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The First
Intifada - Rebellion in Palestine
Palestinian revolt-
not in Israel today but under the British mandate fifty years ago. Charles Townshend
traces its impact and discusses its character.
Jerusalem was surely one of the glittering prizes of the Great War, won by the
'stout hearts and sharp swords' which Lord Birkenhead would later commend to the
under- graduates of Glasgow University. When General Allenby captured the city
in December 1917, he dispelled much of the gloom of the war's grimmest year. The
humility of his entry into the old city through the Jaffa gate, on foot, trumped
the earlier gaudy processions of European emperors for whom the wall had been
barbarously breached. Allenby was a Christian conqueror, and though he was to
prove a sage governor in Egypt after the war, the salient fact for Palestine of
his march to Damascus was conquest. Britain occupied Palestine by force of arms
and exercised a conqueror's rights.
The chief of these was the distribution
of the conquered - or, as the leaders of the Arab national movement hoped, liberated
- territory. The discrepancy between conquest and liberation was ultimately to
prove disastrous. For the Arab fighters who advanced out of the Hejaz with T.E.
Lawrence, the goal was Syria. Palestine as a concept scarcely figured in their
mental map of the new Arab state. Though Jerusalem was one of the three most sacred
sites of lslam, negotiations between the Arabs and the British centred on the
great Syrian cities, Aleppo, Hama, Homs and Damascus. Sherif Hussein almost casually
agreed to the exclusion of 'portions of Syria lying to the west of' these cities
from the planned kingdom.
It was Britain which, in trying to limit the
French sphere of influence in the Levant, and to protect the Suez Canal, created
modern Palestine. First, Britain detached the Holy Land from the French zone by
declaring it an area of 'international' responsibility. Next, it secured control
of the area on both banks of the Jordan as a League of Nations Mandate. Finally
it divided the Mandate into two, Palestine on the west bank and Transjordan on
the east. Simultaneously it confirmed the special status of Palestine through
the policy announced in the Balfour Declaration, of using Britain's 'best endeavours
to facilitate the establishment in Palestine of a national home for the Jewish
people'. The motives for this fateful undertaking, and the ambiguity of its terms,
have been ceaselessly debated ever since; what is certain is that the British
government believed that it had the power as well as the right to carry it out.
It saw Palestine as a tabula rasa, ready to be made new. In adding its equally
resonant proviso, that 'nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and
religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine', it plainly
discounted the possibility that such rights might come to include that of Palestinian
national identity.
What baffled and finally broke the British endeavour
to implement the Mandate was precisely the emergence of Palestinian nationalism.
Why, one is driven to ask, did Britain fail to recognise what seems so obvious
with hindsight? The answer is that the emergence of national consciousness was
an erratic process. The fury of Arab hostility to Zionism, taking shape in the
alarming riots of 1920 and 1921, and spreading almost into general civil war in
1929, now look like clear enough indications. Yet at the time they were not unmistakable.
Arab resistance was sporadic, incoherent, and negative. As Britain constructed
Palestine, so it created Palestinian nationalism. Palestinian identity was forged
in fear of the Jewish domination implied by the Mandate. The process was accelerated,
ironically, by the very caution with which the Mandatory power treated any possible
infringement of Arab rights - caution which Jews saw as anti-Zionist, if not anti-Semitic.
There was indeed a striking shift from the wild leap of the Balfour Declaration
to the circumspection with which the government trod thereafter. Here was an imperial
power which had become acutely sensitive to the religious prejudices of its fifty
million Moslem subjects. This sensitivity did not, of course, reflect empathy
with Islam: rather the reverse, fear of the latent fanaticism of Moslem peoples
and their propensity to mass violence or jihad.
By the time Sir Herbert
Samuel was installed as the First High Commissioner in 1920, the strict limits
on Britain's room for political manoeuvre were already evident. Samuel looked
to be an inspired choice: the very fact of his being Jewish must, it was thought,
reassure the Zionists of Britain's goodwill, while his unimpeachable probity as
a British administrator must reassure the Arabs that they would be treated fairly.
