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Woodhead Commission

The Woodhead Commission (officially the Palestine Partition Commission[1]) was a British technical commission established to propose "a detailed" partition scheme for Mandatory Palestine, including recommending the partition boundaries and examination of economic and financial aspects of the Peel Plan.[2][3]

The Commission was appointed at the end of February 1938 and conducted its investigations from April to early August 1938. It rejected the Peel Commission's plan mainly on the grounds that it required a large transfer of Arabs, and considered two other plans. It preferred a modification of the partition, which forms a satisfactory basis of settlement, if the United Kingdom government accept "the very considerable financial liability involved,"[4] that balances the Arab state budget.[5] In this plan, the entire Galilee and a corridor from Jaffa to Jerusalem would remain under British mandate.

It published its conclusions on November 9, 1938, after which the British government rejected the imminent partition of Palestine as involving insurmountable "political, administrative and financial difficulties".[6] Britain called for a conference in London for all relevant parties to work out a compromise.

Overview Edit

 
Map illustrating Jewish proposals for partition of Jerusalem, presented to the Woodhead Commission

The Arabs renewed their revolt after the publication of the Peel Commission report and the British Cabinet, taking fright, secretly voted against partition on 8 December 1937. The Woodhead commission was appointed with a formal duty of implementation of the Peel proposals but in reality to bury them.[7][8] The Commission comprised Sir John Woodhead, a former civil administrator in India; Sir Alison Russell, a lawyer; Percival Waterfield and Thomas Reid, also Indian civil servants.[9] It was charged with examining the Peel Commission plan in detail, in order "to recommend boundaries for the proposed Arab and Jewish areas and the enclaves to be retained permanently or temporarily under British Mandate" and "to examine and report on the economic and financial questions involved in partition upon which decisions will require to be taken."[10] However, the appointment of the Commission was regarded by the Colonial Office as an instrument to free Britain from its obligation to the partition plan.[11] In accordance with a decision of the British cabinet, Woodhead was secretly advised that it was within the commission's authority to decide that "no workable scheme could be produced".[12] Sir George Rendel, head of the Eastern Department of the Foreign Office, did his utmost to ensure that the Commission would reach the "correct conclusion," by trying to influence the choice of personnel and placing his own memorandum before the Commission as evidence.[13]

The Commission spent over three months in Palestine, taking evidence from witnesses in 55 sessions. No Arabs came forward to submit evidence, though king Abdullah of Transjordan wrote to Woodhead giving support for partition as well as receiving the Commission in Amman.[14][15]

The Commission found that a self-supporting Arab State could only be established if it "contained a large number of Jews, whose contributions to tax-revenue would alone enable that state to balance its budget."[16] As the Arab State would need the mandated territories for farming and the Jewish State would need them for industry, the Commission proposed a customs union.[4]

In their report, they examined three possible modifications of the Peel Commission proposal, which they called Plans A, B and C. These plans proposed the creation of a Jewish state surrounded by a larger Arab state and a British zone.[17] The three plans are as follows:

Plan A Edit

 
Woodhead Commission, Plan A

Plan A, was based on the Peel Plan, with the boundaries redrawn "more exactly, taking their outline as a guide".[18] It proposed a coastal Jewish state, a British-mandated corridor from Jerusalem to the coastal city Jaffa, and the remainder of Palestine merged with Transjordan into an Arab state.[4] Jaffa (without Tel Aviv) was included in the mandated corridor in the Peel Plan but in the Arab state in Plan A.[19] Under Plan A, it was estimated that the Arab state would have 7,200 Jews and 485,200 Arabs, and the Jewish state would have 304,900 Jews and 294,700 Arabs.[20]

Plan B Edit

 
Woodhead Commission, Plan B

Plan B, the same as Plan A, except that it reduced the size of the Jewish State by adding Galilee to the permanently mandated area and the southern part of the region south of Jaffa to the Arab State.[21] Under Plan B, the Jewish state would have 300,400 Jews and 188,400 Arabs (50,000 in the Haifa district), while 90,000 Arabs and 76,000 Jews would continue to live under British rule.[22]

Plan C Edit

 
Woodhead Commission, Plan C

Plan C, a further modification, would reduce the Jewish State to the coastal region between Zikhron Yaakov and Rehovot, while placing northern Palestine, including the Jezreel Valley, and all the semi-arid part of southern Palestine, under a separate mandate[21][23] to be administered by the mandatory until the Arab and Jewish populations could agree on their final destination. An essential feature of the plan was a customs union of the Arab State, the Jewish State and the territories under Mandate.

