1. The significance of an embassy in Jerusalem for the Israeli-Palestinian question
At least since the times of President Carter, all of the United States (US) presidents have qualified the Israeli-Palestinian issue as one of the top priorities of their foreign policy. To a large extent, the degree of success of American administrations in the realm of international relations has thus been measured by referring to their achievements in the Middle East.
Until 2016, an overall assessment of the US position throughout the years revealed a shift towards the protection of the interests of Israel. In particular, the qualification of the Israeli settlements in the Occupied Palestinian Territories (OPT) as illegal had become less firm in time as ambiguous political statements by the Reagan administration substituted the initial condemnation of the Carter administration.Footnote 1 A major turning point in American foreign policy took place in 2004, when the Bush administration departed from the long-standing international consensus that Israel has to withdraw from the territories occupied in 1967, admitting that ‘new realities on the ground, including already existing major Israeli populations [sic] centres’ had to be taken into account.Footnote 2 However, in 2016, the pendulum swung in the opposite direction when President Obama’s administration abstained on United Nations Security Council (UNSC) Resolution 2334, which reaffirmed ‘that the establishment by Israel of settlements in the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem, has no legal validity and constitutes a flagrant violation under international law’ and underlined that ‘any changes to the 4 June 1967 lines, including with regard to Jerusalem, other than those agreed by the parties through negotiations’ will not be recognized.Footnote 3 The resolution also implied an indirect, but clear, reference to the obligation of non-recognition, calling upon member states ‘to distinguish, in their relevant dealings, between the territory of the State of Israel and the territories occupied since 1967’.
Against this background, President Trump inaugurated his mandate with another u-turn. Without putting forward a comprehensive peace plan,Footnote 4 on 6 December 2017, he announced that the US would move its diplomatic mission to the State of Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, implementing a 1995 decision of Congress for which past US presidents had constantly exercised their presidential waiver. Within the international community, the move was widely seen as departing from the well-established international consensus that traditionally considers Jerusalem as a final status issue, to be decided through negotiation by the parties within the framework of the applicable UN resolutions.
So far, only Guatemala has decided to follow the example of the USFootnote 5 while few other states, notably the Czech Republic,Footnote 6 Romania,Footnote 7 Honduras,Footnote 8 and Australia,Footnote 9 have advanced proposals to relocate their diplomatic mission to Jerusalem. The Palestinian leadership, however, has made it clear that they will not accept any mediation led by the US in the future.Footnote 10 Demonstrations in the West Bank and Gaza were violently repressed by the Israeli authorities and a draft UNSC resolution condemning the relocation of the embassy forced the US to make use of its veto power before the UNSC. Subsequently, the UN General Assembly (UNGA) adopted a similar text with the favourable vote of 128 states, 35 abstentions, and 9 votes against, including the US.Footnote 11 Overall, the contentious nature of the decision revitalized the debate on the Israeli-Palestinian question and prompted the reaction of virtually all of the states of the international community, which took position on several occasions before the UNGA, the UNSC and elsewhere.
We believe that this massive reaction by states allows a unique opportunity for taking stock of states’ practice on the status of Jerusalem and on the Israeli-Palestinian issue more broadly. Furthermore, for the first time, the focus of the global debate is on the behaviour of a third state, notably the US, towards the Israeli-Palestinian issue, rather than on the Israeli-Palestinian issue itself and this puts at the forefront the widely debated obligation of non-recognition of unlawful territorial situations. The question of the status of Jerusalem is crucial because of its connection to the final borders of the two states: the latter depends on the agreement on Jerusalem and, vice versa, any decision on the borders affects the status of Jerusalem and, consequently, the prospects for peace in the region.Footnote 12 Indeed, as Henry Cattan said in 1985:
[t]he problem of Jerusalem is one of the most emotional and explosive issues in the world … its importance and dimensions transcend the Middle East and its people …. It is the spiritual and religious heritage of one-half of humanity and is holy for one thousand of million Christians, seven hundred million Muslims, and fourteen million Jews.Footnote 13
Despite its uniqueness, however, Jerusalem remains, at least in part, an occupied territory and as the rest of the Palestinian territory has been the object of a settlement policy which is likely to have a substantial impact on the final status of the city.
