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{{About|the political entity proclaimed in 1988|other uses|Palestine (disambiguation)}}
Palestine? That doesn't even exist.
{{Infobox Country
|native_name = <span style="line-height:1.33em;"> فلسطين <br />''Filastin''</span>
|conventional_long_name = <span style="line-height:1.33em;">Palestine<ref name=Pagep161/></span>
|common_name = Palestine
|image_flag = Flag of Palestine.svg
|image_coat = Palestine COA (alternative).svg
|image_map = LocationPalestine.svg
|national_anthem = ''[[Palestinian National Anthem|Biladi]]'' adopted 1996 – ''[[Mawtiny]] was adopted from 1936 till 1995''
|capital = [[Jerusalem]] (proclaimed){{ref label|capital|i|}}<ref name=Pagep161/><ref name=Bissiop433/><br/> [[Gaza]], [[Ramallah]] (administrative)
|largest_city = [[Gaza]]<sup>1</sup>
|government_type = [[Semi-presidential system|Semi-presidential]];<br>[[Parliamentary system|Parliamentary democracy]]
|leader_title1 = [[President of Palestine|President]]
|leader_name1 = [[Mahmoud Abbas]]
|leader_title2 = [[Prime Minister of Palestine|Prime Minister]]
|leader_name2 = [[Ismail Haniyeh]], [[Salam Fayad]] (disputed)
|population_estimate = 4,136,540
|population_estimate_rank = 125th
|population_estimate_year = 2009 (July)<sup>1</sup>
|population_census =
|population_census_year =
|GDP_PPP = $11.95 billion<sup>1</sup>
|GDP_PPP_rank = –
|GDP_PPP_year = 2008<sup>1</sup>
|GDP_PPP_per_capita = $2,900<sup>1</sup>
|GDP_PPP_per_capita_rank = –
|established_event1 = Declared
|established_date1 = November 15, 1988
|HDI = {{decrease}} 0.731
|HDI_rank = 106th
|HDI_year = 2007
|HDI_category = <span style="color:#fc0;">medium</span>
|currency = [[Jordanian dinar]]<sup>a</sup><br />[[Egyptian Pound]]<sup>b</sup><br />[[Israeli shekel]]<sup>c</sup>
|currency_code = JOD, EGP, ILS
|country_code = PLE
|time_zone = &nbsp;
|utc_offset = +1
|time_zone_DST = &nbsp;
|utc_offset_DST = +2
|cctld = [[.ps]]
|calling_code = [[+970]]<sup>2</sup>
|footnote1=Population and economy statistics and rankings are based on the [[Palestinian territories]]
|footnote2=[[+972]] is also used as well.
}}
{{Wikisourcepar|Palestinian Declaration of Independence}}

The '''State of Palestine''' ({{lang-ar|دولة فلسطين}}, ''dawlat filastin''), officially simply '''Palestine''' ({{lang-ar| فلسطين}}, ''filastin''),<ref name=Pagep161>Baroud in Page, 2004, p. 161.</ref><ref name=Bissiop433>Bissio, 1995, p. 433.</ref> is a [[polity]] that was [[unilateral declaration of independence|unilaterally declared]] in [[Algiers]] on 15 November 1988, when the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]]'s (PLO) [[Palestinian National Council|National Council]] (PNC) adopted the [[Palestinian Declaration of Independence]].

Some countries recognized the state of Palestine, while other countries announced they welcomed this step without explicitly declaring recognition. The exact number of countries offering recognition is unknown, with different figures being given by various sources. Some countries recognise the PLO as the "sole legitimate representative of the [[Palestinian people]]", while others deal with the PLO as the ''de facto'' authority in the Palestinian territories. At the time of the 1988 declaration, the PLO did not exercise control over any territory,<ref name=Zartmanp43>Berchovitch and Zartman, 2008, [http://books.google.ca/books?id=1cqjpHmhTZsC&pg=PA43&dq=%22state+of+palestine%22+%22recognition%22&lr=&cd=12#v=onepage&q=%22state%20of%20palestine%22%20%22recognition%22&f=false p. 43].</ref> and designated [[Jerusalem]] as the capital of Palestine,{{ref label|capital|i|}}<ref name=Pagep161/><ref name=Bissiop433/> despite Israeli control.

On 28 October 1974, the [[1974 Arab League summit]] held in [[Rabat]] designated the PLO as the "sole legitimate representative of the [[Palestinian people]] and reaffirmed their right to establish an independent state of urgency."<ref name="al -Madfai">Madiha Rashid al Madfai, ''Jordan, the United States and the Middle East Peace Process, 1974–1991'', Cambridge Middle East Library, Cambridge University Press (1993). ISBN 0521415233. p 21.</ref> The PLO has had [[United Nations General Assembly observers|observer status at the United Nations]] as an "entity" since 22 November 1974,<ref>[http://www.thejerusalemfund.org/www.thejerusalemfund.org/carryover/documents/resolution3237.html UN General Assembly Resolution 3237]</ref><ref name=Geldenhuysp155>{{cite book|title=Isolated states: a comparative analysis|page=155|first1=Deon|last1=Geldenhuys|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=1990|isbn=0521402689}}</ref> which entitles it to speak in the UN General Assembly but not to vote. In the United Nations the PLO is classified as a [[List of states with limited recognition|state with limited recognition]].<ref>[http://www.jcpa.org/art/becker1.htm International Recognition of a Unilaterally Declared Palestinian State: Legal and Policy Dilemmas], by Tal Becker</ref> In the list of "non-member states and entities", Palestine is categorized under "Other entities having received a standing invitation to participate as observers in the sessions and the work of the General Assembly and are maintaining permanent offices at Headquarters".<ref>{{cite web| url=http://www.un.org/en/members/nonmembers.shtml| title=Permanent observers – non-member states and entities| author=United Nations| date=29 February 2009| accessdate=7 February 2009}}</ref> After the Declaration of Independence the [[United Nations General Assembly]] officially "acknowledged" the proclamation and voted to change the name of the PLO permanent observer to "Palestine".<ref>[http://unispal.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/146E6838D505833F852560D600471E25 United Nations General Assembly – December 9, 1988. Resolution 43/177]</ref><ref name=Hillierp205>Hillier, 1998, [http://books.google.ca/books?id=ukWq9mMUeesC&pg=PA205&dq=%22state+of+palestine%22+%22recognition%22&lr=&cd=1#v=onepage&q=%22state%20of%20palestine%22%20%22recognition%22&f=false p. 205].</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://unispal.un.org/unispal.nsf/9a798adbf322aff38525617b006d88d7/146e6838d505833f852560d600471e25?OpenDocumentc |title=Palestine question/Proclamation of State/Designation "Palestine" – GA resolution |author=United Nations General Assembly |date=15 December 1988 |accessdate=6 February 2010}}</ref>

In 1993, in the [[Oslo Accords]], [[Israel]] acknowledged the PLO negotiating team as "representing the [[Palestinian people]]", in return for the PLO recognizing Israel's right to exist in peace, acceptance of [[UN Security Council resolution]]s [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 242|242]] and [[United Nations Security Council Resolution 338|338]], and its rejection of "violence and terrorism".<ref>Kim Murphy. "[http://articles.latimes.com/1993-09-10/news/mn-33546_1_mutual-recognition Israel and PLO, in Historic Bid for Peace, Agree to Mutual Recognition]," ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'', September 10, 1993.</ref> No reference is made in the Accords to the 1988 declaration of a state of Palestine. The [[Palestinian National Authority]] (PNA or PA), established as a result of the Oslo Accords is an interim administrative body that exercises some governmental functions in parts of the [[West Bank]] and the [[Gaza Strip]]. The current [[President of Palestine]] is [[Mahmoud Abbas]], serving in his capacity as [[Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization]].

==Background==
The Levant formed part of the [[Ottoman Empire]] from 1518. In 1917, it was occupied by Britain during the [[First World War]]. However, there was no administrative unit under the Ottoman Empire corresponding to what came to be known as Palestine and the boundaries were determined as part of the process of formation of the [[British Mandate of Palestine]] after the War.<ref name=Rubinp186/> Since the British Mandate, the term [[Palestine]] has been associated with the geographical area that currently covers the [[State of Israel]], the [[West Bank]] and the [[Gaza Strip]],<ref name=Rubinp186>Rubin, 1999, [http://books.google.ca/books?id=A9FVtIjyFtYC&pg=PA186&dq=palestine+country+palestinians+state&lr=&as_brr=3#v=onepage&q=palestine%20country%20palestinians%20state&f=false p. 186].</ref> though the British Mandate also covered present day [[Jordan]].

===The McMahon–Hussein Correspondence===
{{seealso|McMahon–Hussein Correspondence}}
[[Image:Ottoman Syria 1918.png|thumb|right|250px|Administrative units in the Near East under the Ottoman Empire, until c. 1918]]

In the early years of the First World War, negotiations took place between the British [[High Commissioner]] in Egypt, [[Henry McMahon]] and the [[Sharif of Mecca]], [[Hussein bin Ali, Sharif of Mecca|Husayn bin Ali]] for an alliance of sorts with the Arabs against the Ottomans in Arab Near East. On 24 October 1915, McMahon sent to Hussein a note which the Arabs treated as their "Declaration of Independence". In [[McMahon letters|McMahon's letter]], part of the [[McMahon–Hussein Correspondence]], McMahon declared Britain's willingness to recognise the independence of the Arabs, both in the Levant and the Hejaz, subject to certain exemptions. It stated on behalf of the Government of Great Britain that:<blockquote>
''The districts of Mersin and Alexandretta, and portions of Syria lying to the west of the districts of Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo, cannot be said to be purely Arab, and must on that account be excepted from the proposed [[boundary delimitation|delimitation]].''
''Subject to that modification, and without prejudice to the treaties concluded between us and certain Arab Chiefs, we accept that delimitation.''
''As for the regions lying within the proposed frontiers, in which Great Britain is free to act without detriment to interests of her ally France, I am authorized to give you the following pledges on behalf of the Government of Great Britain, and to reply as follows to your note:''
''That subject to the modifications stated above, Great Britain is prepared to recognize and uphold the independence of the Arabs in all the regions lying within the frontiers proposed by the Sherif of Mecca.''<ref>[http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/9a798adbf322aff38525617b006d88d7/eb39ca1bfead52dd852570c00079484e!OpenDocument October 24, 1915 letter from Sir Henry McMahon, High Commissioner in Egypt, to Sherif Husayn of Mecca], archived at UNISPAL.</ref>
</blockquote>

The exemptions from Arab control of certain areas set out in the McMahon note were to seriously complicate the problems of peace in the Near East. At the time, the Arab portions of the Ottoman Empire were divided into administrative units called ''vilayets'' and ''sanjaks''. Palestine was divided into the ''sanjuks'' of Acre and Nablus, both of which were a part of the ''vilayet'' of Beirut, and an independent ''sanjak'' of Jerusalem. The areas exempted from Arab control by the McMahon note included "Syria lying to the west of the districts of Damascus, Homs, Hama, and Aleppo." The British understanding was that "Damascus" meant the ''vilayet'' and not the city of Damascus, and accordingly virtually all of Palestine was excluded from Arab control. The British entered into the secret [[Sykes–Picot Agreement]] on 16 May 1916 and the commitment of the [[Balfour Declaration of 1917]], for example, on that understanding.

The Arabs, however, insisted at the [[Paris Peace Conference, 1919|Paris Peace Conference]] at the end of the War that "Damascus" meant the city of Damascus – which left Palestine in their hands.<ref>''The Course of Modern Jewish History'', by Howard Morley Sachar, ISBN 0-440-51538-6. pp 370–1.</ref> However, in 1915, these problems of interpretation did not occur to Hussein, who agreed to the British wording. The Arab interpretation of the agreement formed the basis of Arab claims to Palestine at the Peace Conference.

===League of Nations Mandate for Palestine===
[[Image:Faisal-Weizmann map.png|thumb|right|150px|Map showing boundaries of the proposed Jewish state, as outlined by the Zionist representatives at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, superimposed on modern boundaries]]
{{Seealso|British Mandate for Palestine}}

Despite Arab objections based in part on the Arab interpretation of the McMahon correspondence noted above, Britain was given the [[League of Nations]] [[Mandate for Palestine]]. The Mandate was administered as two territories: [[Palestine]] and [[Transjordan]],<ref name=Whiteman>See Marjorie M. Whiteman, Digest of International Law, vol. 1, US State Department (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963) pp 650–652</ref> with the Jordan River being the boundary between them. The boundaries under the Mandate also did not follow those sought by the Jewish community, which sought the inclusion of the east bank of the Jordan into the Palestinian territory, to which the objective of the Mandate for a [[homeland for the Jewish people]] would apply. It was made clear from before the commencement of the Mandate, and a clause to that effect was inserted in the Mandate, that the objective set out in the Mandate would not apply to Transjordan. Transjordan was destined for early independence. The objective of the Mandate was to apply only to territory west of the Jordan, which was commonly referred to as Palestine by the British administration, and as [[Eretz Israel]] by the Jewish community.

===The Arab League and the Arab Higher Committee===
The framers of the Arab League sought to include the Palestinian Arabs within the framework of the League from its inception.<ref name=geddes>Geddes, 1991, p. 208.</ref> An annex to the League Pact declared:<ref name="yale">{{cite web| coauthors = Head of states of the founding members| title = Pact of the League of Arab States, March 22, 1945| work = [[The Avalon Project]]| publisher = [[Yale Law School]]| year = 1998| url = http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/mideast/arableag.htm| accessdate = 2008-07-09}}</ref>
<blockquote>Even though Palestine was not able to control her own destiny, it was on the basis of the recognition of her independence that the Covenant of the League of Nations determined a system of government for her. Her existence and her independence among the nations can, therefore, no more be questioned ''de jure'' than the independence of any of the other Arab States. [...] Therefore, the States signatory to the Pact of the Arab League consider that in view of Palestine's special circumstances, the Council of the League should designate an Arab delegate from Palestine to participate in its work until this country enjoys actual independence.</blockquote>

In November 1945, the [[Arab League]] reconstituted the [[Arab Higher Committee]] comprising twelve members<ref>[http://books.google.com/books?id=jXKTSQrTLO8C&pg=PA303&lpg=PA303&dq=Arab+Higher+Executive&source=bl&ots=ZIT18_uWW1&sig=XHsRWt2lr-wx5j0Jf46Q8GCycoQ&hl=en&ei=CvaDSuvCCIzq6AOxgcXSAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2#v=onepage&q=Arab%20Higher%20Executive&f=false Politics and government in the Middle East and North Africa By Tareq Y. Ismael, Jacqueline S. Ismael, Kamel Abu Jaber], p 303</ref> as the supreme executive body of Palestinian Arabs in the territory of the [[British Mandate of Palestine]]. The committee was dominated by the [[Palestine Arab Party]] and was immediately recognised by Arab League countries. The Mandate government recognised the new Committee two months later.

===Partition of Palestine===
In 1947, the [[United Nations]] proposed the [[United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine|partition of Mandate Palestine]] into an Arab state, a [[Jewish state]], and a [[Corpus Separatum]] for Jerusalem. While the Jewish leaders accepted the partition plan, the Arab leadership in the [[Arab League]] and the Arab Higher Committee rejected it, opposing any partition.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0/4ecbf3578b6149c50525657100507fab?OpenDocument |title=The Future of Arab Palestine and the Question of Partition |author=UNITED NATIONS CONCILIATION COMMISSION FOR PALESTINE |date=30 July 1949 |work= |publisher=United Nations |accessdate=9 May 2010}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The Palestinian refugees in Jordan 1948–1957 |last=Plascov |first=Avi |year=2008 |publisher=Routledge |location= |isbn=978-0714631202 |page=2 |url=http://books.google.com/?id=daLPXTYcoewC&printsec=frontcover&q= |accessdate=2009-12-11 |date=1981}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The Jerusalem question, 1917–1968 |last=Bovis |first=H. Eugene |year=1971 |publisher=Hoover Institution Press,U.S. |location= |isbn=978-0817932916 |pages=37–47 |url=http://books.google.com/?id=1L49R1xKA6QC&printsec=frontcover&q= |accessdate=2009-12-11 |date=1971}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=The Routledge Atlas of the Arab-Israeli Conflict |last=Gilbert |first=Martín |year=2005 |publisher=Routledge |location= |isbn=978-0415359009 |page=36 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Israel: current issues and historical background |last=Marshall |first=Edgar S. |year=2002 |publisher=Nova Science Publishers|location= |isbn=978-1590333259 |page=115}}</ref>

On April 12, 1948, the Arab League announced:<blockquote>The Arab armies shall enter Palestine to rescue it. His Majesty (King Farouk, representing the League) would like to make it clearly understood that such measures should be looked upon as temporary and devoid of any character of the occupation or partition of Palestine, and that after completion of its liberation, that country would be handed over to its owners to rule in the way they like.<ref>''Israel, the West Bank and international law'', by Allan Gerson, Routledge, 1978, ISBN 0-7146-3091-8, page 78</ref></blockquote>

Ernest A. Gross, a senior U.S. State Department legal adviser, authored a memorandum for the [[United States]] government titled ''Recognition of New States and Governments in Palestine'', dated 11 May 1948. He expressed the view that "The Arab and Jewish communities will be legally entitled on May 15, 1948 (the date of expiry of the British Mandate) to proclaim states and organize governments in the areas of Palestine occupied by the respective communities." Gross also said "the law of nations recognizes an inherent right of people lacking the agencies and institutions of social and political control to organize a state and operate a government."<ref>The memo is contained in the Foreign Relations of the United States 1948, volume 5, part 2, page 964 and is cited by Stefan Talmon, in "Recognition of Governments in International Law" (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998), page 36</ref>

On 14 May 1948, the Jewish community of Mandate Palestine [[Israeli Declaration of Independence|declared independence]] on approximately three quarters of Mandate Palestine's territory.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Modern Middle East: A Political History since the First World War |last=Kamrava |first=Mehran |authorlink= |coauthors= |year= |publisher=University of California Press |location= |isbn=978-0520241503 |page=79 |url= |accessdate=2009-12-10}}</ref><ref name="JohnWolfffe">{{cite book |title=Religion in History: Conflict, Conversion and Coexistence (Paperback) |last=Wolffe |first=John |year=2005 |publisher=Manchester University Press |location= |isbn=978-0719071072 |page=265 |url= |accessdate=2009-12-10}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Israel and Palestine: Peace Plans and Proposals from Oslo to Disengagement |last=Golan |first=Galia |authorlink= |coauthors= |year=2008 |publisher=Markus Wiener Publishers |location= |isbn=978-1558765030 |page=3 |url=http://books.google.com/?id=vsCrYBzZ98UC&printsec=frontcover&q= |accessdate=2009-12-10 |date=2008-02}}</ref> or 16.3 percents of the original territory of the British Mandate.<ref>The territory originally governed by [[British Empire|the British]] included [[Transjordan]] (100,800 km2), the [[West Bank]] (5,640 km2) and the [[Gaza Strip]] (360 km2), altogether 127,570 km2; Israel's territory after the [[1948 Arab–Israeli War]] was 20,770 km2.</ref> The event marked the start of the [[1948 Arab-Israeli war]]. After the war, the territory known today as the West Bank was annexed to Jordan, and the territory known as the Gaza Strip was put under Egyptian military administration.

===West Bank and Gaza Strip, 1948–1967===

{{Main|Jordan#Modern_Jordan|l1=Modern Jordan}}
====West Bank====
During the [[1948 Arab-Israeli war]], Jordan occupied the area of [[Cisjordan]] now called the [[West Bank]], which it continued to control in accordance with the [[1949 Armistice Agreements]] and a political union formed in December 1948. Military Proclamation Number 2 of 1948 provided for the application in the West Bank of laws that were applicable in Palestine on the eve of the termination of the Mandate. On 2 November 1948, the military rule was replaced by a civilian administration by virtue of the Law Amending Public Administration Law in Palestine. Military Proclamation Number 17 of 1949, Section 2, vested the King of Jordan with all the powers that were enjoyed by the King of England, his ministers and the High Commissioner of Palestine by the Palestine Order-in-Council, 1922. Section 5 of this law confirmed that all laws, regulations and orders that were applicable in Palestine until the termination of the Mandate would remain in force until repealed or amended.<ref name=Shehadeh>"From Occupation to Interim Accords, Raja Shehadeh, Kluwer Law International, 1997, pages 77–78; and Historical Overview, A. F. & R. Shehadeh Law Firm [http://www.shehadehlaw.com/businessLaw.htm]</ref>

The [[Jericho Conference|Second Arab-Palestinian Congress]] (1948)<ref>[http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3424601425.html See Jericho Congress (1948)]</ref> was held in Jericho on December 1, 1948. The delegates proclaimed [[Abdullah I of Jordan|Abdullah]] King of Palestine and called for a union of Arab Palestine with the Hashemite Kingdom of Transjordan.<ref>See:
*Jericho Declaration, Palestine Post, December 14, 1948, Front page [http://jpress.tau.ac.il/Default/Scripting/ArticleWin.asp?From=Archive&Source=Page&Skin=TAUEn&BaseHref=PLS/1948/12/14&PageLabelPrint=1&EntityId=Ar00106&ViewMode=HTML]
*Telegram Mr. Wells Stabler to the Acting Secretary of State, December 4, 1948, Foreign relations of the United States, 1948, The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Part 2, pages 1645–46 [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=turn&entity=FRUS.FRUS1948v05p2.p1137&id=FRUS.FRUS1948v05p2&isize=M]
*British House of Commons, Jordan and Israel (Government Decision), HC Deb 27 April 1950 vol 474 cc1137-41 [http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1950/apr/27/jordan-and-israel-government-decision]</ref> Avi Plascov says that Abdullah contacted the Nashashibi opposition, local mayors, mukhars, those opposed to the Husaynis, and opposition members of the AHC. Plascov said that the Palestinian Congresses were conducted in accordance with prevailing Arab custom. He also said that contrary to the widely held belief outside Jordan the representatives did reflect the feelings of a large segment of the population.<ref>See "The Palestinian Refugees In Jordan 1948–1957, Routledge, 1981, ISBN 0-7146-3120-5, pages 11–16</ref>

Sandra Berliant Kadosh analyzed United States policy toward the West Bank in 1948, based largely on the Foreign Relations Documents of the United States. She noted that the US government believed that the most satisfactory solution regarding the disposition of the greater part of Arab Palestine
would be incorporation in Transjordan and that the State Department approved the Principle underlying the Jericho resolutions.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1948. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Part 2, pages 1706–1707</ref> Kadosh said that the delegates claimed to represent 90 percent of the population, and that they ridiculed the Gaza government. They asserted that it represented only its eighty-odd members.<ref>See United States Policy toward the West Bank in 1948, Jewish Social Studies, Vol. 46, No. 3/4 (Summer – Autumn, 1984), pp. 231–252</ref>

The Transjordanian Government agreed to the unification on December 7, 1948, and on December 13 the Transjordanian parliament approved the creation of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The change of status was reflected by the adoption of a new official name. The "Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements" says that the name of Transjordan was officially changed on 21 January 1949 to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.<ref>Encyclopedia of the United Nations and International Agreements, Vol. 4, Edmund Jan Osmanczyk, and Anthony Mango, Routledge, 3rd edition, 2004, ISBN 0-415-93924-0, page 2354 [http://books.google.com/books?id=hSxS2MmQsewC&lpg=PA2354&ots=88HuRNXCU3&pg=PA2354#v=onepage&q=&f=false]</ref> The step of unification was ratified by a joint Jordanian National Assembly on April 24, 1950. The Assembly was composed of 20 representatives each from the East and West Bank. The Act of Union contained a protective clause which presrved Arab rights in Palestine without prejudice to any final settlement.<ref name=Shehadeh/><ref name=WhitemanII>*Marjorie M. Whiteman, Digest of International Law, vol. 2, US State Department (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1963) pages 1163–68</ref>