Plan C recommended:[24]

  • A Jewish state of 1,258 square km, in two parts: The northern part would be a coastal strip 15–20 km wide from Tel Aviv to above Zichron Ya'acov, and the southern part would be a smaller region including Rehovot. The initial population would be about 226,000 Jews and 54,400 Arabs.
  • An Arab state of 7,393 square km, consisting mostly of a segment approximating today's West Bank and Gaza Strip with a wide corridor connecting them. The Arab state would also include the city of Jaffa. The initial population would be 8,900 Jews and 444,100 Arabs.
  • Three mandated territories under British control: all of the Galilee (initial population 77,300 Jews and 231,400 Arabs), an enclave including Jerusalem and Lydda (initial population 80,100 Jews and 211,400 Arabs), and the Negev region from north of Beersheva (initially 60,000 Arabs).

Conclusions Edit

The commission report was published on 9, November 1938, concluded that no plan of partition could be evolved within the terms of reference which would, in the view of the members of the Commission, offer much hope of success,[21] for eventual establishment of self-supporting Arab and Jewish states.[4] However, the commission devised possible alternative plans.

The commission rejected Plan A, which was the Commission's interpretation of the Peel Plan, mainly on the grounds that it required a large transfer of Arabs to reduce the number of Arabs in the proposed Jewish state.[25] However, the British government had already rejected Peel's suggestion that the transfer be compulsory, and the Commission considered that a voluntary transfer was also not expected to occur because of the Arab population's "deep attachment to the land".[26] In addition, development difficulties for the Arabs were expected.[2] Second, the inclusion of Galilee in the Jewish state was considered undesirable as "the population is almost entirely Arab", the Arabs living there were likely to resist the inclusion by force, and the option would create a "minority problem" that threatened regional stability.[27]

Plan B was rejected but one member favored it. The problem of Galilee was considered fatal to Plan B.[28] Including it in the Arab state would create a major security problem for the Jewish state, while keeping it indefinitely under mandate would deprive the large Arab population of its right to independence.[28] Major problems were also seen with the disposition of Haifa, whose population was approximately half Jewish, and the part of Palestine running from Haifa to Beisan and then north to the frontier.[28]

Plan C was preferred by the commission. This plan was a modification of the partition, which would form a satisfactory basis of settlement, if the United Kingdom was prepared to provide a sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget.[5] In this plan, the entire Galilee and a corridor from Jaffa to Jerusalem would remain under British mandate.

Two members of the Commission also added Notes of Reservation. Russell argued that Plan B was preferred to Plan C, being more in accord with the Peel Commission's plan, more likely to secure peace, and more equitable and practical.[29] Reid argued that all three plans were fatally flawed.[30]

Economy and finance Edit

The Commission also declared that there were financial and economic difficulties "of such a nature that we can find no possible way to overcome them within our terms of reference."[31] It found that "it is not possible, under our terms of reference, to recommend boundaries which will afford a reasonable prospect of the eventual establishment of a self-supporting Arab State. This conclusion is, in our opinion, equally valid under plan C, plan B, and any other plan of partition which does not involve the inclusion in the Arab State of an area containing a large number of Jews, whose contributions to tax-revenue would alone enable that state to balance its budget".[32] They suggested that the Arab and Jewish states not be given fiscal independence but instead the UK government accept "the very considerable financial liability"[31][further explanation needed] and provide a sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget.[5]

In a published summary his findings, Woodhead identified two reasons for the financial infeasibility of an Arab state.[33] First, Jewish citizens of Palestine made much higher per capita tax contribution than Arabs, yet any feasible partition would leave few Jews in the Arab state.[33] Second, the greater part of the Arab wealth lay in the places that would become part of the Jewish state due to their large Jewish populations.[33] For example, although Arabs and Jews had about the same amount of land under citrus cultivation, less than one third of the Arab holding would be in the Arab state."[33]

The Commission proposed a modified form of partition called "economic federalism" in which the two states would enter into a customs union with the territories that remained under mandate, leaving the Mandatory authorities to determine a fiscal policy. According to the report: "The customs revenue would be collected by the Mandatory, and the net surplus after meeting certain common charges would be distributed between the three areas according to an agreed formula, subject to periodic review...The Commission suggest that initially each area's share should be one-third...To enable the Arab State to balance its budget without subjecting it to external financial control, it should receive a supplementary share out of the share of the mandated territories, under conditions which will entitle it to share in the expansion of customs revenue resulting from an increase of prosperity in the rest of Palestine. This arrangement could be extended, if desired, to cover internal communications (railways, posts and telegraphs) thus removing certain obvious administrative difficulties consequent on partition. While this arrangement withholds fiscal autonomy from the Arab and Jewish states it seems to the Commission, subject to certain reservations, to form a satisfactory basis for settlement, provided his Majesty's Government are prepared to accept the considerable financial liability involved",[4] in order to balance the Arab state budget.