In light of the above, the present article aims to answer, through a comprehensive analysis of the practice, two key questions emerging from the latest developments: first, whether there is room for an obligation of non-recognition in the Israeli-Palestinian question and what that implies and, second, what the prospects for peace are. After recalling the main UNSC and GA resolutions on the status of Jerusalem and the Israeli-Palestinian question (Section 2) and the US position on the matter (Section 3), the article will address these two questions through a systematic analysis of states’ practice. Section 4 will present the results of our investigation. Section 5 will highlight our main findings on the research questions, which are then summarized in our concluding remarks (Section 6). With a view to ensuring full disclosure of the primary sources upon which our conclusions are based, a compilation of all of the examined statements has been made available on the Internet as an annex to this article.Footnote 14
2. Jerusalem and the Israeli-Palestinian question at the UN: A review of the relevant resolutions
The Israeli-Palestinian question has marked the activities of the UN since its inception and represents by far the most debated issue within the organization. At the heart of it is Jerusalem as ‘[t]here will never be a lasting settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict without a solution to the status of Jerusalem acceptable both to most Israelis and to most Palestinians’.Footnote 15
Numerous resolutions have been adopted by the UNGA and the UNSC contributing to the development of an international consensus on the matter, based on the international law principles of self-determination and the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by force.Footnote 16 States have significantly referred to the UNSC and GA resolutions in their foreign policy statements,Footnote 17 including within the UN Educational, Scientific, Cultural Organization (UNESCO).Footnote 18
As is well known, the UN took up the question of Palestine in 1947.Footnote 19 From the British occupation of Ottoman Palestine in 1917 until the end of the British mandate, a number of conflicting claims had been put forward with respect to the status of Jerusalem and the Holy Places. Also for this reason, when the first resolution on Palestine (UNGA Resolution 181 (II) of 1947) provided for the termination of the mandate and the partition of Palestine into a Jewish State and an Arab State, the City of Jerusalem should have become a corpus separatum under a special international regime administered by the UN.Footnote 20 This is the starting point established by the United Nations: neither the Jewish State nor the Arab one would have had exclusive sovereignty over Jerusalem. Tensions between Arabs and Israelis, however, escalated into the First Middle East War, which ended in 1949 with armistice agreements granting control over the Gaza Strip and the West Bank to Egypt and Jordan respectively. In the aftermath of the 1967 Six-Day War leading to the occupation by Israel of the West Bank, East Jerusalem, the Gaza Strip, and the Syrian Golan Heights, UNSC Resolution 242 was adopted unanimously ‘emphasizing the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by war’ and requiring the ‘withdrawal of Israel armed forces from territories occupied’ during the conflict. The resolution also emphasized the ‘respect for and acknowledgment of the sovereignty, territorial integrity and political independence of every state in the area and their right to live in peace within secure and recognized boundaries’.Footnote 21 Resolutions 2253 and 2254, adopted by the UNGA in 1967, also condemned the ‘invalid’ measures adopted by Israel to change the status of Jerusalem and ‘call[ed] upon Israel to rescind all measures already taken and to desist forthwith to take any action which would alter the status of Jerusalem’.Footnote 22 These resolutions made clear that the UN would not have recognized any changes to the city’s status. Since then the position of the organization has not changed: no state has sovereignty over Jerusalem.Footnote 23
Since 1967, Israeli governments have implemented the policy of settlements whose expansion continued steadily during the occupation.Footnote 24 As a result, the UNGA,Footnote 25 the UNSC,Footnote 26 and the ICJFootnote 27 have consistently affirmed that the settlements in the OPT, including East Jerusalem, are ‘illegal’ and/or ‘an obstacle to the peace’. In June 1980, Israel adopted the ‘Basic Law: Jerusalem Capital of Israel’ declaring Jerusalem, complete and united, as the capital of Israel.Footnote 28 States within the UNSC reacted by adopting Resolutions 476 and 478. With Resolution 476, the UNSC reaffirmed ‘the overriding necessity to end the prolonged occupation of Arab territories occupied by Israel since 1967, including Jerusalem’, and condemned Israel’s attempt to change the character and status of the Holy City of Jerusalem, stating that all ‘measures which have altered the geographic, demographic and historical character and status of the Holy City of Jerusalem are null and void and must be rescinded in compliance with the relevant resolutions of the Security Council’.Footnote 29 With Resolution 478, the UNSC decided ‘not to recognize the “basic law” and such other actions by Israel that … seek to alter the character and status of Jerusalem’ and called upon all member states to withdraw their missions from the Holy City.Footnote 30 Resolutions 476 and 478 were adopted with the abstention of the US.Footnote 31
The crucial issue of the settlements came to the surface again before the UNSC in December 2003, when the Council endorsed unanimously the Middle East Quartet’s Road Map principles, including: the freezing of ‘all settlement activity (including natural growth of settlements)’.Footnote 32 Meanwhile the number of states recognizing Palestine as a state had grown considerably and, with Resolution 67/19 of 2012, the UNGA granted Palestine non-member observer state status reaffirming ‘the right of the Palestinian people to self-determination and to independence in their State of Palestine on the Palestinian territory occupied since 1967’.Footnote 33 On 23 December 2016, Resolution 2334 was adopted, with the sole abstention of the US,Footnote 34 and reaffirmed that settlements in the OPT represent a violation of international law, reiterating that the UN will not recognize any changes to the 4 June 1967 lines, including in Jerusalem, other than those agreed by the parties.Footnote 35 After President Trump’s speech of 6 December, the US vetoed a draft resolution affirming ‘that any decisions and actions which purport to have altered, the character, status or demographic composition of the Holy City of Jerusalem have no legal effect, are null and void and must be rescinded in compliance with relevant resolutions’, calling upon all states ‘to refrain from the establishment of diplomatic missions in the Holy City of Jerusalem, pursuant to Resolution 478 (1980) of the Security Council’ and demanding that all states ‘comply with Security Council resolutions regarding the Holy City of Jerusalem, and not to recognize any actions or measures contrary to those resolutions’.Footnote 36 However, the UNGA subsequently adopted – with 128 votes in favour, nine votes against, 35 abstentions, and 21 absences – Resolution 10/19, which mirrors the content of such draft UNSC resolution and reiterates the long-standing position of the organ on the illegality of any measure aimed at unilaterally changing the status of Jerusalem.Footnote 37
3. From the Jerusalem Embassy Act to the relocation of the embassy: The position of the United States
The position of the US concerning Jerusalem has evolved over the years and can be said to have gone through at least three different phases: first, the phase of the ‘international’ solution, according to which the US refused to recognize Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem and pushed for the internationalization of the city; second, the phase of the ‘negotiated’ solution; and, eventually, the phase of the recognition of Israeli sovereignty over Jerusalem, with a negotiated solution concerning the geographical boundaries of such sovereignty.Footnote 38
In the 1940s, during the first phase, the position of the US reflected the above-mentioned UNGA Resolutions of 1947 and 1948 according to which Jerusalem should have been a separate area from the rest of Palestine and member states would not have recognized any state’s sovereignty over this area.Footnote 39 According to the US Secretary of State, at that time the US could not ‘… support any arrangements which would purport to authorize estab [sic] of Israeli or TJ sovereignty over parts of Jerusalem area’.Footnote 40
