The Balfour Declaration of 1917 (hereinafter: BD) resulted in a corresponding US Congress resolution of June 30, 1922. Following the transfer of the British League of Nations Mandate to the UN in 1947, it enabled the political Zionists in May 1948 to proclaim unilaterally the State of Israel. As a direct result of this, the Israel-Palestine conflict was born. One may wonder to what extent world-rulers, at the time, were influenced by these political Zionists? And now, since this conflict keeps continuously simmering around, should the world not be allowed to question the principles and objectives of the political Zionists for a Jewish state? Nearly one hundred years after this BD, the situation in the region of Palestine is still chaotic. Who can remain indifferent to the ‘living’ conditions of "existing non-Jewish communities" in and around that region?
The BD is probably the most curious political document ever drafted by a government. It took shape in a letter drafted by the government of King George V and addressed to banker and House of Lords member Lord Rothschild, and reads as follows: “His Majesty's Government view with favour the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish people, and will use their best endeavours to facilitate the achievement of this object, it being clearly understood that nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, or the rights and political status enjoyed by Jews in any other country”. Historical literature mostly deals with the first stanza of the BD only. For my analysis, I divide the BD in Clause 1 (yellow), 2 (gray) and 3 (green). The concept was largely drawn up by the political Zionists themselves.
Most discussion about Clause 1 arose about the concept of 'national home'. Knowingly, the term ‘state’ was evaded. If the Zionist authors had had it their way, the BD would never have breathed a word about existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine, nor about the status of Jews in any other country (than Palestine). Clause 2 hides a world of deception. It suggests that "non-Jewish communities in Palestine" were a minority. Around 1917, however, Jews in Palestine accounted for less than 10% of the population. The words "civil and religious rights" suggest that (the) non-Jewish communities cannot lay claim to political rights. The missing definite article "the" before "existing non-Jewish communities", which at first díd appear in the original text, paves the way for legal quibbling. Leading British Jews were seriously worried about the BD and their concerns resulted in the additional Clause 3, essentially dealing with the issue of théir political status. These Jews felt it necessary to opt emphatically for "the rights and polítical status" of Jews in any óther country, not merely for "civil and religious rights", as Clause 2 grants to "non-Jewish communities in Palestine"...



To draft a (Balfour) Declaration is a one thing; to implement it in political objectives in the Middle East is another. Still during the war, Great Britain and France tried to secure their interests in the region. In that context, the BD fitted poorly. Surely British promises to the Arabs for their support in fighting the Ottoman authorities clashed with commitments to the political Zionists. The Sykes-Picot Treaty, a Franco-British agreement on division of areas after the fall of the Ottoman Empire, made mention of the line Damascus-Hama. The territory west of this line, now Lebanon, where France had interests, would be excluded from the Arab awards. After the Treaty of Versailles (1919), which entailed very humiliating terms for Germany, the promises to the Arabs had to be fulfilled. Independence was the key and one Arab country after another appeared on the newly drawn maps. Straight boundaries demonstrate how arbitrarily they were drawn. But the key question here is: how to find a way to reconcile the conflicting interests of Arabs and political Zionists?

In all these events it were primarily members of the non-Jewish communities in Palestine who paid the piper. The British were masters in playing the political game: blaming the victim. When they disappeared from the Palestinian scene on May 15, 1948, the status of the territory that the UN had recommended as an Arab State fell in a vacuum, while the political Zionists succeeded in having it all their way in the Jewish State, with the state of Israel as an interim result! And like their British masters, also these political Zionists, now adorned with the beautiful name Israeli Defense Forces (IDF), knew how to perform the blaming the victim game down to utter perfection.
(this article was first published in Dutch – under the same English title - on May 5, 2010. With the appearance of this translated version the Dutch version was rebaptized as "De Balfour Declaratie van 1917, een analyse".)
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