
1946, the land was administered by Syria, and represented as such in all maps of the time.
The maps of the
1949 Armistice Agreements between Syria and Israel also designated the area as Syrian.
Border disputes arose at times, however. Shebaa Farms wasn't unique; several other border villages had similar discrepancies of borders versus land ownership. Syria and Lebanon formed a joint Syrian-Lebanese border committee in the late
1950s to determine a proper border between the two nations. In
1964, concluding its work, the committee suggested to the two governments that the area be deemed the property of Lebanon, and recommended that the international border be reestablished consistent with its suggestion. However, neither Syria nor Lebanon adopted the committee's suggestion, and neither country took any action along the suggested lines. Thus, maps of the area continued to reflect the Farms as being in Syria.
In
1981, the Golan Heights (including the Shebaa Farms area) was officially
annexed by Israel. This unilateral annexation wasn't internationally recognized and
United Nations Security Council Resolution 242 considers the area part of
Israeli occupied territories.
Border with Jordan
The
Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace was implemented on
October 26,
1994. Besides mediating tensions between the two sides, the treaty also resolved territorial and border issues that were ongoing since the 1948 war. The boundary was given new limits and further restrictions with reference to the boundary definition under the
Mandate. The effects of the treaty then stemmed to other issues. The treaty further specified and fully recognized the international border between Israel and Jordan.
Upon the official signing of the
Israel-Jordan Treaty of Peace, the
Jordan and
Yarmouk Rivers, the
Dead Sea, the
Emek Ha'arva/Wadi Araba and the
Gulf of Aqaba were officially designated as the borders between Israel and Jordan. (See:
Israel-Jordan Peace Treaty, Annex I, Israel-Jordan International Boundary Delimitation and Demarcation.) Shortly after the beginning of the
First Intifada, Jordan withdrew any claim to the West Bank.
Border with Egypt
The
1949 Armistice Agreement between
Israel and
Egypt was ratified on
24 February 1949. The newly signed agreement called for the armistice line between these countries was to be at the original international border (dating back to
1906) except near the
Mediterranean Sea, where Egypt would remain in control of the
Gaza Strip.
The
Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty, signed on
26 March 1979, required the withdrawal of Israeli forces and civilians from the
Sinai Peninsula. Israel captured this territory during the
1967 Six-Day War. Just as it was in the first Armistice Agreement, the withdrawal was to the international border except this time the line included the Gaza Strip as a new part to Egypt's border. Egypt withdrew any claim to the Gaza Strip, leaving the land to be contested by both Israelis and Palestinians.
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