- Dec 6, 2009
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P F Tinmore, et al,
No, I'm not mistaken.
(COMMENT)I think you are mistaken. Palestine was declared a newly created state by the League of Nations and its international borders were defined. After the 1948 war, Palestine was still called Palestine and its international borders remained unchanged.
None of Palestine's neighbors dispute their borders.
This is the cornerstone of the dispute. You are again confusing the two administrative districts under the Mandate.
But, if the Arabs/Palestinians believe they have a cause of action, they can take it to court. After all, it was the Western Powers that created the boundaries throughout the region.
OR --- the Palestinians and the Israelis can enter into an agreement sanctioned by the International community.
Without regard to the boundary disputes, there is no cause of action that justifies Arab/Palestinian asymmetric conflict through terrorist means.
Most Respectfully,
R
There is no dispute. What is there to take to court?
The mandate is irrelevant. The mandate ended before the 1948 war.