Progressively, the US realized that plans to internationalize Jerusalem were not feasible and started to favour a negotiated resolution of the issue.Footnote 41 This emerges in 1949 when the US Secretary of State, Dean Acheman, conceded in a memorandum to President Truman that ‘any solution agreed upon by the Christian World and by Israel and Jordan could be supported by us’.Footnote 42
In 1967 – when Israel occupied the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, and the Gaza Strip along with the Egyptian Sinai Peninsula, and the Syrian Golan Heights – the US Department of State stressed again US opposition ‘to any unilateral efforts to change the permanent position in Jerusalem’ and its inability to ‘recognize Israeli measures as having effected changes in formal status of Jerusalem’.Footnote 43 The US refused to recognize the unified municipal administration of Jerusalem as a valid annexation or a permanent change in the legal status of Jerusalem and expressed its intention to ‘work toward equitable settlement of Jerusalem problem developed through consultation among all concerned’.Footnote 44
In the following years, the US reiterated this position and in July 1980, after Israel enacted the law on Jerusalem as capital of Israel, argued that the ‘question of Jerusalem must be addressed in the context of negotiations for a comprehensive, just and lasting Middle East Peace’.Footnote 45 This position was further confirmed in 2015 by the US Supreme Court’s opinion in the well-known Zivotofsky v. Kerry case.Footnote 46
From the 1980s, however, Congress began to propose bills and to take actions calling on the Government to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s capital and move its embassy there. In 1984, the Reagan Administration objected to a bill, arguing that it infringed upon the prerogatives of the President and went ‘beyond the proper scope of legislative action’.Footnote 47 In 1989, the so-called Helm Amendment authorized the State Department to construct ‘two new diplomatic facilities in Israel, Jerusalem, or the West Bank’, provided that the two facilities ‘equally preserves the ability of the United States to locate its Ambassador or its Consul General at that site’.Footnote 48 In 1995, the Jerusalem Embassy Act, providing for the relocation of the US embassy in Israel to Jerusalem, was enacted.Footnote 49 It relied on a series of ‘findings’, including the de facto circumstances that:
since 1950, the city of Jerusalem has been the capital of the State of Israel … The city of Jerusalem is the seat of Israel’s President, Parliament, and Supreme Court, and the site of numerous government ministries and social and cultural institutions …Footnote 50
and on the circumstance that since 1967 and for almost 28 consecutive years, ‘Jerusalem has been a united city administered by Israel’ and that ‘[t]he United States conducts official meetings and other business in the city of Jerusalem in de facto recognition of its status as the capital of Israel’.Footnote 51
The Act was opposed by President Clinton as well as by the Justice Department which prepared a memorandum arguing that it was unconstitutional as it interfered with the President’s power to make decisions pertaining to recognition.Footnote 52 The memorandum did not include any reference to the duty of non-recognition under international law but it was grounded on the need to safeguard the US President’s constitutional prerogatives.Footnote 53 As a result, Article 7 – authorizing the President to postpone opening the embassy in Jerusalem by successive six months increments – was added to the Jerusalem Embassy Act.
On 6 December 2017, after 23 years, President Donald Trump eventually implemented the 1995 Jerusalem Embassy Act. In his speech of 6 December 2017, he recognized ‘Jerusalem as the capital of Israel’ but left open the question of the final status of the city ‘including the specific boundaries of the Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem, or the resolution of contested borders’.Footnote 54 This caveat, together with US previous practice on the matter, leaves blurred the reach of the policy change.Footnote 55 The US administration grounded its decision on ‘fundamental reality’ and notably on the circumstance that ‘Jerusalem has been the political, cultural and spiritual homeland of the Jewish people for thousands of years’; on the other hand, the US ‘took great care not to prejudge final status negotiations in any way, including the specific boundaries of Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem, which remains a subject to be negotiated only by the parties’.Footnote 56 On 14 May 2018, the US embassy in Jerusalem was inaugurated in the ‘no man’s land’ across the 1948 cease-fire lines.Footnote 57
4. Mapping the position of the international community
President Trump concluded his speech of 6 December 2017 forecasting ‘disagreement and dissent regarding this announcement’. No truer words were ever spoken. This position gave rise to reactions from almost all states, which ranged from mild political statements to positions based on international law.
We classify the relevant statements in a table (Table 1) presenting the result of our investigation on our two research questions.Footnote 58
* Indirect recognition of illegality on the basis of UN SC Resolution 478 (1980).
** States refer to the “international consensus” in relation to the settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian issue and/or to the status of Jerusalem, not as the basis of the illegality of the US declaration.
*** Jerusalem as corpus separatum subjected to a special international regime.
On a point of method, it is worth highlighting preliminarily that the classification of the positions of states may pose significant hurdles. A first problem we encountered is how to deal with states that took position both individually and collectively through a regional organization or group. In those cases, we decided to align the position of the individual state to the collective one only when the collective declaration was explicitly acknowledged in the individual statements. We believe that this choice allows us to identify not only the emerging trends in the practice of states but also the nuances of the position of each country. The most difficult aspect, however, is the rationalization of manifest contradictions. A case in point is Kazakhstan whose declarations simultaneously refer, on the one hand, to the opportunity to abide by the 1967 lines with East Jerusalem as the capital of the Palestinian State,Footnote 59 and on the other, call for the resumption of dialogue ‘in the bilateral format and without preconditions’.Footnote 60 In these cases, we attempted to resolve the outstanding questions by referring to multilateral documents expressly recalled by the state concerned.
With regard to our first research question, we identified four sub-questions stemming from the essential components of the rule on non-recognition. The first (logical) sub-question is expressed by column 1 of the table and concerns the nature of the US decision: does it amount to a form of recognition (or not) according to third states? It is clear, in our view, that the declaration of the American administration constitutes an act of recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. This is demonstrated by the language used, which openly speaks of recognition of a ‘reality’. Nonetheless, some elements of ambiguity might derive from the wide caveat according to which the US is not taking position on ‘… the specific boundaries of the Israeli sovereignty in Jerusalem’. It is therefore important to understand precisely to what extent third states have qualified the decision, directly or indirectly, as a form of recognition. We classified accordingly all the statements that used the words ‘recognition’ or ‘recognize’ with reference to the relocation of the US embassy. One should clarify also that even states that did not use such words in their statements but pointed out the need to respect Resolution 478 are, in our view, implicitly qualifying the decision of the US as a form of recognition. This stems from the content of this resolution, which, as has been pointed out in the second section, is centred on the obligation not to recognize the Basic Law declaring Jerusalem ‘complete and united’ as the ‘capital of Israel’.