But Samuel found that the communities were already so polarised that his reputation
was not enough for the second task, which seemed after the 1920 riots to be the
overriding priority. Within a year of his arrival, still more serious riots impelled
him to announce restrictions on Jewish immigration, henceforth to be governed
by the 'economic absorbtive capacity' of Palestine - a fruitful seed of future
contention.
The attempt envisaged in the Mandate to create bi-ethnic administrative
and legislative institutions nonetheless failed. There was no Arab equivalent
to the Jewish Agency, the officially recognised body which fostered the economic,
educational and medical infrastructure of the Jewish community in Palestine (Yishuv).
Arab leaders refused to accept the implication that the Arabs, as the majority,
should be equated with the Jewish minority. The Supreme Moslem Council, which
was established after the 1921 riots as a conciliatory gesture, bore no resemblance
to the Arab Agency which Samuel had hoped to institute. Arabs joined the British
administration and police, but could never reach the highest ranks. By contrast,
the Jewish Agency quickly developed into a virtual state apparatus, giving the
Yishuv organisational capacities which the Arabs were never able to match.
He precarious balancing act between promoting Jewish aspirations and protecting
Arab rights paralysed the government in face of the worst crisis of the 1920s,
the conflict over the' 'Wailing Wall' in Jerusalem in l929. Communal violence
reached catastrophic proportions. Yet even then, the British belief in the necessity
and longevity of their presence in Palestine was scarcely if at all undermined.
Like India, Palestine fascinated its European rulers. 'There is no promotion after
Jerusalem', wrote its first British governor, Ronald Storrs, later sleepwalking
as governor of Cyprus in the 1930s. For Storrs it was an enchanted city, whose
awakening into the twentieth century he oversaw with a devotion and success unequalled
until the reign of Mayor Kollck after 1967. For the rest of the administration,
the enchantment persisted; above all in the person of Sir Arthur Wauchope, High
Commissioner from 1931 to 1938. Appointed by Ramsay MacDonald as a general 'who
does it with his head not his feet', Wauchope was an ardent believer in the possibility
of consensus in Palestine. Though earlier efforts to construct a bi-ethnic constitution
had failed, he persevered with the aim of giving the Arabs a real measure of the
self-government promised by the League of Nations.
In 1934 he set up municipal
councils in the larger towns, and in 1935 he launched his greatest project, a
legislative council with an Arab majority. The ignominious fate of this initiative
was to be rejected not only by both communities in Palestine, hut also by the
House of Commons in London. This last rejection was fatal to the scheme itself,
and also to the credibility of the Palestine government, already undermined by
frequent policy reversals over Jewish immigration. Local resistance might have
been overcome by a more resolute policy. Arabs at first refused to countenance
the proposal, because the legislative council would have no power to question
the terms of the Mandate; but their attitude softened as the extent of Zionist
hostility to it became clear. The scheme plainly offered Arab leaders a basis
for creating a national political structure, and for containing Zionism. Its collapse
left them in a state of unorganised arousal. A latent power struggle between the
representatives of the two leading Arab families, Raghib Bey Nashashibi (former
Mayor of Jerusalem) and Hajj Amin al-Husseini (Mufti of Jerusalem and president
of the Supreme Moslem Council) showed that unity was still a distant prospect.
The fact that the Mufti, who was by far the most influential Arab political figure,
derived his authority from religious sources, clearly showed that Arab politics
were not following the British pattern.
On April 15th, 1936, two Jews
were murdered by Arab 'bandits' (the official term) on the road between Tulkarm
and Nablus. Next day two Arabs were killed near the Jewish town of Petah Tikvah.
The funeral of the Jews in Tel Aviv on April 17th produced, as such events often
did, serious violence, and in neighbouring Jaffa two days later dozens of Jews
were attacked in the streets. Nine were beaten, stoned or stabbed to death, and
killings continued over the following days. Police had to open fire to keep an
Arab crowd out of Tel Aviv, and armoured cars were brought in. The situation was
grim, but it did not yet seem unprecedented: indeed, it seemed all too familiar.
