Even before the beginning of the Jarring Mission (the Special
Representative as mentioned in the Resolution), the Arab
States insisted that Security Council Resolution 242 called
for a total withdrawal of Israeli forces from territories
occupied in the Six-Day War. Israel held that the withdrawal
phrase in the Resolution was not meant to refer to a total
withdrawal. Following are statements including the
interpretations of various delegations to Resolution 242:
A. United Kingdom
- Lord Caradon, sponsor of the draft that was about to be adopted,
stated, before the vote in the Security Council on Resolution 242:
" . . . the draft Resolution is a balanced whole. TO add to it or
to detract from it would destroy the balance and also destroy the
wide measure of agreement we have achieved together. It must be
considered as a whole as it stands. I suggest that we have reached
the stage when most, if not all, of us want the draft Resolution,
the whole draft Resolution and nothing but the draft Resolution."
(S/PV 1382, p. 31, of 22.11.67)
- Lord Caradon, interviewed on Kol Israel in February 1973:
Question: "This matter of the (definite) article which is there in
French and is missing in English, is that really significant?"
Answer: "the purposes are perfectly clear, the principle is stated
in the preamble, the necessity for withdrawal is stated in the
operative section. And then the essential phrase which is not
sufficiently recognized is that withdrawal should take place to
secure and recognized boundaries, and these words were very
carefully chosen: they have to be secure and they have to be
recognized. They will not be secure unless they are recognized. And
that is why one has to work for agreement. This is essential. I
would defend absolutely what we did. It was not for us to lay down
exactly where the border should be. I know the 1967 border very
well. It is not a satisfactory border, it is where troops had to
stop in 1947, just where they happened to be that night, that is
not a permanent boundary . . . "
- Mr. Michael Stewart, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth
Affairs, in reply to a question in Parliament, 17 November 1969:
Question: "What is the British interpretation of the wording of the
1967 Resolution? Does the Right Honourable Gentleman understand it
to mean that the Israelis should withdraw from all territories
taken in the late war?"
Mr. Stewart: "No, Sir. That is not the phrase used in the
Resolution. The Resolution speaks of secure and recognized
boundaries. These words must be read concurrently with the
statement on withdrawal."
- Mr. Michael Stewart, Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth
Affairs, in a reply to a question in Parliament, 9 December 1969:
"As I have explained before, there is reference, in the vital
United Nations Security Council Resolution, both to withdrawal from
territories and to secure and recognized boundaries. As I have told
the House previously, we believe that these two things should be
read concurrently and that the omission of the word 'all' before
the word 'territories' is deliberate."
- Mr. George Brown, British Foreign Secretary in 1967, on 19 January
1970:
"I have been asked over and over again to clarify, modify or
improve the wording, but I do not intend to do that. The phrasing
of the Resolution was very carefully worked out, and it was a
difficult and complicated exercise to get it accepted by the UN
Security Council. "I formulated the Security Council Resolution.
Before we submitted it to the Council, we showed it to Arab
leaders. The proposal said 'Israel will withdraw from territories
that were occupied', and not from 'the' territories, which means
that Israel will not withdraw from all the territories." (The
Jerusalem Post, 23.1.70)
B. United States of America
- Mr. Arthur Goldberg, US representative, in the Security Council in the
course of the discussions which preceded the adoption of Resolution 242:
"To seek withdrawal without secure and recognized boundaries ...
would be just as fruitless as to seek secure and recognized
boundaries without withdrawal. Historically, there have never been
secure or recognized boundaries in the area. Neither the armistice
lines of 1949 nor the cease-fire lines of 1967 have answered that
description ... such boundaries have yet to be agreed upon. An
agreement on that point is an absolute essential to a just and
lasting peace just as withdrawal is . . . " (S/PV. 1377, p. 37, of
15. 11.67)
- President Lyndon Johnson, 10 September 1968:
"We are not the ones to say where other nations should draw lines
between them that will assure each the greatest security. It is
clear, however, that a return to the situation of 4 June 1967 will
not bring peace. There must be secure and there must be recognized
borders. Some such lines must be agreed to by the neighbours
involved."
- Mr. Joseph Sisco, Assistant Secretary of State, 12 July 1970 (NBC
"Meet the Press"):
"That Resolution did not say 'withdrawal to the pre-June 5 lines'.
The Resolution said that the parties must negotiate to achieve
agreement on the so-called final secure and recognized borders. In
other words, the question of the final borders is a matter of
negotiations between the parties."
- Eugene V. Rostow, Professor of Law and Public Affairs, Yale
University, who, in 1967, was US Under-Secretary of State for Political
Affairs:
a) " ... paragraph 1 (i) of the Resolution calls for the
withdrawal of Israeli armed forces 'from territories occupied in
the recent conflict', and not 'from the territories occupied in the
recent conflict'. Repeated attempts to amend this sentence by
inserting the word 'the' failed in the Security Council. It is,
therefore, not legally possible to assert that the provision
requires Israeli withdrawal from all the territories now occupied
under the cease-fire resolutions to the Armistice Demarcation
lines." (American Journal of International Law, Volume 64,
September 1970, p. 69)
b) "The agreement required by paragraph 3. of the Resolution, the
Security Council said, should establish 'secure and recognized
boundaries' between Israel and its neighbours 'free from threats or
acts of force', to replace the Armistice Demarcation lines
established in 1949, and the cease-fire lines of June 1967. The
Israeli armed forces should withdraw to such lines as part of a
comprehensive agreement, settling all the issues mentioned in the
Resolution, and in a condition of peace." (American Journal of
International Law, Volume 64, September 1970, p. 68)
C. USSR
- Mr. Vasily Kuznetsov said in discussions that preceded the adoption of
Resolution 242:
" ... phrases such as 'secure and recognized boundaries'. What does
that mean? What boundaries are these? Secure, recognized - by
whom, for what? Who is going to judge how secure they are? Who must
recognize them? ... there is certainly much leeway for different
interpretations which retain for Israel the right to establish new
boundaries and to withdraw its troops only as far as the lines
which it judges convenient." (S/PV. 1373, p. 112, of 9.11.67)
D. Brazil
- Mr. Geraldo de Carvalho Silos, Brazilian representative, speaking in
the Security Council after the adoption of Resolution 242:
"We keep constantly in mind that a just and lasting peace in the
Middle East has necessarily to be based on secure, permanent
boundaries freely agreed upon and negotiated by the neighbouring
States." (S/PV. 1382, p. 66, 22.11.67)