Without the Canadian mediation between the two world blocs in
1947, UN resolution 181(II) to partition Palestine would likely
have failed to secure the two thirds majority necessary for
adoption by the General Assembly. In fact, the Canadians were among
the main initiators of the partition plan and the establishment of
a Jewish state. Tauber demonstrates that this Canadian involvement
was not an official government policy, but rather a private
initiative of some high-ranking Canadian foreign service officials
who believed partition to be the only practicable solution for the
Palestine question. Thus, due to humanitarian concerns, these
officials followed an independent policy against the express will
of their prime minister. The results would forever change the
history of the Middle East.
Tauber explores this little known aspect of Canadian foreign
policy. Canada's under secretary of state for external affairs,
Lester Pearson, assisted by other foreign service officials,
decided on his own accord which policy to follow in this instance.
Based upon many original Canadian, British, American, UN, and
Israeli documents, this study shows that Pearson's motivation was
not the desire to make Canada a middle power involved in
international affairs, as some scholars of Canadian international
affairs have previously argued. Instead, the impact of the
Holocaust drove these officials to break ranks with their superiors
at home to support the establishment of a Jewish state in
Palestine.
General
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