The Department of State Bulletin for the first quarter of 1950 contained an article about the Clapp Mission to Middle East countries of Lebanon, Jordan, Arab Palestine, and Syria. The UN Economic Survey Mission for the Middle East, headed by Gordon R. Clapp, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority recommended four development projects, involving the Wadi Zerqa basin in Jordan, the Wadi Qilt watershed and stream bed in Arab Palestine, the Litani River in Lebanon, and the [[Ghab valley]] in Syria.<ref>See the Department of State Bulletin, Vol. 22 Jan- Mar 1950, pages 105–106 [http://www.archive.org/details/departmentofstat2250unit]</ref> President Truman subsequently announced that the Foreign Economic Assistance Act of 1950 contained an appropriation of $27 million dollars for the development projects recommended by the Clapp Mission and to assist Palestinian refugees.<ref name="United States 1950. Page 921">Foreign relations of the United States, 1950. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa, Volume V (1950), Page 921</ref>

Many legal scholars say the declaration of the Arab League and the Act of Union implied that Jordan's claim of sovereignty was provisional, because it had always been subject to the emergence of the Palestinian state.<ref>Palestine and International Law, ed. Sanford R. Siverburg, McFarland, 2002, ISBN 0-7864-1191-0, page 47</ref><ref>Israel, the West Bank and international law, By Allan Gerson, Routledge, 1978, ISBN 0-7146-3091-8, page 77</ref> A political union was legally established by the series of proclamations, decrees, and parliamentary acts in December 1948. Abdullah thereupon took the title King of Jordan, and he officially changed the country's name to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in April 1949. The 1950 Act of Union confirmed and ratified King Abdullah's actions. Following the annexation of the West Bank, only two countries formally recognized the union: Britain and Pakistan.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sixdaywar.org/content/jordanianocuupationjerusalem.asp |title=1948–1967: Jordanian Occupation of Eastern Jerusalem |publisher=Sixdaywar.org |date=1949-04-03 |accessdate=2010-08-02}}</ref> Thomas Kuttner notes that de facto recognition was granted to the regime, most clearly evidenced by the maintaining of consulates in East Jerusalem by several countries, including the United States.<ref>See Israel and the West Bank, By Thomas S. Kuttner, Israel Yearbook on Human Rights 1977, Volume 7; Volume 1977, edited by [[Yoram Dinstein]], Kluwer Law International, 1989, ISBN 0-7923-0357-1, [http://books.google.com/books?id=-yGRfQbK92MC&lpg=PA166&ots=Cqvy0Lw3oR&pg=PA176#v=onepage&q=&f=false]</ref> Joseph Weiler agreed, and said that other states had engaged in activities, statements, and resolutions that would be inconsistent with non-recognition.<ref>See Israel and the creation of a Palestinian state: a European perspective, By Joseph Weiler, Croom Helm, Ltd. 1985, ISBN 0-7099-3605-2, page 48 [http://books.google.com/books?id=OKsOAAAAQAAJ&lpg=PA47&client=&pg=PA48#v=onepage&q=&f=false]</ref> Joseph Massad said that the members of the Arab League granted de facto recognition and that the United States had formally recognized the annexation, except for Jerusalem.<ref>; See Joseph A. Massad, Colonial Effects: The Making of National Identity in Jordan (New York: Columbia University Press, 2001),ISBN 0-231-12323-X, page 229</ref><ref>The policy of the U.S. Department, was stated in a paper on the subject prepared for the Foreign Ministers meetings in London in May was in favor of the incorporation of Central Palestine into Jordan, but desired that it be done gradually and not by sudden proclamation. Once the annexation took place, the Department approved of the action "in the sense that it represents a logical development of the situation which took place as a result of a free expression of the will
of the people.... The United States continued to wish to avoid a public expression of approval of the union." See Foreign relations of the United States, 1950. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa
Volume V (1950), page 1096 [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1950v05&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=1096]</ref>

The United States extended de jure recognition to the Government of Transjordan and the Government of Israel on the same day, January 31, 1949.<ref name="autogenerated1949">Foreign relations of the United States, 1949. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume VI, Page 713</ref> President Truman told King Abdullah that the policy of the United States Government as regards a final territorial settlement in Palestine had been stated in the General Assembly on Nov 30, 1948 by the American representative. The US supported Israeli claims to the boundaries set forth in the UN General Assembly resolution of November 29, 1947, but believed that if Israel sought to retain additional territory in Palestine allotted to the Arabs, it should give the Arabs territorial compensation.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1949. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa, Volume VI, pages 878 and 879</ref>

Clea Bunch said that "President Truman crafted a balanced policy between Israel and its moderate Hashemite neighbours when he simultaneously extended formal recognition to the newly created state of Israel and the Kingdom of Transjordan. These two nations were inevitably linked in the President's mind as twin emergent states: one serving the needs of the refugee Jew, the other absorbing recently displaced Palestinian Arabs. In addition, Truman was aware of the private agreements that existed between Jewish Agency leaders and King Abdullah I of Jordan. Thus, it made perfect sense to Truman to favour both states with de jure recognition."<ref>Clea Lutz Bunch, "Balancing Acts: Jordan and the United States during the Johnson Administration," Canadian Journal of History 41.3 (2006)</ref>

In 1978 the U.S. State Department published a memorandum of conversation held on June 5, 1950 between Mr. Stuart W. Rockwell of the Office of African and Near Eastern Affairs and Abdel Monem Rifai, a Counselor of the Jordan Legation: Mr. Rifai asked when the United States was going to recognize the union of Arab Palestine and Jordan. Mr. Rockwell explained the Department's position, stating that it was not the custom of the United States to issue formal statements of recognition every time a foreign country changed its territorial area. The union of Arab Palestine and Jordan had been brought about as a result of the will of the people and the US accepted the fact that Jordanian sovereignty had been extended to the new area. Mr. Rifai said he had not realized this and that he was very pleased to learn that the US did in fact recognize the union.<ref name="United States 1950. Page 921"/>

At the [[Rabat summit conference]] in 1974, Jordan and the other members of the [[Arab League]] declared that the PLO was the "sole legitimate representative of the [Arab] Palestinian people", thereby relinquishing to that organization its role as representative of the West Bank.

The Amman Agreement of February 11, 1985, declared that the PLO and Jordan would pursue a proposed confederation between the state of Jordan and a Palestinian state.<ref>See "An Interview with Yasser Arafat", NY Review of Books, Volume 34, Number 10, June 11, 1987 [http://www.nybooks.com/articles/4746#fn1]</ref> In 1988, King Hussein dissolved the Jordanian parliament and renounced Jordanian claims to the West Bank. The PLO assumed responsibility as the Provisional Government of Palestine and an independent state was declared.<ref>See Renouncing claims to the West Bank, Jordan under King Hussein [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/306128/Jordan/ » Renouncing claims to the West Bank]</ref>

{{Main|All-Palestine Government}}

====Gaza Strip====
Egypt supervised an independent government of Palestine in Gaza as a trustee on behalf of the Arab League.<ref>See "Palestine and International Law", ed. Sanford R. Siverburg, McFarland and Company, 2002, ISBN 0-7864-1191-0, page 11</ref> An Egyptian Ministerial order dated June 1, 1948 declared that all laws in force during the Mandate would continue to be in force in the Gaza Strip. Another order issued on August 8, 1948 vested an Egyptian Administrator-General with the powers of the High Commissioner. The All-Palestine Government issued a Declaration of the Independent State of Palestine on October 1, 1948.<ref>See Palestine Yearbook of International Law, Vol 4, By Anis F. Kassim, Kluwer Law International (June 1, 1988), ISBN 90-411-0341-4, page 294</ref> In 1957, the Basic Law of Gaza established a Legislative Council that could pass laws which were given to the High Administrator-General for approval. In March 1962, a Constitution for the Gaza Strip was issued confirming the role of the Legislative Council.<ref name=Shehadeh/>

====1967 occupation====
The West Bank and Gaza Strip were conquered by Israel during the [[1967 war]]. They are considered by the [[international community]] to be [[Occupied Palestinian Territory]], notwithstanding the 1988 declaration of Palestinian independence, the limited self-government accorded to the Palestinian Authority as a result of the 1993 [[Oslo Accords]], and Israel's withdrawal from Gaza as part of the [[Israel's unilateral disengagement plan]] of 2005, which saw the dismantlement of four [[Israeli settlements]] in the West Bank and all settlements in the Gaza Strip.<ref name=Morep27>Le More, 2008, pp. 27–29.</ref> See also [[State of Palestine#Consequences of the occupation|Consequences of the occupation]] in the [[State of Palestine#Legal status|Legal status]] section below.

==Arab state under the UN Partition Plan==
[[File:1947-UN-Partition-Plan-1949-Armistice-Comparison.png|thumb|Claimed area of Palestine by United Nations (Green and Light Coral color)]]
The termination of the Palestine Mandate gave the Arabs of Palestine the opportunity to exercise their right to self-determination.

In 1946, leaders of the Zionist movement in the US sought the postponement of a determination of the application by [[Transjordan]] for United Nations membership until the status of Mandate Palestine as a whole was determined.<ref>[http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1946v01&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=411 Foreign relations of the United States, 1946. General; the United Nations Volume I, Page 411]</ref> However, at its final session the League of Nations recognized the independence of Transjordan, with the agreement of Britain.

The [[United Nations Special Committee on Palestine]] (UNSCOP), which was formed to recommend a solution to Britain's dilemma in Palestine, subsequently reported that the proposed Arab state would not be economically viable. The report indicated that the Arab state would be forced to call for financial assistance "from international institutions in the way of loans for expansion of education, public health and other vital social services of a non-self-supporting nature." A technical note from the Secretariat explained that without some redistribution of customs from the Jewish state, Arab Palestine would not be economically viable. The Committee was satisfied that the proposed Jewish State and the City of Jerusalem would be viable.<ref>United Nations Special Committee on Palestine Report to the General Assembly, A/364, 3 September 1947, "A TECHNICAL NOTE ON THE VIABILITY OF THE PROPOSED PARTITION STATES PREPARED BY THE SECRETARIAT" and [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1947v05&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=1167 Foreign relations of the United States, 1947. The Near East and Africa Volume V, Page 1167]</ref>

Jewish leaders including Nahum Goldmann, Rabbi Abba Silver, Moshe Shertok, and David Ben Gurion proposed in 1946 to US officials a union between Arab Palestine and Transjordan.<ref>For example:
*Dr Goldmann, [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1946v07&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=680 Foreign relations of the United States, 1946. The Near East and Africa, Volume VII, Page 680]
*Mr. Shertok, [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1948v05p2&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=945 Foreign relations of the United States, 1948. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Part 2, Page 945]
*Rabbi Silver, Foreign relations of the United States, 1948. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa (in two parts)
Volume V, Part 2, Page 900
*Mr. Ben Gurion Foreign relations of the United States, 1949. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume VI, Page 927</ref> In December 1948 the Secretary of State authorized the US Consul in Amman to advise King Abdullah and the officials of Transjordan that the US accepted the principles contained in the resolutions of the [[Jericho Conference]], and that the US viewed incorporation with Transjordan as the logical disposition of Arab Palestine.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1948. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Part 2, Page 1706</ref> The United States subsequently extended de jure recognition to the Government of Transjordan and the Government of Israel on the same day, January 31, 1949.<ref name="autogenerated1949"/> The 1950 State Department Country Report on Jordan said that King Abdullah had taken successive steps to incorporate the area of Central Palestine into Jordan and described the Jordanian Parliament resolution concerning the union of Central Palestine with Jordan. The report said the US had privately advised the British and French Foreign Ministers that it had approved the action, and that "it represented a logical development of the situation which took place as a result of a free expression of the will of the people."<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1950. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Page 1096</ref> The major problems of concern to the United States were the establishment of peaceful and friendly relations between Israel and Jordan and the successful absorption into the polity and economy of Jordan of Arab Palestine, its inhabitants, and the-bulk of the refugees located there.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1950. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Page 1095</ref>

The 1947 [[1947 UN Partition Plan|United Nations Partition Plan]] proposed a division of Mandate Palestine between an Arab and a Jewish state, with [[Jerusalem]] and the surrounding area to be a ''[[corpus separatum]]'' under a special international regime. The regions allotted to the proposed Arab state included what would become the Gaza Strip and almost all of what would become the West Bank, as well as other areas.

The Partition Plan was passed by the UN General Assembly on November 1947. The Partition Plan was accepted by the Jewish leadership, but rejected by the Arab leaders. The Arab League threatened to take military measures to prevent the partition of Palestine and to ensure the national rights of the Palestinian Arab population. One day before the expiration of the British Mandate for Palestine, on 14 May 1948, Israel declared its independence within the borders of the Jewish State set out in the Partition Plan. US President Harry Truman recognized the State of Israel ''de facto'' the following day. The Arab countries declared war on the newly formed [[State of Israel]] heralding the start of the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]].

After the war, which Palestinians call the Catastrophe, the [[1949 Armistice Agreements]] established the separation lines between the combatants, leaving Israel in control of some of the areas which had been designated for the Arab state under the Partition Plan, Transjordan in control of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Egypt in control of the Gaza Strip and Syria in control of the Himmah Area.

In 1978 the U.S. State Department published a memorandum of conversation held on June 5, 1950 between Mr. Stuart W. Rockwell of the Office of African and Near Eastern Affairs and Abdel Monem Rifai, a Counselor of the Jordan Legation: Mr. Rifai asked when the United States was going to recognize the union of Arab Palestine and Jordan. Mr. Rockwell explained the Department's position, stating that it was not the custom of the United States to issue formal statements of recognition every time a foreign country changed its territorial area. The union of Arab Palestine and Jordan had been brought about as a result of the will of the people and the US accepted the fact that Jordanian sovereignty had been extended to the new area. Mr. Rifai said he had not realized this and that he was very pleased to learn that the US did in fact recognize the union.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1950. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa, Volume V (1950), Page 921</ref>

The US advised the Arab states that the US attitude regarding Israel had been clearly stated in the UN by Dr. Jessup on November 20, 1949. He said that the US supported Israeli claims to the boundaries set forth in the UN General Assembly resolution. However, the US believed that if Israel sought to retain additional territory in Palestine it should give the Arabs other territory as compensation.<ref>See for example Foreign relations of the United States, 1949. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume VI, Page 712</ref> The Israelis agreed that the boundaries were negotiable, but did not agree to the principle of compensation as a precondition. Mr. Eban stressed that it was undesirable to undermine what had already been accomplished by the armistice agreements, and maintained that Israel held no territory wrongfully, since her occupation of the areas had been sanctioned by the armistice agreements, as had the occupation of the territory in Palestine held by the Arab states.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1949. The Near East, South Asia, and Africa, Volume VI, 1149</ref>

==The Crisis of 1967==
In November 1966, the Israeli Defense Forces conducted a raid into Jordan and carried out operations against the West Bank village of Samu in response to several attacks. President Johnson's personal assistant, R. W. Komer, sent word to Prime Minister Eshkol 'that Israel was "going too far" in striking Jordan and had better lay off'. He told Israeli Ambassador Harmon the Israelis had put in jeopardy the US policy of promoting Arab-Israel stability by subsidizing an independent Jordan. President Johnson's personal assistant, Walt Rostow, agreed and added that the US had spent $500 million to shore up Jordan as a stabilizing factor on Israel's longest border.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XVIII Arab-Israeli Dispute, document numbers 333, 336, and 339.</ref>

On June 9, 1967 Foreign Minister Eban assured US Ambassador Goldberg that Israel was not seeking territorial aggrandizement and had no "colonial" aspirations.<ref>Foreign Relations of the United States Volume XIX, Arab-Israeli Crisis and War, 1967, page 386, Document number 227</ref> Secretary Rusk stressed to the Government of Israel that no settlement with Jordan would be accepted by the world community unless it gave Jordan some special position in the Old City of Jerusalem. The US also assumed Jordan would receive the bulk of the West Bank as that was regarded as Jordanian territory.<ref>Foreign Relations of the United States Volume XIX, Arab-Israeli Crisis and War, 1967, page 765-766, Document 411</ref>

On November 3, 1967 US Ambassador Goldberg, accompanied by Mr. Sisco and Mr. Pedersen, called on King Hussein of Jordan. Goldberg said the US was committed to the principle of political independence and territorial integrity and was ready to reaffirm it bilaterally and publicly in the Security Council resolution. According to Goldberg, the US believed in territorial integrity, withdrawal, and recognition of secure boundaries. Goldberg said the Principle of territorial integrity has two important sub-principles, there must be a withdrawal to recognized and secure frontiers for all countries, not necessarily the old armistice lines, and there must be mutuality in adjustments.<ref>Foreign Relations of the United States Volume XIX, Arab-Israeli Crisis and War, 1967, Page 981, Document 501</ref>

Walt Rostow advised President Johnson, that Secretary Rusk had explained to Mr Eban that US support for secure permanent frontiers doesn't mean we support territorial changes.<ref>Foreign Relations of the United States Volume XIX, Arab-Israeli Crisis and War, 1967, Page 942, Document 487</ref> The record of a meeting between Under Secretary of State Eugene Rostow and Israeli Ambassador Harmon stated that Rostow made clear the US view that there should be movement from General Armistice Agreements to conditions of peace and that this would involve some adjustments of Armistice lines as foreseen in the Armistice Agreements. Rostow told Harmon that he had already stressed to Foreign Minister Eban that the US expected the thrust of the settlement would be toward security and demilitarization arrangements rather than toward major changes in the Armistice lines. Harmon said the Israeli position was that Jerusalem should be an open city under unified administration but that the Jordanian interest in Jerusalem could be met through arrangements including "sovereignty". Rostow said the US government assumed (and Harman confirmed) that despite public statements to the contrary, the Government of Israel position on Jerusalem was that which Eban, Harman, and Evron had given several times, that Jerusalem was negotiable.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XVIII Arab-Israeli Dispute, page 996, Document 505</ref>

Ambassador Goldberg briefed King Hussein on US assurances regarding territorial integrity. Goldberg said the US did not view Jordan as a country that consisted only of the East Bank, and that the US was prepared to support a return of the West Bank to Jordan with minor boundary rectifications. The US would use its influence to obtain compensation to Jordan for any territory it would be required to give up. Finally, although as a matter of policy the US did not agree with Jordan's position on Jerusalem, nor with the Israeli position on Jerusalem, the US was prepared to use its influence to obtain for Jordan a role in Jerusalem.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XVIII Arab-Israeli Dispute, Page 998, Document 506</ref> Secretary Rusk advised President Johnson that he confirmed Golberg's pledge regarding territorial integrity to King Hussein.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XVIII Arab-Israeli Dispute, page 1012, document 513</ref>

During a subsequent meeting between President Johnson, King Hussein, and Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Hussein said the phraseology of the resolution calling for withdrawal from occupied territories could be interpreted to mean that the Egyptians should withdraw from Gaza and the Jordanians should withdraw from the West Bank. He said this possibility was evident from a speech given by Prime Minister Eshkol in which it had been claimed that both Gaza and the West Bank had been "occupied territory". The President agreed, and promised he would talk to Ambassador Goldberg about inserting Israel in that clause. Ambassador Goldberg told King Hussein that after taking into account legitimate Arab concerns and suggestions, the US would be willing to add the word "Israeli" before "Armed Forces" in first operative paragraph.<ref>Foreign relations of the United States, 1964–1968, Volume XVIII Arab-Israeli Dispute, Page 1015, Document 515 and Page 1026, Document 521</ref>

In a speech delivered on September 1, 1982 President Reagan called for a settlement freeze and continued to support full Palestinian autonomy in political union with Jordan. He also said that "It is the United States' position that – in return for peace – the withdrawal provision of Resolution 242 applies to all fronts, including the West Bank and Gaza."<ref>see [http://www.aipac.org/Publications/SourceMaterialsExecutiveBranchInitiatives/The_Reagan_Plan.pdf The Reagan Plan]</ref>

After the events of [[Black September in Jordan]], the rift between the Palestinian leadership and the Kingdom of Jordan continued to widen. The Arab League affirmed the right of the Palestinian people to ''self-determination'' and called on all the Arab states, including Jordan, to undertake to defend Palestinian national unity and not to interfere in internal Palestinian affairs. The Arab League also 'affirmed the right of the Palestinian people to establish an independent national authority under the command of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people in any Palestinian territory that is liberated.' King Ḥussein dissolved the Jordanian parliament. Half of its members had been West Bank representatives. He renounced Jordanian claims to the West Bank, and allowed the PLO to assume responsibility as the Provisional Government of Palestine. The Kingdom of Jordan, Egypt, and Syria no longer act as the legitimate representatives of the Palestinian people, or their territory.<ref>see [http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/d80185e9f0c69a7b85256cbf005afeac/63d9a930e2b428df852572c0006d06b8!OpenDocument PLO sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people] and [http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/306128/Jordan/23336/Renouncing-claims-to-the-West-Bank Jordan under King Ḥussein » Renouncing claims to the West Bank]</ref>

==1988 Declaration==
{{See also|Proposals for a Palestinian state#Declaration of the state in 1988}}
The [[Palestinian Declaration of Independence]] was approved by the [[Palestinian National Council]] (PNC) in [[Algiers]] on November 15, 1988, by a vote of 253 in favour 46 against and 10 abstentions. It was read by [[Yasser Arafat]] at the closing session of the 19th PNC to a standing ovation.<ref name=Sayighp624>Sayigh, 1999, p. 624.</ref> Upon completing the reading of the declaration, Arafat, as [[Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization]] assumed the title of "President of Palestine."<ref name=Silverburg198>Silverburg, 2002, p. 198.</ref>

Referring to "the historical injustice inflicted on the Palestinian Arab people resulting in their dispersion and depriving them of their [[right to self-determination]]," the declaration recalled the [[Treaty of Lausanne]] (1923) and [[UN General Assembly Resolution 181]] as supporting the rights of Palestinians and Palestine. The declaration then proclaims a "State of Palestine on our Palestinian territory with its capital [[Jerusalem]]".<ref name=Silverburgp42>Silverburg, 2002, p. 42.</ref><ref name=Quigleyp212/> The borders of the declared State of Palestine were not specified. The population of the state was referred to by the statement: "The State of Palestine is the state of Palestinians wherever they may be". The state was defined as an Arab country by the statement: "The State of Palestine is an Arab state, an integral and indivisible part of the Arab nation". The declaration was accompanied by a PNC call for multilateral negotiations on the basis of [[UN Security Council Resolution 242]]. This call was later termed "the Historic Compromise",<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.nad-plo.org/news-updates/Historic%20Compromise%20FAQs%20FINAL.pdf |title=The Historic Compromise: The Palestinian Declaration of Independence and the Twenty-Year Struggle for a Two-State Solution |author=PLO Negotiations Affairs Department |date=13 November 2008 |accessdate=6 February 2010}}</ref> as it implied acceptance of the "two-state solution", namely that it no longer questioned the legitimacy of the [[State of Israel]].<ref name=Quigleyp212>Quigley, 2005, p. 212.</ref> The PNC's political communiqué accompanying the declaration called only for withdrawal from "[[East Jerusalem|Arab Jerusalem]]" and the other "Arab territories occupied."<ref>[http://www.al-bab.com/arab/docs/pal/pal4.htm Political communique] Palestine National Council. Algiers, November 15, 1988. Official translation.</ref> [[Yasser Arafat]]'s statements in Geneva a month later<ref>[http://mondediplo.com/focus/mideast/arafat88-en ''Yasser Arafat, Speech at UN General Assembly Geneva, General Assembly 13 December 1988''] – [[Le Monde Diplomatique]]</ref><ref>[http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/Terrorism/plotstate1.html ''Arafat Clarifies Statement to Satisfy U.S. Conditions for Dialogue, 14 December 1988''] – [[Jewish Virtual Library]]</ref> were accepted by the United States as sufficient to remove the ambiguities it saw in the declaration and to fulfill the longheld conditions for open dialogue with the [[United States]].<ref>{{cite journal |last=Rabie |first=Mohamed|date=Summer,1992|title=The U.S.-PLO Dialogue: The Swedish Connection |journal= Journal of Palestine Studies|volume=21|issue=4|pages=54–66|id=|url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0377-919X(199222)21%3A4%3C54%3ATUDTSC%3E2.0.CO%3B2-Q |accessdate= 2007-07-01 |doi=10.1525/jps.1992.21.4.00p0140g |ref=harv}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author=Quandt, William B. | authorlink = William B. Quandt |title=Peace Process: American Diplomacy and the Arab-Israeli conflict since 1967 |publisher=Brookings Institution |location=Washington |year=1993 |pages=367–375, 494 |isbn=0-520-08390-3}}</ref>

As a result of the declaration, the [[United Nations General Assembly]] (UNGA) convened, inviting Yasser Arafat, Chairman of the PLO to give an address. An UNGA resolution was adopted "acknowledging the proclamation of the State of Palestine by the Palestine National Council on 15 November 1988," and it was further decided that "the designation 'Palestine' should be used in place of the designation 'Palestine Liberation Organization' in the [[United Nations]] system." One hundred and four states voted for this resolution, forty-four abstained, and two – the [[United States]] and [[Israel]] – voted against.<ref name=Quigley/> By mid-December, 75 states had recognized Palestine, rising to 89 states by February 1989.<ref name=Kassimp49>Kassim, 1997, [http://books.google.ca/books?id=LoRru2_pAkQC&pg=PA49&dq=state+recognition+palestine+89+1988&lr=#v=onepage&q=&f=false p. 49].</ref>

==Palestinian Authority==
{{main|Palestinian National Authority}}

Under the terms of the [[Oslo Accords]] signed between Israel and the PLO, the latter assumed control over the [[Jericho]] area of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip on 17 May 1994. On September 28, 1995, following the signing of the [[Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip|Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and Gaza Strip]], Israeli military forces withdrew from the West Bank towns of [[Nablus]], [[Ramallah]], [[Jericho]], [[Jenin]], [[Tulkarem]], [[Qalqilya]] and [[Bethlehem]]. In December 1995, the PLO also assumed responsibility for civil administration in 17 areas in [[Hebron]].<ref name=Eurp905>Europa World Publications, 2004, p. 905.</ref> While the PLO assumed these responsibilities as a result of Oslo, a new temporary interim administrative body was set up as a result of the Accords to carry out these functions on the ground: the [[Palestinian National Authority]] (PNA).