Criticism Edit

Former Colonial Secretary Leo Amery argued that partition had been rejected "for the wrong reasons." He said that the Peel Plan based its proposal on areas where "Jews and Arabs already preponderated," while fulfilling the Mandate required providing the Jews with sufficient territory for substantial immigration. The attempt of the Woodhead Commission to include the fewest Arabs in Jewish areas and vice versa led to plans that were not viable. Moreover, the implication was that a self-supporting Arab state must "continue to enjoy those amenities that Jewish enterprise and taxation had brought to undivided Palestine." According to Amery, no scheme could be implemented under such assumptions.[34]

Aftermath Edit

The report of the Woodhead commission was presented to Parliament and published on November 9, 1938. As a consequence, the government issued a policy statement that "the political, administrative and financial difficulties involved in the proposal to create independent Arab and Jewish States inside Palestine are so great that this solution of the problem is impracticable."[6]

The Jewish Agency Executive responded that the Woodhead report could not "serve as the basis for any negotiations, either between the Jews and the Arabs or between the Jewish Agency and the [British] government."[35]

Despite Britain's announcement that the plan was impracticable, it suggested that Arab-Jewish agreement might still be possible.[21] In 1939 London invited the Palestine Arabs, the neighboring Arab states and the Jewish Agency to London to participate in a third attempt to resolve the crisis, the St. James Conference (also known as the Round Table Conference of 1939). The recommendations were eventually rejected by both Jews and Arabs.[21]

