LeveragedBuyout
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It is YOU who is avoiding facts and jumping all over the place. I always claimed that all legitimacy is gained at the barrel of the gun. You brought in the Americas, without realizing that you were supporting my argument. Your example of the Middle East also falls flat, since the facts don't support you.
Answer me this: what was the Jewish population of Palestine in 1917, at the time of the Balfour Declaration?
How on earth can you claim that giving the land to 3-5% of the population -- which was itself mostly very recent migrants in the previous 20 odd years with the explicit goal of colonizing the land -- can be equated to "giving the land to people who were living there?" The 95-97% of the residents, who were non-Jewish, were summarily dismissed by the colonial Brits.
Your example of Jordan is also flawed. The ruling tribe may have been shipped in, but the vast majority of Jordan's residents were already living there.
I think you're confusing me with someone else. I never challenged the primacy of force in international affairs; on the contrary, I fully agree with you in that respect. That's why I cited the Americas and Australia--these were lands not declared for the indigenous population, but rather taken by force, and have legitimacy today simply by existing. Whatever the history of what is now Israel, today's Israel came into being by force, and has legitimacy today simply by existing. There was no contradiction in my argument.
You introduced an incorrect line of thinking into the discussion by stating that Israel is the only state that came into being on behalf of a minority population. When I showed that was wrong, you arbitrarily tightened the timeframe to the early 20th century. When I showed that was wrong through the example of Jordan (let's leave aside such places as Yugoslavia, Rhodesia, and South Africa because of the fraught political implications), you've now come back and claimed that even though the native Jordanians don't rule Jordan, that's fine, because they still live there. OK. "Palestinian" Arabs still live in Mandatory Palestine, they just don't rule Mandatory Palestine. Therefore, based on your logic, all is well, and nothing needs to change.
I don't know what you're trying to argue for. If it's "might makes right," I agree. No argument. If it's "Israel is illegitimate because it was formed on behalf of a minority population," then there a plethora of additional examples of such states whose legitimacy is not questioned to the same degree that Israel's is, so you would essentially have to re-write the current world order to be consistent in claiming that Israel is illegitimate. Arbitrarily drawing lines around the early 20th century doesn't change anything.
Nice try, it goes back to the Balfour declaration. The British consensus a year after that recorded the Jewish people as minority.
You have your chronology incorrect, as usual. The Palestinian Mandate didn't exist yet at the time the Balfour Declaration was issued. The declaration didn't even promise a Jewish state, it promised a Jewish homeland in Palestine. UNSCOP partitioned Mandatory Palestine into a majority Arab nation and a majority Jewish nation. The formation of Israel was therefore legitimate even by your arbitrary definition of a majority population. The losses by the "Palestinian" Arabs due to their rejection of the UN plan further undermines their claims on the state. When you gamble in a casino and lose, you don't get to tell the house that you were just joking and please return your money. You live with the consequences.