An analysis outlining the relationship between the PLO, the PNA (or PA), Palestine and Israel in light of the interim arrangements set out in the Oslo Accords begins by stating that, "Palestine may best be described as a transitional association between the PA and the PLO." It goes on to explain that this transitional association accords the PA responsibility for local government and the PLO responsibility for representation of the Palestinian people in the international arena, while prohibiting it from concluding international agreements that affect the status of the [[Occupied Palestinian territory|occupied territories]]. This situation is said to be accepted by the Palestinian population insofar as it is viewed as a temporary arrangement.<ref name=Dajanip121>Dajani in Brownlie et al., 1999, p. 121.</ref>

In March 2008 it was reported that the PA was working to increase the number of countries that recognize Palestine and that a PA representative had signed a bilateral agreement between the State of Palestine and Costa Rica.<ref name=Forward>See Perelman, Marc, Forward, March 07, 2008, Costa Rica Opens Official Ties With ‘State of Palestine’ [http://www.forward.com/articles/12761/]</ref> A recent Al-Haq position paper said the reality is that the PA has entered into various agreements with international organizations and states. These instances of foreign relations undertaken by the PA signify that the Interim Agreement is part of a larger on-going peace process, and that the restrictions on the foreign policy operations of the PA conflict with the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, now a norm with a nature of jus cogens, which includes a right to engage in international relations with other peoples.<ref name="autogenerated2">Al-Haq Position Paper on Issues Arising from the Palestinian Authority’s Submission of a Declaration to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Under Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute (December 14, 2009)</ref>

==Governorates structure==
[[File:Palestine election map.PNG|thumb|right|180px|[[Governorates of the Palestinian National Authority|Governorates of Palestine]]]]
{{Main|Governorates of the Palestinian National Authority}}

The Constitution of the League of Arab States says the existence and independence of Palestine cannot be questioned de jure even though the outward signs of this independence have remained veiled as a result of force majeure.<ref>Henry G. Schermers and Niels M. Blokker, International Institutional Law, Hotei, 1995–2004, ISBN 9004138285, page 51</ref> The League supervised the Egyptian trusteeship of the Palestinian government in Gaza after the termination of the British Mandate and secured assurances from Jordan that the 1950 Act of Union was "without prejudice to the final settlement".<ref name=WhitemanII/><ref>See paragraph 2.20 of the Written Statement submitted by the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan [http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1559.pdf]</ref>

By the 1988 declaration, the PNC empowered its central council to form a [[government-in-exile]] when appropriate, and called upon its executive committee to perform the duties of the government-in-exile until its establishment.<ref name=Sayighp624>Sayigh, 1999, p. 624.</ref>

Under the terms of the [[Oslo Accords]] signed between Israel and the PLO, the latter assumed control over the [[Jericho]] area of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip on 17 May 1994. On September 28, 1995, following the signing of the [[Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip|Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and Gaza Strip]], Israeli military forces withdrew from the West Bank towns of [[Nablus]], [[Ramallah]],, [[Jericho]], [[Jenin]], [[Tulkarem]], [[Qalqilya]] and [[Bethlehem]]. In December 1995, the PLO also assumed responsibility for civil administration in 17 areas in [[Hebron]].<ref name=Eurp905>Europa World Publications, 2004, p. 905.</ref> While the PLO assumed these responsibilities as a result of Oslo, a new temporary interim administrative body was set up as a result of the Accords to carry out these functions on the ground: the [[Palestinian National Authority]] (PNA).

An analysis outlining the relationship between the PLO, the PNA (or PA), Palestine and Israel in light of the interim arrangements set out in the Oslo Accords begins by stating that, "Palestine may best be described as a transitional association between the PA and the PLO." It goes on to explain that this transitional association accords the PA responsibility for local government and the PLO responsibility for representation of the Palestinian people in the international arena, while prohibiting it from concluding international agreements that affect the status of the [[Occupied Palestinian territory|occupied territories]]. This situation is said to be accepted by the Palestinian population insofar as it is viewed as a temporary arrangement.<ref name=Dajanip121>Dajani in Brownlie et al., 1999, p. 121.</ref>

In March 2008 it was reported that the PA was working to increase the number of countries that recognize Palestine and that a PA representative had signed a bilateral agreement between the State of Palestine and Costa Rica.<ref name=Forward>See Perelman, Marc, Forward, March 07, 2008, Costa Rica Opens Official Ties With ‘State of Palestine’ [http://www.forward.com/articles/12761/]</ref> A recent Al-Haq position paper said the reality is that the PA has entered into various agreements with international organizations and states. These instances of foreign relations undertaken by the PA signify that the Interim Agreement is part of a larger on-going peace process, and that the restrictions on the foreign policy operations of the PA conflict with the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, now a norm with a nature of jus cogens, which includes a right to engage in international relations with other peoples.<ref name="autogenerated2"/>

==Population==
{{Main|Palestinian people}}

==Exodus==
===1948===
{{Main|1948 Palestinian exodus}}

===1967===
{{Main|1967 Palestinian exodus}}

==Legal status==
There are a wide variety of views regarding the status of the State of Palestine, both among the states of the international community and among legal scholars. The existence of a state of Palestine, although controversial, is nonetheless a reality in the opinions of the many states that have established bilateral diplomatic relations.<ref>Segal, Jerome M., Chapter 9, "The State of Palestine, The Question of Existence", in Philosophical perspectives on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Tomis Kapitan editor, M.E. Sharpe, 1997, ISBN 1563248786</ref><ref name=Boyle>Boyle, Francis A. Creation of the State of Palestine; 1 Eur. J. Int'l L. 301 (1990)</ref><ref>Kearney, Michael and Denayer, Stijn, Al-Haq Position Paper on Issues Arising from the Palestinian Authority’s Submission of a Declaration to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Under Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute (December 14, 2009), para 43.a.</ref><ref name="Dugard Op-Ed">See John Dugard, Take the Case, Op-Ed section, New York Times, July 22, 2009 [http://www.nytimes.com/2009/07/23/opinion/23iht-eddugard.html]</ref> A number of publicists and legal experts have noted that the majority of other states have legally recognized the State of Palestine.

===Consequences of the occupation===
After 1967, a number of legal arguments were advanced which dismissed the right of Palestinians to self-determination and statehood. They generally proposed that Palestine was a land void of a legitimate sovereign and supported Israeli claims to the remaining territory of the Palestine Mandate.<ref>Yehuda Z. Blum, The Missing Reversioner: Reflections on the Status of Judea and Samaria, 3 ISR. L. REV. 279, 289–90 (1968)</ref><ref>Eugene V. Rostow, “Palestinian Self-Determination”: Possible Futures for the Unallocated Territories of the Palestine Mandate, 5 YALE J. WORLD PUB. ORD. 147 (1980)</ref> Historian and journalist, [[Gershom Gorenberg]], says that outside of the pro-settlement community in Israel, these positions are considered quirky. He says that, while the Israeli government has used them for [[Public relations|PR]] purposes abroad, it takes entirely different positions when arguing real legal cases before the Israeli Supreme Court. In 2005 Israel decided to dismantle all Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip and four in the northern West Bank. Gorenberg notes, the government's decision was challenged in the Supreme Court by settlers, and the government won the case by noting the settlements were in territory whose legal status was that of 'belligerent territory'. The government argued that the settlers should have known the settlements were only temporary.<ref>See Gershom Gorenberg, The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967–1977, Macmillan, 2007, ISBN 0805082417, page 363 and South Jerusalem On Settlement Legality, 24 November 2008 [http://southjerusalem.com/2008/11/on-settlement-legality-with-thanks-to-our-readers/]</ref>

Most UN member states questioned the claim that Israel held better title to the land than the inhabitants, and stressed that statehood was an inalienable right of the Palestinian people.<ref>Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People [http://www.un.org/Depts/dpa/qpal/committee.htm]</ref> Legal experts, like David John Ball, concluded that "the Palestinians, based on the principles of self-determination and the power of the U.N., appear to hold better title to the territory."<ref>Ball, David John, 79 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 990 (2004), Toss the Travaux – Application of the Fourth Geneva Convention to the Middle East Conflict – A Modern (Re)Assessment</ref> The International Court of Justice subsequently reaffirmed the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and the prohibition under customary and conventional international law against acquisition of territory by war.

The Israeli Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, cited a case involving Gaza and said that "The Judea and Samaria areas are held by the State of Israel in belligerent occupation. The legal representative of the state in the area is the military commander. He is not the sovereign in the territory held in belligerent occupation. His power is granted him by public international law regarding belligerent occupation. The legal meaning of this view is twofold: first, Israeli law does not apply in these areas. They have not been "annexed" to Israel. Second, the legal regime which applies in these areas is determined by public international law regarding belligerent occupation."<ref name=Maraabe>[http://elyon1.court.gov.il/files_eng/04/570/079/a14/04079570.a14.pdf HCJ 7957/04 Mara’abe v. The Prime Minister of Israel]</ref>

The court said most Israelis do not have ownership of the land on which they built their houses and businesses in the territory "They acquired their rights from the military commander, or from persons acting on his behalf. Neither the military commander nor those acting on his behalf are owners of the property, and they cannot transfer rights better than those they have. To the extent that the Israelis built their homes and assets on land which is not private ('state land'), that land is not owned by the military commander. His authority is defined in regulation 55 of The Hague Regulations. . . . The State of Israel acts . . . as the administrator of the state property and as [[usufruct]]uary of it."<ref name=Maraabe/>

===The Declaration and the Act of State Doctrine===
Many states have recognized the State of Palestine since 1988. Under the principles of customary international law, when a government is recognized by another government, recognition is retroactive in effect, and validates all the actions and conduct of the government so recognized from the commencement of its existence.<ref>See for example "The Restatement (Third) Foreign Relations Law of the United States, § 443 "The Act of State Doctrine", Commentary a., RN 3; or Oetjen v. Cent.Leather Co., 246 U.S. 297, 303 (1918)[http://supreme.justia.com/us/246/297/case.html]</ref>

Stephen Talmon notes that many countries have a formal policy of recognizing states, not their governments. In practice, they usually make no formal declarations regarding recognition. He cites several examples including a memorandum on US recognition policy and practice, dated 25 September 1981 which said that recognition would be implied by the US Government's dealings with the new government.<ref name=implied>See Stefan Talmon, Recognition of Governments in International Law: With Particular Reference to Governments in Exile (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998) pages 3–4</ref> Many countries have expressed their intention to enter into relations with the State of Palestine. The United States formally recognized the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a country in 1997 at the request of the Palestinian Authority. At that time it asked the public to take notice of that fact through announcements it placed in the Federal Register.<ref>[http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR-1997-03-14/pdf/97-6434.pdf See the explanatory note in T.D. 97–16]</ref> The USAID West Bank/Gaza,<ref>[http://www.usaid.gov/wbg/home.html USAID West Bank/Gaza]</ref> has been tasked with "state-building" projects in the areas of democracy, governance, resources, and infrastructure. Part of the USAID mission is to "provide flexible and discrete support for implementation of the Quartet Road Map",<ref>[http://www.usaid.gov/policy/budget/cbj2005/ane/pdf/294-001.pdf See the USAID policy and budget statement]</ref> an internationally backed plan which calls for the progressive development of a viable Palestinian State in the West Bank and Gaza. The EU has announced similar external relations programs with the Palestinian Authority.<ref>See the EU statement on external relations with the Palestinian Authority [http://ec.europa.eu/external_relations/occupied_palestinian_territory/index_en.htm]</ref>

The view of the [[European Union|European states]], which did not extend full recognition was expressed by French President [[François Mitterrand]] who stated: "Many European countries are not ready to recognize a Palestine state. Others think that between recognition and non-recognition there are significant degrees; I am among these."<ref name=Quigley/>
But, after the PLO recognized the state of Israel, Mitterrand welcomed the PLO leader, Yasser Arafat, in Paris, in May 1989.<ref>[[Jean-Pierre Filiu]], "Mitterrand and the Palestinians", Journal of Palestine Studies, 150, winter 2009, p.34.</ref>

===Decisions of international and national tribunals===
The U.S. State Department ''Digest of International Law'' says that the terms of the [[Treaty of Lausanne]] provided for the application of the principles of state succession to the [[League of Nations mandate#Class A mandates|"A" Mandates]]. The [[Treaty of Versailles]] (1920) provisionally recognized the former Ottoman communities as independent nations. It also required Germany to recognize the disposition of the former Ottoman territories and to recognize the new states laid down within their boundaries. The [[Treaty of Lausanne]] required the newly created states that acquired the territory to pay annuities on the Ottoman public debt, and to assume responsibility for the administration of concessions that had been granted by the Ottomans. A dispute regarding the status of the territories was settled by an Arbitrator appointed by the Council of the [[League of Nations]]. It was decided that [[Palestine]] and [[Transjordan]] were newly created states according to the terms of the applicable post-war treaties. In its ''Judgment No. 5, The Mavrommatis Palestine Concessions'', the [[Permanent Court of International Justice]] also decided that [[Palestine]] was responsible as the successor state for concessions granted by Ottoman authorities. The Courts of Palestine and Great Britain decided that title to the properties shown on the Ottoman Civil list had been ceded to the government of Palestine as an allied successor state.<ref name="Whiteman"/>

===State succession===
A legal analysis by the [[International Court of Justice]] noted that the [[Covenant of the League of Nations]] had provisionally recognized the communities of Palestine as independent nations. The mandate simply marked a transitory period, with the aim and object of leading the mandated
territory to become an independent self-governing State.<ref name="Ormsby-Gore">See the Statement of the Principal Accredited Representative, Hon. W. Ormsby-Gore, C.330.M.222, Mandate for Palestine – Minutes of the Permanent Mandates Commission/League of Nations 32nd session, 18 August 1937, [http://domino.un.org/UNISPAL.NSF/0145a8233e14d2b585256cbf005af141/fd05535118aef0de052565ed0065ddf7?OpenDocument]</ref> Judge Higgins explained that the Palestinian people are entitled to their territory, to exercise self-determination, and to have their own State."<ref>See the Judgment in "Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory" [http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1681.pdf]</ref> The Court said that specific guarantees regarding freedom of movement and access to the Holy Sites contained in the [[Treaty of Berlin (1878)]] had been preserved under the terms of the Palestine Mandate and a chapter of the [[United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine]].<ref>See paragraphs 49, 70, and 129 of the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion, Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory [http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1671.pdf] and PAUL J. I. M. DE WAART (2005). International Court of Justice Firmly Walled in the Law of Power in the Israeli–Palestinian Peace Process. Leiden Journal of International Law, 18 , pp 467–487, doi:10.1017/S0922156505002839</ref>

Article 62 (LXII) of the Treaty of Berlin, 13 July 1878<ref>[http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1878berlin.html See Article 62 (LXII) of the Treaty of Berlin]</ref> dealt with religious freedom and civil and political rights in all parts of the Ottoman Empire.<ref>See Defending the Rights of Others, by Carol Fink, Cambridge University, 2006, ISBN 0-521-02994-5, page 28</ref> The guarantees have frequently been referred to as "religious rights" or "minority rights". However, the guarantees included a prohibition against discrimination in civil and political matters. Difference of religion could not be alleged against any person as a ground for exclusion or incapacity in matters relating to the enjoyment of civil or political rights, admission to public employments, functions, and honors, or the exercise of the various professions and industries, "in any locality whatsoever."

The resolution of the San Remo Conference contained a safeguarding clause for all of those rights. The conference accepted the terms of the Mandate with reference to Palestine, on the understanding that there was inserted in the process-verbal a legal undertaking by the Mandatory Power that it would not involve the surrender of the rights hitherto enjoyed by the non-Jewish communities in Palestine.<ref>See Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, The Paris Peace Conference, 1919, Page 94 [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/FRUS/FRUS-idx?type=goto&id=FRUS.FRUS1919Parisv13&isize=M&submit=Go+to+page&page=94]</ref> The draft mandates for Mesopotamia and Palestine, and all of the post-war peace treaties contained clauses for the protection of minorities. The mandates invoked the compulsory jurisdiction of the Permanent Court of International Justice in the event of any disputes.<ref>See Summary of the work of the League of Nations, January 1920 – March 1922, League of Nations Union, 1922, page 4 [http://www.archive.org/details/summaryofworkofl00leagiala]</ref>

Article 28 of the Mandate required that those rights be safeguarded in perpetuity, under international guarantee.<ref name="Ormsby-Gore"/> The General Assembly's ''Plan for the Future Government of Palestine'' placed those rights under UN protection as part of a [[Minority Treaties|minority protection plan]].<ref>It was cataloged during a review of Minority Rights Treaties conducted in 1950: see UN Document E/CN.4/367, 7 April 1950. UN GAR 181(II) is also listed in the Table of Treaties, starting at Page xxxviii, of Self-determination and National Minorities, Oxford Monographs in International Law, Thomas D. Musgrave, Oxford University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-19-829898-6</ref> It required that they be acknowledged in a Declaration, embodied in the fundamental laws of the states, and in their Constitutions. The partition plan also contained provisions that bound the new states to international agreements and conventions to which Palestine had become a party and held them responsible for its financial obligations.<ref>See UN GA Resolution 181(II), November 29, 1947, Section C., Chapters 1–4 [http://www.yale.edu/lawweb/avalon/un/res181.htm]</ref> The Declarations of the Independent State of Israel and the Independent State of Palestine acknowledged the protected rights and were accepted as being in line with UN resolution 181(II).<ref>Mr Eban acknowledged the undertakings contained in resolution 181(II) and 194(III) with regard to religious and minority rights and the internationalization of Jerusalem during the Ad Hoc Committee hearings on Israel's application for membership in the United Nations. His declarations and explanations were noted in text of General Assembly resolution 273 (III), 11 May 1949, and UN documents A/AC.24/SR.45, 48, 50 and 51; The fact that Declaration of the State of Palestine, supplied by the Palestine National Council, was accepted as being in line with General Assembly resolution 181(II) was noted in General Assembly resolution 43/177, 15 December 1988</ref>

===Opinions of officials and legal scholars===
Jacob Robinson was a legal advisor to the United Nations delegation of the Jewish Agency for Palestine during the special session of the General Assembly in 1947.<ref>See The Life, Times and Work of Jokubas Robinzonas – Jacob Robinson [http://hsozkult.geschichte.hu-berlin.de/termine/id=8048]; and Palestine and the United Nations: prelude to solution, By Jacob Robinson, Greenwood Press Reprint; New ed of 1947 ed edition (September 28, 1971), ISBN 0-8371-5986-5</ref> He advised the Zionist Executive that the provisional states had come into existence as a result of the resolution of November 29, 1947.<ref>See the Minutes of the People's Council, Palestine Yearbook of International Law, Vol 4, By Anis F. Kassim, Kluwer Law International (June 1, 1988), ISBN 90-411-0341-4, page 279</ref>

L.C. Green explained that "recognition of statehood is a matter of discretion, it is open to any existing state to accept as a state any entity it wishes, regardless of the existence of territory or an established government."<ref>See Israel Yearbook on Human Rights, 1989, Yoram Dinstein, Mala Tabory eds., Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1990, ISBN 0-7923-0450-0, page 135-136 [http://books.google.com/books?id=5okNqth8I9wC&pg=PA135&lpg=PA135&dq=t&source=bl&ots=ARGGNDm7G-&sig=1r1ORvymWmZJO16sZPGolLaDRPs&hl=en&ei=C8EUSqe8EYK_lAeww5HfCw&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=5#PPA135,M1]</ref>

Alex Takkenberg writes that while "[...] there is no doubt that the entity 'Palestine' should be considered a state ''[[in statu nascendi]]'' and although it is increasingly likely that the ongoing peace process will eventually culminate in the establishment of a Palestinian state, it is premature to conclude that statehood, as defined by international law, is at present (spring 1997) firmly established."<ref name=Takkenbergp181>Takkenberg, 1998, p. 181.</ref> Referring to the four criteria of statehood, as outlined in the 1933 [[Montevideo Convention]] – that is, a permanent population, a defined territory, government and the capacity to enter into relations with other states – Takkenberg states that the entity known as Palestine does not fully satisfy this criteria.<ref name=Takkenbergp181/>

Conversely [[John V. Whitbeck]], who served as an advisor to the Palestinian negotiation team during negotiations with Israel, writes that "[...] the State of Palestine already exists," and that when, "Judged by these customary criteria [those of the Montevideo Convention], the State of Palestine is on at least as firm a legal footing as the State of Israel." He continues: "The weak link in Palestine's claim to already exist as a state was, until recently, the fourth criterion, "effective control. [...] Yet a Palestinian executive and [[Palestinian Legislative Council|legislature]], democratically elected with the enthusiastic approval of the international community, now exercises 'effective control' over a portion of Palestinian territory in which the great majority of the state's population lives. It can no longer be seriously argued that Palestine's claim to exist falls at the fourth and final hurdle."<ref name=Whitbeck>{{cite journal|volume=3|issue=2|year=1996|title=The Palestinian State Exists|url=http://www.pij.org/details.php?id=544|accessdate=2009-08-05|journal=Palestine-Israel Journal of Politics, Economic and Culture|ref=harv}}</ref>

For [[John Quigley]] Palestine's existence as a state predates the 1988 declaration. Tracing Palestine's status as an international entity back to the collapse of the [[Ottoman Empire]] after [[World War I]], he recalls that the [[Palestine Mandate]] (1918–1948), an arrangement made under Article 22 of the Covenant of the [[League of Nations]], held as its "ultimate objective", the "[[self-determination]] and independence of the people concerned." He says that in explicitly referring to the Covenant, the 1988 declaration was reaffirming an existing Palestinian statehood.<ref>See Silverburg, Sanford R. (2002), "Palestine and International Law: Essays on Politics and Economics", Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co, ISBN 0-7864-1191-0, pages 37–54</ref> Noting that Palestine under the Mandate entered into [[Bilateral treaty|bilateral treaties]], including one with [[Great Britain]], the Mandatory power, he cites this as an example of its "sovereignty" at that time. He also notes the corollary of the [[Stimson Doctrine]] and the customary prohibition on the use of force contained in the Restatement of Foreign Relations Law of the United States, "[a]n entity does not necessarily cease to be a state even if all of its territory has been occupied by a foreign power".<ref name=Quigley/>