References Edit

  1. ^ Palestine Partition Commission Report, Command Paper 5854, Printed and published by His Majesty's Stationery Office, London, 1938 (310 pages and 13 maps)
  2. ^ a b Mandated Landscape: British Imperial Rule in Palestine 1929-1948
  3. ^ Policy in Palestine, December 23, 1937
  4. ^ a b c d e Britain Drops Partition, Maps Peace Parleys; Agency Rejects Woodhead Report As Talks Basis
  5. ^ a b c "Woodhead commission report". (p. 236) FINANCE...we found that it was impossible, whatever boundaries we might recommend, to set up an Arab State which should be self-supporting.... deficits of £P.610,000 per annum for the Arab State (including Trans- Jordan) and of £P.460,000 per annum for the Mandated Territories, but a surplus of £P.600,Q00 per annum for the (p. 237 ) Jewish State. We have found that it is not possible to call upon the Jewish State for a direct subvention to the Arab State, and neither practicable nor equitable to set up an Arab State with a budget so very far from being balanced. We conclude that, if partition is to be carried out, there is no alternative but that Parliament should be asked to provide, in some form, sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget. (p. 246)...CONCLUSION ... The question whether partition is practicable involves considerations of two kinds : practical and political. The former concern chiefly finance and economics ;.... But the financial and economic difficulties, ..., are of such a nature that we can find no possible way to overcome them within our terms of reference. ... we have proposed, ... a modification of partition which, ... seems to us, subject to certain reservations, to form a satisfactory basis of settlement, if His Majesty's Government are prepared to accept the very considerable financial liability involved. There remain the political difficulties. .... But there is still the possibility that both sides may be willing to accept a reasonable compromise.
  6. ^ a b Palestine. Statement by His Majesty's Government in the United Kingdom. Presented by the Secretary of State for the Colonies to Parliament by Command of His Majesty. November, 1938. Cmd. 5893. . Archived from the original on 2013-11-03. Retrieved 2014-11-11.
  7. ^ Benny Morris (2004). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited. Cambridge University Press. pp. 49–. ISBN 978-0-521-00967-6. However, within weeks, the Peel recommendations were dead in the water. The Arabs, unappeased, renewed their revolt, and the British Government, taking fright, secretly voted against partition on 8 December 1937 and then appointed yet another ('technical') committee, ostensibly to look into the praxis of implementing the Peel proposals but in reality to bury them. The Woodhead Committee, set up in March 1938, presented its findings in November
  8. ^ Itzhak Galnoor (1 February 2012). The Partition of Palestine: Decision Crossroads in the Zionist Movement. SUNY Press. pp. 53–. ISBN 978-1-4384-0372-4. The cabinet held a secret discussion on December 8, 1937, and accepted Prime Minister Chamberlain's proposal to delay all immediate action for more than a year ...In retrospect, this cabinet resolution signified abandonment of the partition proposal, although this would be...
  9. ^ Conservative Party Attitudes to Jews, 1900-1950, Harry Defries
  10. ^ Report, p, 7
  11. ^ Palestine: Retreat from the Mandate: The Making of British Policy, 1936-1945, Michael J. Cohen, pp. 44-45
  12. ^ Itzhak Galnoor (1995). The Partition of Palestine: Decision Crossroads in the Zionist Movement. Albany: State University of New York Press. p. 53.
  13. ^ Palestine: Retreat from the Mandate: The Making of British Policy, 1936-1945, Michael J. Cohen, pp. 46-47
  14. ^ Report, pp. 8–9
  15. ^ Yoav Gelber (1997). Jewish-Transdanian Relations 1921–1948. Frank Cass. pp. 134–135.
  16. ^ Report, p196.
  17. ^ David Ben-Gurion’s Answer to Kristallnacht
  18. ^ Report, p. 45.
  19. ^ Report, pp. 40–44, maps 3, 8.
  20. ^ Report, p. 81
  21. ^ a b c d e Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry - Appendix IV
  22. ^ The Arab-Israeli Conflict: Its History in Maps, Martin Gilbert, p. 29
  23. ^ Palestine: Retreat from the Mandate: The Making of British Policy, 1936-1945, Michael J. Cohen, p. 72
  24. ^ Report, p. 109 and Map 10
  25. ^ Report, p. 52
  26. ^ Report, pp. 52–83.
  27. ^ Report, pp. 96–97
  28. ^ a b c Report, pp. 97–98
  29. ^ Report, pp. 249–262.
  30. ^ Report, pp. 263–281
  31. ^ a b Report, p.246
  32. ^ report, p. 196
  33. ^ a b c d John Woodhead (1939). "The Report of the Palestine Partition Commission". International Affairs. 18 (2): 171–193. doi:10.2307/3019878. JSTOR 3019878.
  34. ^ Palestine: Retreat from the Mandate: The Making of British Policy, 1936-1945, Michael J. Cohen, pp. 164-165
  35. ^ The Partition of Palestine: Decision Crossroads in the Zionist Movement, Itzhak Galnoor

