May/June 1991, Page 17
Two Politically Motivated Decisions
Truman Adviser Recalls May 14,1948 US Decision
to Recognize Israel
By Richard H. Curtiss
With US President George Bush increasingly frustrated by the Israeli-Palestinian
problem, a new generation of Americans is asking an old question:
Why must the US deal with this seemingly intractable dispute?
The answer, unfortunately, is that the US is largely responsible
for the problem because of two American decisions in 1947 and 1948.
Now, only the US can break the impasse, by forcing its Israeli client
state to give back all or most of the land the United Nations allotted
to Muslim and Christian inhabitants when it partitioned Palestine
in 1947.
An "insider's account" of the discussions leading up
to these decisions has just been published by former Secretary of
Defense Clark Clifford, one of the few living parties to the discussions
leading to partition.
Most people who knew the Middle East at first hand opposed the
partition plan, adopted by the United Nations on November 29, 1947.
Patently unfair, it awarded 56 percent of Palestine to its 650,000
Jewish inhabitants, and 44 percent to its 1,300,000 Muslim and Christian
Arab inhabitants.
Partition was adopted only after ruthless arm-twisting by the US
government and by 26 pro-Zionist US senators who, in telegrams to
a number of UN member states, warned that US goodwill in rebuilding
their World War II-devastated economies might depend on a favorable
vote for partition.
In a Nov. 10, 1945 meeting with American diplomats brought in from
their posts in the Middle East to urge Truman not to heed Zionist
urgings, Truman had bluntly explained his motivation:
"I'm sorry, gentlemen, but I have to answer to hundreds of
thousands who are anxious for the success of Zionism: I do not have
hundreds of thousands of Arabs among my constituents."
Immediately after the plan was adopted, however, extensive fighting
broke out between Jews and Arabs, just as US diplomats had predicted.
The Arab states categorically rejected the partition by outside
parties of an overwhelmingly Arab land.
David Ben-Gurion, soon to be Israel's first prime minister, had
ordered his representatives at the UN to accept the plan, but not
to enter into any discussion or agreement defining the new Jewish
state's borders. To his followers, who, like the Arabs, laid claim
to the entire land, Ben-Gurion promised that his acceptance was
only tactical.
As well-organized Jewish militias seized Village after village
assigned by the UN plan to the Arabs, and badly organized Arab villagers
retaliated with bloody but purposeless attacks on Jewish vehicles
and convoys, Secretary of State George C. Marshall urged Truman
to reconsider.
The British Army was resolved to withdraw from Palestine on May
15, 1948 regardless of the outcome of events in the UN. The fighting
was spreading all over the mandate, including Jerusalem, which was
supposed to remain a "corpus separatum" under international
control and not be assigned either to the Jewish or the Arab state.
"I do not have hundreds of thousands of Arabs
among my constituents."
Marshall and a majority of diplomats at the UN saw a direct UN
trusteeship, succeeding the British mandate, as the only solution
to halt the bloodshed. Otherwise, they knew, neighboring Arab states
would send military units across the border into Palestine the day
the British withdrew, in an attempt to reoccupy the Arab towns and
villages seized by Jewish forces. The State Department urged Truman
not to grant diplomatic recognition to the Jewish state when the
British withdrew, but instead to side with rapidly growing sentiment
in the United Nations in favor of trusteeship. Truman wavered and,
for a time, both sides in a bitter battle for the president's ear
thought they had his support.
Forty-four years after these events, Clifford, Truman's principal
domestic advisor, has produced his memoir. Written in two parts
with Richard Holbrooke, the first part of the memoir was published
in the March 25, 1991 New Yorker. It covers events from 1944,
when Clifford, a 37-year-old lawyer and newly commissioned lieutenant,
junior grade, in the naval reserve from St. Louis, MO, Truman's
home town, took up duties in the White House, through the decision
to recognize Israel on May 14, 1948.
Astonishingly, it confirms the key role of Clifford, Truman's inexperienced
domestic political adviser, in overriding the wishes of General
of the Armies George C. Marshall, the World War II chief of staff.
Marshall had returned to government to serve as secretary of state
to the inexperienced former vice president, who was ill-prepared
for the presidency when it was thrust upon him by the sudden death
of Franklin D. Roosevelt on April 12, 1945, just a month before
the Allied victory in Europe and four months before the victory
over Japan.
