The legality of the Israeli occupation of Palestine, which has continued since 1967 and is the longest military occupation in modern history,[1] is a subject that has received much less attention than violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights law (IHRL) that have occurred during the occupation.[2][3][4] Multiple United Nations General Assembly resolutions have described the continuing occupation as illegal. The general thrust of international law scholarship addressing this question has concluded that, regardless of whether it was initially legal, the occupation has become illegal over time.[5] Reasons cited for its illegality include use of force for impermissible purposes such as annexation, violation of the Palestinian right to self-determination, that the occupation itself is an illegal regime "of alien subjugation, domination and exploitation", or some combination of these factors.[6]Eyal Benvenisti suggested that refusal by an occupier to engage in good faith with efforts to reach a peaceful solution should not only be considered illegal but as outright annexation.[7] International law scholar Ralph Wilde[8] states that "The common way of understanding the extended duration of the occupation... is a prolonged violation of international law".[9] However, Israel denies that it is occupying Palestine and maintains that its presence is legal.
According to international law, annexation is not an acceptable motive for the use of force in international law, nor is it legal to acquire territory through the use of force.[30] An occupation maintained for the purpose of territorial aggrandizement is no different from an explicit annexation according to international law—both are illegal.[21] Israel therefore may not annex the Palestinian territories, nor may it continue the occupation because of desire to incorporate these territories.[31] Israel states that the occupation is justified as self-defense, but there has been little legal analysis of the occupation in relation to laws governing the use of force.[32] For the occupation to be legal, it would need to be a justified and proportional use of force when it began and continuously from 1967 to the present, in self-defense of the original threat or a comparable threat. The legality of using force in self-defense against non-state actors is disputed. Many international law experts and states doubt that extended occupations can ever be legal according to international law.[33] Illegal occupation constitutes an act of aggression in international law and could also be a crime of aggression.[34][35]
Some commentators have proposed that an occupation that is initially legal will remain so until a peace treaty is signed.[36] A peace treaty however is not synonymous with the absence of a threat justifying the use of force in self-defense, without which military aggression becomes illegal.[37] According to Wilde, "it is not credible to regard the occupation as a necessary and proportionate means of ensuring Israel’s security" and therefore, the continuation of the occupation "has been and is unlawful under the law on the use of force".[38] Many United Nations General Assembly resolutions have condemned the Israeli occupation of Palestine as a violation of international law and the Charter of the United Nations.[38][39]
Self-determination
The Palestinian right to self-determination is internationally recognized.[40] Regardless of whether a Palestinian state currently exists, the sovereignty in the occupied Palestinian territories belongs to the Palestinian people.[41] International law scholar Ralph Wilde states, "given that the Palestinian people have not agreed that all or part of the oPt is to be Israeli territory, the default requirement of the law of self-determination is that they should be immediately freed from the impediments to self-rule", including a speedy end to the occupation.[42]
Other legal frameworks
The question of the legality of the occupation is largely separate from violations of international humanitarian law (IHL) and international human rights law (IHRL) that have occurred during the occupation. It is also separate from international criminal law including the occurrence of war crimes and the argument that Israel's policies constitute a crime of apartheid.[43][2] According to Wilde, these violations of jus in bello "just aggravate the illegality" of the occupation.[44] Valentina Azarova writes that systematic violations of IHL and human rights are intertwined with the issue of prolonged occupation.[45] Azarova also suggested that unlawfully prolonged occupations can also "be treated as manifestations of outlawed colonial practices of foreign
domination, political subjugation, and economic exploitation".[46] An interpretive statement[47] issued by the United Nations Human Rights Committee ruled that acts of aggression occasioning loss of life inherently violate the right to life guaranteed by the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.[48]
Occupation law, as a branch of IHL, regulates the conduct of occupation but does not address the question of the legality of the occupation itself.[49] In a 2005 paper, Orna Ben-Naftali, Aeyal Gross, and Keren Michaeli argue that because occupation is intended to be temporary, a prolonged occupation would inherently violate occupation law.[50][51] They rate the Israeli occupation of Palestine as illegal for this reason and others.[52] According to Gross, a prolonged occupation also undermines the rule that sovereignty may not derive from occupation.[53]
Overall assessments
In European Journal of International Law, Ardi Imseis argues that "Israel’s occupation has become illegal over time for being in violation of three jus cogens norms of international law: the prohibition on the acquisition of territory through force, the obligation to respect the right of peoples to self-determination and the obligation to refrain from imposing regimes of alien subjugation, domination and exploitation inimical to humankind, including racial discrimination".[2]
Vito Todeschini argues that the prolonged and indefinite nature of the occupation of the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, makes it illegal under both jus ad bellum and international humanitarian law.[54]
According to Azarova, "Since the very presence of such occupying states in the occupied territory presents a threat to the indigenous civilian population of the occupied territory, the principal task of international law is to eliminate such unlawful situations through restitution of the occupied territory to the status quo ante bellum".[35] Azarova has encouraged European Union policymakers to uphold the legal obligation of non-recognition of violations of international law—including Israel's de facto annexation of the West Bank—and to "rethink a failed peace-making model".[21]
Imseis states that if the occupation is an internationally wrongful act, an immediate end to the wrong—rather than waiting for a negotiated compromise—would be the correct solution according to international law on state responsibility.[2] Conducting negotiations while the illegal occupation is maintained, in his view, "could be abused by the more powerful party to consolidate its illegal actions under a cloak of legitimacy provided by the UN".[56] According to the principle of ex injuria jus non oritur, the violator of international law may not derive a benefit from its violations.[57][58]
Focus on the methods of occupation and individual IHL and IHRL has been criticized for overlooking the larger question of whether the occupation itself is legal, or even legitimizing the occupation itself.[59][2][3][4][60] The overall focus on the occupation has been criticized by Wilde and Hani Sayed as reinforcing the two-state solution paradigm, and erasing important political questions such as the consequences of the 1948 Palestinian expulsion and flight, Palestinian refugees, the status of Palestinian residents of Israel, and other issues relevant to the Israel–Palestinian conflict.[61][62]
^Wilde 2021, p. 23. "Consequently, the law on the use of force prevents Israel from founding a legally valid claim to sovereignty based on the control exercised over the territories. Moreover, it prohibits Israel from conducting the occupation on the basis of founding such a claim. Put more simply, an assertion of annexation based on the occupation would be both illegal (as a prohibited use of force) and without legal effect, as far as territorial acquisition is concerned."
^Todeschini, Vito (2023). "Out of Time: On the (Il)legality of Israel's Prolonged Occupation of the West Bank". Prolonged Occupation and International Law. Brill Nijhoff. pp. 31–51. ISBN978-90-04-50393-9.
Azarova, Valentina (2018). "The secret life of non-recognition: EU-Israel relations and the obligation of non-recognition in international law". Global Affairs. 4 (1): 23–37. doi:10.1080/23340460.2018.1507278. S2CID158794287.
Azarova, Valentina (2019). "Towards a Counter-Hegemonic Law of Occupation: On the Regulation of Predatory Interstate Acts in Contemporary International Law". Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Volume 20, 2017. T.M.C. Asser Press. pp. 113–160. ISBN978-94-6265-264-4.
Francis, Sahar (2014). "Status of Palestinian Prisoners in International Humanitarian Law". Journal of Palestine Studies. 43 (4): 39–48. doi:10.1525/jps.2014.43.4.39.
Milano, Enrico (2006). "Defining the Boundaries of Legality: Unlawfulness of Territorial Situations". Unlawful Territorial Situations in International Law: Reconciling Effectiveness, Legality And Legitimacy. Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. ISBN978-90-474-1774-3.