The second sub-question (columns 3 and 4) investigates whether states have qualified the US decision as a breach of international law (or not). The key question in this respect is quantitative: how many states did qualify the decision to relocate the US embassy as a violation of international law? How many states, conversely, decided to air their criticism in the form of a political statement? As we shall see, these two positions might be overlapping as political criticism (column 2), obviously, does not preclude a declaration of illegality (column 3).
The third sub-question (columns 4, 5, 6 and 7) tackles the legal basis invoked for the illegality. We thus analysed the relevant statements with a view to ascertaining the legal basis of each state’s declaration of illegality. As the table shows, there are, in this respect, at least four different positions emerging from the practice. Some states argue that the illegality of the US decision is exclusively or mainly based on the relevant resolutions of the UNSC (column 4). Some states emphasize the importance of the violation of international law, at times by making a vague reference to ‘international law’ in general, at other times mentioning an applicable principle, such as the principle of self-determination or the principle according to which the acquisition of territory through the use of force is prohibited (column 5). As we shall see, in the latter case, some states refer the violation of the prohibition of forcible occupation to the US, although theoretically it should rather be considered as a violation made by Israel, in the first place, which entails a duty of non-recognition upon the US, as a consequence. A limited number of states also make specific reference to human rights and/or humanitarian law (column 6). Finally, a specific feature of the position of states with respect to the illegality of the relocation is that reference is often made to the existence of an ‘international consensus’ on Jerusalem and the wider Israeli-Palestinian issue (column 7). As will be seen in the ensuing section, the legal significance and the binding nature of this reference to a wide consensus remains to be explored.
With respect to the second research question, we highlighted the existence of some shared parameters for the settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian issue and the main elements of uncertainty in state practice. In particular, column 8 evidences that states almost unanimously agree on the principle ‘two people, two states’ but are divided on how to implement it. First, there is debate over the final status of Jerusalem and the borders of both Israel and the Palestinians’ sovereignty over the city (and, more broadly, over the region of Palestine). Some states take the view that Jerusalem should be the capital of two states but put different emphasis either on the fact that East Jerusalem should be the capital of the Palestinian State or, conversely, on the fact that West Jerusalem is the capital of the Jewish State. We classified all of these statements under column 8 because, notwithstanding their being clearly different in terms of the political stance they express, from a legal point of view they both admit that the final status of Jerusalem revolves around the division of the city into two parts.
To a different category (column 10) pertain those statements expressing the view that the final status of Jerusalem will have to be determined through negotiations. This position does not rule out the final division of the city into two parts – a view maintained by a significant number of the statements classified under this column – but is also compatible with different legal solutions such as the re-proposal of the corpus separatum theory, which is clearly reminiscent of the earlier UN resolutions, or with a comprehensive negotiation duly considering the problems of access to the Holy Sites located in the city. What really counts, however, in our opinion, is that the statements referring to Jerusalem as a final status issue express the view that the status of the city must not be determined de facto, but rather should be the outcome of a comprehensive negotiation. We then approached the wider problem of the final borders of the two states. In this respect, there is controversy on at least two key questions. Firstly, an issue under debate pertains to the procedure for the exercise of the Palestinian people’s right to self-determination and most notably to Israeli withdrawal from the territories occupied in 1967 as a precondition for the initiation of meaningful negotiations on the final status of such territories. This question is of the utmost importance as presence on the ground necessarily impacts on the negotiation power of the parties. We therefore classified under column 11 all of the statements referring to the need for Israeli withdrawal from the territories occupied after June 1967, as a pillar for peace.
Finally (columns 12 and 13), we approached the crucial issue of the territorial unit on which the Palestinian State should be established. As highlighted in the review of the relevant UN resolutions (Section 2), there is wide consensus on the fact that the territorial basis of the state should be located on the territories occupied by Israel after 1967 (the West Bank and the Gaza Strip), which are invariably defined in the relevant UN resolutions as ‘Palestinian’ territories. In some of the states’ declarations, however, the admissibility of territorial swaps comes to the surface leaving the precise determination of the territorial unit to the negotiations between the parties. From this perspective, the 1967 territories are the starting point of a negotiation that could bring about a different outcome. We therefore classified these statements as a form of flexible reference to the 1967 ceasefire lines: the legal parameter for the establishment of the final borders of the Palestinian State through negotiations (column 13). To the contrary, some states express the opinion that the territory of the Palestinian State coincides with the 1967 territorial unit and do not mention the possibility of altering such unit during the negotiation process. These statements are classified under column 12.
5. Analysis of the practice
5.1 The first research question: The anatomy of the duty of non-recognition
While we are fully aware that the scholarly debate on the duty of non-recognition is wide and encompasses complex aspects ranging from the nature of the primary norm to be breached, the relevance of a centralized ascertainment of the breach, the consequences of the duty, and the prohibited conduct,Footnote 61 it must be acknowledged that the practice of states detailed above is quite rudimentary when assessed in the light of the subtleties emerging from the literature. Statements do not describe explicitly the US decision to relocate its embassy as a violation of the duty of non-recognition, nor do they specify whether such a duty of non-recognition derives from a serious violation of a norm of peremptory nature by Israel or from relevant UNSC resolutions. Most of the time one is left with some indicia that would seem to confirm the validity of a given doctrinal construction but a significant effort of rationalization by the interpreter is needed. In the ensuing sub-sections, we will provide some tentative answers but a word of caution is necessary: the practice is far from being univocal in many respects.