A new kind of Arab organisation was, however, emerging. A 'National Committee'
met in Nablus on the 20th and declared a general strike. The strike call was repeated
by national committees in other towns, and finally by a Higher Arab Committee
in Jerusalem on the 25th.
The Higher Committee spelled out the Arab demands:
stoppage of Jewish immigration, prohibition of land sales to Jews, and establishment
of representative government. The strike rapidly solidified; the port of Jaffa
ceased to function, road transport seized up (though rail workers did not strike),
and a tax boycott began. Violence became more systematic: Jewish buildings, crops
and plantations were special targets. Most ominously, in May and June armed bands
appeared in the hills of Samaria and started to carry out bigger ambushes and
attacks.
The question for the government, and also for the Yishuv, was
how to react to this Arab activity. Was it a genuine national movement, or a series
of local disturbances, fomented by agitators and criminal bandits? Zionist leaders
divided on this: David Ben-Gurion took the former view, Berl Katznelson the latter.
The British view was also confused from the start. Sympathy with Arab fears of
Zionist domination went along with paternalistic assumptions of Arab in- capacity.
Plentiful evidence of intimidation could be found to confirm the instinctive belief
that the strike was not spontaneous. The culprits were as usual 'fanatics', 'criminals',
and 'professional agitators'. The British found it hard to accept that such undesirables
might represent popular sentiment. Moslem 'fanaticism' was an especially alien
threat which seems to have poisoned, in British eyes, the cause with which it
was inextricably linked.
The result was a complacency which is astonishing
in retrospect. Though emergency powers (the 1931 Palestine (Defence) Order in
Council) were invoked across the whole country as early as April 19th, Wauchope
consistently refused to permit military action against the armed bands. Troops
were called in as guards or to replace the British contingent of the police, who
were relieved of their ordinary duties - which often involved an irksome subordination
to Arab officers - so that they could pursue the rebels, without noticeable effect.
The bands continued to multiply throughout the summer, and their activities increasingly
resembled guerrilla warfare. The term 'rebellion' was often used within the administration
to describe what was going on, but quite casually: more often the violence was
fragmented - sniping, assault, abduction, arson, and so on - and loosely lumped
together as 'disorders' or 'disturbances'. This negative view governed the official
response until September 1936, with one spectacular exception. In the last fortnight
of June the army blasted its way into the old city of Jaffa, the epicentre of
the rebellion, with a massive series of demolitions. Two wide roads were driven
through the 'rabbit warren' of narrow streets and blind-walled houses so typical
of middle-eastern cities and so hostile to western notions of order. There was
almost no resistance: after some sniping had been silenced by a deluge of gunfire,
the population watched the demolitions with evident incomprehension or fatalism,
and Jaffa remained quiet for several months. This crushing operation followed
a long tussle between the civil and military authorities about the need for firm
measures to restore public security. The army's view was that government must
assert itself to win public confidence. The government conceded, but contrived
to wriggle out of the military posture by disingenuously attributing the demolitions
to public health requirements. This compromise was to persist as the months of
conflict dragged into years.
Jaffa foreshadowed the rough military methods
which were finally to be used when the rebellion reached its peak in autumn 1938.
Even then, however, martial law was never formally declared, and the relationship
between the civil and military authorities was never wholly harmonious. Aversion
to military rule was, of course, part of British political culture - albeit less
evident in the colonies - but it seems to have been most pronounced in Palestine.
Wauchope's dominance as High Commissioner was heightened by the fact that as a
general he out- ranked all the military staff in Palestine, even after the London
government forced the issue in September by announcing the imminent proclamation
of martial law, and despatching Major-General John Dill with a full division of
troops to enforce it.
Dill left England believing that he was to be military
governor of Palestine; he arrived to find that the threat of martial law, coupled
with the promise of a royal commission to investigate Arab grievances, had enabled
Wauchope to negotiate a compromise. The strike was called off, but the armed bands
did not surrender themselves or their weapons: they simply dispersed. Dill's fury
was barely controlled. He castigated the squeamishness of the Jerusalem government
which, he believed, had allowed the rebellion to spread and which now refused
to face the reality of an intolerable situation. The Chief of the Imperial General
Staff fumed privately that the High Commissioner's methods were 'entirely ineffective':
'unfettered military control should have been exercised from the first'.
