Sent: Sunday, November 10, 2013 6:47
PM
To: Secretary John Kerry
To: Secretary John Kerry
Alan
Baker, Attorney, Ambassador (ret’)
P.O.B.
182, Har Adar,
Israel
90836
Tel:
+972-54-3322643
E-mail:
ambassador.alan@gmail.com
The Hon.
James Kerry, U.S. Secretary of State,
The
State Department,
Washington
D.C.
November
8, 2013
Dear
Secretary Kerry,
After
listening to you declare repeatedly over the past weeks that
"Israel's settlements are
illegitimate", I respectfully wish to state, unequivocally, that you are
mistaken and ill advised, both in law and in fact.
Pursuant
to the "Oslo Accords", and specifically the Israel-Palestinian Interim Agreement
(1995), the "issue of settlements" is one of subjects to be negotiated in the
permanent status negotiations. President Bill Clinton on behalf of the
US, is signatory as witness
to that agreement, together with the leaders of the EU, Russia, Egypt, Jordan and Norway.
Your
statements serve to not only to prejudge this negotiating issue, but also to
undermine the integrity of that agreement, as well as the very negotiations that
you so enthusiastically advocate.
Your
determination that Israel's settlements are illegitimate
cannot be legally substantiated. The oft-quoted prohibition on transferring
population into occupied territory (Art. 49 of the 4th Geneva Convention) was,
according to the International Committee Red Cross's own official commentary of
that convention, drafted in 1949 to prevent the forced, mass transfer of
populations carried out by the Nazis in the Second World War. It was never
intended to apply to Israel's settlement activity.
Attempts by the international community to attribute this article to
Israel emanate from clear
partisan motives, with which you, and the US are now
identifying.
The
formal applicability of that convention to the disputed territories cannot be
claimed since they were not occupied from a prior, legitimate sovereign power.
The
territories cannot be defined as "Palestinian territories" or, as you yourself
frequently state, as "Palestine". No such entity exists, and the
whole purpose of the permanent status negotiation is to determine, by agreement,
the status of the territory, to which Israel has a legitimate claim, backed
by international legal and historic rights. How can you presume to undermine
this negotiation?
There is
no requirement in any of the signed agreements between Israel and the Palestinians that
Israel cease, or freeze settlement
activity. The opposite is in fact the case. The above-noted 1995 interim
agreement enables each party to plan, zone and build in the areas under its
respective control.
Israel's
settlement policy neither prejudices the outcome of the negotiations nor does it
involve displacement of local Palestinian residents from their private
property. Israel is indeed duly committed to
negotiate the issue of settlements, and thus there is no room for any
predetermination by you intended to prejudge the outcome of that
negotiation.
By your
repeating this ill-advised determination that Israel's settlements are illegitimate, and by
your threatening Israel with
a "third Palestinian intifada" and international isolation and delegitimization,
you are in fact buying into, and even fueling the Palestinian propaganda
narrative, and exerting unfair pressure on Israel. This is
equally the case with your insistence on a false and unrealistic time limit to
the negotiation.
As such
you are taking sides, thereby prejudicing your own personal credibility, as well
as that of the US.
With a
view to restoring your own and the US's credibility, and to come with clean hands to
the negotiation, you are respectfully requested to publicly and formally retract
your determination as to the illegitimate nature of Israel's settlements and to cease your pressure
on Israel.
Respectfully,
Alan
Baker, Attorney, Ambassador (ret'),
Former
legal counsel of Israel's Ministry for Foreign
Affairs,
Former
ambassador of Israel to
Canada,
Director,
Institute for Contemporary Affairs, Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs,
Director,
International Action Division, The Legal Forum for Israel
Copy:
H.E.
Daniel B. Shapiro, US Ambassador to Israel,
71
Hayarkon Street
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