British foreign secretary Ernest Bevin announces in new statement of policy the formation of an Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry "to examine the question of European Jewry and to make a further review of the Palestine problem in the light of that examination." Though he explains that Palestine cannot by itself provide sufficient opportunity for grappling with the whole Jewish problem, he nevertheless announces continued Jewish immigration into Palestine "at the present monthly rate" (i.e. 1,500 per month).
The Anglo-American Committee of Inquiry
(AACI) was dispatched to Palestine in 1946 to “examine the question of European Jewry and to . . . review the Palestine Problem in light of that examination.” The plight of thousands of Jewish displaced persons across Europe after World War II
, the conflict over Palestine, and the development of the
British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin
announced the formation of the AACI, consisting of six British and six US investigators, on 13 November 1945. This initiative was the British attempt to involve the Americans in their policy in Palestine and to deflect US President
Composition of the Committee
MacDonald was not alone in carrying biases into his investigative work. Bartley Crum , like MacDonald, had been recommended for the committee by Truman’s secretary, David Niles , who was himself a Zionist activist. Crum was also pro-Zionist from the start, and like MacDonald he leaked information about the committee’s work to benefit the Zionists, as did Frank W. Buxton , editor of the Boston Herald. None of the committee members exhibited anything that could be labeled a “pro-Arab” stance. US Judge Joseph Hutcheson was a self-proclaimed liberal, as was Frank Aydelotte , former president of Swarthmore College and head of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton . They emphasized “balance” and “equity” as a means to resolve the competing claims of Jews and Arabs in Palestine, thereby sidelining the fact that Palestine was an overwhelmingly Arab country.
Among the British members was Richard Crossman
, a socialist
The Committee’s Deliberations
The committee heard from Zionists, Arabs, Arab-Americans, British officials, and renowned thinkers such as Albert Einstein and American Protestant theologian Reinhold Niebuhr .
The wide-ranging testimony of Chaim Weizmann
before the committee emphasized “Jewish homelessness” that has existed “many centuries before
The Jewish Agency obliged all its constituent parties to endorse the demand for a Jewish state in their presentations to the AACI. As a result, parties like the Hashomer Hatzair Workers’ Party , which advocated binationalism, did not do so in front of the committee. The Jewish Agency’s diktats did not stop Judah Magnes , head of the Ehud Movement and president of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, from calling for Arab-Jewish unity in a binational state.
Arab Participation and Committee Dismissal
For many Palestinians, whether to participate in the consultations of yet another commission of inquiry was a matter of debate. So many investigative commissions had come and gone to Palestine since the British took over as Mandatory power under the League of Nations, with little done to stymie the colonial encroachments of Zionism
on their lands and lives as a result. But after the Palestinians decided only at the last minute to represent themselves in front of the Royal Peel Commission
in 1936, some urged Palestinian participation in this latest investigative foray. Political independent
Most Arab representatives that the committee would hear—among them people who Crossman described as “poor inefficient, idle, corrupt political leaders who are wasting our time”—appeared before them in Jerusalem, where the committee heard seven hours of hearings every day. It was “a bit trying” and left the committee “very testy and bored,” as Crossman recorded in his diary. In MacDonald’s view,
While trying to maintain the focus of the hearings on legal and democratic values, representatives of the Palestinian cause struggled to convince their interrogators of their humanity and the sincerity of their sympathy for the Jews. The Arab Office, the small public relations team for the Palestinians that took the lead in presenting the Arab case, consistently drew on legal arguments. With the guidance of
In testimony before the AACI, Hourani reminded the committee that “the Arab people … has again and again emphasized that the only just and practicable solution for the problem of Palestine lies in the constitution of Palestine, … into a self-governing state, with its Arab majority, but with full rights for the Jewish citizens …. A state which should enter the United Nations … on a level of equality with other Arab states; a state in which questions of general concern, like immigration, should be decided by the ordinary democratic procedure, in accordance with the will of the majority.” The government would be “representative of all Palestinian citizens on a level of absolute individual equality.” As the Arab Office laid out its vision, it emphasized the rights of Jews who were already in the country as legal citizens. This vision for the future was one in which “Palestinian citizens, Arabs and Jews alike, [would] have responsibility of the welfare of the whole people of the country.” Other documents submitted to the AACI outlined the formation of the government through Constitutional and Legislative Assemblies, provisions for an electoral law, and other guarantees that should, they said, be “embodied” in a UN General Assembly Resolution.