Military strictures did indeed appear to be justified when, after a year of relative
calm, the insurgency took still more formidable shape in the autumn of 1937. During
the six months of the rebellion's first phase, 16 police and 21 soldiers had been
killed, 102 police and 104 soldiers wounded. Amongst civilians, 89 Jews and 195
Arabs were reported killed, and some 300 Jews and 800 Arabs wounded, though the
figures for Arab casualties were conjectural, and well over 500 may have died.
These totals would have been even larger but for the policy of non- retaliation
(havlaga) adopted by the Jewish Agency. In themselves they give at best a crude
indication of the collapse of public security en- gendered by the insurrection.
When the second phase of the rebellion began, with the assassination of the District
Commissioner for Galilee, Lewis Andrews, in Nazareth on September 27th, the governmental
catastrophe was even more complete. Armed bands reappeared in greater numbers
than ever before, and in addition to guerrilla activities began to exert systematic
intimidation of local communities. Rebel courts were established, 'taxes' levied,
decrees enforced (such as the abandonment of traditional urban Palestinian headgear
in favour of the desert kaffiyah), and the British administration paralysed.
The
first official reaction was more aggressive than in the previous year. The Arab
higher committee and the National Committee were proscribed; the Mufti of Jerusalem,
Hajj Amin al-Husseini - the most influential Arab political figure, widely regarded
as the instigator of the rebellion - was dismissed from his official posts, as
President of the Supreme Moslem Council and Chairman of the General Wakf Committee
(which had given him extensive funds and powers of patronage); and more stringent
emergency powers were taken. Wauchope's early retirement was announced, opening
the way to a tougher line. The army occupied the old city of Jerusalem, and widespread
arrests were made, though the Mufti escaped from the Haramash-Sharif, which troops
were forbidden to enter. Yet these measures had little effect. Within six months
Wouchope's successor, Sir Harold MacMichael, was reporting that 'the situation
in the rebel areas is steadily deteriorating, and unless remedial measures can
be taken, the drift will be toward rebellion'. By July 1938 there was a noticeable
'increase in the number and size of the armed gangs, [which] were enjoying increasing
support from the villagers'. In September the disturbances, he confessed, 'more
than ever before assumed the character of open rebellion'.
In fact, the
reference to 'rebel areas' in May revealed that even then some parts of Palestine
were beyond the government's control. Refusal to admit the reality of rebellion
while there was still a chance of containing it in the hills of Samaria accelerated
the slide into catastrophe. By the time Dill left the country in August 1937,
to be replaced by Archibald Wavell, the military garrison had been halved - two
brigades instead of two divisions. Wavell tried to meet the renewed insurgency
with mobile columns: he had neither the strength nor the authority to attempt
an intensive combing-out of the rebel heartland, small though it was (the notorious
'triangle' between Nablus, Tulkarm and Jenin measured barely thirty kilometres
on each side). Despite official optimism, the results were disappointing. Violence
trickled down across the whole country over the summer of 1938; a celebrated Iraqi
guerrilla leader, Fauzi al-Kaukji, succeeded in giving a new degree of cohesion
to the actions of the armed bands; whilst a specially ominous aspect of this virtual
civil war was the increase in terrorist attacks on Arabs by Jewish revisionist
groups, later to explode into the British consciousness as the 'Stern gang' and
the Irgun. These had already drawn the conclusion that Arab violence had caused
the British to renege on the Balfour declaration, and that only violence could
now establish Eretz Israel.
Well might Major-General Iron-side, visiting
Palestine in October, report that 'civil government has completely broken down,
and civil administration is only in operation to a limited extent in certain towns'.