External links Edit

  • Woodhead Commission report

woodhead, commission, 1943, bengal, famine, famine, inquiry, commission, officially, palestine, partition, commission, british, technical, commission, established, propose, detailed, partition, scheme, mandatory, palestine, including, recommending, partition, . For the Woodhead Commission on the 1943 Bengal famine see Famine Inquiry Commission The Woodhead Commission officially the Palestine Partition Commission 1 was a British technical commission established to propose a detailed partition scheme for Mandatory Palestine including recommending the partition boundaries and examination of economic and financial aspects of the Peel Plan 2 3 The Commission was appointed at the end of February 1938 and conducted its investigations from April to early August 1938 It rejected the Peel Commission s plan mainly on the grounds that it required a large transfer of Arabs and considered two other plans It preferred a modification of the partition which forms a satisfactory basis of settlement if the United Kingdom government accept the very considerable financial liability involved 4 that balances the Arab state budget 5 In this plan the entire Galilee and a corridor from Jaffa to Jerusalem would remain under British mandate It published its conclusions on November 9 1938 after which the British government rejected the imminent partition of Palestine as involving insurmountable political administrative and financial difficulties 6 Britain called for a conference in London for all relevant parties to work out a compromise Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Plan A 1 2 Plan B 1 3 Plan C 2 Conclusions 2 1 Economy and finance 3 Criticism 4 Aftermath 5 References 6 External linksOverview Edit nbsp Map illustrating Jewish proposals for partition of Jerusalem presented to the Woodhead CommissionThe Arabs renewed their revolt after the publication of the Peel Commission report and the British Cabinet taking fright secretly voted against partition on 8 December 1937 The Woodhead commission was appointed with a formal duty of implementation of the Peel proposals but in reality to bury them 7 8 The Commission comprised Sir John Woodhead a former civil administrator in India Sir Alison Russell a lawyer Percival Waterfield and Thomas Reid also Indian civil servants 9 It was charged with examining the Peel Commission plan in detail in order to recommend boundaries for the proposed Arab and Jewish areas and the enclaves to be retained permanently or temporarily under British Mandate and to examine and report on the economic and financial questions involved in partition upon which decisions will require to be taken 10 However the appointment of the Commission was regarded by the Colonial Office as an instrument to free Britain from its obligation to the partition plan 11 In accordance with a decision of the British cabinet Woodhead was secretly advised that it was within the commission s authority to decide that no workable scheme could be produced 12 Sir George Rendel head of the Eastern Department of the Foreign Office did his utmost to ensure that the Commission would reach the correct conclusion by trying to influence the choice of personnel and placing his own memorandum before the Commission as evidence 13 The Commission spent over three months in Palestine taking evidence from witnesses in 55 sessions No Arabs came forward to submit evidence though king Abdullah of Transjordan wrote to Woodhead giving support for partition as well as receiving the Commission in Amman 14 15 The Commission found that a self supporting Arab State could only be established if it contained a large number of Jews whose contributions to tax revenue would alone enable that state to balance its budget 16 As the Arab State would need the mandated territories for farming and the Jewish State would need them for industry the Commission proposed a customs union 4 In their report they examined three possible modifications of the Peel Commission proposal which they called Plans A B and C These plans proposed the creation of a Jewish state surrounded by a larger Arab state and a British zone 17 The three plans are as follows Plan A Edit nbsp Woodhead Commission Plan APlan A was based on the Peel Plan with the boundaries redrawn more exactly taking their outline as a guide 18 It proposed a coastal Jewish state a British mandated corridor from Jerusalem to the coastal city Jaffa and the remainder of Palestine merged with Transjordan into an Arab state 4 Jaffa without Tel Aviv was included in the mandated corridor in the Peel Plan but in the Arab state in Plan A 19 Under Plan A it was estimated that the Arab state would have 7 200 Jews and 485 200 Arabs and the Jewish state would have 304 900 Jews and 294 700 Arabs 20 Plan B Edit nbsp Woodhead Commission Plan BPlan B the same as Plan A except that it reduced the size of the Jewish State by adding Galilee to the permanently mandated area and the southern part of the region south of Jaffa to the Arab State 21 Under Plan B the Jewish state would have 300 400 Jews and 188 400 Arabs 50 000 in the Haifa district while 90 000 Arabs and 76 000 Jews would continue to live under British rule 22 Plan C Edit nbsp Woodhead Commission Plan CPlan C a further modification would reduce the Jewish State to the coastal region between Zikhron Yaakov and Rehovot while placing northern Palestine including the Jezreel Valley and all the semi arid part of southern Palestine under a separate mandate 21 23 to be administered by the mandatory until the Arab and Jewish populations could agree on their final destination An essential feature of the plan was a customs union of the Arab State the Jewish State and the territories under Mandate Plan C recommended 24 A Jewish state of 1 258 square km in two parts The northern part would be a coastal strip 15 20 km wide from Tel Aviv to above Zichron Ya acov and the southern part would be a smaller region including Rehovot The initial population would be about 226 000 Jews and 54 400 Arabs An Arab state of 7 393 square km consisting mostly of