|
November 30, 2003 To the editor of the
Guardian
Subject: "UN's chief says fence must go"
Re "UN's chief says fence must go" Nov. 29, UN Secretary General, Kofi
Annan's declaration that Israel is in violation of international law for
flouting a UN resolution calling for dismantling of its "security fence"
is patently incorrect. Rather, it is the UN resolution, to which he
refers, that clearly flouts international law, violating, as it does,
Security Council Resolution 242, which, unlike GA resolutions, is binding.
No better authority for clarification of 242, need be sought than the late
Eugene Rostow who participated in producing it. In an article published in
The New Republic on October 21, 1991, he explained unambiguously that
Resolution 242 allows Israel to administer the territories it occupied in
1967 until "a just and lasting peace in the Middle East" is achieved.
Resolutions calling for withdrawals from "all" the territories were
defeated for the explicit reason that there was no intention to force
Israel back to the "fragile" and "vulnerable" Armistice Demarcation Lines.
Rather, it was intended that Israel retire, once peace was made, to what
Resolution 242 called "secure and recognized" boundaries, agreed to by the
parties.
Your readers are surely entitled to expect that the UN Secretary General
acquaint himself with the aforementioned implications of 242. While the
fence to which Mr. Anan objects may, or may not, be wise or desirable, it
is clearly not illegal and one may hope that Mr. Anan will withdraw his
mistaken declaration about the legality of Israel's anti-terror barrier.
Sincerely,
Maurice Ostroff
Back
|