On one single issue, however, we have certainty: a majority of states (164) condemn the relocation of the US embassy. The most prominent international organizations and groups, including the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), the League of Arab States (LAS), the European Union (EU) as well as the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM), condemn the US move both from a political and a legal point of view. Political statements (163) range from qualifying the US move as a ‘dangerous declaration’ or as ‘steps that might prejudice the historical, legal or religious status of the city of Al-Quds Ash-Sharif’ (OIC) to a ‘decision, which will only increase tensions in the region’ (AU) or as a decision having ‘repercussions … on the prospect of peace’ (EU). Only a few states abstained from taking position, at least individually.Footnote 62 Among these is Hungary that argued that there is no ‘need to react to the US government’s decision’.Footnote 63 Israel, quite understandably, welcomed the decision as ‘a milestone for Israel, for peace and for the world’.Footnote 64 The position of the EU reveals the existence of different political attitudes among member states and the fracture within the bloc was confirmed by the decision of six European states to abstain when the UNGA adopted Resolution ES 10-19. A careful look at the EU member states’ declarations, however, shows that the grounds put forward by the abstaining states correspond, to a large extent, to the legal basis invoked by the states that voted in favour of the resolution. The statement of Estonia, which spoke on behalf of 21 European states approving the resolution, is identical in its relevant passage to a statement released by Poland, which abstained.Footnote 65 In other words, EU states abstaining on the UNGA resolution acknowledge, directly or indirectly, the existence of a legal obligation not to locate diplomatic representations in JerusalemFootnote 66 with the consequence that the decision to abstain seems to have been determined by political convenience.Footnote 67
Declarations of illegality were released by 155 states, either/both individually or/and within international organizations. The US decision to relocate its embassy is qualified as a form of ‘recognition’ of Jerusalem and condemned as unlawful under international law. In some cases, we inferred that a state considers the relocation as illegal because reference is made to UNSC Resolution 478 (1980), which qualifies Israeli measures seeking to alter the character and status of Jerusalem as null and void and calls upon member states to withdraw their diplomatic missions from ‘the Holy City’.Footnote 68 Interestingly, in some declarations the decision of the US is not openly qualified as unlawful but the state nonetheless takes the view that adopting a similar course of action would be precluded by the applicable rules. These states, in essence, put forward an indirect declaration of illegality by stating that, complying with international law or the applicable UN resolutions, they shall not adopt the same decision as the US.Footnote 69
5.1.1 The legal bases of the alleged illegality
As is well known, the question as to the nature of the primary norm whose breach would bring about a duty of non-recognition is answered by Article 41(2) of the ILC Articles on State Responsibility by referring to a ‘serious breach’ of a ‘peremptory norm’. The duty of non-recognition is therefore conceptualized by the ILC, together with the duty not to render aid or assistance, as a peculiar consequence of a form of aggravated responsibility. It is no wonder that this degree of theoretical sophistication is extraneous to state practice and that none of the declarations make explicit reference to the concept of peremptory norm. The fact remains, however, that a substantive number of statements utilize a norm that is undoubtedly peremptory as one of the main legal bases of their claim of illegality of the US embassy relocation.
States recall peremptory norms of international law such as the ‘prohibition of acquisition of territory by force’ (NAM, Yemen, Bolivia, Venezuela, and Palestine) and the right of self-determination of people (Malaysia and Iran). Reference to peremptory norms is made, sometimes directly and at other times indirectly, by recalling relevant UNSC resolutions. A case of direct reference is Yemen, which argues that:
[t]he decision taken by the United States Administration on 6 December 2017 on the status of Jerusalem … is a dangerous violation and breach of international law and the Charter of the United Nations, which provides for the inadmissibility of the acquisition of land by force.Footnote 70
Similarly, according to Iran,
[t]he recent illegal decision by the United States Administration to recognize Al-Quds as the capital of the Israeli regime and to move its embassy to this holy city has made it crystal clear that the United States … harbours no respect for the legitimate rights of the Palestinian people, including their right to self-determination.Footnote 71
Along the same lines, Malaysia argues that the US decision ‘is also an infringement of the Palestinian people’s rights and their right to self-determination’.Footnote 72 What is worth noting is that these statements seem to depart from the ILC conceptualization and attribute the violation of the peremptory norm directly to the US, rather than Israel. It is thus unclear whether, in the views of those states, the illegality of the US embassy relocation derives from a direct violation of peremptory norms by the US itself, or whether their reasoning includes logical leaps with the consequence that the violation of the peremptory norm (i.e., inadmissibility of the acquisition of land by force or breach of self-determination) shall be attributable to Israel and the illegality of the US decision shall be derived from the violation of the secondary norm on non-recognition. On the contrary, a two-step approach from the primary norm to the secondary one, in line with the logic of the ILC Articles, emerges from the OIC’s statement which ‘calls for not tolerating any state that accepts the Israeli claims about the occupied city of Al-Quds, or takes measures that consecrate Israel’s occupation of the holy city’.Footnote 73
Generally, NAM countries adopt a sort of holistic approach, invoking a panoply of legal bases, including inter alia the Fourth Geneva Convention.Footnote 74 A specificity of the 120 NAM states, both within the movement and individually, is that they refer to norms of International Humanitarian Law whose jus cogens nature is still disputed in the scholarly debate.Footnote 75 Reference to international humanitarian law and to the Fourth Geneva Convention can also be drawn indirectly from UNSC Resolution 2334. As has been seen in Section 2, Resolution 2334 affirms that the establishment by Israel of settlements ‘flagrantly’ violates the Fourth Geneva Convention and calls upon states to distinguish in their dealings between the territory of the State of Israel and the territories occupied since 1967. Therefore, the US move of its embassy to Jerusalem – a territory occupied by Israel since 1948 (West) and 1967 (East), and where the policy of settlement is currently implemented – would entail a form of recognition incompatible with international law. States that indirectly endorse this view are KuwaitFootnote 76, Nicaragua,Footnote 77 and the 57 states of the OIC.Footnote 78
