Although
the West Bank and Gaza are referred to by nearly all other States
as "occupied territories," implying that all Israeli activities
in them are governed by the Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949, Israel
calls them administered areas and has a different view
of its obligations and their legal status.
The Israeli government view, laid out in legal memoranda issued
by its Ministry of Foreign Affairs, is that the territories did
not belong to any sovereign State at the time Israel captured them
during the 1967 war. That is, Egypt did not claim the Gaza Strip,
and Jordan may have claimed the West Bank, but Israel and the great
majority of states did not recognize that claim; and Palestinians
did not assert sovereignty to the territory at that time. In addition,
UN resolutions 242 and 338, which call upon Israel to withdraw from
occupied territory, did not say that other States claimed sovereignty
at the time. Israel further argues that any Palestinian claims to
sovereignty over the territories based upon the UN General Assembly
partition resolution of 1947 were rendered invalid because the Palestinians
and allied Arab states rejected the resolution and took up arms
against it.
Accordingly, in the Israeli view, the Fourth Convention is inapplicable
on its face, since under the second paragraph of Article 2 common
to all four Conventions of 1949, the Conventions apply only to occupation
of the territory of a High Contracting Party. Formal recognition
of the applicability of the Convention, Israel argued, implied a
recognition of the sovereignty of the former administration.
Nevertheless, the Israel government in official statements has pledged
compliance with what it views as the humanitarian and customary
provisions of the Conventionbut without stipulating which
articles it has in mind. Israel claims it has gone further than
required in its protection of the local population of the territories.
For example, although the Convention accepts the legality of the
death penalty, it is not applied even to horrific acts of terrorism.
Similarly, the Convention does not require that any provision be
made for movement of the local population to and from territories,
whereas Israel, within limits, permits such travel and trade, even
to countries in a legal state of war with Israel.
The United Nations Security Council, the International Committee
of the Red Cross, States, and scholars have criticized Israels
legal position. Critics note that Article 1 of the Fourth Geneva
Convention requires a High Contracting Party to respect and
ensure respect for the Convention in all circumstances.
Moreover, Article 4 stipulates that persons protected by the
Convention are those who, at any given moment, and in any manner
whatsoever, find themselves, in case of a conflict or occupation,
in the hands of a Party to the conflict or occupying power of which
they are not nationals. Thus, critics agree, Israel should
apply the full Convention, and it is an exaggeration to claim that
accepting the applicability of the Convention implies acknowledging
prior sovereignty.
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