A Hasty Decision
Confirming charges by "Arabists" that the decision to
recognize Israel was hasty and based upon domestic political considerations,
Clifford writes:
"Marshall firmly opposed American recognition of the new Jewish
state; I did not. Marshall's opposition was shared by almost every
member of the brilliant and now legendary group of presidential
advisers, later referred to as the Wise Men, who were then in the
process of creating a post-war foreign policy that would endure
for more than 40 years. The opposition included the respected Under
Secretary of State Robert Lovett; his predecessor, Dean Acheson;
the No. 3 man in the State Department, Charles Bohlen; the brilliant
chief of the Policy Planning Staff George Kennan; (Navy Secretary
James V.) Forrestal; and ... Dean Rusk, then the director of the
Office of United Nations Affairs...
"Officials in the State Department had done everything in
their power to prevent, thwart, or delay the President's Palestine
policy in 1947 and 1948, while I had fought for assistance to the
Jewish Agency.
"At midnight on May 14, 1948 (6 pm in Washington), the British
would relinquish control of Palestine, which they had been administering
under a mandate from the old League of Nations since the First World
War. One minute later, the Jewish Agency, under the leadership of
David Ben-Gurion, would proclaim the new state.
"I had already had several serious disagreements with General
Marshall's protege, Dean Rusk, and with Loy Henderson, the director
of Near Eastern and African Affairs, over State's position ... He
had no use for White House interference in what he saw as his personal
domain in American policy in the Middle East. A number of Middle
East experts in the State Department were widely regarded as anti-Semitic.
On May 7th, a week before the end of the British mandate, I met
with President Truman for our customary. private day-end chat...
"I handed the president a draft of a public statement I had
prepared, and proposed that at his next press conference, scheduled
for May 13th, the day before the British mandate would end, he announce
that it was his intention to recognize the Jewish state. The president
was sympathetic to the proposal, but, being keenly aware of Marshall's
strong feelings, he picked up the telephone to get the Secretary's
views ... I could tell that Marshall objected strongly to the proposed
statement. The president listened politely, then told Marshall he
wanted to have a meeting on the subject ...
"On ending the conversation, the president swiveled his chair
toward me. 'Clark, I am impressed with General Marshall's argument
that we should not recognize the new state so fast,' he said. 'He
does not want to recognize it at all—at least, not now. I've
asked him and Lovett to come in next week to discuss this business.
I think Marshall is going to continue to take a very strong position.
When he does, I would like you to make the case in favor of recognition'.
. .
"President Truman had asked me to debate the man he most admired,
a man whose participation in the administration was essential to
its success. I was 41 years old, in my third year at the White House
as a presidential aide. Virtually every American regarded General
Marshall, then 67, with a respect bordering on awe. He had capped
his central contribution to victory in the Second World War with
his speech at Harvard a year earlier proposing what became known
as the Marshall Plan ... Without his towering presence, the administration
would be much diminished, perhaps even mortally wounded, at home
and abroad ...
A Crucial Meeting
"At 4 pm on Wednesday, May 12 ... seven of us joined President
Truman in the Oval Office ... President Truman did not raise the
issue of recognition; his desire was that I be the first to raise
it, but only after Marshall and Lovett had spoken, so that he would
be able to ascertain the degree of Marshall's opposition before
showing his own hand.
"Lovett began by criticizing what he termed signs of growing
'assertiveness' by the Jewish Agency ... Marshall interrupted Lovett.
He was strongly opposed to the behavior of the Jewish Agency, he
said. He had met on May 8th with Moshe Shertok, its political representative,
and had told Shertok that it was 'dangerous to base long-range policy
on temporary military success.' Moreover, Marshall said, he had
told Shertok that if the Jews got into trouble and 'came running
to us for help ... there was no warrant to expect help from the
United States, which had warned them of the grave risk which they
were running'. . The United States, he said, should continue to
support those resolutions in the United Nations which would turn
Palestine over to the UN as a trusteeship, and defer any decision
on recognition."
Clifford then relates his own arguments, citing the British Balfour
Declaration of 1917 promising a Jewish homeland, the European Holocaust,
and the possibility of establishing "a nation committed to
the democratic system" in the Middle East.
"The new Jewish state can be such a place," Clifford
reports he told the group. "We should strengthen it in its
infancy by prompt recognition. I had noticed Marshall's face reddening
with suppressed anger as I talked. When I finished, he exploded.
'Mr. President, I thought this meeting was called to consider an
important and complicated problem in foreign policy. I don't even
know why Clifford is here. He is a domestic adviser, and this is
a foreign-policy matter.'
"I will never forget President Truman's characteristically
simple reply: 'Well, General, he's here because I asked him to be
here.' Marshall, scarcely concealing his ire, shot back, 'These
considerations have nothing to do with the issue. I fear that the
only reason Clifford is here is that he is pressing a political
consideration with regard to this issue. I don't think politics
should play any part in this.'