Other norms invoked as grounds for illegality range from the UNSC resolutions and (vaguely) international law to the reference to the existence of a (legal) consensus, often enshrined in the UNSC resolutions themselves. UNSC resolutions are often enumerated precisely and most frequently include: UNSC Resolution 242 (1967), Resolution 338 (1973), Resolutions 476 and 478 (1980), and Resolution 2334 (2016). In some cases, the UN Charter is expressly recalled as the basis of the illegality of the US decision.Footnote 79
5.1.2 The UN resolutions as binding documents
The circumstance that many states ground the illegality of the US decision on the applicable UN resolutions brings to the surface the scholarly debates as to what type of acts of the UNSC are binding in generalFootnote 80 and which ones, among the many adopted on the Middle East, have binding nature specifically.Footnote 81 In light of the practice on the US embassy relocation, some authors have already argued that the UN resolutions ‘may simply have operated as a mere restatement’ of a duty of non-recognition ‘already imposed under general international law’.Footnote 82 While this approach undoubtedly captures some of the positions adopted by third states, in our view the practice seems to offer a more coloured picture. The language used by the declarations allows us to infer that some states consider the UN resolutions as binding per se; while other states treat the resolutions as binding because they mirror international law. Egypt, for instance, argued that ‘… it might be appropriate to recall the most important binding Council resolutions on Jerusalem, longstanding and more contemporary ones alike’. Mentioning explicitly Resolutions 242 (1967), 478 (1982), and 2334 (2016), the Egyptian representative affirmed that ‘[t]hey are the binding Security Council resolutions that all countries have pledged, pursuant to the Charter of the United Nations, to implement and abide by’.Footnote 83 Similar statements were released by Venezuela, Bolivia, and Saudi Arabia. France also observed that UNSC Resolutions 476 (1980) and 478 (1980) include two principles:
[f]irst, any measure aimed at altering the status of Jerusalem, as well as the geographical, demographic and historical characteristics of the city, is considered null and void and must be abandoned. Secondly, all United Nations Member States that have established diplomatic missions in Jerusalem must remove them from the city.Footnote 84
The use of the word ‘must’, seems to imply that France considers the prescription of those resolutions as mandatory. Jordan, by contrast, argues that any measures aiming to alter the legal nature and status of Jerusalem ‘are null and void as confirmed by various relevant Security Council Resolutions’.Footnote 85 Similar statements were released by Bahrain and Syria. On the same path, South Africa recalls:
… all United Nations resolutions, including Security Council resolutions 476 (1980) and 478 (1980), by which the Council, interalia, reconfirmed that all legislative and administrative measures and actions taken by Israel, the Occupying Power, that purported to alter the character and status of the Holy City of Jerusalem had no legal validity and must be rescinded forthwith.Footnote 86
In our view, the use of the verb ‘confirm’ in these cases points out that the resolutions are treated as texts mirroring some pre-existing international law obligations.
Finally, it is of note that a number of states (87) refer, directly or implicitly, to the existence of an ‘international consensus’ which would have been breached by the decision to relocate the embassy. Among these are the EU and its member states that ‘will continue to respect the international consensus on Jerusalem embodied in, interalia, UNSCR 478, including on the location of their diplomatic representations until the final status of Jerusalem is resolved’.Footnote 87 Some states even speak of ‘internationally agreed parameters’ recalling the idea that a sort of (express or tacit) worldwide agreement exists on the issue of Jerusalem and Palestine, more broadly.Footnote 88 Reference to a consensual element, however, is never presented as the only legal argument to qualify the behaviour of the US.
As will be discussed further, below, in our treatment of the second research question, reference to this stratification of international peace plans and initiatives is also made to substantiate the existence of some agreed parameters for the solution of the crisis.Footnote 89
5.1.3 The relocation as an unlawful form of aid or assistance
Some states qualify the behaviour of the US as an unjustified form of endorsement or complicity with the violations attributable to Israel. Malaysia, for instance, states that the US decision:
… not only contravenes and undermines the relevant Security Council Resolutions but it would also embolden Israel, the Occupying Power to continue to execute its brutal occupation and repressive policies in the Occupied Palestinian Territory – a clear violation of international law, including humanitarian law.Footnote 90
Along the same lines, Indonesia argues that the US decision ‘supports illegal acts committed by Israel in violation of international humanitarian and international human rights law’.Footnote 91 Similarly, the OIC maintains that the inauguration of the US embassy in Al Quds ‘further emboldens Israel, the occupying power to set up its illegal and criminal actions against the Palestinian people’.Footnote 92 These positions mirror the conceptualization of the consequences of serious violations of peremptory norms put forward by Article 41(2) of the ILC Articles, which imposes upon states not only a duty not to recognize as lawful a situation created by a serious breach of a peremptory norm, but also the obligation not to render aid or assistance in maintaining such a situation. Theoretically, the ILC construed the prohibition contained in paragraph 2 as an autonomous obligation insofar as the actions concerned do ‘not necessarily imply recognition of the situation created by serious breaches in the sense of article 40’. However, the above-mentioned states consider the relocation of the embassy as both a violation of the duty of non-recognition and the duty not to render aid or assistance.
5.1.4 The consequences of the unlawfulness: The relocation as an act affected by nullity
Several states (127) consider the US decision as ‘null and void’. Turkey, for instance, underlines that ‘[t]he OIC unanimously rejected the decision as null and void in accordance with Security Council Resolution 476/1980, which censored, in the strongest terms, a similar decision taken by the Israeli parliament in 1980’.Footnote 93 Along similar lines, the Maldives state:
[t]he Security Council has declared … that Israel’s occupation of the State of Palestine is illegal, its annexation of East Jerusalem is illegal, and the decision by any country to recognize Jerusalem as Israel’s so-called capital and the relocation of diplomatic missions to Jerusalem, are also illegal and should be construed by the international community as null and void.Footnote 94
One might therefore wonder what the meaning of nullity is and what the obligations arising from this double nullity – both of the annexation of Jerusalem and of its recognition – are. The statements, however, do not clarify which prohibitions ensue from the qualification as nullity of the relocation of the embassy. One might take the view that the obligation of third parties not to enter into any diplomatic relations with the US embassy in Jerusalem would be a logical corollary of the nullity of the relocation. The practice, however, does not shed light on this aspect.