Robert Weston Ash says that Quigley’s analysis of the declaration that the Palestinian Authority provided to the International Criminal Court failed to explain a number of key issues. He says the “Palestinian people” to whom sovereignty reverted upon the departure of the British would have
included both Jews and Arabs. He suggests that establishes a colorable Jewish —as well as Arab— claim to all of Palestine which tends to refute Professor Quigley’s contention that there are no other claimants to that territory. Ash says there are segments of Israeli society that continue to view “Judea and Samaria” as areas promised to the Jews by the Balfour Declaration and says that the Geneva Convention is not applicable to Israel's presence in those territories. He cites Yehuda Blum's "Missing Reversioner" and Eugene Rostow's related claim that “The right of the Jewish people to settle in Palestine has never been terminated for the West Bank.”<ref>Robert Weston Ash, [http://www.lawrecord.com/files/36-Rutgers-L-Rec-186.pdf Is Palestine a “state”? A response to Professor John Quigley's article], The Internet Journal of Rutgers School of Law.</ref> Quigley has said that the International Court of Justice findings in the "Wall" case regarding the applicability of the Geneva Convention discredited once and for all, as a legal matter, the ‘missing reversioner’ argument.<ref>See The International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion on the Legality of Israel’s Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Legal Analysis and Potential Consequences, By Susan Akram, John Quigley, Elizabeth Badger, and Rasmus Goksor, page 11 [http://thejerusalemfund.org/ht/a/GetDocumentAction/i/3064]</ref> The International Criminal Court has published a summary of arguments which says that some submissions consider that it is clear that the Palestinian National Authority cannot be regarded as a ‘State’, and that some submit that Palestine is recognized as a State by many States and many institutions. The Court says that a conclusive determination on Palestine's declaration will have to be made by the judges at an appropriate moment.<ref>See the ICC Letter to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, dated 12 January 2010 [http://www.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/FF55CC8D-3E63-4D3F-B502-1DB2BC4D45FF/281439/LettertoUNHC1.pdf]</ref><ref>[http://www2.icc-cpi.int/NR/rdonlyres/74EEE201-0FED-4481-95D4-C8071087102C/279787/QARegistryArticle15.pdf See the ICC Questions and Answers]</ref>

Disputes have arisen as a result of the [[Conflict of laws]] between the Palestinian Authority and Israel. Judgments originating in Israeli Courts are not directly enforceable in the Courts of the Palestinian Authority.<ref>''See Michael M. Karayanni, The Quest For Creative Jurisdiction: The Evolution Of Personal Jurisdiction Doctrine Of Israeli Courts Towards The Palestinian Territories [http://students.law.umich.edu/mjil/article-pdfs/v29n4-karayanni.pdf]''</ref> The District Court of Israel ruled that the Palestinian Authority satisfied the criteria to be legally treated as a sovereign state<ref>See Elon Moreh College Association v. The State of Israel, April 3, 2006; Mis. Civ. P. (Jer) 1008/06, Elon Moreh College Association v. The State of Israel [April 3, 2006]; and Yuval Yoaz, "J'lem court: Palestinian Authority meets criteria to be classed as a sovereign state, Ha'aretz, 24/04/2006, [http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=708424]</ref> The ruling was appealed to the [[Supreme Court of Israel]] which ruled that the Palestinian Authority cannot be defined as a foreign state, since recognizing states is an exclusive authority of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The Supreme Court held that the Palestinian Authority can be granted state immunity on an ad hoc basis when it is warranted by the circumstances.<ref>[http://elyon2.court.gov.il/files/03/600/040/P38/03040600.P38.htm The Israeli Supreme Court ruling in Hebrew]</ref> The Knesset responded to the willingness of the judges to engage in examination of the notion of ‘statehood for the purpose of state immunity’ by adopting a measure that makes it possible to grant sovereign immunity to a ‘political entity that is not a state’ as part of the 2008 Foreign States Immunity Law, Art. 20.<ref>See Ronen, Yael "ICC Jurisdiction Over Acts Committed in the Gaza Strip: Article 12(3) of the ICC Statute and Non-State Entities", Journal of International Criminal Justice, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2010, page 24 [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1530529]</ref>

Stefan Talmon notes that "In international law it is true that one generally recognizes the Government which exercises effective control over a territory. But this is not an absolute rule without exceptions."<ref>See Stefan Talmon, Recognition of Governments in International Law: With Particular Reference to Governments in Exile (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998) page 1</ref> James Crawford notes that despite its prevalence, and inclusion in the statehood criteria found in the Montevideo Convention, effectiveness is not the sole or even the critical criterion for statehood. He cites several examples of annexations and governments that have been recognized despite their lack of a territorial foothold.<ref>See Thomas D. Grant, The Recognition of States: Law and Practice in Debate and Evolution (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1999) page 9</ref> Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu recently expressed a willingness to recognize the State of Palestine if it will agree to forgo taking effective control of its airspace, military defense, and not enter into alliances with Israel's enemies.<ref>[http://enduringamerica.com/2009/06/14/transcript-netanyahu-speech-on-israel-palestine-14-june/ See Transcript: Netanyahu Speech on Israel-Palestine (14 June 2009)]</ref>

In November 2009, Palestinian officials were reported to be preparing the ground for asking for recognition of a Palestinian State from the [[Security Council]]. The state was envisioned to be based on the 1967 [[Green Line (Israel)|Green Line]] as an international border with Israel and East Jerusalem as its capital. The plan was reported to have support from Arab states, Russia and the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon.<ref>[http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1128052.html PA negotiator: We may seek UN recognition of Palestinian state (Haaretz, Nov. 14, 2009)]</ref> The Secretary General said "Today, the State of Israel exists, but the State of Palestine does not." "It is vital that a sovereign State of Palestine is achieved". "This should be on the basis of the 1967 lines with agreed land swaps and a just and agreed solution to the refugee issue."<ref>See "A Sovereign State of Palestine, Vital: UN Chief", 2009-12-01, Xinhua, [http://english.cri.cn/6966/2009/12/01/195s532672.htm]</ref> On 29 January 2010, the representative of Palestine deposited a copy of a letter submitted by Prime Minister Fayyad with the Secretary-General of the United Nations. The letter reported on the decree issued by Mahmoud Abbas, "President of the State of Palestine", concerning the formation of an independent commission to follow up on the Goldstone report in compliance with General Assembly resolution 64/10 of 5 November 2009.<ref>See Report of the Secretary-General, UN Document A/64/651, 4 February 2010 para 5 and Annex II [http://unispal.un.org/pdfs/A64651.pdf]</ref>

Paul De Waart says that the Quartet, particularly the United States, as well as western states, do not consider Palestine to be a state as yet. In their view the statehood of Palestine will be the result of bilateral negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian people. He says they have overlooked that under international law it is not anymore a question of creating but of recognizing the State of Palestine.<ref>International symposium ICJ and Israel’s Wall, The Hague 9 July 2009, Address P.J.I.M. de Waart [http://www.unitedcivilians.nl/documents/docs/Toespraak_Paul_de_Waart.pdf]</ref>

Israeli legal expert Ruth Lapidoth said the Palestinians have already unilaterally declared statehood, and they did not need to do it again. "Recognition of statehood is a political act, and every state has the right to decide for itself whether to recognize another state."<ref>See Lieberman warns against '67 borders, Jerusalem Post, November 14, 2009 [http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1258027286557&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull]</ref>

President Abbas said that the State of Palestine was already in existence and that the current battle is to have the state's border recognized.<ref>[http://www.ynet.co.il/english/articles/0,7340,L-3803622,00.html See Abbas: Palestinian state an existing fact, Ynet, November 11, 2009]</ref>
Jerome Segal wrote about Salam Fayyad's plan for Palestinian statehood. He said lest anyone believe that the 1988 declaration is ancient history, they should read the new Fayyad plan with more care. It cites the 1988 declaration four times, identifying it as having articulated "the foundations of the Palestinian state."<ref>See The 1988 Declaration of Independence [http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1131101.html] and Ending the Occupation, Establishing the State – Program of the Thirteenth Government [http://www.miftah.org/Display.cfm?DocId=20388&CategoryId=8]</ref>

In September 2010 the World Bank released a report which found the Palestinian Authority "well-positioned to establish a state" at any point in the near future. The report highlighted, however, that unless private-sector growth in the Palestinian economy was stimulated, a Palestinian state would remain donor dependent. <ref>[http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N16267019.htm Palestinians able to establish a state - World Bank (Reuters, Sept. 17, 2010)]</ref>

===Statehood for the purposes of the UN Charter===
The UN Charter protects the territorial integrity or political independence of any state from the threat or use of force. [[Philip Jessup]] served as a representative of the United States to the United Nations and as a Judge on the International Court of Justice. During the Security Council hearings regarding Israel's application for membership in the UN, he said:<blockquote>[W]e already have, among the members of the United Nations, some political entities which do not possess full sovereign power to form their own international policy, which traditionally has been considered characteristic of a State. We know however, that neither at San Francisco nor subsequently has the United Nations considered that complete freedom to frame and manage one's own foreign policy was an essential requisite of United Nations membership.... ...The reason for which I mention the qualification of this aspect of the traditional definition of a State is to underline the point that the term "State", as used and applied in Article 4 of the Charter of the United Nations, may not be wholly identical with the term "State" as it is used and defined in classic textbooks on international law."<ref>[http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=S/PV.383 See page 12 of S/PV.383, 2 December 1948]</ref></blockquote>

After Operation Cast Lead, Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad al-Malki said that he and Palestinian Justice Minister Ali Kashan had provided proof to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court that Palestine had been extended legal recognition as a State by 67 other countries, and had bilateral agreements with States in Latin America, Asia, Africa and Europe .<ref>[http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/detaylar.do?load=detay&link=169152 See ICC prosecutor considers ‘Gaza war crimes’ probe]</ref> The General Assembly endorsed the report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict which also called for war crimes investigations.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www2.ohchr.org/english/bodies/hrcouncil/specialsession/9/FactFindingMission.htm |title=United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza conflict |publisher=.ohchr.org |date= |accessdate=2010-08-02}}</ref>

John Dugard has served as Judge ad hoc on the International Court of Justice and as a Special Rapporteur for both the former United Nations Commission on Human Rights and the International Law Commission. He recently wrote that the majority of states recognize the State of Palestine, and that it was only necessary that it be considered a State for the purposes of the Rome Statute for the case to be accepted by the International Criminal Court.<ref name="Dugard Op-Ed"/>

Thomas Grant says that the General Assembly "Definition of Aggression", contained in UN General Assembly Resolution 3314 (XXIX) (1974) provides that any entity (even an illegal one like the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus) which is the target of aggression may be legally termed a State – without regard to recognition or UN membership – and benefit from the protections contained in article 2(4) of the UN Charter regarding the use of force or the threat of force by other states.<ref>See [http://books.google.com/books?id=GAQ8vIJE8_QC&lpg=PR3&client=&pg=PA21 The recognition of states, By Thomas D. Grant, page 21]</ref> The UN Treaty Organization says that portions of the General Assembly's definition have been judged to be declarative of customary international law by the International Court of Justice.<ref>See Definition of Aggression, General Assembly resolution 3314 (XXIX), 14 December 1974 [http://untreaty.un.org/cod/avl/ha/da/da.html]</ref>

== International recognition ==
{{See also|List of diplomatic missions of Palestine}}
[[File:Palestine-recognition-map.png|right|thumb|500px|Map showing nations which have recognised or have special diplomatic arrangements with the State of Palestine or other Palestinian delegation.]]
The United Nations has recognized the permanent sovereignty of the Palestinian people in the Occupied [[Palestinian territories|Palestinian Territory]], including East Jerusalem as a matter of international law. General Assembly resolution 64/185, 21 December 2009 was adopted by a vote of 165 in favor to 8 against, with 7 abstentions. The right of permanent sovereignty over natural resources is a "valid norm of international law."<ref>See Gerhard Brehme, Souveranitat der jungen National-staaten uber Naturreichtumer [Sovereignty of the Young Nation-States over Natural Resources] 71, 266 (1967)</ref> Franz Perrez wrote that "The principle of permanent sovereignty over natural resources is a fundamental principle of contemporary international law. It emerged in the 1950s during the process of decolonization as a basic constituent of the right to self-determination and an essential and inherent element of state sovereignty."<ref>The other authorities cited in Franz Xaver Perrez, "The Relationship between "Permanent Sovereignty" and the Obligation Not to Cause Transboundary Environmental Damage," Environmental Law 26.4 (1996) are Kamal Hossain, Introduction to Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources in International Law at ix (Kamal Hossain & Subrata Roy Chowdhury eds., 1984); International Law Association, Report of the Sixtieth Conference, Montreal, pages 196–197 (1982); and Milan Bulajic, Principles of International Development Law pages 283–284 (2d ed. 1992);</ref>

The International Court of Justice noted that a number of agreements have been signed since 1993 between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization and that those agreements required Israel to transfer to Palestinian authorities certain powers and responsibilities exercised in the Occupied Palestinian Territory by its military authorities and civil administration. The Court said that Israel is under an obligation not to raise any obstacle to the exercise of such rights in those fields where competence has been transferred to Palestinian authorities.<ref>See para. 77 and 112 of the ICJ Advisory Opinion in the "Wall" case</ref> Israel’s representative at the United Nations subsequently said that under agreements reached between the two sides, the Palestinian Authority ''already exercised jurisdiction'' over many natural resources, while interim cooperation and arrangements were in place for others.<ref>[http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2008/gaef3219.doc.htm See General Assembly Doc. GA/EF/3219, 20 October 2008]</ref>

===States recognising the State of Palestine===
{{See also|Foreign relations of Palestine}}
The exact number of countries recognizing the State of Palestine is unknown, due to the equivocal nature of many official statements of acknowledgment.<ref>Crawford, James (1999). "Israel (1948–1949) and Palestine (1998–1999): Two Studies in the Creation of States", in Goodwin-Gil G.S. and S. Talmon, [http://books.google.co.il/books?id=FcO3hLQbGXwC&pg=PA95&lpg=PA95&dq=James+Crawford+Palestine&source=bl&ots=W1n7ayMLWv&sig=gNHKqbQff3iy7tx-CmBjOwWpwl4&hl=iw&ei=n4jkS5DoPMSNOKGUrOUN&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CAYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=James%20Crawford%20Palestine&f=false The Reality of International Law: Essays in Honour of Ian Brownlie], Oxford University Press Inc., New York, pp. 110–115</ref> Many countries have a standing policy against making formal declarations that recognize new governments instead indicating their recognition of a state by doing business with its government.<ref name=implied/> [[Francis Boyle]], legal advisor to the PLO, assisted the organization in drafting the 1988 Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Palestine. At that time, the United States was using its Foreign Assistance Act and other measures to discourage other countries and international organizations from extending recognition.<ref>See Patterns of global terrorism 1985–2005: U.S. Department of State reports with supplementary documents and statistics, Volume 1, Anna Sabasteanski, Berkshire, 2005, ISBN 0-9743091-3-3, page 47</ref> According to one author, by 1988, more than 100 countries had recognized Palestine.<ref name=Fowlerp59>Fowler and Bunck, 1995, p. 59.</ref> Boyle reported in 1990 that the number was 114 states.<ref name=Boyle/> In 2005, Anat Kurz reported that 117 [[United Nations]] member states had formally recognised the state of Palestine as a [[sovereign state]].<ref name=kurz>Kurz, Anat N. (2005) Fatah and the Politics of Violence: the institutionalization of a popular Struggle. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1-84519-032-7, ISBN 978-1-84519-032-3 p. 123</ref> In 2010, the PA Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad, estimated the number at several dozens.<ref>In an interview to Uri Avneri ([http://aljazeera.com/news/articles/39/The-big-gamble.html 14 April 2010]), the PA Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad said: "Dozens of countries recognized this state [of Palestine], and the PLO representatives there enjoy the official status of ambassadors. But did this improve the situation of the Palestinians?"</ref>

After the election victory of Hamas, some governments took steps to oppose countries that supported the new Palestinian authorities, and once again imposed [[2006–2007 economic sanctions against the Palestinian National Authority|economic]] and other sanctions.<ref>See for example, Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109–446, Dec. 21, 2006, 120 Stat. 3318 [http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/search/display.html?terms=&url=/uscode/html/uscode22/usc_sec_22_00002378---b000-notes.html]</ref><ref>US plotted to overthrow Hamas after election victory, by Suzanne Goldenberg, The Guardian, Tuesday 4 March 2008</ref> The Palestinian National Authority publicly acknowledged the recognition of 94 other states.<ref>[http://web.archive.org/web/20060404211437/http://www.pna.gov.ps/Government/gov/recognition_of_the_State_of_Palestine.asp Official website of the Palestinian National Authority]</ref> Since then, other states have publicly extended recognition<ref name=Forward>See Perelman, Marc, Forward, March 07, 2008, Costa Rica Opens Official Ties With ‘State of Palestine’ [http://www.forward.com/articles/12761/]</ref> and Boyle has reported in 2009 that about 130 countries recognize the State of Palestine.<ref name=BoyleI>Palestine, Palestinians and International Law, Francis A. Boyle, Clarity Press, September 1, 2009, ISBN 093286337X, Back Cover</ref> Most states that recognized the State of Palestine subsequently upgraded to embassy status any PLO offices in their countries.<ref name=Talmonp158>Talmon, 1998, p. 158, footnote #236.</ref> A number of other states and the [[Holy See]] grant some form of diplomatic status to a Palestinian delegation. Some fall short of full diplomatic recognition. The following are listed in alphabetical order by region.

{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
====Africa====
* [[Algeria]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic">[http://www.sesrtcic.org/members/default.shtml OIC members and Palestine] ''The Statistical, Economic and Social Research and Training Centre for Islamic Countries''<br> [http://english.people.com.cn/200604/14/eng20060414_258351.html OIC members urge recognition of Hamas] ''People's Daily''</ref><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Angola]]<ref name="UNESCO">{{cite web|url=http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0008/000827/082711eo.pdf|title=Request for the admission of the State of Palestine to Unesco as a Member State|date=12 May 1989|publisher=[[UNESCO]]|accessdate=2009-08-22}}</ref><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Benin]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Botswana]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Burkina Faso]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Burundi]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Cameroon]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Cape Verde]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Central African Republic]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Chad]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Comoros]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Côte d'Ivoire]]<ref name=OICmember/>
* [[Democratic Republic of the Congo]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=note>The DRC recognized Palestine under its former name of "Zaire".</ref>
* [[Republic of the Congo]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Djibouti]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Equatorial Guinea]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Egypt]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Ethiopia]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Gabon]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Gambia]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Ghana]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Guinea]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Guinea-Bissau]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Kenya]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name=Petersp141>Peters, 1992, [http://books.google.ca/books?id=jtgrLRrvMUAC&pg=PA141&dq=%22recognized+the+State+of+Palestine%22&lr=&cd=37#v=onepage&q=%22recognized%20the%20State%20of%20Palestine%22&f=false p. 141].</ref>
* [[Libya]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Madagascar]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Mali]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Mauritania]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Mauritius]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Morocco]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Mozambique]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Namibia]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Niger]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Nigeria]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Rwanda]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[São Tomé and Príncipe]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Senegal]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Seychelles]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Sierra Leone]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Somalia]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[South Africa]]<ref>[http://www.sarep.org/ South African Representative Office to the Palestinian National Authority]</ref>
* [[Sudan]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Swaziland]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Eurp933>Eur, 2004, p. 933.</ref>
* [[Tanzania]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Togo]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Tunisia]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Uganda]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Zambia]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Zimbabwe]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>

====North and Central America====
* [[Costa Rica]]<ref name=Costa>{{cite news|title=Israeli diplomat postpones meeting after Costa Rica recognizes Palestinian state|agency=Associated Press|publisher=[[Haaretz]]|date=26 February 2008|url=http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/958208.html}}</ref>
* [[Cuba]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Nicaragua]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>

====South America====
* [[Guyana]]<ref name=OICmember/>
* [[Suriname]]<ref name=OICmember/>
* [[Venezuela]]<ref name=Venezuela>{{cite web|title=English Translation of Letter from Venezuelan Foreign Ministry|url=http://diplomacymonitor.com/stu/dma1.nsf/tr/tt72F6FB6B8DA924A1852575A6000F95D4|publisher=Diplomacy Monitor|date=April 27, 2009}}</ref>
{{col-2}}

====Asia====
* [[Afghanistan]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Bangladesh]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Bhutan]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Brunei]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Cambodia]]<ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[People's Republic of China]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Tesslerp722/>
* [[North Korea]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[India]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Tesslerp722/>
* [[Indonesia]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Kazakhstan]]<ref name="embassies">[http://www.webgaza.net/resources/Embassies_of_Palestine.htm Embassies of Palestine]</ref>
* [[Kyrgyzstan]]<ref name=OICmember/>
* [[Laos]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Malaysia]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Maldives]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Mongolia]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Nepal]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Pakistan]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Philippines]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref>[http://www.gov.ph/directory/main.asp?child=1&sid=393 Diplomatic and Consular Missions > Consulate General of the State of Palestine]. Government of the Philippines. Retrieved March 20, 2007.</ref>
* [[Sri Lanka]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Eurp933/><ref name=Tesslerp722/>
* [[Tajikistan]]<ref name=OICmember>Member state of the OIC. All 56 OIC members recognize Palestine as a state and it is a member state of that body. [http://www.miftah.org/Display.cfm?DocId=21140&CategoryId=5 Palestine's Right to Statehood and What it Means]</ref>
* [[Turkmenistan]]<ref name="oic"/>
* [[Uzbekistan]]<ref name="Uzbek">[http://palestineuzbek.com/english.php?action=4 Embassy of the State of Palestine to the Republic of Uzbekistan, Central Asia and Azerbaijan]</ref>
* [[Vietnam]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref>[http://www.mofa.gov.vn/en/bng_vietnam/dscqdd/dt041206142716/view Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs]. Government of Vietnam. Retrieved March 20, 2007.</ref>

====Europe====
* [[Albania]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Azerbaijan]]<ref name="oic"/><ref>The Palestinian embassy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan also represents the PNA to Azerbaijan.</ref><ref name="Uzbek"/>
* [[Belarus]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Minsk>{{cite web|title=Embassy of the State of Palestine|publisher=Kompass|accessdate=2009-07-18|url=http://www.kompass.com/it/BY150045}}</ref>
* [[Bosnia and Herzegovina]]<ref name=PM>[http://www.un.int/palestine/directoryam.shtml Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations: Palestine Embassies, Missions, Delegations Abroad]</ref><ref name=AboutB>[http://www.bosnia.org.uk/bosnia/viewitem.cfm?itemID=285&typeID=229 About Bosnia: Institutions and Organisations – Foreign Embassies in Sarajevo]</ref>
* [[Bulgaria]]<ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Czech Republic]]<ref name=Czech>{{cite web|url=http://www.mzv.cz/jnp/en/diplomatic_missions/foreign_missions_to_the_czech_republic/palestine_embassy_of_the_state_of.html|title=Palestine: Embassy of the State of Palestine|publisher=Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Czech Republic}}</ref>
* [[Greece]]<ref name=Tesslerp722>Tessler, 1994, p. 722. "Within two weeks of the PNC meeting, at least fifty-five nations, including states as diverse as the Soviet Union, China, India, Greece, Yugoslavia, Sri Lanka, Malta, and Zambia, had recognized the Palestinian state."</ref>
* [[Hungary]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Malta]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Tesslerp722/>
* [[Montenegro]]<ref name=MFMonte>{{cite web|title=Dates of Recognition and Establishment of Diplomatic Relations|url=http://www.mip.gov.me/en/index.php/Bilateral/dates-of-recognition-and-establishment-of-diplomatic-relations.html|publisher=Montenegro: Ministry of Foreign Affairs|accessdate=2010-01-03}}The State of Palestine recognized the state of Montenegro on July 24, 2006, and diplomatic relations were established between the two states on August 1, 2006.</ref>
* [[Poland]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Romania]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Russia]]<ref name="MEDEA">{{cite web|url=http://www.medea.be/index.html?page=2&lang=en&doc=289|publisher=European Institute for Research on Mediterranean and Euro-Arab Cooperation|title=Palestine, recognition of the State of|date=December 2001|accessdate=2009-01-03}}</ref>
* [[Serbia]]<ref name="oic"/>
* [[Slovakia]]<ref name=Slovakia>{{cite web|title=Embassy of the State of Palestine|accessdate=2009-07-18|url=http://www.palestine.sk/about.html}}</ref>
* [[Turkey]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Ukraine]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref>[http://www.mfa.gov.ua/mfa/ua/publication/content/1757.htm Ukrainian Ministry of Foreign Affairs]. Retrieved March 20, 2007.</ref>
* [[Vatican City]]<ref name=Eurp933/>

