Thursday, August 29, 2024
The most important Middle East treaty that you probably never heard about
Ken Spiro
You may have heard about The Balfour Declaration of
1917 or the U.N. Partition Plan of 1947, but have you ever heard about The
Treaty of San Remo in 1920?
A year and a half after the end of World War I, the
victorious Allied Powers convened at a villa in northern Italy, to decide the
fate of the defeated Ottoman Empire and redraw the map of the Middle East which
had, until the end of the war, been part of that empire. The result of this
conference was The Treaty of San Remo which was signed on April 24, 1920. The significance of the Treaty of San Remo
for the modern Middle East cannot be overstated. It not only redrew the map of the
region, creating several new nation-states, but also sowed the seeds of
long-standing geopolitical conflicts. The decision to grant Britain the mandate
over Palestine, in particular, had profound consequences that reverberate to
this day.
The Background:
At the heart of the Treaty of San Remo was the
dismantling of the Ottoman Empire, The Allied Powers, including Britain,
France, Italy, and Japan (with American diplomats present as observers),
convened to discuss the post-war division of the Ottoman territories. The
outcome of this conference not only shaped the political boundaries of the
Middle East but also laid the foundation for the establishment of many of the
nation-states, with the League of Nations overseeing the mandates entrusted to
specific European powers.
The British Empire emerged from World War I as a
major player in the Middle East, and the Treaty of San Remo solidified its
influence in the region. The Sykes-Picot Agreement of1916, a secret
understanding between Britain and France, had already outlined their intentions
for the post-Ottoman division of the region. However, the San Remo conference
brought these plans into the public domain and legitimized the British control
over Palestine.
One of the most notable outcomes of the treaty was the
establishment of the mandate system, which granted certain territories to the
control of mandatory powers-Great Britain and France. The League of Nations,
the international organization formed after World War I, entrusted Britain and
France with the administration of various territories in the Middle East. These
mandates laid the groundwork for the creation of several modern states: Iraq gained independence from the British mandate system in 1932
and the French mandate led to the creation of Lebanon in 1943 and Syria in
1946.
In hindsight, it’s clear that the biggest weakness of
the mandate system was that the artificial creation of these modern Middle
Eastern states was largely based on the political, economic, and historical
interests of European colonial powers and did not take into consideration the
past history of the region or the religious, tribal or territorial realities of
the indigenous populations. The terrible situation that we see today in
Lebanon, Syria and Iraq is, in many ways, the direct by-product of the short-sighted
decisions made by these European powers a hundred years ago.
The
British Mandate in Palestine:
While the British and French may not
have done the best job in creating the new Arab states that came into existence
post World War I, they basically followed and fulfilled the decisions made at
San Remo. One of the key provisions of
the treaty was also the establishment of a Jewish homeland in Palestine.
However, that wasn’t what happened. The worst part of Britain’s failure, when it
came to facilitating the creation of a Jewish state, is that it was not the
byproduct of incompetence or bad judgment. It was the consequence of
deliberate policies and decisions made by the British government that led to
Great Britain’s failure to fulfill its obligations, leading to enduring
consequences for the establishment of a Jewish state.
The Treaty of San Remo incorporated the
principles of the Balfour Declaration of 1917, which had expressed British
support for the establishment of a "national home for the Jewish
people" in Palestine toward the end of World War I. The League of Nations
granted Britain the mandate to oversee the administration of Palestine and to
implement the provisions of the Balfour Declaration.
Despite the explicit endorsement
of a Jewish homeland in Palestine, the British Mandate administration failed,
largely due to the desire to appease the much larger Arab population of the Middle
East, to uphold its obligations. The implementation of policies that hindered
Jewish immigration and settlement contradicted the spirit of the mandate.
Restrictions on land purchases by Jews and the introduction of quotas for
Jewish immigrants limited the development of a thriving Jewish community in
Palestine and put the Jews who were there at great risk.
A significant factor contributing
to the failure of the British to establish a Jewish state was the creation of
Trans-Jordan (present-day Jordan) in 1921. Originally intended as part of the
British Mandate for Palestine, Trans-Jordan, which comprised a whopping 73% of
the original territory on the East Bank of the Jordan that was earmarked solely
for the Jewish state, was carved out and placed under the rule of Emir
Abdullah, the brother of Hussein the Hashemite Sharif (ruler) of Mecca. This
decision marked a dramatic departure from the commitment to the establishment
of a Jewish homeland, as it reduced the territory available for Jewish
settlement down to one-quarter of the original land set aside at San Remo. The remaining 27% of the territory, on the
West Bank of the Jordan, was not left for Jewish settlement as even that small
piece of land was to be further divided amongst the Jewish and Arab residents
of the area leaving less than 15% of what was originally set aside at San Remo
for a tiny Jewish state.
This was far from the only
British attempt to sabotage their treaty obligations. On the eve of the start of World War, the
British government issued the White Paper of 1939. This British foreign policy
statement limited Jewish immigration to Palestine to a mere 75,000 over five
years and then called for a complete cessation of all Jewish immigration after
five years The timing couldn’t have been worse. At a time when Jewish refugees
sought refuge from the horrors of Nazi persecution and most of the countries of
the world had slammed their doors shut, they couldn’t even seek refuge in their
historic homeland.
Throughout the war and even after the
Holocaust, the British continued their policy of blocking immigration and even
intercepting boat-loads of refugees, preventing them from entering Palestine.
This policy not only led to the deaths of countless numbers of Jews who
perished at the hands of the Nazis but also severely compromised the
demographic balance in the region and hindered the development of a
self-sufficient Jewish state. If not for
world pressure and the sympathy generated by the murder of six million Jews,
who knows what would have happened or if a Jewish state would have ever come
into existence.
The San Remo conference created
the most significant and transformative treaty in the history of the modern
Middle East. If only the British had
fulfilled their obligations, as they and the French had done elsewhere, who knows
how different the history of Israel and the Middle East might have been.
Subscribe to Posts [Atom]