With respect to the theoretical basis of nullity, it has been rightly observed that in the international legal system, nullity does not follow the decision of a Court depriving the act of any legal effect but the assessment made by each ‘interested participant’, either individually or collectively, within international organizations.Footnote 95 With the consequence that acts are ‘voidable’ in the sense that they are ‘provisionally or at least potentially, valid acts that can be voided by an appropriate extra-judicial declaration’.Footnote 96 Therefore, as Reisman and Pulkowski observed, ‘[a]n act may be treated as valid by the international community until interested participants promote a policy of its non-recognition’.Footnote 97An assessment made by a ‘third’ multilateral organization, such as the UNSC, that an act is null and void, may contribute to confirm, in the eyes of the international community, the fact that the act shall be deprived of any effect whatsoever.Footnote 98
In this respect, some of the statements confirm that states consider the relocation as illegal and thus ‘voidable’ by the international community through non-recognition: for instance, according to the above-mentioned statement by the Maldives ‘the relocation of diplomatic missions to Jerusalem … should be construed by the international community as null and void’. Pakistan, conversely, argues that nullity is an intrinsic quality of the relocation (‘[m]y delegation believes that the United States veto earlier this week in the Security Council … attempted to legitimize a declaration that is already null and void and lacks any legality’), but at the same time admits that ‘[t]hrough draft resolution … the rest of the world will say … that it cannot and will not be complicit in any act of illegality’.Footnote 99 Saudi Arabia, finally, observes ‘… that any measure taken by the occupying Power on Jerusalem is null and void. Any recognition of Jerusalem as the capital and any relocation of the embassy of any country to Jerusalem are null and void’.Footnote 100
For a majority of states an ascertainment by UN organs remains, in any case, a pivotal element for the nullity of the relocation,Footnote 101 confirming that the UN still represents the main forum where the assessment of the practice on non-recognition takes place.
5.2 The second research question: The prospects for peace
5.2.1 The status of Jerusalem
The final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian question cannot avoid the quest for a solution to the status of Jerusalem. As recognized by the representative of France within the Security Council, ‘there will be no two-states solution without agreement between the parties on Jerusalem’.Footnote 102 In this respect, it should be noted that 164 states take a position which is reminiscent of the approach of the Oslo accords, when Jerusalem was qualified as an autonomous ‘final status issue’ to be decided by relevant parties through negotiation. Among European states, in particular, there is wide agreement on the fact that the status of Jerusalem shall be determined during final status negotiations and on the circumstance that the city shall be the capital of both states.Footnote 103
A wide majority of states (133) regard East Jerusalem as belonging to the Palestinian State, even though they invariably admit that Jerusalem represents a final status issue to be decided during the peace process. The Russian Federation, for example, believes ‘that a fair and lasting solution to the protracted Palestinian-Israeli conflict should be based on international law, including UN Security Council and General Assembly resolutions that provide for settling all aspects of the final status of the Palestinian territories, including the highly delicate issue of Jerusalem, through direct Palestinian-Israeli talks’, on the one hand, and ‘sees East Jerusalem as the capital of the future Palestinian State and West Jerusalem as the capital of the State of Israel’, on the other.Footnote 104 These statements affirm that Jerusalem should be the capital of both states but at the same time highlight that its final status cannot be resolved by merely dividing the city into two parts. Presumably, they acknowledge that, in the case of the Holy City, there are more complex issues to be addressed, such as the problems related to access to the Holy Places.
Overall, there is wide consensus on the fact that the outcome of the final status negotiations shall not depart from Jerusalem as the capital of both states.Footnote 105 Only two states, Uruguay and the Holy See, took the view that the final status of Jerusalem would have to be ‘a corpus separatum subjected to a special international regime’,Footnote 106 recalling the original plan promoted by the UN in 1947. The precise administrative status of Jerusalem, however, is left unprejudiced, as it will be decided upon during the negotiations: a divided city or a shared capital? With what arrangements to ensure access to the Holy Places? These are the questions to be addressed during the negotiations.
5.2.2 The borders of the two states
In many respects, the Israeli-Palestinian question appears as an intractable problem. On one single issue, however, we have certainty. There is a virtually unanimous consensus (166) on the need for two states living in peace and security in the region. This is clearly visible in the statements that we collected. Only Pakistan mentioned the one-state solution with the aim of discharging it swiftly.Footnote 107 This shows that the re-emerging cultural debate on the one-state solution has not contaminated state practice yet.Footnote 108 A number of states (127) refer expressly to the existence of some agreed parameters concerning the settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian issue.Footnote 109 China, for instance, mentions the ‘long-standing foundation for the settlement of the question of Palestine’,Footnote 110 Malta, the existence of an ‘international consensus on the issue’,Footnote 111 Japan, Luxembourg and many other EU states refer to ‘[well-]known parameters’ for the final status of Jerusalem and/or the solution of the Israel-Palestine conflict,Footnote 112 while South Africa talks about an ‘international legal framework’ within which negotiations between the parties shall take place.Footnote 113 The content of this consensus is often shaped around the main peace plans, such as the Arab Peace Initiative of 2002 or the Quartet Road Map.Footnote 114 These documents are also recalled as the bases for peace negotiation by states that do not expressly mention the existence of an international consensus.Footnote 115
Much more controversial is the question of borders. Whereas the exercise of the Palestinians’ right to self-determination through the establishment of an independent state is not put into question, the precise borders of such a state are not always clearly identified. After the relocation of the US embassy, statements refer to the final borders of the Palestinian state using slightly different phrases. We identified the following different wordings referring to the ‘borders’ of 4 June 1967: ‘within the borders’, ‘on the borders’, ‘based on the borders’, ‘along the borders’, and ‘on the basis of the borders’. We believe that the first two express less flexibility compared to the last three, although, admittedly, there is room for interpretation, especially in the case of the second. We classified the statements accordingly: 1 and 2 as strict, and 3, 4, 5 as flexible, although, at times, some contradictions among statements by the same state emerged.Footnote 116
Essentially, flexibility with regard to the borders takes two forms: whereas the language used by some states makes reference to the 1967 lines as a mere parameter for the negotiation,Footnote 117 other statements identify precisely the 1967 lines as the future borders of the Palestinian state, but at the same time underline that they can be altered only through negotiation.Footnote 118 Some states quoted verbatim the text of Resolution 2334, according to which the UNSC ‘will not recognize any changes to the pre-1967 lines, including with regard to Jerusalem, other than those agreed by the parties through negotiations’.Footnote 119
Overall, the practice gives evidence that the majority of states agree on the fact that Palestine’s territory shall be the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, considered as a single territorial unit. This territorial unit represents the basis for any negotiation and reflects the geographical identification of the Palestinian State in international agreements stipulated by Palestine,Footnote 120 the practice of the General Assembly,Footnote 121 and the framework of the main peace plans.Footnote 122 An element of uncertainty, however, is the room left to territorial swaps between the parties. As will be seen in the ensuing sub-section, the conditions under which the final negotiations should take place are also open to debate.