"Injurious to the Prestige of the President"
"Lovett joined the attack. 'It would be highly injurious to
the United Nations to announce the recognition of the Jewish state
even before it had come into existence and while the General Assembly
is still considering the question. Furthermore, such a move would
be injurious to the prestige of the President. It is obviously designed
to win the Jewish vote, but in my opinion it would lose more votes
than it would gain.' Lovett had finally brought to the surface the
root cause of Marshall's fury: his view that the position I presented
was dictated by domestic political considerations ...
"When Lovett concluded his attack, Marshall spoke again. Speaking
with great and barely contained anger and with more than a hint
of self-righteousness, he made the most remarkable threat I have
ever heard anyone make directly to a president. He said, 'If you
follow Clifford's advice and if I were to vote in the election,
I would vote against you.' Everyone in the room was stunned.
"Here was the indispensable symbol of continuity, whom President
Truman revered and needed, making a threat that, if it became public,
could virtually seal the dissolution of the Truman administration
and send the Western Alliance, then in the process of creation,
into disarray before it had been fully structured. Marshall's statement
fell short of an explicit threat to resign, but it came very close.
"Lovett and I both tried to step into the ensuing silence
with words of conciliation. We both knew how important it was to
get this dreadful meeting over with quickly, before Marshall said
something even more irretrievable ... President Truman also knew
that the meeting had to be ended ... Seeing that Marshall was still
highly agitated, he rose and turned to him and said, 'I understand
your position, General, and I'm inclined to side with you in this
matter'. . .
Clifford did not consult Truman on some of Marshall's
proposals.
"Marshall did not even glance at me as he and Lovett left.
In fact, he not only never spoke to me again after that meeting
but, according to his official biographer, never mentioned my name
again. At the end of that day, still steaming, he did something
quite unusual, which the president and I were unaware of at the
time. Certain that history would prove him right, he wanted his
personal comments included in the official State Department record
of the meeting. His record, exactly as he wanted historians to find
it when it was declassified, almost three decades later, reads as
follows:
'"I remarked to the president that, speaking objectively,
I could not help but think that the suggestions made by Mr. Clifford
were wrong. I thought that to adopt these suggestions would have
precisely the opposite effect from that intended by Mr. Clifford.
The transparent dodge to win a few votes would not in fact achieve
this purpose. The great dignity of the office of the president would
be seriously diminished. The counsel offered by Mr. Clifford was
based on domestic political considerations, while the problem which
confronted us was international. I said bluntly that if the president
were to follow Mr. Clifford's advice and if in the elections I were
to vote, I would vote against the president. "'
Clifford's article details at length his further negotiations,
through Undersecretary of State Robert Lovett, to stick to his own
plan to recognize the Jewish state while keeping the general from
resigning. To do this, he pretended to take to President Truman
Marshall's suggestions, as relayed by Lovett. In fact, Clifford
did not consult Truman on some of Marshall's proposals, but simply
waited for a while and then called Lovett back, saying in one case,
the President "is not going to budge an inch."
In recounting this, however, Clifford indicates throughout the
New Yorker article that he represented President Truman's
own personal position, even when he did not consult the president.
Truman's own accounts, however, and those of his biographers, indicate
that he vacillated and was honestly confused. He was pulled one
way by Jewish White House adviser David Niles, and Truman's old
Jewish army buddy and business partner, Eddie Jacobson, and another
by the professionals at the State Department.
Meanwhile Clifford and Niles, as well as the Department of State,
were dealing directly with Eliahu Epstein, the Jewish Agency (predecessor
to the government of Israel) representative in Washington. Clifford
describes his own role on May 14 as follows:
Setting the Machinery in Motion
"Even without a clear signal from Lovett and Marshall, I felt,
we had to set in motion the machinery for recognition, in the event
that a favorable decision was made. At 10 am, I made a different
call—one that I looked on later with great pleasure.
... Mr. Epstein, 'I told the Jewish Agency representative, 'we
would like you to send an official letter to President Truman before
12 o'clock today formally requesting the United States to recognize
the new Jewish state. I would also request that you send a copy
of the letter directly to Secretary Marshall.'
"Epstein was ecstatic. He did not realize that the president
had still not decided how to respond to the request I had just solicited
... It was particularly important, I said, that the new state claim
nothing beyond the boundaries outlined in the UN resolution of Nov.
29, 1947, because those boundaries were the only ones that had been
agreed to...
"A few minutes later, Epstein called me. 'We've never done
this before, and we're not quite sure how to go about it,' he said...
