On March 6, 1948, Truman Adviser Clark Clifford opposed the State Department on Partition, calling to divide Palestine into a Jewish and an Arab state.
Clark Clifford, adviser to then-US President Harry Truman, did not want the US to waiver from the partition resolution passed at the UN in November 1947, which called for the division of Palestine into both Arab and Jewish states.
In two detailed memoranda to President Truman, Special Presidential Counsel Clark Clifford emphatically favored both the partition of Palestine and the lifting of an arms embargo imposed on Jewish forces in Palestine. Clifford found himself in direct opposition to the staunchly held views of the State Department, particularly Loy Henderson and George Kennan in the Policy Planning Branch, and Secretary of State Marshall. Clifford’s short memorandum was written on March 6, with a more lengthy dispatch dated March 8, 1948. Together, they were the most forceful pro-Zionist statements by a Truman administration official in the months between the vote on partition in November 1947 and Israel’s Declaration of Independence on May 14, 1948.
Clifford did not want the US to waiver from the partition resolution passed at the UN in November, which called for the division of Palestine into Arab and Jewish states, with an economic union between them and a special international regime for Jerusalem. Partition, he argued, was the only course of action to strengthen America’s position in the region vis-a-vis Russia. He said, “Jettisoning of the United Nations (vote) would be calamitous to American morale.”
Opposed to Any Appeasement Toward the Arabs
Clifford told Truman that he was thoroughly opposed to all acts of appeasement that were being made toward the Arabs, particularly the Arab desire to have the US delay the implementation of partition. “Shipments of arms should be freely allowed… This will give the Jewish militia and Haganah [pre-state Zionist military], which are striving to implement the UN decision, equal opportunity with the Arabs to arm for self-defense.”
Among other points, he argued that “our Arabian oil supplies will not be imperiled if we support the (UN) Assembly’s resolution (on partition). The fact of the matter is that the Arab states must have oil royalties or go broke… Political and economic self-preservation will compel the Arabs to sell their oil to the United States.”
Truman did not back away from supporting partition and Israel’s independence, though the State Department’s pressure might have succeeded had Clark Clifford’s forceful views not been presented to the president.
By: Center for Israel Education