====Middle East & Mediterranean ====
* [[Bahrain]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Cyprus]]<ref name=UNESCO/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref>[http://www02.mfa.gov.cy/mfa/mfa.nsf/FPBilatrelationsCountries?OpenForm Cypriot Ministry of Foreign Affairs]. Government of Cyprus. Retrieved March 20, 2007.</ref>
* [[Iran]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Iraq]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Jordan]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Kuwait]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Lebanon]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Kassimp291>Kassim, 1997, p. 291.</ref>
* [[Oman]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Qatar]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Saudi Arabia]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Syria]]<ref name="oic"/>
* [[United Arab Emirates]]<ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>
* [[Yemen]]<ref name="UNESCO"/><ref name="oic"/><ref name="MEDEA"/>

====Oceania====
* [[Vanuatu]]<ref name="MEDEA"/><ref name=Eurp933/>
{{col-end}}

=== States maintaining special diplomatic arrangements ===
States that do not recognize the State of Palestine but allow the PLO to maintain a representative office in their countries are:

{{col-begin}}
{{col-2}}
* [[Argentina]]<ref>http://www.palestina.int.ar/ Retrieved March 20, 2007.</ref>
* [[Australia]]<ref>[http://www.info.dfat.gov.au/Info/WebProtocol/WebProtocol.nsf/WebConsularList?OpenForm&Palestinian%20TerritoriesO ]{{dead link|date=August 2010}}</ref>
* [[Belgium]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Bolivia]]
* [[Brazil]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Canada]] (Palestinian General Delegation)<ref>[http://www.cyberus.ca/~baker/gdpc.htm General Delegation of Palestine in Canada]</ref>
* [[Chile]]
* [[Colombia]]<ref name="embassies" />
* [[Denmark]] (Palestinian General Delegation)
* [[Finland]] (Palestinian General Delegation), also carries out diplomatic relations with [[Estonia]], [[Latvia]], and [[Lithuania]].<ref>[http://www.palestinegd.fi/ General Delegation of Palestine in Finland]</ref>
* [[France]](Palestinian General Delegation)<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Georgia (country)|Georgia]] <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.mfa.gov.ge/index.php?sec_id=346&lang_id=ENG |title=Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Georgia – Palestine |publisher=Mfa.gov.ge |date= |accessdate=2010-08-02}}</ref>
* [[Germany]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Haiti]]
{{col-2}}

* [[Italy]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Jamaica]]
* [[Japan]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Luxembourg]]<ref>The General Delegation of Palestine in Brussels, Belgium is accredited to Luxembourg.</ref>
* [[Netherlands]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Norway]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Paraguay]]
* [[Peru]]
* [[Portugal]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Republic of Korea]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Slovenia]]
* [[Spain]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Sweden]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[Switzerland]]<ref name=Eurp933/><ref>The ICJ noted that Palestine gave a unilateral undertaking, by declaration of 7 June 1982, in the name of the 'State of Palestine' to apply the Fourth Geneva Convention – and that Switzerland, as depositary State, considered that unilateral undertaking valid. See paragraph 91 of the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion, Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. [http://www.icj-cij.org/docket/files/131/1671.pdf Source]</ref>
* [[United Kingdom]]<ref name=Eurp933/>
* [[United States]]<ref name="embassies" />
{{col-end}}

The delegations and embassies listed below on the left, are recognized as the representatives of the Palestinian people by the nations listed to their right:
* General Delegation of Palestine: [[Republic of Ireland]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.gdp.ie/ |title=Home – General Delegation of Palestine in Ireland |publisher=Gdp.ie |date= |accessdate=2010-08-02}}</ref>
* Palestinian Special Delegation: [[Mexico]]<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.palestina.com.mx/ |title=Girokonto: Wichtige Informationen rund um das Girokonto |publisher=Palestina.com.mx |date= |accessdate=2010-08-02}}</ref>

==Representation in international organizations==
=== United Nations representation ===
Palestine is an entity with special status at the UN.<ref name=Mangop1741>Osmańczyk and Mango, 2003, p. 1741.</ref> The [[Palestine National Council]] (PNC) sent formal notification to the U.N. Secretary-General regarding the establishment of the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]] (PLO) in May 1964. The following year in October, some Arab states requested that a PLO delegation be allowed to attend meetings of the Special Political Committee, and it was decided that they could present a statement, without implying recognition. PLO participation in the discussions of the Committee took place under the agenda item of the [[United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East]] (UNRWA) from 1963 to 1973.<ref name=UN>{{cite web|title=Status of Palestine at the United Nations|url=http://www.un.int/palestine/status.shtml|publisher=Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations – New York|accessdate=2009-07-28}}</ref>

The PLO gained observer status at the [[United Nations General Assembly]] in 1974 (General Assembly resolution 3237). Acknowledging the proclamation of the State of Palestine, the UN redesignated this observer status to 'Palestine' on 15 December 1988 in General Assembly resolution 43/177 and affirmed "the need to enable the Palestinian people to exercise their sovereignty over their territory occupied since 1967."<ref name=Hillierp214>Hillier, 1998, p. 214.</ref> In July 1998, the General Assembly adopted a new resolution (52/250) conferring upon Palestine additional rights and privileges, including the right to participate in the general debate held at the start of each session of the General Assembly, the right of reply, the right to co-sponsor resolutions and the right to raise points of order on [[Palestinian territories|Palestinian]] and [[Middle East]] issues.<ref name=Mangop1741/> By this resolution, "seating for Palestine shall be arranged immediately after non-member States and before the other observers."<ref name=Mangop1741/> This resolution was adopted by a vote of 124 in favor, 4 against (Israel, USA, Marshall Islands, [[Federated States of Micronesia]]) and 10 abstentions.<ref name=Silverburgp292>Silverburg, 2002, p. 292.</ref>

===Organisation of the Islamic Conference===
Palestine is a member state of the international [[Organisation of the Islamic Conference]] (OIC) and the [[Islamic Development Bank]], an international financial institution set up for member states.<ref name=OICUN>{{cite web|url=http://www.oic-un.org/about_oic.asp#Members|title=OIC Member States|publisher=Permanent Mission of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference to the United Nations Offices in Geneva and Vienna|accessdate=2009-12-30}}</ref><ref name=Dean>Taylor & Francis group and Lucy Dean, 2003, p. 1328.</ref>

===Application to the WHO===
The PLO, who holds observer status at the [[World Health Organization]] (WHO), applied for full membership status for the State of Palestine in 1989. The [[United States]], which provided one-quarter of the WHO's funding at the time, informed the WHO that its funding would be withheld if Palestine was admitted as a member state. Yasser Arafat described the US statement as "blackmail". The PLO was asked to withdraw its application by the WHO director general. The WHO subsequently voted to postpone consideration of the application and no action or decision on the application was ever taken.<ref name=Quigley>{{cite web|date=May 6, 2009|title=THE PALESTINE DECLARATION TO THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT: THE STATEHOOD ISSUE|url=http://www.lawrecord.com/files/35-rutgers-l-rec-1.pdf|publisher=Rutgers Law Record|accessdate=2009-07-19}}</ref> [[John Quigley]] writes that Palestine's efforts to gain membership in several international organizations connected to the United Nations was frustrated by US threats to withhold funding from any organization that admitted Palestine.<ref name=Quigleyp231>Quigley, 1990, p. 231.</ref>

===Arab League===
Palestine is a member of the [[Arab League]]. Represented there since 1964 by the [[Palestine Liberation Organization]], after the 1988 declaration of statehood, its status was upgraded to full membership under the name 'Palestine' with the [[Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization]] serving as 'president of Palestine'.<ref name=Takkenbergp136>Takkenberg, 1998, pp. 136–138.</ref>

===Other memberships===
Palestine is a member state in a number of international organizations. In others, it enjoys affiliation in a lesser capacity or under another designation (such as [[PLO]] or [[Occupied Palestinian Territory]]). In the list below, if the membership is not full or not for the state of Palestine, the type and name of affiliation is denoted in parentheses.

* [[Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development]] (AFESD)
* [[Arab Monetary Fund]] (AMF)
* [[Union for the Mediterranean|Barcelona Process: Union for the Mediterranean]] (BP:UfM)
* [[Council of Arab Economic Unity]] (CAEU)
* [[FIFA]] ([[Asian Football Confederation]]) (AFC)
* [[Group of 77]] (G77)
* [[International Olympic Committee]] (IOC)
* [[International Trade Union Confederation]] (ITUC) (''[[PGFTU - Palestinian General Federation of Trade Unions|affiliate member]]''
* [[International Telecommunication Union]] (ITU) (''non-voting observer status'')
* [[International Organization for Standardization]] (ISO) (''[[Countries in International Organization for Standardization|representation for 'Occupied Palestinian Territory' equivalent to that of a state]], assigned the code "ps"''<ref>[http://www.iso.org/iso/english_country_names_and_code_elements#p.. English country names and code elements]</ref>
* [[International Paralympic Committee]] (IPC)
* [[International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies]] (IFRC)
* [[International Committee of the Red Cross]] (ICRC)
* [[Non-Aligned Movement]] (NAM)
* [[United Nations]] (UN) (''[[United Nations General Assembly observers|permanent observer]] with [[State of Palestine#United Nations representation|special privileges]]'') (current representative:[[Riyad H. Mansour]])
** [[UNESCO]] (''observer status'')
** [[United Nations Regional Groups|Asian Group of the United Nations]]
** [[United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia]] (UNESCWA)
** [[Universal Postal Union]] (UPU) (''special observer status'')
** [[World Intellectual Property Organization]] (WIPO) Observer <ref>http://www.wipo.int/members/en/organizations.jsp</ref>

==Palestinian passport==
[[File:Palestinian Authority Passport.jpg|thumb|right|180px|Palestinian Authority passport]]
{{See also|Palestinian Authority passport}}
{{See also|British Mandate of Palestine}}
{{See also|Israeli passport}}

Between 1924 and 1948, the term "Palestinian passport" referred to the travel documents that were available to residents of [[British Mandate Palestine]]. Issued by the High Commissioner for Palestine, they were officially titled, "British passport, Palestine". These passports became invalid with the termination of the British mandate on 15 May 1948<ref name=Artzp77>Artz, 1997 [http://books.google.ca/books?id=fGDPWvyPcDMC&pg=PA77&dq=%22passport%22+%22state+of+palestine%22&lr=&cd=4#v=onepage&q=%22passport%22%20%22state%20of%20palestine%22&f=false p. 77].</ref>. Israeli and Jordanian passports were offered to former British Mandate subjects according to the citizenship they acquired in the aftermath of the [[1948 Arab-Israeli War]]. A significant number of Palestinian Arabs, especially in the Gaza Strip and those who found refuge in Syria and Lebanon, remained stateless. The term "Palestinian passport" reemerged in a different context in April 1995, when the Palestinian National Authority, pursuant to the Oslo Accords with the State of Israel, started to issue passports to Palestinian residents of the [[Gaza Strip]] and [[West Bank]]. The appearance of the passport and details about its issuance are described in Appendix C of Annex II (Protocol Concerning Civil Affairs) of Gaza-Jericho Agreement signed by Israel and the PLO on 4 May 1994. The Palestinian Authority does not issue the passports on behalf of the proclaimed State of Palestine<ref name=Kapitanp231>Segal in Kapitan, 1997, [http://books.google.ca/books?id=kvExBpKOVFMC&pg=PA231&dq=%22passport%22+%22state+of+palestine%22&lr=&cd=8#v=onepage&q=%22passport%22%20%22state%20of%20palestine%22&f=false p. 231].</ref>. The passports bear the inscription: "''This passport/travel document is issued pursuant to the Palestinian Self Government Agreement according to Oslo Agreement signed in Washington on 13/9/1993''"<ref>"United States Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services, Palestine/Occupied Territories: Information On Passports Issued By The Palestine National Authority, 17 December 1998, PAL99001.ZCH, available at: [http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/docid/3df0b9914.html]" (accessed 24 August 2010)</ref>. By September 1995, the passport has been recognised by 29 states, some of them (e.g. the United States) recognise it only as a travel document (see further details below): [[Algeria]], [[Bahrain]], [[Bulgaria]], [[People's Republic of China]], [[Cyprus]], [[Egypt]], [[France]], [[Germany]], [[Greece]], [[India]], [[Iran]], [[Jordan]], [[Malta]], [[Morocco]], the [[Netherlands]], [[Pakistan]], [[Qatar]], [[Romania]], [[Russia]], [[Saudi Arabia]], [[South Africa]], [[Spain]], [[Sweden]], [[Switzerland]], [[Tunisia]], [[Turkey]], the [[United Arab Emirates]], the [[United Kingdom]], and the [[United States]].<ref name=Eurp933>Eur, 2004, p. 933.</ref>

While the U.S. Government recognises Palestinian Authority passports as travel documents, it does not view them as conferring citizenship, since they are not issued by a government. Consular officials representing the Governments of Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, when asked by the Resource Information Center of [[UNHCR]] in May 2002, would not comment on whether their governments viewed PA passports as conferring any proof of citizenship or residency, but did say that the passports, along with valid visas or other necessary papers, would allow their holders to travel to their countries.<ref name=UNHCR>{{cite web|format=PDF|url=http://www.unhcr.org/refworld/pdfid/402d150c4.pdf|title=Palestinian Territory, Occupied|date=May 20, 2002|author=INS Resource Information Center|publisher=UNHCR|accessdate=2009-01-24}}</ref>

The Palestinian Authority has said that anyone born in Palestine carrying a birth certificate attesting to that can apply for a PA passport. Whether Palestinians born outside Palestine could apply was not clear to the PA Representative questioned by UNHCR representatives in May 2002. The PA representative also said even if those applying met the PA's eligibility criteria, the Israeli government placed additional restrictions on the actual issuance of passports.<ref name=UNHCR/>

In October 2007, a Japanese Justice Ministry official said, "Given that the Palestinian Authority has improved itself to almost a full-fledged state and issues its own passports, we have decided to accept the Palestinian nationality". The decision followed a recommendation by a ruling party panel on nationality that Palestinians should no longer be treated as stateless.<ref>See Japan to recognize Palestinian nationality, KUNA, 10/5/2007 [http://www.kuna.net.kw/NewsAgenciesPublicSite/ArticleDetails.aspx?id=1846153&Language=en]; Japan to recognise Palestinian nationality, The India Report, 6 October 2007 [http://www.indiareport.com/India-usa-uk-news/latest-news/27302/International/2/1/2]; Yomiuri, Government to recognize Palestinian ‘nationality’, Saturday, October 6, 2007; and Japan News Review, Government to recognize Palestinian ‘nationality’, October 6, 2007, [http://www.japannewsreview.com/society/national/20071006page_id=2302]</ref>

== See also ==
{{Portal|Palestine}}
{{Main|Outline of Palestine}}
*[[Proposals for a Palestinian state]]
*[[Palestinian Declaration of Independence]]
*[[Palestinian National Authority]]
*[[Palestine Investment Conference]]

== Footnotes ==
{| class="references-small" style="margin-left:13px; line-height:150%;"
|-
| style="text-align:right; vertical-align:top;"|i.&nbsp;&nbsp;
|{{note|capital}}The Palestine Basic Law, approved by the PLC in May 2002, states unambiguously "Jerusalem is the Capital of Palestine" (source: <ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.palestinianbasiclaw.org/2002-basic-law |title=2002 Basic Law |publisher=The Palestinian Basic Law |date= |accessdate=2010-08-02}}</ref>). [[Ramallah]] is the administrative capital where government institutions and foreign representative offices of [[Australia]], [[Brazil]], [[Canada]] [[Colombia]], [[Czech Republic]], [[Denmark]], [[Finland]], [[Germany]], [[Malta]], the [[Netherlands]], [[South Africa]], and [[Switzerland]] are located. Jerusalem's final status awaits future negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (see [http://web.archive.org/web/20060514191731/http://www.publicpolicy.umd.edu/IPPP/Fall97Report/negotiating_jerusalem.htm "Negotiating Jerusalem", University of Maryland]). The [[United Nations]] and most countries do not accept Israel's claim over the whole of Jerusalem (see {{harvnb|Kellerman|1993|p=140}}) and maintain their embassies to Israel in other cities (see the [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/geos/is.html CIA Factbook]).
|}

== References ==
{{Reflist|2}}

==Bibliography==
{{refbegin}}
*{{cite book|title=Refugees into citizens: Palestinians and the end of the Arab-Israeli conflict|first1=Donna E.|last1=Arzt|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Council on Foreign Relations|year=1997|isbn=087609194X, 9780876091944}}
*{{cite book|title=The SAGE Handbook of Conflict Resolution|first1=Jacob|last1=Bercovitch|first2=I. William|last2=Zartman|editors=Jacob Bercovitch, Victor Kremenyuk, I. William Zartman|edition=Illustrated|publisher=SAGE Publications Ltd|year=2008|isbn=1412921929, 9781412921923}}
*{{cite book|title=The world: a Third World guide 1995–96|editor=Roberto Remo Bissio|publisher=Instituto del Tercer Mundo|year=1995|edition=Illustrated|isbn=0885982918}}
*{{Cite book|title=The reality of international law: essays in honour of Ian Brownlie|first1=Ian|last1=Brownlie|first2=Guy S.|last2=Goodwin-Gill|first3=Stefan|last3=Talmon|first4=Robert|last4=Jennings|edition=Illustrated, reprint|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1999|isbn=0198268378, 9780198268376|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{Cite book|url=http://books.google.ca/books?id=gP_-8rXzQs8C&pg=PA3325&dq=europa+swaziland+palestine&cd=1#v=onepage&q=&f=false|title=Europa World Year Book 2|publisher=Taylor & Francis Group|year=2004|isbn=185743255X, 9781857432558|ref=harv|postscript=<!-- Bot inserted parameter. Either remove it; or change its value to "." for the cite to end in a ".", as necessary. -->[[Category:Articles with inconsistent citation formats]]}}
*{{Cite book|title=The Middle East and North Africa 2004|edition=50th, illustrated|publisher=Routledge|year=2004|isbn=1857431847, 9781857431841|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{cite book|title=Law, power, and the sovereign state: the evolution and application of the concept of sovereignty|first1=Michael|last1=Fowler|first2=Julie Marie|last2=Bunck|publisher=Penn State Press|year=1995|isbn=0271014717, 9780271014715|url=http://books.google.com/?id=oAp_97VvpMIC&pg=PA59&dq=%22recognized+the+state+of+palestine%22&cd=15#v=onepage&q=%22recognized%20the%20state%20of%20palestine%22}}
*{{Cite book|title=Sourcebook on public international law|first1=Tim|last1=Hillier|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Routledge|url=1998|isbn=1859410502, 9781859410509|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{Cite book|title=Philosophical perspectives on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict|editor=Tomis Kapitan|first1=Segal|last1=Jerome M.|edition=Illustrated|publisher=M.E. Sharpe|year=1997|isbn=1563248786, 9781563248788|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{Cite book|title=The Palestine Yearbook of International Law 1989|first1=Anis F.|last1=Kassim|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Martinus Nijhoff Publishers|year=1997|isbn=9041103422, 9789041103420|url=http://books.google.com/?id=LoRru2_pAkQC&pg=PA291&dq=%22countries+that+have+recognized+the+state+of+palestine%22&cd=1#v=onepage&q=croatia%201988%20country|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
* {{Cite document|title=Society and Settlement: Jewish Land of Israel in the Twentieth Century|last=Kellerman|first=Aharon|year=1993|publisher=State University of New York Press|isbn=0791412954|url=http://books.google.com/?id=XI6uIZJQnU8C&printsec=frontcover|pages=352|date=1993-01|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{cite book|title= International assistance to the Palestinians after Oslo: political guilt, wasted money|first1=Anne|last1=Le More|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Routledge|year=2008|isbn=0415453852, 9780415453851|url=http://books.google.com/?id=gnbdQ4k3meIC&pg=PA27&dq=%22international+community%27+%22occupied+palestinian+territory%22+%27west+bank%27+gaza&cd=5#v=onepage&q=%22international%20community%27%20%22occupied%20palestinian%20territory%22%20%27west%20bank%27%20gaza}}
*{{Cite book|title=Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements|first1=Edmund Jan|last1=Osmańczyk|first2=Anthony|last2=Mango|edition=3rd|publisher=Taylor & Francis|year=2003|isbn=0415939216, 9780415939218|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/?id=NYszJtC66FAC&pg=PA161&dq=%22official+name%22+palestine&q=%22official%20name%22%20palestine|title=Middle East Review|author=Kogan Page|edition=27th, illustrated|year=2004|isbn=074944066X, 9780749440664|unused_data=Kogan Page Publishers}}
*{{Cite book|url=http://books.google.com/?id=pP315Mw3S9EC&pg=PA1328&dq=Palestine+member+Islamic+countries|title=The Middle East and North Africa 2004: 2004|last1=Taylor & Francis Group|first2=Lucy|last2=Dean|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Routledge|year=2003|isbn=1857431847, 9781857431841|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{Cite book|title=The case for Palestine: an international law perspective|first1=John B.|last1=Quigley|edition=2nd, revised|publisher=Duke University Press|year=2005|isbn=0822335395, 9780822335399|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/?id=NYszJtC66FAC&pg=PA161&dq=%22official+name%22+palestine+page&cd=1#v=onepage&q=|title=Middle East Review|first1=Ramzy|last1=Baroud|editor=Kogan Page|edition=27th, illustrated|publisher=Kogan Page Publishers|year=2004|isbn=074944066X, 9780749440664}}
*{{cite book|title=Israel and Africa: the problematic friendship|first1=Joel|last1=Peters|edition=Illustrated|publisher=I.B.Tauris|year=1992|isbn=1870915100, 9781870915106}}
*{{cite book|title=The World Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theatre: The Arab world|first1=Don|last1=Rubin|isbn=0415059321, 9780415059329|publisher=Taylor & Francis|edition=Illustrated, reprint|year=1999}}
*{{Cite book|title=Armed Struggle and the Search for State: The Palestinian National Movement, 1949–1993|first1=Yezid|last1=Sayigh|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1999|isbn=0198296436, 9780198296430|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{Cite book |last1=Silverburg|first1=Sanford R. |title=Palestine and International Law: Essays on Politics and Economics |publisher=McFarland & Co |location=Jefferson, N.C |year=2002 |pages= |isbn=0-7864-1191-0 |oclc= |doi= |accessdate= |ref=harv |postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{Cite book|title=The status of Palestinian refugees in international law|first1=Alex|last1=Takkenberg|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1998|isbn=0198265905, 9780198265900|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
*{{cite book|url=http://books.google.com/?id=scc8EboiJX8C&pg=PA158&dq=%22recognized+the+state+of+palestine%22&cd=21#v=onepage&q=%22recognized%20the%20state%20of%20palestine%22|title=Recognition of governments in international law: with particular reference to governments in exile|first1=Stefan|last1=Talmon|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=1998|isbn=0198265735, 9780198265733}}
*{{cite book|title=A History of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict|first1=Mark A.|last1=Tessler|edition=2nd, illustrated|publisher=Indiana University Press|year=1994}}
*{{Cite book|title=The Oslo Accords: international law and the Israeli-Palestinian peace agreements|first1=Geoffrey R.|last1=Watson|edition=Illustrated|publisher=Oxford University Press|year=2000|isbn=0198298919, 9780198298915|ref=harv|postscript=<!--None-->}}
{{refend}}

== External links ==
*[http://www.al-bab.com/arab/docs/pal/pal4.htm Political Statement accompanying Palestinian Declaration of Independence]
*[http://www.palestine-un.org/index.html Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations]
*[http://www.nad-plo.org/news-updates/Historic%20Compromise%20FAQs%20FINAL.pdf The Historic Compromise: The Palestinian Declaration of Independence and the Twenty-Year Struggle for a Two-State Solution]
*[http://www.ottomanpalestine.com Palestine in Ottoman Times]


{{Template group
|title = Articles Related to the State of Palestine
|list =
{{Palestinian diaspora|state=uncollapsed}}
{{Arab League}}
{{OIC}}
{{Non-Aligned Movement}}
}}

<!-- best fit category as this article discusses various types of international recognition -->

{{DEFAULTSORT:Palestine, State Of}}
[[Category:Palestine]]
[[Category:Palestine Liberation Organization]]
[[Category:Unrecognized or largely unrecognized states]]
[[Category:Palestinian nationalism]]
[[Category:Foreign relations of the Palestinian National Authority]]

<!--Other languages-->

[[af:Staat van Palestina]]
[[ar:دولة فلسطين]]
[[ceb:Palestina]]
[[dv:ފަލަސްޠީނުގެ ދައުލަތް]]
[[fr:Palestine (État revendiqué)]]
[[id:Negara Palestina]]
[[he:מדינה פלסטינית]]
[[lv:Palestīnas Valsts]]
[[pl:Państwo Palestyna]]
[[pt:Estado da Palestina]]
[[ru:Государство Палестина]]
[[yo:Orílẹ̀-èdè Palẹstínì]]
[[zh:巴勒斯坦国]]

Revision as of 03:57, 26 October 2010

Palestine[1]
فلسطين
Filastin
Anthem: Biladi adopted 1996 – Mawtiny was adopted from 1936 till 1995
Location of Palestine
CapitalJerusalem (proclaimed)[i][1][2]
Gaza, Ramallah (administrative)
Largest cityGaza1
GovernmentSemi-presidential;
Parliamentary democracy
• President
Mahmoud Abbas
Ismail Haniyeh, Salam Fayad (disputed)
Establishment
• Declared
November 15, 1988
Population
• 2009 (July)1 estimate
4,136,540 (125th)
GDP (PPP)20081 estimate
• Total
$11.95 billion1 ()
• Per capita
$2,9001 ()
HDI (2007)Decrease 0.731
Error: Invalid HDI value (106th)
CurrencyJordanian dinara
Egyptian Poundb
Israeli shekelc (JOD, EGP, ILS)
Time zoneUTC+1 ( )
• Summer (DST)
UTC+2 ( )
Calling code+9702
ISO 3166 codePS
Internet TLD.ps
  1. Population and economy statistics and rankings are based on the Palestinian territories
  2. +972 is also used as well.