a segment approximating today s West Bank and Gaza Strip with a wide corridor connecting them The Arab state would also include the city of Jaffa The initial population would be 8 900 Jews and 444 100 Arabs Three mandated territories under British control all of the Galilee initial population 77 300 Jews and 231 400 Arabs an enclave including Jerusalem and Lydda initial population 80 100 Jews and 211 400 Arabs and the Negev region from north of Beersheva initially 60 000 Arabs Conclusions EditThe commission report was published on 9 November 1938 concluded that no plan of partition could be evolved within the terms of reference which would in the view of the members of the Commission offer much hope of success 21 for eventual establishment of self supporting Arab and Jewish states 4 However the commission devised possible alternative plans The commission rejected Plan A which was the Commission s interpretation of the Peel Plan mainly on the grounds that it required a large transfer of Arabs to reduce the number of Arabs in the proposed Jewish state 25 However the British government had already rejected Peel s suggestion that the transfer be compulsory and the Commission considered that a voluntary transfer was also not expected to occur because of the Arab population s deep attachment to the land 26 In addition development difficulties for the Arabs were expected 2 Second the inclusion of Galilee in the Jewish state was considered undesirable as the population is almost entirely Arab the Arabs living there were likely to resist the inclusion by force and the option would create a minority problem that threatened regional stability 27 Plan B was rejected but one member favored it The problem of Galilee was considered fatal to Plan B 28 Including it in the Arab state would create a major security problem for the Jewish state while keeping it indefinitely under mandate would deprive the large Arab population of its right to independence 28 Major problems were also seen with the disposition of Haifa whose population was approximately half Jewish and the part of Palestine running from Haifa to Beisan and then north to the frontier 28 Plan C was preferred by the commission This plan was a modification of the partition which would form a satisfactory basis of settlement if the United Kingdom was prepared to provide a sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget 5 In this plan the entire Galilee and a corridor from Jaffa to Jerusalem would remain under British mandate Two members of the Commission also added Notes of Reservation Russell argued that Plan B was preferred to Plan C being more in accord with the Peel Commission s plan more likely to secure peace and more equitable and practical 29 Reid argued that all three plans were fatally flawed 30 Economy and finance Edit The Commission also declared that there were financial and economic difficulties of such a nature that we can find no possible way to overcome them within our terms of reference 31 It found that it is not possible under our terms of reference to recommend boundaries which will afford a reasonable prospect of the eventual establishment of a self supporting Arab State This conclusion is in our opinion equally valid under plan C plan B and any other plan of partition which does not involve the inclusion in the Arab State of an area containing a large number of Jews whose contributions to tax revenue would alone enable that state to balance its budget 32 They suggested that the Arab and Jewish states not be given fiscal independence but instead the UK government accept the very considerable financial liability 31 further explanation needed and provide a sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget 5 In a published summary his findings Woodhead identified two reasons for the financial infeasibility of an Arab state 33 First Jewish citizens of Palestine made much higher per capita tax contribution than Arabs yet any feasible partition would leave few Jews in the Arab state 33 Second the greater part of the Arab wealth lay in the places that would become part of the Jewish state due to their large Jewish populations 33 For example although Arabs and Jews had about the same amount of land under citrus cultivation less than one third of the Arab holding would be in the Arab state 33 The Commission proposed a modified form of partition called economic federalism in which the two states would enter into a customs union with the territories that remained under mandate leaving the Mandatory authorities to determine a fiscal policy According to the report The customs revenue would be collected by the Mandatory and the net surplus after meeting certain common charges would be distributed between the three areas according to an agreed formula subject to periodic review The Commission suggest that initially each area s share should be one third To enable the Arab State to balance its budget without subjecting it to external financial control it should receive a supplementary share out of the share of the mandated territories under conditions which will entitle it to share in the expansion of customs revenue resulting from an increase of prosperity in the rest of Palestine This arrangement could be extended if desired to cover internal communications railways posts and telegraphs thus removing certain obvious administrative difficulties consequent on partition While this arrangement withholds fiscal autonomy from the Arab and Jewish states it seems to the Commission subject to certain reservations to form a satisfactory basis for settlement provided his Majesty s Government are prepared to accept the considerable financial liability involved 4 in order to balance the Arab state budget Criticism EditFormer Colonial Secretary Leo Amery argued that partition had been rejected for the wrong reasons He said that the Peel Plan based its proposal on areas where Jews and Arabs already preponderated while fulfilling the Mandate required providing the Jews with sufficient territory for substantial immigration The attempt of the Woodhead Commission to include the