But the Palestinian and other Arab arguments seemed to leave little impression on the commissioners, some of whom reviled the Arabs for their “intransigence” and their uncompromising stances. Representatives of the Palestinian case, such as
In their argumentation, the Palestinians acknowledged that at the root of the contest were two points of view: either the majority in Palestine—the Arabs—should be accorded their democratic rights; or that right could be sacrificed, and the result of Europe’s barbarity could be shunted off, and its victims given a state in Palestine in the name of “humanitarianism.”
But the European tragedy ultimately was used to determine and defend the political decision to grant key Zionist demands, in opposition to all democratic principles and procedures.
Committee Recommendations
Among the final recommendations of the committee in its report, released on 20 April 1946, was to issue certificates for the immigration of 100,000 Jews to Palestine, thereby fulfilling a Zionist demand and putting them forward on the path to obtaining a majority in the country. The report also recommended that Jewish immigration to Palestine should not be dependent on the Arabs’ approval and that all laws limiting sale of Arab land to the Jews be abolished. The Institute of Arab American Affairs chastised the committee for not ceding to the Arab demand that Palestine be organized “within the frame of the same democratic principles which operate in [the United States and Great Britain].” They tried to make their democratic point again: “The same fundamental and inalienable human rights conceded those nations must be conceded the Arabs of Palestine.” They were not to be.
Among the other findings of the committee, which received less attention at the time, was the recommendation that all governments work together to “find new homes for all such ‘displaced persons’, irrespective of creed or nationality.” This call landed flat in the shadow of the 100,000 immigration certificates that Truman touted. The other recommendations showed some attempt to balance the interests of Jews and Arabs, suggesting that British Mandate claims to be doing so and their self-proclaimed inability to carry that out taught the committee nothing. The committee called for terrorism to stop and the Mandate to continue until Palestine became a UN trusteeship, with the provision that the “trustee should proclaim the principle that Arab economic, educational and political advancement in Palestine is of equal importance with that of the Jew” while facilitating Jewish immigration. They also called for the Land Transfers Regulations of 1940 to be rescinded and “replaced by regulations based on a policy of freedom in the sale, lease or use of land, irrespective of race, community or creed” with protections for small owners and tenant cultivators. Echoing the committee’s emphasis on balance and “reasonableness,” they advocated neutral and equalized education of both Arabs and Jews, to be supervised by the government in order “to do away with the present excited emphasis on racialism and the perversion of education for propaganda purposes” in Jewish schools.
There was a mix of views among the committee members and among people appearing before the committee in favor of and opposing the partition of Palestine. In the report, the committee opposed the idea of either a Jewish state or an Arab state over the whole of Palestine. They thought their report demonstrated a fair “live and let live” attitude, as Hutcheson, the American chair of the committee described it.
Reactions
While Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin supported the report, UK Prime Minister Clement Attlee opposed it, fearing that it would stir Arab and Jewish ire and recognizing the problem of designating Palestine alone as the country to absorb displaced survivors of the Holocaust. Truman expressed his happiness at the committee’s call for immediate mass Jewish immigration to Palestine and the abrogation of the White Paper, while he dismissed the other recommendations, which dealt with “many other questions of long-range political policies and questions of international law” as requiring “careful study,” which he promised to “take under advisement.”
The Zionists welcomed the decision to admit 100,000 Jewish immigrants to Palestine, but they were disappointed not to receive an endorsement of a Jewish state. Arab reaction, in contrast, was unanimously critical, leading the Arab Higher Committee to call for a general strike to protest the report. Albert Hourani dismissed the Anglo-American Committee report as having “‘no intellectual merits, no depth of understanding, no logical cogency.’” Like political leader
Once again, logical Arab argumentation based in liberal and democratic values did not alter Great Power dynamics. Instead, the British composed a new committee to determine how the Anglo-American proposals would be implemented. The resultant Morrison-Grady Plan proffered, in the words of historian Wm. Roger Louis , a “classic Colonial Office solution applied to the unique problem of Palestine,” recasting a blueprint for provincial autonomy and a central British trusteeship. Truman and the Zionists rejected the provisional autonomy plan, and the Arabs rejected the plan on the grounds that it laid the basis for partition.