The
Persian Gulf, territorial disputes and the historical entitlement
In reviewing TERRITORIAL DISPUTES in
the Persian Gulf, we centered the attention yesterday on historical entitlement
arguments. It is often the case Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait,
Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates base their claims on historical, legal, political, cultural
and geographical evidence.
The just acquisition principle has
been previously related to territorial sovereignty since it has been maintained
that amongst the objects to which this principle is meant to be capable of
applying are portions of the Earth’s surface, that is, areas of land. The main problem with this idea
applied to TERRITORIAL DISPUTES is that the information required to apply this
principle is not epistemically accessible in sovereignty conflicts—e.g. how far
back would the agents need to investigate so as to determine who the first
inhabitants of the Persian Gulf were? What would happen in the case of extinct
civilisations? What about cultures that were in Ancient Times nomadic?
The principle of just acquisition may
work for individuals. For States, it may solve one problem, what one has to do,
i.e. mix one’s labour. But leaves several other issues unresolved—e.g. a) who
did it first? b) how much each does individual own? (new problem, e.g. if
someone digs, can he claim that plot, the field or the whole island?), and c)
who inherits the property—the inhabitants or their ‘mother community’?
Any version of just acquisition will
have the same problems: Saudi Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman,
Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates
will never agree on the relevant facts and the relevant test, and therefore all
this principle would do is guarantee endless conflict. So, reasonable people
would reject it if they wanted to achieve a peaceful and permanent solution.
Whether they have access to historical
records or not is irrelevant since they would only result in endless discussion
concerning historical entitlement that in most—if not all cases—is highly
difficult to be demonstrated. Governments and their representatives are aware
of this issue.
More precisely, as we have seen in previous posts referred to
the United States, the United Kingdom, Russia and China, non-regional states
maintain the very convenient status quo
to their interest by using the historical argument since they know it will not
bring any changes to the current situation.
The advice here would be not to agree
to rely on a principle that guarantees endless conflict, and therefore, to
reject it as the principle to resolve these disputes.
At the same time, by
rejecting the historical entitlement argument, it leaves all (Saudi
Arabia, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain, Oman, Qatar, and the United Arab Emirates)
with an equal footing to
continue the negotiations since none of them can argue a better or more robust right
over the claimed territories.
Jorge Emilio Núñez
Twitter:
@London1701
12th December 2018
Thanks for sharing an informative post, If you wants to know about Persian Gulf Ancient History.
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