With my knowledge and encouragement, Epstein then turned for additional
advice to two of the wisest lawyers in Washington, David Ginsburg
and Benjamin Cohen, both of whom were great New Dealers and strong
supporters of the Zionist cause. Working together during the rest
of the morning, he and they drafted the recognition request. . .
"
Clifford closes with the well-known story of how a Jewish Agency
employee driving to the White House with the request for recognition
of "the Jewish state" was overhauled by another Jewish
Agency employee. Epstein had just heard on the radio that the new
state was to be called "Israel" and instructed the second
employee to write in that name in ink before handing over the request
for recognition to the White House.
Meanwhile, General Marshall agreed that, although he could not
support President Truman on the issue, he would not oppose it. When
the news was broken to the American delegation at the UN, which
had been lining up votes for continued trusteeship, US Ambassador
Warren Austin left the building in order not to be present when
US recognition of Israel was announced, just 11 minutes after the
state's creation. Dean Rusk subsequently had to rush to the UN to
talk US delegation members out of resigning en masse in protest.
Lovett, who Clifford believes talked General Marshall out of resigning
because "this issue did not merit resignation," remained
friendly with Clifford, who writes:
"Lovett remained adamant for the rest of his life, however,
in his view that the president and I had been wrong. So did most
of his colleagues. Nothing could ever convince him, Marshall, Acheson,
Forrestal, or Rusk that President Truman had made the right decision
... Because President Truman was often annoyed by the tone and fierceness
of the pressure exerted on him by American Zionists, he left some
people with the impression that he was ambivalent about the events
of May 1948. This was not true. He never wavered in his belief that
he had taken the right action."
Nor, apparently, does Clifford, who never once expresses any regret
about the 750,000 Palestinians pushed out of their country during
the 1947 to 1949 fighting, and never allowed by Israel to return
to their homes. Nor does Clifford seem to realize that his opponents
in the bureaucratic battle he describes are vindicated by the five
Arab-Israeli wars. These and the Middle East instability that has
led to the overthrow of several Arab governments and, perhaps, the
two bloody wars in the Persian Gulf, are largely attributable to
US recognition of Israel before it officially agreed to the borders
assigned it by the United Nations in 1947. That recognition has
led subsequently to the US military and economic support of every
elected government of Israel, even the Likudist fanatics presently
in charge there, that postpones the necessity for those governments
to settle with the Palestinians on the basis of UN Security Council
Resolution 242's land-for-peace formula.
Clifford's story once again disproves the assertion that American
diplomatic or military personnel ever viewed Israel as a "
strategic asset." The foreign policy establishment, 43 years
ago as today, saw Israel as a geopolitical liability that owes its
US support to the extraordinary clout of its apologists within the
American Jewish community and the American political system.
Still-Pertinent Implications
Other implications of the story are still pertinent. Had General
Marshall resigned the moment he realized President Truman was bent
on his unwise course of recognition, the subsequent tragedies might
have been averted. Too often leaders like General Marshall, who
could have resigned without personal sacrifice, acquiesce in small
evils in order to remain in office to fight larger ones. The small
evils, however, become the larger problems that overwhelm their
successors.
The US is once again the world's only superpower, just as it was
in 1947 and 1948 when it had the world's only atomic weapons. Now,
as then, it cannot afford to base foreign policy decisions on domestic
political considerations without reaping a bitter future harvest.
Clifford, a cabinet member in the Lyndon Johnson administration
and adviser to Democratic presidents for more than 45 years, has
been described as the most powerful man in Washington and the "consumate
insider. " Now, at 84 years of age, he faces, for the first
time in his life, serious legal problems.
As lawyer for some Arab businessmen, and as a director of a bank
they illegally took over, he will likely face trial and prison.
In recent media interviews he has made little attempt to prove his
innocence in activities that seem to have brought him $6.5 million
in 1988 alone. Instead, he indicates that age must have dulled his
judgment.
His article in the New Yorker, however, is not entirely
candid. Biographies of Truman indicate Clifford was deeply concerned
that if Truman, who had succeeded to the presidency on Roosevelt's
death, did not court the "Jewish vote, " he would not
be elected president in his own right in 1948.
With his current article claiming more altruistic motives for supporting
Israel, and taking such cheap shots as claiming that his State Department
opponents in 1948 "were widely regarded as anti-Semitic, "
Clifford once again demonstrates shrewd, and amoral, political calculation.
Clearly he seeks mercy in his travails not from the courts, but
from the media. What better way to get it than to remind a younger
generation of American journalists, many of them avid Jewish supporters
of Israel, that he, as much as any other American, was responsible
for Truman-era policies that not only created Israel, but also turned
it into the pampered client state of a reluctant America? |