The State of Palestine (Arabic: دولة فلسطين, dawlat filastin), officially simply Palestine (Arabic: فلسطين, filastin),[1][2] is a polity that was unilaterally declared in Algiers on 15 November 1988, when the Palestine Liberation Organization's (PLO) National Council (PNC) adopted the Palestinian Declaration of Independence.

Some countries recognized the state of Palestine, while other countries announced they welcomed this step without explicitly declaring recognition. The exact number of countries offering recognition is unknown, with different figures being given by various sources. Some countries recognise the PLO as the "sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people", while others deal with the PLO as the de facto authority in the Palestinian territories. At the time of the 1988 declaration, the PLO did not exercise control over any territory,[3] and designated Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine,[i][1][2] despite Israeli control.

On 28 October 1974, the 1974 Arab League summit held in Rabat designated the PLO as the "sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people and reaffirmed their right to establish an independent state of urgency."[4] The PLO has had observer status at the United Nations as an "entity" since 22 November 1974,[5][6] which entitles it to speak in the UN General Assembly but not to vote. In the United Nations the PLO is classified as a state with limited recognition.[7] In the list of "non-member states and entities", Palestine is categorized under "Other entities having received a standing invitation to participate as observers in the sessions and the work of the General Assembly and are maintaining permanent offices at Headquarters".[8] After the Declaration of Independence the United Nations General Assembly officially "acknowledged" the proclamation and voted to change the name of the PLO permanent observer to "Palestine".[9][10][11]

In 1993, in the Oslo Accords, Israel acknowledged the PLO negotiating team as "representing the Palestinian people", in return for the PLO recognizing Israel's right to exist in peace, acceptance of UN Security Council resolutions 242 and 338, and its rejection of "violence and terrorism".[12] No reference is made in the Accords to the 1988 declaration of a state of Palestine. The Palestinian National Authority (PNA or PA), established as a result of the Oslo Accords is an interim administrative body that exercises some governmental functions in parts of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. The current President of Palestine is Mahmoud Abbas, serving in his capacity as Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization.

Background

The Levant formed part of the Ottoman Empire from 1518. In 1917, it was occupied by Britain during the First World War. However, there was no administrative unit under the Ottoman Empire corresponding to what came to be known as Palestine and the boundaries were determined as part of the process of formation of the British Mandate of Palestine after the War.[13] Since the British Mandate, the term Palestine has been associated with the geographical area that currently covers the State of Israel, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip,[13] though the British Mandate also covered present day Jordan.

The McMahon–Hussein Correspondence

Administrative units in the Near East under the Ottoman Empire, until c. 1918

In the early years of the First World War, negotiations took place between the British High Commissioner in Egypt, Henry McMahon and the Sharif of Mecca, Husayn bin Ali for an alliance of sorts with the Arabs against the Ottomans in Arab Near East. On 24 October 1915, McMahon sent to Hussein a note which the Arabs treated as their "Declaration of Independence". In McMahon's letter, part of the McMahon–Hussein Correspondence, McMahon declared Britain's willingness to recognise the independence of the Arabs, both in the Levant and the Hejaz, subject to certain exemptions. It stated on behalf of the Government of Great Britain that:

The districts of Mersin and Alexandretta, and portions of Syria lying to the west of the districts of Damascus, Homs, Hama and Aleppo, cannot be said to be purely Arab, and must on that account be excepted from the proposed delimitation. Subject to that modification, and without prejudice to the treaties concluded between us and certain Arab Chiefs, we accept that delimitation. As for the regions lying within the proposed frontiers, in which Great Britain is free to act without detriment to interests of her ally France, I am authorized to give you the following pledges on behalf of the Government of Great Britain, and to reply as follows to your note: That subject to the modifications stated above, Great Britain is prepared to recognize and uphold the independence of the Arabs in all the regions lying within the frontiers proposed by the Sherif of Mecca.[14]

The exemptions from Arab control of certain areas set out in the McMahon note were to seriously complicate the problems of peace in the Near East. At the time, the Arab portions of the Ottoman Empire were divided into administrative units called vilayets and sanjaks. Palestine was divided into the sanjuks of Acre and Nablus, both of which were a part of the vilayet of Beirut, and an independent sanjak of Jerusalem. The areas exempted from Arab control by the McMahon note included "Syria lying to the west of the districts of Damascus, Homs, Hama, and Aleppo." The British understanding was that "Damascus" meant the vilayet and not the city of Damascus, and accordingly virtually all of Palestine was excluded from Arab control. The British entered into the secret Sykes–Picot Agreement on 16 May 1916 and the commitment of the Balfour Declaration of 1917, for example, on that understanding.

The Arabs, however, insisted at the Paris Peace Conference at the end of the War that "Damascus" meant the city of Damascus – which left Palestine in their hands.[15] However, in 1915, these problems of interpretation did not occur to Hussein, who agreed to the British wording. The Arab interpretation of the agreement formed the basis of Arab claims to Palestine at the Peace Conference.

League of Nations Mandate for Palestine

Map showing boundaries of the proposed Jewish state, as outlined by the Zionist representatives at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference, superimposed on modern boundaries

Despite Arab objections based in part on the Arab interpretation of the McMahon correspondence noted above, Britain was given the League of Nations Mandate for Palestine. The Mandate was administered as two territories: Palestine and Transjordan,[16] with the Jordan River being the boundary between them. The boundaries under the Mandate also did not follow those sought by the Jewish community, which sought the inclusion of the east bank of the Jordan into the Palestinian territory, to which the objective of the Mandate for a homeland for the Jewish people would apply. It was made clear from before the commencement of the Mandate, and a clause to that effect was inserted in the Mandate, that the objective set out in the Mandate would not apply to Transjordan. Transjordan was destined for early independence. The objective of the Mandate was to apply only to territory west of the Jordan, which was commonly referred to as Palestine by the British administration, and as Eretz Israel by the Jewish community.

The Arab League and the Arab Higher Committee

The framers of the Arab League sought to include the Palestinian Arabs within the framework of the League from its inception.[17] An annex to the League Pact declared:[18]

Even though Palestine was not able to control her own destiny, it was on the basis of the recognition of her independence that the Covenant of the League of Nations determined a system of government for her. Her existence and her independence among the nations can, therefore, no more be questioned de jure than the independence of any of the other Arab States. [...] Therefore, the States signatory to the Pact of the Arab League consider that in view of Palestine's special circumstances, the Council of the League should designate an Arab delegate from Palestine to participate in its work until this country enjoys actual independence.

In November 1945, the Arab League reconstituted the Arab Higher Committee comprising twelve members[19] as the supreme executive body of Palestinian Arabs in the territory of the British Mandate of Palestine. The committee was dominated by the Palestine Arab Party and was immediately recognised by Arab League countries. The Mandate government recognised the new Committee two months later.

Partition of Palestine

In 1947, the United Nations proposed the partition of Mandate Palestine into an Arab state, a Jewish state, and a Corpus Separatum for Jerusalem. While the Jewish leaders accepted the partition plan, the Arab leadership in the Arab League and the Arab Higher Committee rejected it, opposing any partition.[20][21][22][23][24]

On April 12, 1948, the Arab League announced:

The Arab armies shall enter Palestine to rescue it. His Majesty (King Farouk, representing the League) would like to make it clearly understood that such measures should be looked upon as temporary and devoid of any character of the occupation or partition of Palestine, and that after completion of its liberation, that country would be handed over to its owners to rule in the way they like.[25]

Ernest A. Gross, a senior U.S. State Department legal adviser, authored a memorandum for the United States government titled Recognition of New States and Governments in Palestine, dated 11 May 1948. He expressed the view that "The Arab and Jewish communities will be legally entitled on May 15, 1948 (the date of expiry of the British Mandate) to proclaim states and organize governments in the areas of Palestine occupied by the respective communities." Gross also said "the law of nations recognizes an inherent right of people lacking the agencies and institutions of social and political control to organize a state and operate a government."[26]

On 14 May 1948, the Jewish community of Mandate Palestine declared independence on approximately three quarters of Mandate Palestine's territory.[27][28][29] or 16.3 percents of the original territory of the British Mandate.[30] The event marked the start of the 1948 Arab-Israeli war. After the war, the territory known today as the West Bank was annexed to Jordan, and the territory known as the Gaza Strip was put under Egyptian military administration.

West Bank and Gaza Strip, 1948–1967

West Bank

During the 1948 Arab-Israeli war, Jordan occupied the area of Cisjordan now called the West Bank, which it continued to control in accordance with the 1949 Armistice Agreements and a political union formed in December 1948. Military Proclamation Number 2 of 1948 provided for the application in the West Bank of laws that were applicable in Palestine on the eve of the termination of the Mandate. On 2 November 1948, the military rule was replaced by a civilian administration by virtue of the Law Amending Public Administration Law in Palestine. Military Proclamation Number 17 of 1949, Section 2, vested the King of Jordan with all the powers that were enjoyed by the King of England, his ministers and the High Commissioner of Palestine by the Palestine Order-in-Council, 1922. Section 5 of this law confirmed that all laws, regulations and orders that were applicable in Palestine until the termination of the Mandate would remain in force until repealed or amended.[31]

The Second Arab-Palestinian Congress (1948)[32] was held in Jericho on December 1, 1948. The delegates proclaimed Abdullah King of Palestine and called for a union of Arab Palestine with the Hashemite Kingdom of Transjordan.[33] Avi Plascov says that Abdullah contacted the Nashashibi opposition, local mayors, mukhars, those opposed to the Husaynis, and opposition members of the AHC. Plascov said that the Palestinian Congresses were conducted in accordance with prevailing Arab custom. He also said that contrary to the widely held belief outside Jordan the representatives did reflect the feelings of a large segment of the population.[34]

Sandra Berliant Kadosh analyzed United States policy toward the West Bank in 1948, based largely on the Foreign Relations Documents of the United States. She noted that the US government believed that the most satisfactory solution regarding the disposition of the greater part of Arab Palestine would be incorporation in Transjordan and that the State Department approved the Principle underlying the Jericho resolutions.[35] Kadosh said that the delegates claimed to represent 90 percent of the population, and that they ridiculed the Gaza government. They asserted that it represented only its eighty-odd members.[36]

The Transjordanian Government agreed to the unification on December 7, 1948, and on December 13 the Transjordanian parliament approved the creation of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The change of status was reflected by the adoption of a new official name. The "Encyclopedia of the United Nations and international agreements" says that the name of Transjordan was officially changed on 21 January 1949 to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.[37] The step of unification was ratified by a joint Jordanian National Assembly on April 24, 1950. The Assembly was composed of 20 representatives each from the East and West Bank. The Act of Union contained a protective clause which presrved Arab rights in Palestine without prejudice to any final settlement.[31][38]

The Department of State Bulletin for the first quarter of 1950 contained an article about the Clapp Mission to Middle East countries of Lebanon, Jordan, Arab Palestine, and Syria. The UN Economic Survey Mission for the Middle East, headed by Gordon R. Clapp, chairman of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee Valley Authority recommended four development projects, involving the Wadi Zerqa basin in Jordan, the Wadi Qilt watershed and stream bed in Arab Palestine, the Litani River in Lebanon, and the Ghab valley in Syria.[39] President Truman subsequently announced that the Foreign Economic Assistance Act of 1950 contained an appropriation of $27 million dollars for the development projects recommended by the Clapp Mission and to assist Palestinian refugees.[40]

Many legal scholars say the declaration of the Arab League and the Act of Union implied that Jordan's claim of sovereignty was provisional, because it had always been subject to the emergence of the Palestinian state.[41][42] A political union was legally established by the series of proclamations, decrees, and parliamentary acts in December 1948. Abdullah thereupon took the title King of Jordan, and he officially changed the country's name to the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan in April 1949. The 1950 Act of Union confirmed and ratified King Abdullah's actions. Following the annexation of the West Bank, only two countries formally recognized the union: Britain and Pakistan.[43] Thomas Kuttner notes that de facto recognition was granted to the regime, most clearly evidenced by the maintaining of consulates in East Jerusalem by several countries, including the United States.[44] Joseph Weiler agreed, and said that other states had engaged in activities, statements, and resolutions that would be inconsistent with non-recognition.[45] Joseph Massad said that the members of the Arab League granted de facto recognition and that the United States had formally recognized the annexation, except for Jerusalem.[46][47]

The United States extended de jure recognition to the Government of Transjordan and the Government of Israel on the same day, January 31, 1949.[48] President Truman told King Abdullah that the policy of the United States Government as regards a final territorial settlement in Palestine had been stated in the General Assembly on Nov 30, 1948 by the American representative. The US supported Israeli claims to the boundaries set forth in the UN General Assembly resolution of November 29, 1947, but believed that if Israel sought to retain additional territory in Palestine allotted to the Arabs, it should give the Arabs territorial compensation.[49]

Clea Bunch said that "President Truman crafted a balanced policy between Israel and its moderate Hashemite neighbours when he simultaneously extended formal recognition to the newly created state of Israel and the Kingdom of Transjordan. These two nations were inevitably linked in the President's mind as twin emergent states: one serving the needs of the refugee Jew, the other absorbing recently displaced Palestinian Arabs. In addition, Truman was aware of the private agreements that existed between Jewish Agency leaders and King Abdullah I of Jordan. Thus, it made perfect sense to Truman to favour both states with de jure recognition."[50]

In 1978 the U.S. State Department published a memorandum of conversation held on June 5, 1950 between Mr. Stuart W. Rockwell of the Office of African and Near Eastern Affairs and Abdel Monem Rifai, a Counselor of the Jordan Legation: Mr. Rifai asked when the United States was going to recognize the union of Arab Palestine and Jordan. Mr. Rockwell explained the Department's position, stating that it was not the custom of the United States to issue formal statements of recognition every time a foreign country changed its territorial area. The union of Arab Palestine and Jordan had been brought about as a result of the will of the people and the US accepted the fact that Jordanian sovereignty had been extended to the new area. Mr. Rifai said he had not realized this and that he was very pleased to learn that the US did in fact recognize the union.[40]

At the Rabat summit conference in 1974, Jordan and the other members of the Arab League declared that the PLO was the "sole legitimate representative of the [Arab] Palestinian people", thereby relinquishing to that organization its role as representative of the West Bank.

The Amman Agreement of February 11, 1985, declared that the PLO and Jordan would pursue a proposed confederation between the state of Jordan and a Palestinian state.[51] In 1988, King Hussein dissolved the Jordanian parliament and renounced Jordanian claims to the West Bank. The PLO assumed responsibility as the Provisional Government of Palestine and an independent state was declared.[52]

Gaza Strip

Egypt supervised an independent government of Palestine in Gaza as a trustee on behalf of the Arab League.[53] An Egyptian Ministerial order dated June 1, 1948 declared that all laws in force during the Mandate would continue to be in force in the Gaza Strip. Another order issued on August 8, 1948 vested an Egyptian Administrator-General with the powers of the High Commissioner. The All-Palestine Government issued a Declaration of the Independent State of Palestine on October 1, 1948.[54] In 1957, the Basic Law of Gaza established a Legislative Council that could pass laws which were given to the High Administrator-General for approval. In March 1962, a Constitution for the Gaza Strip was issued confirming the role of the Legislative Council.[31]

1967 occupation

The West Bank and Gaza Strip were conquered by Israel during the 1967 war. They are considered by the international community to be Occupied Palestinian Territory, notwithstanding the 1988 declaration of Palestinian independence, the limited self-government accorded to the Palestinian Authority as a result of the 1993 Oslo Accords, and Israel's withdrawal from Gaza as part of the Israel's unilateral disengagement plan of 2005, which saw the dismantlement of four Israeli settlements in the West Bank and all settlements in the Gaza Strip.[55] See also Consequences of the occupation in the Legal status section below.

Arab state under the UN Partition Plan

Claimed area of Palestine by United Nations (Green and Light Coral color)

The termination of the Palestine Mandate gave the Arabs of Palestine the opportunity to exercise their right to self-determination.

In 1946, leaders of the Zionist movement in the US sought the postponement of a determination of the application by Transjordan for United Nations membership until the status of Mandate Palestine as a whole was determined.[56] However, at its final session the League of Nations recognized the independence of Transjordan, with the agreement of Britain.

The United Nations Special Committee on Palestine (UNSCOP), which was formed to recommend a solution to Britain's dilemma in Palestine, subsequently reported that the proposed Arab state would not be economically viable. The report indicated that the Arab state would be forced to call for financial assistance "from international institutions in the way of loans for expansion of education, public health and other vital social services of a non-self-supporting nature." A technical note from the Secretariat explained that without some redistribution of customs from the Jewish state, Arab Palestine would not be economically viable. The Committee was satisfied that the proposed Jewish State and the City of Jerusalem would be viable.[57]

Jewish leaders including Nahum Goldmann, Rabbi Abba Silver, Moshe Shertok, and David Ben Gurion proposed in 1946 to US officials a union between Arab Palestine and Transjordan.[58] In December 1948 the Secretary of State authorized the US Consul in Amman to advise King Abdullah and the officials of Transjordan that the US accepted the principles contained in the resolutions of the Jericho Conference, and that the US viewed incorporation with Transjordan as the logical disposition of Arab Palestine.[59] The United States subsequently extended de jure recognition to the Government of Transjordan and the Government of Israel on the same day, January 31, 1949.[48] The 1950 State Department Country Report on Jordan said that King Abdullah had taken successive steps to incorporate the area of Central Palestine into Jordan and described the Jordanian Parliament resolution concerning the union of Central Palestine with Jordan. The report said the US had privately advised the British and French Foreign Ministers that it had approved the action, and that "it represented a logical development of the situation which took place as a result of a free expression of the will of the people."[60] The major problems of concern to the United States were the establishment of peaceful and friendly relations between Israel and Jordan and the successful absorption into the polity and economy of Jordan of Arab Palestine, its inhabitants, and the-bulk of the refugees located there.[61]

The 1947 United Nations Partition Plan proposed a division of Mandate Palestine between an Arab and a Jewish state, with Jerusalem and the surrounding area to be a corpus separatum under a special international regime. The regions allotted to the proposed Arab state included what would become the Gaza Strip and almost all of what would become the West Bank, as well as other areas.

The Partition Plan was passed by the UN General Assembly on November 1947. The Partition Plan was accepted by the Jewish leadership, but rejected by the Arab leaders. The Arab League threatened to take military measures to prevent the partition of Palestine and to ensure the national rights of the Palestinian Arab population. One day before the expiration of the British Mandate for Palestine, on 14 May 1948, Israel declared its independence within the borders of the Jewish State set out in the Partition Plan. US President Harry Truman recognized the State of Israel de facto the following day. The Arab countries declared war on the newly formed State of Israel heralding the start of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War.

After the war, which Palestinians call the Catastrophe, the 1949 Armistice Agreements established the separation lines between the combatants, leaving Israel in control of some of the areas which had been designated for the Arab state under the Partition Plan, Transjordan in control of the West Bank and East Jerusalem, Egypt in control of the Gaza Strip and Syria in control of the Himmah Area.