5.2.3 Procedural issues on the exercise of self-determination
Direct reference to the principle of self-determination, as the basis for the final settlement of the Israeli-Palestinian question, is made by NAM and OIC (altogether 125 states) and by Poland. In addition, the almost universal acceptance of the two-state solution in the examined practice clearly shows that the right of the Palestinian people to establish an independent state is by no means put into question. As often happens with self-determination, however, the problem does not lie in the objective to be achieved but rather in the procedure to be implemented.Footnote 123
There are two main procedural issues related to the exercise of the right to self-determination emerging from the examined statements.
The first issue revolves around the degree of engagement of the international community in the negotiations for the final settlement. There are two main views in this respect: whereas some states call for the involvement of the international community in a multilateral management of the crisis,Footnote 124 at the opposite end of the spectrum, other states envisage a bilateral direct negotiation.Footnote 125 Within the first group, the proposal of Palestine for an international peace conference to resume peace talks stresses that the US is disqualified as a mediator and highlights the need to adopt a truly multilateral method by getting new actors involved in the mediation effort.Footnote 126 Along the same lines, South Africa speaks of a ‘commitment to multilateralism in order to secure a sustainable solution’,Footnote 127 while Nigeria highlights ‘the cogency of multilateral diplomacy, and reiterate[s] that there is no substitute to an agreed multilateral approach for addressing the Israeli-Palestinian conundrum …’.Footnote 128 Within states emphasizing the need for bilateral talks,Footnote 129 the US adopts an extreme position according to which any solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would be acceptable if agreed upon by the two parties involved, with no indication of any internationally agreed parameter for the settlement of the issue.Footnote 130 In this regard, it is perhaps understandable that some states mildly criticised the US position expressing their hope that ‘the United States can [still?] lend their full support to the two-state solution’.Footnote 131
The second procedural issue touches upon the crucial problem of withdrawal from the Occupied Territories. Whereas a substantive number of states (126), mostly represented by the NAM countries, considers Israel’s withdrawal from the Palestinian territories as one of the conditions to achieve peace and, among them, some take the view that such withdrawal should take place urgently or immediately as a precondition to start negotiations,Footnote 132 other states, mostly represented by the EU, do not mention the need for an Israeli withdrawal that would seem to be treated as a mere consequence of the negotiation process (53 states). It is worth observing that most of the states considering Israel’s withdrawal as one of the conditions for the peace talks have referred to the Arab Peace Initiative of 2002 as a parameter for the settlement of the conflict.Footnote 133 Indeed, the Arab Peace Initiative calls for ‘full Israeli withdrawal from all the territories occupied since 1967 …’ and the ‘establishment of an independent and sovereign Palestinian State on the Palestinian territories occupied since 4 June 1967 in the West Bank and Gaza Strip with East Jerusalem as its capital’.Footnote 134 Initiating the peace talks after having restored Palestinian control over the West Bank and the Gaza Strip would mean allowing Palestine a seat at the negotiating table as a peer of Israel to discuss the final settlement of Jerusalem and the Middle East issue more broadly. On the contrary if, as many states (40) seem to envisage, Israel’s withdrawal represents only a possible outcome of peace talks, Palestine would have to start negotiations with the Occupying Power with little, if no chance, to be heard.
6. Concluding remarks
The two research questions discussed above are intrinsically intertwined. The answer that states provide to the first (compliance with the duty of non-recognition) inevitably impacts on the second (the prospects for peace) and on the capacity of the Palestinian people to exercise their right to self-determination. State practice shows that a general duty not to recognize the unlawful acquisition of territory is widely accepted as a rule notwithstanding a great variety of positions as to its legal basis and conceptualization. As long as the majority of states believe that the situation existing on the ground in consequence of Israeli (or US) violations of peremptory norms shall not be recognized, the implementation of the two-state solution remains viable. As has been seen, however, there is no clarity on the procedure to be adopted.
In practical terms, the US decision to move its embassy to Jerusalem, despite the broad caveat concerning the scope of Israel’s sovereignty, has the effect of weakening the prospects for peace and, especially, the role that the Palestinian people can play in shaping such a peace. This is particularly true considering that, at the time of writing, there are no credible diplomatic initiatives and that, according to the US, any solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would be acceptable if agreed upon by the two parties involved. This attitude towards the bi-lateralization of the crisis, despite the current inequality of arms between the parties deriving from the situation on the ground, does not favour the achievement of a just and lasting peace. The almost unanimous reaction of states (164) to the US decision and their almost unanimous commitment to the two-state option (166) will remain dead letter if the solution of the crisis is left to a future bilateral agreement. The hopes of a settlement with two states living in peace within secure borders depend on the adoption of a new multilateral initiative safeguarding the interests of both parties, including the party that is called to seat at the negotiating table as an occupied territory.