fewest Arabs in Jewish areas and vice versa led to plans that were not viable Moreover the implication was that a self supporting Arab state must continue to enjoy those amenities that Jewish enterprise and taxation had brought to undivided Palestine According to Amery no scheme could be implemented under such assumptions 34 Aftermath EditThe report of the Woodhead commission was presented to Parliament and published on November 9 1938 As a consequence the government issued a policy statement that the political administrative and financial difficulties involved in the proposal to create independent Arab and Jewish States inside Palestine are so great that this solution of the problem is impracticable 6 The Jewish Agency Executive responded that the Woodhead report could not serve as the basis for any negotiations either between the Jews and the Arabs or between the Jewish Agency and the British government 35 Despite Britain s announcement that the plan was impracticable it suggested that Arab Jewish agreement might still be possible 21 In 1939 London invited the Palestine Arabs the neighboring Arab states and the Jewish Agency to London to participate in a third attempt to resolve the crisis the St James Conference also known as the Round Table Conference of 1939 The recommendations were eventually rejected by both Jews and Arabs 21 References Edit Palestine Partition Commission Report Command Paper 5854 Printed and published by His Majesty s Stationery Office London 1938 310 pages and 13 maps a b Mandated Landscape British Imperial Rule in Palestine 1929 1948 Policy in Palestine December 23 1937 a b c d e Britain Drops Partition Maps Peace Parleys Agency Rejects Woodhead Report As Talks Basis a b c Woodhead commission report p 236 FINANCE we found that it was impossible whatever boundaries we might recommend to set up an Arab State which should be self supporting deficits of P 610 000 per annum for the Arab State including Trans Jordan and of P 460 000 per annum for the Mandated Territories but a surplus of P 600 Q00 per annum for the p 237 Jewish State We have found that it is not possible to call upon the Jewish State for a direct subvention to the Arab State and neither practicable nor equitable to set up an Arab State with a budget so very far from being balanced We conclude that if partition is to be carried out there is no alternative but that Parliament should be asked to provide in some form sufficient assistance to enable the Arab State to balance its budget p 246 CONCLUSION The question whether partition is practicable involves considerations of two kinds practical and political The former concern chiefly finance and economics But the financial and economic difficulties are of such a nature that we can find no possible way to overcome them within our terms of reference we have proposed a modification of partition which seems to us subject to certain reservations to form a satisfactory basis of settlement if His Majesty s Government are prepared to accept the very considerable financial liability involved There remain the political difficulties But there is still the possibility that both sides may be willing to accept a reasonable compromise a b Palestine Statement by His Majesty s Government in the United Kingdom Presented by the Secretary of State for the Colonies to Parliament by Command of His Majesty November 1938 Cmd 5893 Policy statement Advice against partition UK Secretary of State for the Colonies UK documentation CMD 5893 Non UN document 11 November 1938 Archived from the original on 2013 11 03 Retrieved 2014 11 11 Benny Morris 2004 The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited Cambridge University Press pp 49 ISBN 978 0 521 00967 6 However within weeks the Peel recommendations were dead in the water The Arabs unappeased renewed their revolt and the British Government taking fright secretly voted against partition on 8 December 1937 and then appointed yet another technical committee ostensibly to look into the praxis of implementing the Peel proposals but in reality to bury them The Woodhead Committee set up in March 1938 presented its findings in November Itzhak Galnoor 1 February 2012 The Partition of Palestine Decision Crossroads in the Zionist Movement SUNY Press pp 53 ISBN 978 1 4384 0372 4 The cabinet held a secret discussion on December 8 1937 and accepted Prime Minister Chamberlain s proposal to delay all immediate action for more than a year In retrospect this cabinet resolution signified abandonment of the partition proposal although this would be Conservative Party Attitudes to Jews 1900 1950 Harry Defries Report p 7 Palestine Retreat from the Mandate The Making of British Policy 1936 1945 Michael J Cohen pp 44 45 Itzhak Galnoor 1995 The Partition of Palestine Decision Crossroads in the Zionist Movement Albany State University of New York Press p 53 Palestine Retreat from the Mandate The Making of British Policy 1936 1945 Michael J Cohen pp 46 47 Report pp 8 9 Yoav Gelber 1997 Jewish Transdanian Relations 1921 1948 Frank Cass pp 134 135 Report p196 David Ben Gurion s Answer to Kristallnacht Report p 45 Report pp 40 44 maps 3 8 Report p 81 a b c d e Anglo American Committee of Inquiry Appendix IV The Arab Israeli Conflict Its History in Maps Martin Gilbert p 29 Palestine Retreat from the Mandate The Making of British Policy 1936 1945 Michael J Cohen p 72 Report p 109 and Map 10 Report p 52 Report pp 52 83 Report pp 96 97 a b c Report pp 97 98 Report pp 249 262 Report pp 263 281 a b Report p 246 report p 196 a b c d John Woodhead 1939 The Report of the Palestine Partition Commission International Affairs 18 2 171 193 doi 10 2307 3019878 JSTOR 3019878 Palestine Retreat from the Mandate The Making of British Policy 1936 1945 Michael J Cohen pp 164 165 The Partition of Palestine Decision Crossroads in the Zionist Movement Itzhak GalnoorExternal links EditWoodhead Commission report Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Woodhead Commission amp oldid 1180073766, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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