He held that because civil administration 'restricts and causes delay to immediate
action by troops so essential to dealing with any rebellion', 'any form of civil
administration is unsuitable for an emergency such as this, and military control
must be introduced and the country administered by a military governor'. It was
a familiar military contention, driven by exasperation rather than ambition. As
a War Office representative, Colonel Robert Haining had protested to the Colonial
Office mandarins in 1936 that as long as the High Commissioner remained the arbiter
of public safety, effective military action would be stymied. Now he succeeded
Wavell as Commander-in-Chief. He was given greatly increased powers, including
operational control over the police. But he still believed that friction between
the military and rival authorities was a crippling handicap.
There was
a straightforward conflict of view between soldiers who believed that drastic
measures, including collective punishments on villages suspected of harbouring
guerrilla fighters, were the only way of restoring control, and civil officials
who saw such punishments as immoral when the government could not guarantee to
protect villagers from intimidation. Haining privately accused the 'civil obstructionists'
of watering down military measures and passing the buck for unpopular policies
to the army. He regarded collective punishments as 'the only method of impressing
the peaceful but terrorised majority that failure to assist law and order may
in the long run be more unpleasant than submitting to intimidation'.
In
the winter of 1938-39 a somewhat murky compromise, akin to the Jaffa demolitions
of 1936, was reached. The military were given a more or less free hand, but no
open avowal of military rule was made. Formal emergency powers rested with the
High Commissioner, codified in a sequence of Defence Regulations which were to
continue in force through the Jewish insurgency after the Second World War and,
indeed, have continued to be used by Israel in the 'occupied territories' since
1967. As during the intifiada which broke out there in the winter of 1987, the
army was left to find a rough- and-ready way of putting pressure on an alienated
population. Some of the means were very rough; collective punishments often bore
the hallmark of reprisals and involved, as now, casual brutality beyond official
control. Much military violence'. Undoubtedly went unreported, but in 1939 at
least it seems to have had a cumulative effect in isolating and breaking up the
guerrilla bands. The use of Arab hostages ('minesweepers' in unofficial military
parlance) immunised military patrols and convoys against rebel mines. The most
striking successes were achieved by one of the army's most unconventional officers,
Orde Wingate, who established the Special Night Squad, the only specialised conter-
insurgency force then in existence. It was an odd and potentially explosive mixture
of British army volunteers and members of the Jewish Agency's unofficial army,
the Hagana, described none too decorously by the senior RAF officer in Palestine,
Arthur Harris, as 'local toughs'. They were able to tap sources of information
previously unreached by the security forces, though their activities were suspected
of straying across the fine line between prevention and pre-emption or counter-terrorism.
The impact of the SNS was considerable, but it was necessarily limited. General
military pressure gradually broke up the larger guerrilla bands, though the smaller
remnants proved much harder to eliminate. Many non- military observers thought
that the rebellion died out largely because of the political concessions made
in the 1939 White Paper which set final limits to Jewish immigration into Palestine.
The appearance of 'peace bands' recruited from pro- government villagers around
this time signalled the fracturing of the precarious Arab unity which had made
a deep impression on the British Cabinet. The White Paper was certainly, a dramatic
policy shift, since it promised majority - therefore Arab - self government after
five years. Britain's attempts to justify the League of Nations this redefinition
of the Mandate involved recognising the rebellion as an upsurge of national consciousness:
as the Colonial Secretary put it to the League's Permanent Mandates Committee
'large numbers of Arabs have shown themselves prepared to lay down their lives
in defence of their people'. Major-General Bernard Montgomery, then a divisional
commander in north Palestine, vigorously opposed this view. In his eyes the rebels
remained mere gangs of criminals, professional bandits not national fighters;
the agitation was the work of a few 'young hotheads', while the majority of the
people were 'in no way anti-British'. He believed that the authorities could win
back the people by making clear that they would 'get a fair deal from us but be
killed if they rebel'. The cardinal failure of the Palestine government was its
inability to follow this simple policy. For all its attractive lack of complexity,
this interpretation was probably wrong. Montgomery would have a second chance
to test it, during the Jewish insurgency after 1945, when it looked even more
inadequate. This, however, could provide little comfort to the civil government,
faced with the wreck of the hopes and promises on which the Mandate had been founded.
Article by Charles Townshed.
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