In 1978 the U.S. State Department published a memorandum of conversation held on June 5, 1950 between Mr. Stuart W. Rockwell of the Office of African and Near Eastern Affairs and Abdel Monem Rifai, a Counselor of the Jordan Legation: Mr. Rifai asked when the United States was going to recognize the union of Arab Palestine and Jordan. Mr. Rockwell explained the Department's position, stating that it was not the custom of the United States to issue formal statements of recognition every time a foreign country changed its territorial area. The union of Arab Palestine and Jordan had been brought about as a result of the will of the people and the US accepted the fact that Jordanian sovereignty had been extended to the new area. Mr. Rifai said he had not realized this and that he was very pleased to learn that the US did in fact recognize the union.[62]

The US advised the Arab states that the US attitude regarding Israel had been clearly stated in the UN by Dr. Jessup on November 20, 1949. He said that the US supported Israeli claims to the boundaries set forth in the UN General Assembly resolution. However, the US believed that if Israel sought to retain additional territory in Palestine it should give the Arabs other territory as compensation.[63] The Israelis agreed that the boundaries were negotiable, but did not agree to the principle of compensation as a precondition. Mr. Eban stressed that it was undesirable to undermine what had already been accomplished by the armistice agreements, and maintained that Israel held no territory wrongfully, since her occupation of the areas had been sanctioned by the armistice agreements, as had the occupation of the territory in Palestine held by the Arab states.[64]

The Crisis of 1967

In November 1966, the Israeli Defense Forces conducted a raid into Jordan and carried out operations against the West Bank village of Samu in response to several attacks. President Johnson's personal assistant, R. W. Komer, sent word to Prime Minister Eshkol 'that Israel was "going too far" in striking Jordan and had better lay off'. He told Israeli Ambassador Harmon the Israelis had put in jeopardy the US policy of promoting Arab-Israel stability by subsidizing an independent Jordan. President Johnson's personal assistant, Walt Rostow, agreed and added that the US had spent $500 million to shore up Jordan as a stabilizing factor on Israel's longest border.[65]

On June 9, 1967 Foreign Minister Eban assured US Ambassador Goldberg that Israel was not seeking territorial aggrandizement and had no "colonial" aspirations.[66] Secretary Rusk stressed to the Government of Israel that no settlement with Jordan would be accepted by the world community unless it gave Jordan some special position in the Old City of Jerusalem. The US also assumed Jordan would receive the bulk of the West Bank as that was regarded as Jordanian territory.[67]

On November 3, 1967 US Ambassador Goldberg, accompanied by Mr. Sisco and Mr. Pedersen, called on King Hussein of Jordan. Goldberg said the US was committed to the principle of political independence and territorial integrity and was ready to reaffirm it bilaterally and publicly in the Security Council resolution. According to Goldberg, the US believed in territorial integrity, withdrawal, and recognition of secure boundaries. Goldberg said the Principle of territorial integrity has two important sub-principles, there must be a withdrawal to recognized and secure frontiers for all countries, not necessarily the old armistice lines, and there must be mutuality in adjustments.[68]

Walt Rostow advised President Johnson, that Secretary Rusk had explained to Mr Eban that US support for secure permanent frontiers doesn't mean we support territorial changes.[69] The record of a meeting between Under Secretary of State Eugene Rostow and Israeli Ambassador Harmon stated that Rostow made clear the US view that there should be movement from General Armistice Agreements to conditions of peace and that this would involve some adjustments of Armistice lines as foreseen in the Armistice Agreements. Rostow told Harmon that he had already stressed to Foreign Minister Eban that the US expected the thrust of the settlement would be toward security and demilitarization arrangements rather than toward major changes in the Armistice lines. Harmon said the Israeli position was that Jerusalem should be an open city under unified administration but that the Jordanian interest in Jerusalem could be met through arrangements including "sovereignty". Rostow said the US government assumed (and Harman confirmed) that despite public statements to the contrary, the Government of Israel position on Jerusalem was that which Eban, Harman, and Evron had given several times, that Jerusalem was negotiable.[70]

Ambassador Goldberg briefed King Hussein on US assurances regarding territorial integrity. Goldberg said the US did not view Jordan as a country that consisted only of the East Bank, and that the US was prepared to support a return of the West Bank to Jordan with minor boundary rectifications. The US would use its influence to obtain compensation to Jordan for any territory it would be required to give up. Finally, although as a matter of policy the US did not agree with Jordan's position on Jerusalem, nor with the Israeli position on Jerusalem, the US was prepared to use its influence to obtain for Jordan a role in Jerusalem.[71] Secretary Rusk advised President Johnson that he confirmed Golberg's pledge regarding territorial integrity to King Hussein.[72]

During a subsequent meeting between President Johnson, King Hussein, and Secretary of State Dean Rusk, Hussein said the phraseology of the resolution calling for withdrawal from occupied territories could be interpreted to mean that the Egyptians should withdraw from Gaza and the Jordanians should withdraw from the West Bank. He said this possibility was evident from a speech given by Prime Minister Eshkol in which it had been claimed that both Gaza and the West Bank had been "occupied territory". The President agreed, and promised he would talk to Ambassador Goldberg about inserting Israel in that clause. Ambassador Goldberg told King Hussein that after taking into account legitimate Arab concerns and suggestions, the US would be willing to add the word "Israeli" before "Armed Forces" in first operative paragraph.[73]

In a speech delivered on September 1, 1982 President Reagan called for a settlement freeze and continued to support full Palestinian autonomy in political union with Jordan. He also said that "It is the United States' position that – in return for peace – the withdrawal provision of Resolution 242 applies to all fronts, including the West Bank and Gaza."[74]

After the events of Black September in Jordan, the rift between the Palestinian leadership and the Kingdom of Jordan continued to widen. The Arab League affirmed the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and called on all the Arab states, including Jordan, to undertake to defend Palestinian national unity and not to interfere in internal Palestinian affairs. The Arab League also 'affirmed the right of the Palestinian people to establish an independent national authority under the command of the Palestine Liberation Organization, the sole legitimate representative of the Palestinian people in any Palestinian territory that is liberated.' King Ḥussein dissolved the Jordanian parliament. Half of its members had been West Bank representatives. He renounced Jordanian claims to the West Bank, and allowed the PLO to assume responsibility as the Provisional Government of Palestine. The Kingdom of Jordan, Egypt, and Syria no longer act as the legitimate representatives of the Palestinian people, or their territory.[75]

1988 Declaration

The Palestinian Declaration of Independence was approved by the Palestinian National Council (PNC) in Algiers on November 15, 1988, by a vote of 253 in favour 46 against and 10 abstentions. It was read by Yasser Arafat at the closing session of the 19th PNC to a standing ovation.[76] Upon completing the reading of the declaration, Arafat, as Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization assumed the title of "President of Palestine."[77]

Referring to "the historical injustice inflicted on the Palestinian Arab people resulting in their dispersion and depriving them of their right to self-determination," the declaration recalled the Treaty of Lausanne (1923) and UN General Assembly Resolution 181 as supporting the rights of Palestinians and Palestine. The declaration then proclaims a "State of Palestine on our Palestinian territory with its capital Jerusalem".[78][79] The borders of the declared State of Palestine were not specified. The population of the state was referred to by the statement: "The State of Palestine is the state of Palestinians wherever they may be". The state was defined as an Arab country by the statement: "The State of Palestine is an Arab state, an integral and indivisible part of the Arab nation". The declaration was accompanied by a PNC call for multilateral negotiations on the basis of UN Security Council Resolution 242. This call was later termed "the Historic Compromise",[80] as it implied acceptance of the "two-state solution", namely that it no longer questioned the legitimacy of the State of Israel.[79] The PNC's political communiqué accompanying the declaration called only for withdrawal from "Arab Jerusalem" and the other "Arab territories occupied."[81] Yasser Arafat's statements in Geneva a month later[82][83] were accepted by the United States as sufficient to remove the ambiguities it saw in the declaration and to fulfill the longheld conditions for open dialogue with the United States.[84][85]

As a result of the declaration, the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) convened, inviting Yasser Arafat, Chairman of the PLO to give an address. An UNGA resolution was adopted "acknowledging the proclamation of the State of Palestine by the Palestine National Council on 15 November 1988," and it was further decided that "the designation 'Palestine' should be used in place of the designation 'Palestine Liberation Organization' in the United Nations system." One hundred and four states voted for this resolution, forty-four abstained, and two – the United States and Israel – voted against.[86] By mid-December, 75 states had recognized Palestine, rising to 89 states by February 1989.[87]

Palestinian Authority

Under the terms of the Oslo Accords signed between Israel and the PLO, the latter assumed control over the Jericho area of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip on 17 May 1994. On September 28, 1995, following the signing of the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israeli military forces withdrew from the West Bank towns of Nablus, Ramallah, Jericho, Jenin, Tulkarem, Qalqilya and Bethlehem. In December 1995, the PLO also assumed responsibility for civil administration in 17 areas in Hebron.[88] While the PLO assumed these responsibilities as a result of Oslo, a new temporary interim administrative body was set up as a result of the Accords to carry out these functions on the ground: the Palestinian National Authority (PNA).

An analysis outlining the relationship between the PLO, the PNA (or PA), Palestine and Israel in light of the interim arrangements set out in the Oslo Accords begins by stating that, "Palestine may best be described as a transitional association between the PA and the PLO." It goes on to explain that this transitional association accords the PA responsibility for local government and the PLO responsibility for representation of the Palestinian people in the international arena, while prohibiting it from concluding international agreements that affect the status of the occupied territories. This situation is said to be accepted by the Palestinian population insofar as it is viewed as a temporary arrangement.[89]

In March 2008 it was reported that the PA was working to increase the number of countries that recognize Palestine and that a PA representative had signed a bilateral agreement between the State of Palestine and Costa Rica.[90] A recent Al-Haq position paper said the reality is that the PA has entered into various agreements with international organizations and states. These instances of foreign relations undertaken by the PA signify that the Interim Agreement is part of a larger on-going peace process, and that the restrictions on the foreign policy operations of the PA conflict with the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, now a norm with a nature of jus cogens, which includes a right to engage in international relations with other peoples.[91]

Governorates structure

Governorates of Palestine

The Constitution of the League of Arab States says the existence and independence of Palestine cannot be questioned de jure even though the outward signs of this independence have remained veiled as a result of force majeure.[92] The League supervised the Egyptian trusteeship of the Palestinian government in Gaza after the termination of the British Mandate and secured assurances from Jordan that the 1950 Act of Union was "without prejudice to the final settlement".[38][93]

By the 1988 declaration, the PNC empowered its central council to form a government-in-exile when appropriate, and called upon its executive committee to perform the duties of the government-in-exile until its establishment.[76]

Under the terms of the Oslo Accords signed between Israel and the PLO, the latter assumed control over the Jericho area of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip on 17 May 1994. On September 28, 1995, following the signing of the Israeli-Palestinian Interim Agreement on the West Bank and Gaza Strip, Israeli military forces withdrew from the West Bank towns of Nablus, Ramallah,, Jericho, Jenin, Tulkarem, Qalqilya and Bethlehem. In December 1995, the PLO also assumed responsibility for civil administration in 17 areas in Hebron.[88] While the PLO assumed these responsibilities as a result of Oslo, a new temporary interim administrative body was set up as a result of the Accords to carry out these functions on the ground: the Palestinian National Authority (PNA).

An analysis outlining the relationship between the PLO, the PNA (or PA), Palestine and Israel in light of the interim arrangements set out in the Oslo Accords begins by stating that, "Palestine may best be described as a transitional association between the PA and the PLO." It goes on to explain that this transitional association accords the PA responsibility for local government and the PLO responsibility for representation of the Palestinian people in the international arena, while prohibiting it from concluding international agreements that affect the status of the occupied territories. This situation is said to be accepted by the Palestinian population insofar as it is viewed as a temporary arrangement.[89]

In March 2008 it was reported that the PA was working to increase the number of countries that recognize Palestine and that a PA representative had signed a bilateral agreement between the State of Palestine and Costa Rica.[90] A recent Al-Haq position paper said the reality is that the PA has entered into various agreements with international organizations and states. These instances of foreign relations undertaken by the PA signify that the Interim Agreement is part of a larger on-going peace process, and that the restrictions on the foreign policy operations of the PA conflict with the inalienable right of the Palestinian people to self-determination, now a norm with a nature of jus cogens, which includes a right to engage in international relations with other peoples.[91]

Population

Exodus

1948

1967

Legal status

There are a wide variety of views regarding the status of the State of Palestine, both among the states of the international community and among legal scholars. The existence of a state of Palestine, although controversial, is nonetheless a reality in the opinions of the many states that have established bilateral diplomatic relations.[94][95][96][97] A number of publicists and legal experts have noted that the majority of other states have legally recognized the State of Palestine.

Consequences of the occupation

After 1967, a number of legal arguments were advanced which dismissed the right of Palestinians to self-determination and statehood. They generally proposed that Palestine was a land void of a legitimate sovereign and supported Israeli claims to the remaining territory of the Palestine Mandate.[98][99] Historian and journalist, Gershom Gorenberg, says that outside of the pro-settlement community in Israel, these positions are considered quirky. He says that, while the Israeli government has used them for PR purposes abroad, it takes entirely different positions when arguing real legal cases before the Israeli Supreme Court. In 2005 Israel decided to dismantle all Israeli settlements in the Gaza Strip and four in the northern West Bank. Gorenberg notes, the government's decision was challenged in the Supreme Court by settlers, and the government won the case by noting the settlements were in territory whose legal status was that of 'belligerent territory'. The government argued that the settlers should have known the settlements were only temporary.[100]

Most UN member states questioned the claim that Israel held better title to the land than the inhabitants, and stressed that statehood was an inalienable right of the Palestinian people.[101] Legal experts, like David John Ball, concluded that "the Palestinians, based on the principles of self-determination and the power of the U.N., appear to hold better title to the territory."[102] The International Court of Justice subsequently reaffirmed the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and the prohibition under customary and conventional international law against acquisition of territory by war.

The Israeli Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, cited a case involving Gaza and said that "The Judea and Samaria areas are held by the State of Israel in belligerent occupation. The legal representative of the state in the area is the military commander. He is not the sovereign in the territory held in belligerent occupation. His power is granted him by public international law regarding belligerent occupation. The legal meaning of this view is twofold: first, Israeli law does not apply in these areas. They have not been "annexed" to Israel. Second, the legal regime which applies in these areas is determined by public international law regarding belligerent occupation."[103]

The court said most Israelis do not have ownership of the land on which they built their houses and businesses in the territory "They acquired their rights from the military commander, or from persons acting on his behalf. Neither the military commander nor those acting on his behalf are owners of the property, and they cannot transfer rights better than those they have. To the extent that the Israelis built their homes and assets on land which is not private ('state land'), that land is not owned by the military commander. His authority is defined in regulation 55 of The Hague Regulations. . . . The State of Israel acts . . . as the administrator of the state property and as usufructuary of it."[103]

The Declaration and the Act of State Doctrine

Many states have recognized the State of Palestine since 1988. Under the principles of customary international law, when a government is recognized by another government, recognition is retroactive in effect, and validates all the actions and conduct of the government so recognized from the commencement of its existence.[104]

Stephen Talmon notes that many countries have a formal policy of recognizing states, not their governments. In practice, they usually make no formal declarations regarding recognition. He cites several examples including a memorandum on US recognition policy and practice, dated 25 September 1981 which said that recognition would be implied by the US Government's dealings with the new government.[105] Many countries have expressed their intention to enter into relations with the State of Palestine. The United States formally recognized the West Bank and Gaza Strip as a country in 1997 at the request of the Palestinian Authority. At that time it asked the public to take notice of that fact through announcements it placed in the Federal Register.[106] The USAID West Bank/Gaza,[107] has been tasked with "state-building" projects in the areas of democracy, governance, resources, and infrastructure. Part of the USAID mission is to "provide flexible and discrete support for implementation of the Quartet Road Map",[108] an internationally backed plan which calls for the progressive development of a viable Palestinian State in the West Bank and Gaza. The EU has announced similar external relations programs with the Palestinian Authority.[109]

The view of the European states, which did not extend full recognition was expressed by French President François Mitterrand who stated: "Many European countries are not ready to recognize a Palestine state. Others think that between recognition and non-recognition there are significant degrees; I am among these."[86] But, after the PLO recognized the state of Israel, Mitterrand welcomed the PLO leader, Yasser Arafat, in Paris, in May 1989.[110]

Decisions of international and national tribunals

The U.S. State Department Digest of International Law says that the terms of the Treaty of Lausanne provided for the application of the principles of state succession to the "A" Mandates. The Treaty of Versailles (1920) provisionally recognized the former Ottoman communities as independent nations. It also required Germany to recognize the disposition of the former Ottoman territories and to recognize the new states laid down within their boundaries. The Treaty of Lausanne required the newly created states that acquired the territory to pay annuities on the Ottoman public debt, and to assume responsibility for the administration of concessions that had been granted by the Ottomans. A dispute regarding the status of the territories was settled by an Arbitrator appointed by the Council of the League of Nations. It was decided that Palestine and Transjordan were newly created states according to the terms of the applicable post-war treaties. In its Judgment No. 5, The Mavrommatis Palestine Concessions, the Permanent Court of International Justice also decided that Palestine was responsible as the successor state for concessions granted by Ottoman authorities. The Courts of Palestine and Great Britain decided that title to the properties shown on the Ottoman Civil list had been ceded to the government of Palestine as an allied successor state.[16]

State succession

A legal analysis by the International Court of Justice noted that the Covenant of the League of Nations had provisionally recognized the communities of Palestine as independent nations. The mandate simply marked a transitory period, with the aim and object of leading the mandated territory to become an independent self-governing State.[111] Judge Higgins explained that the Palestinian people are entitled to their territory, to exercise self-determination, and to have their own State."[112] The Court said that specific guarantees regarding freedom of movement and access to the Holy Sites contained in the Treaty of Berlin (1878) had been preserved under the terms of the Palestine Mandate and a chapter of the United Nations Partition Plan for Palestine.[113]

Article 62 (LXII) of the Treaty of Berlin, 13 July 1878[114] dealt with religious freedom and civil and political rights in all parts of the Ottoman Empire.[115] The guarantees have frequently been referred to as "religious rights" or "minority rights". However, the guarantees included a prohibition against discrimination in civil and political matters. Difference of religion could not be alleged against any person as a ground for exclusion or incapacity in matters relating to the enjoyment of civil or political rights, admission to public employments, functions, and honors, or the exercise of the various professions and industries, "in any locality whatsoever."

The resolution of the San Remo Conference contained a safeguarding clause for all of those rights. The conference accepted the terms of the Mandate with reference to Palestine, on the understanding that there was inserted in the process-verbal a legal undertaking by the Mandatory Power that it would not involve the surrender of the rights hitherto enjoyed by the non-Jewish communities in Palestine.[116] The draft mandates for Mesopotamia and Palestine, and all of the post-war peace treaties contained clauses for the protection of minorities. The mandates invoked the compulsory jurisdiction of the Permanent Court of International Justice in the event of any disputes.[117]

Article 28 of the Mandate required that those rights be safeguarded in perpetuity, under international guarantee.[111] The General Assembly's Plan for the Future Government of Palestine placed those rights under UN protection as part of a minority protection plan.[118] It required that they be acknowledged in a Declaration, embodied in the fundamental laws of the states, and in their Constitutions. The partition plan also contained provisions that bound the new states to international agreements and conventions to which Palestine had become a party and held them responsible for its financial obligations.[119] The Declarations of the Independent State of Israel and the Independent State of Palestine acknowledged the protected rights and were accepted as being in line with UN resolution 181(II).[120]

Opinions of officials and legal scholars

Jacob Robinson was a legal advisor to the United Nations delegation of the Jewish Agency for Palestine during the special session of the General Assembly in 1947.[121] He advised the Zionist Executive that the provisional states had come into existence as a result of the resolution of November 29, 1947.[122]

L.C. Green explained that "recognition of statehood is a matter of discretion, it is open to any existing state to accept as a state any entity it wishes, regardless of the existence of territory or an established government."[123]

Alex Takkenberg writes that while "[...] there is no doubt that the entity 'Palestine' should be considered a state in statu nascendi and although it is increasingly likely that the ongoing peace process will eventually culminate in the establishment of a Palestinian state, it is premature to conclude that statehood, as defined by international law, is at present (spring 1997) firmly established."[124] Referring to the four criteria of statehood, as outlined in the 1933 Montevideo Convention – that is, a permanent population, a defined territory, government and the capacity to enter into relations with other states – Takkenberg states that the entity known as Palestine does not fully satisfy this criteria.[124]

Conversely John V. Whitbeck, who served as an advisor to the Palestinian negotiation team during negotiations with Israel, writes that "[...] the State of Palestine already exists," and that when, "Judged by these customary criteria [those of the Montevideo Convention], the State of Palestine is on at least as firm a legal footing as the State of Israel." He continues: "The weak link in Palestine's claim to already exist as a state was, until recently, the fourth criterion, "effective control. [...] Yet a Palestinian executive and legislature, democratically elected with the enthusiastic approval of the international community, now exercises 'effective control' over a portion of Palestinian territory in which the great majority of the state's population lives. It can no longer be seriously argued that Palestine's claim to exist falls at the fourth and final hurdle."[125]

For John Quigley Palestine's existence as a state predates the 1988 declaration. Tracing Palestine's status as an international entity back to the collapse of the Ottoman Empire after World War I, he recalls that the Palestine Mandate (1918–1948), an arrangement made under Article 22 of the Covenant of the League of Nations, held as its "ultimate objective", the "self-determination and independence of the people concerned." He says that in explicitly referring to the Covenant, the 1988 declaration was reaffirming an existing Palestinian statehood.[126] Noting that Palestine under the Mandate entered into bilateral treaties, including one with Great Britain, the Mandatory power, he cites this as an example of its "sovereignty" at that time. He also notes the corollary of the Stimson Doctrine and the customary prohibition on the use of force contained in the Restatement of Foreign Relations Law of the United States, "[a]n entity does not necessarily cease to be a state even if all of its territory has been occupied by a foreign power".[86]

Robert Weston Ash says that Quigley’s analysis of the declaration that the Palestinian Authority provided to the International Criminal Court failed to explain a number of key issues. He says the “Palestinian people” to whom sovereignty reverted upon the departure of the British would have included both Jews and Arabs. He suggests that establishes a colorable Jewish —as well as Arab— claim to all of Palestine which tends to refute Professor Quigley’s contention that there are no other claimants to that territory. Ash says there are segments of Israeli society that continue to view “Judea and Samaria” as areas promised to the Jews by the Balfour Declaration and says that the Geneva Convention is not applicable to Israel's presence in those territories. He cites Yehuda Blum's "Missing Reversioner" and Eugene Rostow's related claim that “The right of the Jewish people to settle in Palestine has never been terminated for the West Bank.”[127] Quigley has said that the International Court of Justice findings in the "Wall" case regarding the applicability of the Geneva Convention discredited once and for all, as a legal matter, the ‘missing reversioner’ argument.[128] The International Criminal Court has published a summary of arguments which says that some submissions consider that it is clear that the Palestinian National Authority cannot be regarded as a ‘State’, and that some submit that Palestine is recognized as a State by many States and many institutions. The Court says that a conclusive determination on Palestine's declaration will have to be made by the judges at an appropriate moment.[129][130]

Disputes have arisen as a result of the Conflict of laws between the Palestinian Authority and Israel. Judgments originating in Israeli Courts are not directly enforceable in the Courts of the Palestinian Authority.[131] The District Court of Israel ruled that the Palestinian Authority satisfied the criteria to be legally treated as a sovereign state[132] The ruling was appealed to the Supreme Court of Israel which ruled that the Palestinian Authority cannot be defined as a foreign state, since recognizing states is an exclusive authority of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. The Supreme Court held that the Palestinian Authority can be granted state immunity on an ad hoc basis when it is warranted by the circumstances.[133] The Knesset responded to the willingness of the judges to engage in examination of the notion of ‘statehood for the purpose of state immunity’ by adopting a measure that makes it possible to grant sovereign immunity to a ‘political entity that is not a state’ as part of the 2008 Foreign States Immunity Law, Art. 20.[134]

Stefan Talmon notes that "In international law it is true that one generally recognizes the Government which exercises effective control over a territory. But this is not an absolute rule without exceptions."[135] James Crawford notes that despite its prevalence, and inclusion in the statehood criteria found in the Montevideo Convention, effectiveness is not the sole or even the critical criterion for statehood. He cites several examples of annexations and governments that have been recognized despite their lack of a territorial foothold.[136] Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu recently expressed a willingness to recognize the State of Palestine if it will agree to forgo taking effective control of its airspace, military defense, and not enter into alliances with Israel's enemies.[137]

In November 2009, Palestinian officials were reported to be preparing the ground for asking for recognition of a Palestinian State from the Security Council. The state was envisioned to be based on the 1967 Green Line as an international border with Israel and East Jerusalem as its capital. The plan was reported to have support from Arab states, Russia and the UN Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon.[138] The Secretary General said "Today, the State of Israel exists, but the State of Palestine does not." "It is vital that a sovereign State of Palestine is achieved". "This should be on the basis of the 1967 lines with agreed land swaps and a just and agreed solution to the refugee issue."[139] On 29 January 2010, the representative of Palestine deposited a copy of a letter submitted by Prime Minister Fayyad with the Secretary-General of the United Nations. The letter reported on the decree issued by Mahmoud Abbas, "President of the State of Palestine", concerning the formation of an independent commission to follow up on the Goldstone report in compliance with General Assembly resolution 64/10 of 5 November 2009.[140]

Paul De Waart says that the Quartet, particularly the United States, as well as western states, do not consider Palestine to be a state as yet. In their view the statehood of Palestine will be the result of bilateral negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian people. He says they have overlooked that under international law it is not anymore a question of creating but of recognizing the State of Palestine.[141]

Israeli legal expert Ruth Lapidoth said the Palestinians have already unilaterally declared statehood, and they did not need to do it again. "Recognition of statehood is a political act, and every state has the right to decide for itself whether to recognize another state."[142]

President Abbas said that the State of Palestine was already in existence and that the current battle is to have the state's border recognized.[143] Jerome Segal wrote about Salam Fayyad's plan for Palestinian statehood. He said lest anyone believe that the 1988 declaration is ancient history, they should read the new Fayyad plan with more care. It cites the 1988 declaration four times, identifying it as having articulated "the foundations of the Palestinian state."[144]

In September 2010 the World Bank released a report which found the Palestinian Authority "well-positioned to establish a state" at any point in the near future. The report highlighted, however, that unless private-sector growth in the Palestinian economy was stimulated, a Palestinian state would remain donor dependent. [145]

Statehood for the purposes of the UN Charter

The UN Charter protects the territorial integrity or political independence of any state from the threat or use of force. Philip Jessup served as a representative of the United States to the United Nations and as a Judge on the International Court of Justice. During the Security Council hearings regarding Israel's application for membership in the UN, he said:

[W]e already have, among the members of the United Nations, some political entities which do not possess full sovereign power to form their own international policy, which traditionally has been considered characteristic of a State. We know however, that neither at San Francisco nor subsequently has the United Nations considered that complete freedom to frame and manage one's own foreign policy was an essential requisite of United Nations membership.... ...The reason for which I mention the qualification of this aspect of the traditional definition of a State is to underline the point that the term "State", as used and applied in Article 4 of the Charter of the United Nations, may not be wholly identical with the term "State" as it is used and defined in classic textbooks on international law."[146]

After Operation Cast Lead, Palestinian Foreign Minister Riad al-Malki said that he and Palestinian Justice Minister Ali Kashan had provided proof to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court that Palestine had been extended legal recognition as a State by 67 other countries, and had bilateral agreements with States in Latin America, Asia, Africa and Europe .[147] The General Assembly endorsed the report of the United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza Conflict which also called for war crimes investigations.[148]

John Dugard has served as Judge ad hoc on the International Court of Justice and as a Special Rapporteur for both the former United Nations Commission on Human Rights and the International Law Commission. He recently wrote that the majority of states recognize the State of Palestine, and that it was only necessary that it be considered a State for the purposes of the Rome Statute for the case to be accepted by the International Criminal Court.[97]

Thomas Grant says that the General Assembly "Definition of Aggression", contained in UN General Assembly Resolution 3314 (XXIX) (1974) provides that any entity (even an illegal one like the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus) which is the target of aggression may be legally termed a State – without regard to recognition or UN membership – and benefit from the protections contained in article 2(4) of the UN Charter regarding the use of force or the threat of force by other states.[149] The UN Treaty Organization says that portions of the General Assembly's definition have been judged to be declarative of customary international law by the International Court of Justice.[150]

International recognition

Map showing nations which have recognised or have special diplomatic arrangements with the State of Palestine or other Palestinian delegation.

The United Nations has recognized the permanent sovereignty of the Palestinian people in the Occupied Palestinian Territory, including East Jerusalem as a matter of international law. General Assembly resolution 64/185, 21 December 2009 was adopted by a vote of 165 in favor to 8 against, with 7 abstentions. The right of permanent sovereignty over natural resources is a "valid norm of international law."[151] Franz Perrez wrote that "The principle of permanent sovereignty over natural resources is a fundamental principle of contemporary international law. It emerged in the 1950s during the process of decolonization as a basic constituent of the right to self-determination and an essential and inherent element of state sovereignty."[152]

The International Court of Justice noted that a number of agreements have been signed since 1993 between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization and that those agreements required Israel to transfer to Palestinian authorities certain powers and responsibilities exercised in the Occupied Palestinian Territory by its military authorities and civil administration. The Court said that Israel is under an obligation not to raise any obstacle to the exercise of such rights in those fields where competence has been transferred to Palestinian authorities.[153] Israel’s representative at the United Nations subsequently said that under agreements reached between the two sides, the Palestinian Authority already exercised jurisdiction over many natural resources, while interim cooperation and arrangements were in place for others.[154]

States recognising the State of Palestine

The exact number of countries recognizing the State of Palestine is unknown, due to the equivocal nature of many official statements of acknowledgment.[155] Many countries have a standing policy against making formal declarations that recognize new governments instead indicating their recognition of a state by doing business with its government.[105] Francis Boyle, legal advisor to the PLO, assisted the organization in drafting the 1988 Declaration of the Establishment of the State of Palestine. At that time, the United States was using its Foreign Assistance Act and other measures to discourage other countries and international organizations from extending recognition.[156] According to one author, by 1988, more than 100 countries had recognized Palestine.[157] Boyle reported in 1990 that the number was 114 states.[95] In 2005, Anat Kurz reported that 117 United Nations member states had formally recognised the state of Palestine as a sovereign state.[158] In 2010, the PA Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad, estimated the number at several dozens.[159]

After the election victory of Hamas, some governments took steps to oppose countries that supported the new Palestinian authorities, and once again imposed economic and other sanctions.[160][161] The Palestinian National Authority publicly acknowledged the recognition of 94 other states.[162] Since then, other states have publicly extended recognition[90] and Boyle has reported in 2009 that about 130 countries recognize the State of Palestine.[163] Most states that recognized the State of Palestine subsequently upgraded to embassy status any PLO offices in their countries.[164] A number of other states and the Holy See grant some form of diplomatic status to a Palestinian delegation. Some fall short of full diplomatic recognition. The following are listed in alphabetical order by region.

States maintaining special diplomatic arrangements

States that do not recognize the State of Palestine but allow the PLO to maintain a representative office in their countries are:

The delegations and embassies listed below on the left, are recognized as the representatives of the Palestinian people by the nations listed to their right:

Representation in international organizations

United Nations representation

Palestine is an entity with special status at the UN.[199] The Palestine National Council (PNC) sent formal notification to the U.N. Secretary-General regarding the establishment of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO) in May 1964. The following year in October, some Arab states requested that a PLO delegation be allowed to attend meetings of the Special Political Committee, and it was decided that they could present a statement, without implying recognition. PLO participation in the discussions of the Committee took place under the agenda item of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) from 1963 to 1973.[200]

The PLO gained observer status at the United Nations General Assembly in 1974 (General Assembly resolution 3237). Acknowledging the proclamation of the State of Palestine, the UN redesignated this observer status to 'Palestine' on 15 December 1988 in General Assembly resolution 43/177 and affirmed "the need to enable the Palestinian people to exercise their sovereignty over their territory occupied since 1967."[201] In July 1998, the General Assembly adopted a new resolution (52/250) conferring upon Palestine additional rights and privileges, including the right to participate in the general debate held at the start of each session of the General Assembly, the right of reply, the right to co-sponsor resolutions and the right to raise points of order on Palestinian and Middle East issues.[199] By this resolution, "seating for Palestine shall be arranged immediately after non-member States and before the other observers."[199] This resolution was adopted by a vote of 124 in favor, 4 against (Israel, USA, Marshall Islands, Federated States of Micronesia) and 10 abstentions.[202]

Organisation of the Islamic Conference

Palestine is a member state of the international Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Islamic Development Bank, an international financial institution set up for member states.[203][204]

Application to the WHO

The PLO, who holds observer status at the World Health Organization (WHO), applied for full membership status for the State of Palestine in 1989. The United States, which provided one-quarter of the WHO's funding at the time, informed the WHO that its funding would be withheld if Palestine was admitted as a member state. Yasser Arafat described the US statement as "blackmail". The PLO was asked to withdraw its application by the WHO director general. The WHO subsequently voted to postpone consideration of the application and no action or decision on the application was ever taken.[86] John Quigley writes that Palestine's efforts to gain membership in several international organizations connected to the United Nations was frustrated by US threats to withhold funding from any organization that admitted Palestine.[205]

Arab League

Palestine is a member of the Arab League. Represented there since 1964 by the Palestine Liberation Organization, after the 1988 declaration of statehood, its status was upgraded to full membership under the name 'Palestine' with the Chairman of the Palestine Liberation Organization serving as 'president of Palestine'.[206]

Other memberships

Palestine is a member state in a number of international organizations. In others, it enjoys affiliation in a lesser capacity or under another designation (such as PLO or Occupied Palestinian Territory). In the list below, if the membership is not full or not for the state of Palestine, the type and name of affiliation is denoted in parentheses.

Palestinian passport

File:Palestinian Authority Passport.jpg
Palestinian Authority passport

Between 1924 and 1948, the term "Palestinian passport" referred to the travel documents that were available to residents of British Mandate Palestine. Issued by the High Commissioner for Palestine, they were officially titled, "British passport, Palestine". These passports became invalid with the termination of the British mandate on 15 May 1948[209]. Israeli and Jordanian passports were offered to former British Mandate subjects according to the citizenship they acquired in the aftermath of the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. A significant number of Palestinian Arabs, especially in the Gaza Strip and those who found refuge in Syria and Lebanon, remained stateless. The term "Palestinian passport" reemerged in a different context in April 1995, when the Palestinian National Authority, pursuant to the Oslo Accords with the State of Israel, started to issue passports to Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip and West Bank. The appearance of the passport and details about its issuance are described in Appendix C of Annex II (Protocol Concerning Civil Affairs) of Gaza-Jericho Agreement signed by Israel and the PLO on 4 May 1994. The Palestinian Authority does not issue the passports on behalf of the proclaimed State of Palestine[210]. The passports bear the inscription: "This passport/travel document is issued pursuant to the Palestinian Self Government Agreement according to Oslo Agreement signed in Washington on 13/9/1993"[211]. By September 1995, the passport has been recognised by 29 states, some of them (e.g. the United States) recognise it only as a travel document (see further details below): Algeria, Bahrain, Bulgaria, People's Republic of China, Cyprus, Egypt, France, Germany, Greece, India, Iran, Jordan, Malta, Morocco, the Netherlands, Pakistan, Qatar, Romania, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Tunisia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[172]

While the U.S. Government recognises Palestinian Authority passports as travel documents, it does not view them as conferring citizenship, since they are not issued by a government. Consular officials representing the Governments of Egypt, Jordan and the United Arab Emirates, when asked by the Resource Information Center of UNHCR in May 2002, would not comment on whether their governments viewed PA passports as conferring any proof of citizenship or residency, but did say that the passports, along with valid visas or other necessary papers, would allow their holders to travel to their countries.[212]

The Palestinian Authority has said that anyone born in Palestine carrying a birth certificate attesting to that can apply for a PA passport. Whether Palestinians born outside Palestine could apply was not clear to the PA Representative questioned by UNHCR representatives in May 2002. The PA representative also said even if those applying met the PA's eligibility criteria, the Israeli government placed additional restrictions on the actual issuance of passports.[212]

In October 2007, a Japanese Justice Ministry official said, "Given that the Palestinian Authority has improved itself to almost a full-fledged state and issues its own passports, we have decided to accept the Palestinian nationality". The decision followed a recommendation by a ruling party panel on nationality that Palestinians should no longer be treated as stateless.[213]

See also

Footnotes

i.   ^ The Palestine Basic Law, approved by the PLC in May 2002, states unambiguously "Jerusalem is the Capital of Palestine" (source: [214]). Ramallah is the administrative capital where government institutions and foreign representative offices of Australia, Brazil, Canada Colombia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Malta, the Netherlands, South Africa, and Switzerland are located. Jerusalem's final status awaits future negotiations between Israel and the Palestinian Authority (see "Negotiating Jerusalem", University of Maryland). The United Nations and most countries do not accept Israel's claim over the whole of Jerusalem (see Kellerman 1993, p. 140) and maintain their embassies to Israel in other cities (see the CIA Factbook).

References

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  30. ^ The territory originally governed by the British included Transjordan (100,800 km2), the West Bank (5,640 km2) and the Gaza Strip (360 km2), altogether 127,570 km2; Israel's territory after the 1948 Arab–Israeli War was 20,770 km2.
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    • Jericho Declaration, Palestine Post, December 14, 1948, Front page [2]
    • Telegram Mr. Wells Stabler to the Acting Secretary of State, December 4, 1948, Foreign relations of the United States, 1948, The Near East, South Asia, and Africa Volume V, Part 2, pages 1645–46 [3]
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  85. ^ Quandt, William B. (1993). Peace Process: American Diplomacy and the Arab-Israeli conflict since 1967. Washington: Brookings Institution. pp. 367–375, 494. ISBN 0-520-08390-3.
  86. ^ a b c d "THE PALESTINE DECLARATION TO THE INTERNATIONAL CRIMINAL COURT: THE STATEHOOD ISSUE" (PDF). Rutgers Law Record. May 6, 2009. Retrieved 2009-07-19.
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  89. ^ a b Dajani in Brownlie et al., 1999, p. 121.
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  91. ^ a b Al-Haq Position Paper on Issues Arising from the Palestinian Authority’s Submission of a Declaration to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court Under Article 12(3) of the Rome Statute (December 14, 2009)
  92. ^ Henry G. Schermers and Niels M. Blokker, International Institutional Law, Hotei, 1995–2004, ISBN 9004138285, page 51
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  99. ^ Eugene V. Rostow, “Palestinian Self-Determination”: Possible Futures for the Unallocated Territories of the Palestine Mandate, 5 YALE J. WORLD PUB. ORD. 147 (1980)
  100. ^ See Gershom Gorenberg, The Accidental Empire: Israel and the Birth of the Settlements, 1967–1977, Macmillan, 2007, ISBN 0805082417, page 363 and South Jerusalem On Settlement Legality, 24 November 2008 [14]
  101. ^ Committee on the Exercise of the Inalienable Rights of the Palestinian People [15]
  102. ^ Ball, David John, 79 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 990 (2004), Toss the Travaux – Application of the Fourth Geneva Convention to the Middle East Conflict – A Modern (Re)Assessment
  103. ^ a b HCJ 7957/04 Mara’abe v. The Prime Minister of Israel
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  105. ^ a b See Stefan Talmon, Recognition of Governments in International Law: With Particular Reference to Governments in Exile (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998) pages 3–4
  106. ^ See the explanatory note in T.D. 97–16
  107. ^ USAID West Bank/Gaza
  108. ^ See the USAID policy and budget statement
  109. ^ See the EU statement on external relations with the Palestinian Authority [17]
  110. ^ Jean-Pierre Filiu, "Mitterrand and the Palestinians", Journal of Palestine Studies, 150, winter 2009, p.34.
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  112. ^ See the Judgment in "Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory" [19]
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  114. ^ See Article 62 (LXII) of the Treaty of Berlin
  115. ^ See Defending the Rights of Others, by Carol Fink, Cambridge University, 2006, ISBN 0-521-02994-5, page 28
  116. ^ See Papers relating to the foreign relations of the United States, The Paris Peace Conference, 1919, Page 94 [21]
  117. ^ See Summary of the work of the League of Nations, January 1920 – March 1922, League of Nations Union, 1922, page 4 [22]
  118. ^ It was cataloged during a review of Minority Rights Treaties conducted in 1950: see UN Document E/CN.4/367, 7 April 1950. UN GAR 181(II) is also listed in the Table of Treaties, starting at Page xxxviii, of Self-determination and National Minorities, Oxford Monographs in International Law, Thomas D. Musgrave, Oxford University Press, 1997, ISBN 0-19-829898-6
  119. ^ See UN GA Resolution 181(II), November 29, 1947, Section C., Chapters 1–4 [23]
  120. ^ Mr Eban acknowledged the undertakings contained in resolution 181(II) and 194(III) with regard to religious and minority rights and the internationalization of Jerusalem during the Ad Hoc Committee hearings on Israel's application for membership in the United Nations. His declarations and explanations were noted in text of General Assembly resolution 273 (III), 11 May 1949, and UN documents A/AC.24/SR.45, 48, 50 and 51; The fact that Declaration of the State of Palestine, supplied by the Palestine National Council, was accepted as being in line with General Assembly resolution 181(II) was noted in General Assembly resolution 43/177, 15 December 1988
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  122. ^ See the Minutes of the People's Council, Palestine Yearbook of International Law, Vol 4, By Anis F. Kassim, Kluwer Law International (June 1, 1988), ISBN 90-411-0341-4, page 279
  123. ^ See Israel Yearbook on Human Rights, 1989, Yoram Dinstein, Mala Tabory eds., Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 1990, ISBN 0-7923-0450-0, page 135-136 [25]
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  126. ^ See Silverburg, Sanford R. (2002), "Palestine and International Law: Essays on Politics and Economics", Jefferson, N.C: McFarland & Co, ISBN 0-7864-1191-0, pages 37–54
  127. ^ Robert Weston Ash, Is Palestine a “state”? A response to Professor John Quigley's article, The Internet Journal of Rutgers School of Law.
  128. ^ See The International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion on the Legality of Israel’s Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Legal Analysis and Potential Consequences, By Susan Akram, John Quigley, Elizabeth Badger, and Rasmus Goksor, page 11 [26]
  129. ^ See the ICC Letter to the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, dated 12 January 2010 [27]
  130. ^ See the ICC Questions and Answers
  131. ^ See Michael M. Karayanni, The Quest For Creative Jurisdiction: The Evolution Of Personal Jurisdiction Doctrine Of Israeli Courts Towards The Palestinian Territories [28]
  132. ^ See Elon Moreh College Association v. The State of Israel, April 3, 2006; Mis. Civ. P. (Jer) 1008/06, Elon Moreh College Association v. The State of Israel [April 3, 2006]; and Yuval Yoaz, "J'lem court: Palestinian Authority meets criteria to be classed as a sovereign state, Ha'aretz, 24/04/2006, [29]
  133. ^ The Israeli Supreme Court ruling in Hebrew
  134. ^ See Ronen, Yael "ICC Jurisdiction Over Acts Committed in the Gaza Strip: Article 12(3) of the ICC Statute and Non-State Entities", Journal of International Criminal Justice, Vol. 7, No. 1, 2010, page 24 [30]
  135. ^ See Stefan Talmon, Recognition of Governments in International Law: With Particular Reference to Governments in Exile (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1998) page 1
  136. ^ See Thomas D. Grant, The Recognition of States: Law and Practice in Debate and Evolution (Westport, CT: Praeger, 1999) page 9
  137. ^ See Transcript: Netanyahu Speech on Israel-Palestine (14 June 2009)
  138. ^ PA negotiator: We may seek UN recognition of Palestinian state (Haaretz, Nov. 14, 2009)
  139. ^ See "A Sovereign State of Palestine, Vital: UN Chief", 2009-12-01, Xinhua, [31]
  140. ^ See Report of the Secretary-General, UN Document A/64/651, 4 February 2010 para 5 and Annex II [32]
  141. ^ International symposium ICJ and Israel’s Wall, The Hague 9 July 2009, Address P.J.I.M. de Waart [33]
  142. ^ See Lieberman warns against '67 borders, Jerusalem Post, November 14, 2009 [34]
  143. ^ See Abbas: Palestinian state an existing fact, Ynet, November 11, 2009
  144. ^ See The 1988 Declaration of Independence [35] and Ending the Occupation, Establishing the State – Program of the Thirteenth Government [36]
  145. ^ Palestinians able to establish a state - World Bank (Reuters, Sept. 17, 2010)
  146. ^ See page 12 of S/PV.383, 2 December 1948
  147. ^ See ICC prosecutor considers ‘Gaza war crimes’ probe
  148. ^ "United Nations Fact Finding Mission on the Gaza conflict". .ohchr.org. Retrieved 2010-08-02.
  149. ^ See The recognition of states, By Thomas D. Grant, page 21
  150. ^ See Definition of Aggression, General Assembly resolution 3314 (XXIX), 14 December 1974 [37]
  151. ^ See Gerhard Brehme, Souveranitat der jungen National-staaten uber Naturreichtumer [Sovereignty of the Young Nation-States over Natural Resources] 71, 266 (1967)
  152. ^ The other authorities cited in Franz Xaver Perrez, "The Relationship between "Permanent Sovereignty" and the Obligation Not to Cause Transboundary Environmental Damage," Environmental Law 26.4 (1996) are Kamal Hossain, Introduction to Permanent Sovereignty over Natural Resources in International Law at ix (Kamal Hossain & Subrata Roy Chowdhury eds., 1984); International Law Association, Report of the Sixtieth Conference, Montreal, pages 196–197 (1982); and Milan Bulajic, Principles of International Development Law pages 283–284 (2d ed. 1992);
  153. ^ See para. 77 and 112 of the ICJ Advisory Opinion in the "Wall" case
  154. ^ See General Assembly Doc. GA/EF/3219, 20 October 2008
  155. ^ Crawford, James (1999). "Israel (1948–1949) and Palestine (1998–1999): Two Studies in the Creation of States", in Goodwin-Gil G.S. and S. Talmon, The Reality of International Law: Essays in Honour of Ian Brownlie, Oxford University Press Inc., New York, pp. 110–115
  156. ^ See Patterns of global terrorism 1985–2005: U.S. Department of State reports with supplementary documents and statistics, Volume 1, Anna Sabasteanski, Berkshire, 2005, ISBN 0-9743091-3-3, page 47
  157. ^ Fowler and Bunck, 1995, p. 59.
  158. ^ Kurz, Anat N. (2005) Fatah and the Politics of Violence: the institutionalization of a popular Struggle. Brighton: Sussex Academic Press ISBN 1-84519-032-7, ISBN 978-1-84519-032-3 p. 123
  159. ^ In an interview to Uri Avneri (14 April 2010), the PA Prime Minister, Salam Fayyad said: "Dozens of countries recognized this state [of Palestine], and the PLO representatives there enjoy the official status of ambassadors. But did this improve the situation of the Palestinians?"
  160. ^ See for example, Palestinian Anti-Terrorism Act of 2006, Pub. L. 109–446, Dec. 21, 2006, 120 Stat. 3318 [38]
  161. ^ US plotted to overthrow Hamas after election victory, by Suzanne Goldenberg, The Guardian, Tuesday 4 March 2008
  162. ^ Official website of the Palestinian National Authority
  163. ^ Palestine, Palestinians and International Law, Francis A. Boyle, Clarity Press, September 1, 2009, ISBN 093286337X, Back Cover
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  169. ^ The DRC recognized Palestine under its former name of "Zaire".
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  171. ^ South African Representative Office to the Palestinian National Authority
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  178. ^ a b Embassy of the State of Palestine to the Republic of Uzbekistan, Central Asia and Azerbaijan
  179. ^ Vietnamese Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Government of Vietnam. Retrieved March 20, 2007.
  180. ^ The Palestinian embassy in Tashkent, Uzbekistan also represents the PNA to Azerbaijan.
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  182. ^ Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations: Palestine Embassies, Missions, Delegations Abroad
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  188. ^ Cypriot Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Government of Cyprus. Retrieved March 20, 2007.
  189. ^ Kassim, 1997, p. 291.
  190. ^ http://www.palestina.int.ar/ Retrieved March 20, 2007.
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  192. ^ General Delegation of Palestine in Canada
  193. ^ General Delegation of Palestine in Finland
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  195. ^ The General Delegation of Palestine in Brussels, Belgium is accredited to Luxembourg.
  196. ^ The ICJ noted that Palestine gave a unilateral undertaking, by declaration of 7 June 1982, in the name of the 'State of Palestine' to apply the Fourth Geneva Convention – and that Switzerland, as depositary State, considered that unilateral undertaking valid. See paragraph 91 of the International Court of Justice Advisory Opinion, Legal Consequences of the Construction of a Wall in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Source
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  200. ^ "Status of Palestine at the United Nations". Permanent Observer Mission of Palestine to the United Nations – New York. Retrieved 2009-07-28.
  201. ^ Hillier, 1998, p. 214.
  202. ^ Silverburg, 2002, p. 292.
  203. ^ "OIC Member States". Permanent Mission of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference to the United Nations Offices in Geneva and Vienna. Retrieved 2009-12-30.
  204. ^ Taylor & Francis group and Lucy Dean, 2003, p. 1328.
  205. ^ Quigley, 1990, p. 231.
  206. ^ Takkenberg, 1998, pp. 136–138.
  207. ^ English country names and code elements
  208. ^ http://www.wipo.int/members/en/organizations.jsp
  209. ^ Artz, 1997 p. 77.
  210. ^ Segal in Kapitan, 1997, p. 231.
  211. ^ "United States Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services, Palestine/Occupied Territories: Information On Passports Issued By The Palestine National Authority, 17 December 1998, PAL99001.ZCH, available at: [40]" (accessed 24 August 2010)
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Bibliography

External links