The creation of the modern State of Israel in 1948 was not an isolated historical accident but rather the outcome of decades of political maneuvering, international agreements, and colonial policies—most notably the involvement of the British Empire. The argument that Israel was established under the “privilege of a British gift” is rooted in historical events that reshaped the Middle East following World War I, particularly the British Mandate over Palestine and the issuance of the Balfour Declaration. While Jewish nationalism, known as Zionism, played a significant role, the facilitation of Jewish statehood was made possible largely due to Britain’s control of the region and its policies that favored Jewish settlement over the indigenous Arab majority.
Prior to 1917, Palestine had been part of the Ottoman Empire for nearly four centuries, administered as part of larger provinces, with a population composed predominantly of Arab Muslims, alongside Christian and Jewish minorities. In 1917, during World War I, Britain captured Palestine from the Ottomans and soon afterward issued the Balfour Declaration, a 67-word statement signed by British Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour, which promised British support for the establishment of a “national home for the Jewish people” in Palestine. Crucially, the declaration added that “nothing shall be done which may prejudice the civil and religious rights of existing non-Jewish communities in Palestine,” yet no political rights were promised to the Arab majority. At the time of the declaration, Jews made up only about 10 percent of Palestine’s population, and most were long-established communities, not part of the new Zionist immigration wave.
The Balfour Declaration was not a random act of goodwill but a calculated colonial policy. Britain saw strategic advantages in supporting the Zionist movement. A Jewish homeland loyal to Britain in the eastern Mediterranean would help secure the Suez Canal and Britain’s imperial interests in the region. The British also hoped to gain influence among influential Jewish communities in Europe and the United States during the war. However, this promise to the Jews conflicted directly with earlier wartime commitments Britain had made to the Arabs. Through the Hussein-McMahon Correspondence (1915–1916), Britain had encouraged an Arab revolt against the Ottoman Empire by promising Arab independence over vast territories, including Palestine. The later secret Sykes-Picot Agreement (1916), in which Britain and France divided Ottoman territories between them, further exposed the duplicity of British wartime diplomacy.
When the League of Nations granted Britain the Mandate for Palestine in 1920, the Balfour Declaration was incorporated into the legal framework of British administration. This mandate gave Britain the authority to implement policies encouraging Jewish immigration and settlement while effectively disregarding the political aspirations of the Arab majority. Under British protection, Zionist institutions flourished: the Jewish Agency acted as a proto-government, collecting funds from Jewish communities worldwide, purchasing land, and establishing agricultural settlements. The British administration trained Jewish paramilitary forces such as the Haganah, which would later form the core of the Israeli Defense Forces. In contrast, Palestinian Arabs, who made up around 90 percent of the population in 1920, were systematically excluded from political power. Their opposition to British policies was often suppressed by military force, especially during revolts.
Jewish immigration increased rapidly under British rule, particularly in the 1920s and 1930s. Waves of immigration, known as Aliyahs, were driven by growing antisemitism and persecution in Europe, culminating in the Holocaust. Between 1922 and 1947, the Jewish population in Palestine rose from around 83,000 to over 600,000, changing the demographic balance significantly. Zionist organizations, with British facilitation, purchased large tracts of land, often displacing Palestinian tenant farmers. Land sales by absentee landlords were legal under British policies, despite protests from local Arab communities who feared losing their livelihoods.
Palestinian resistance to these changes erupted in multiple uprisings, the largest being the Arab Revolt of 1936–1939. This revolt was a nationalist uprising against both British rule and Jewish immigration. Britain responded with overwhelming military force, killing thousands, imprisoning leaders, and dismantling much of the Palestinian political infrastructure. While British authorities did impose temporary restrictions on Jewish immigration later, especially with the 1939 White Paper, which sought to limit immigration to appease Arab opposition, by then the demographic and institutional foundations for a future Jewish state had already been laid. The White Paper was widely criticized by Zionist leaders, but despite these limits, illegal immigration and continued support from Britain allowed Jewish paramilitary groups to grow stronger.
The Holocaust added a new urgency to Zionist claims for a Jewish homeland. Tens of thousands of Holocaust survivors sought refuge in Palestine, and Britain, struggling to maintain control, faced growing international pressure. Jewish paramilitary groups such as the Haganah, Irgun, and Lehi increasingly turned against British authorities, targeting British military installations and officials to force an end to the mandate. Britain, exhausted by World War II and unable to manage the intensifying conflict between Jews and Arabs, referred the issue to the newly formed United Nations.
In 1947, the UN proposed a partition plan (Resolution 181), recommending the creation of separate Jewish and Arab states. The plan allocated about 55 percent of the land to the Jewish state, even though Jews owned less than 7 percent of the land and constituted about one-third of the population at the time. Jewish leaders accepted the plan, while Arab leaders rejected it, viewing it as illegitimate and unfair. Violence escalated immediately after the UN vote. By the time the British withdrew in May 1948, Zionist militias had already launched military operations—such as Plan Dalet—capturing Arab towns and depopulating villages, paving the way for Israel’s declaration of independence on May 14, 1948.
Thus, while the State of Israel was ultimately declared unilaterally by Jewish leaders and secured through war, its very possibility was shaped by three decades of British policy. The British provided the legal framework, military support, and geopolitical conditions necessary for a Jewish state to emerge in a territory where the indigenous population overwhelmingly opposed it. The Balfour Declaration, incorporated into the British Mandate, effectively acted as a colonial “gift”—not to the Jewish people as a whole, but to the political Zionist movement. The Palestinians, who had no comparable international support, were left stateless, and more than 700,000 were expelled or fled during the 1948 war, an event Palestinians call the Nakba, or “catastrophe.”
In retrospect, the establishment of Israel was both a product of Zionist organization and determination and of British imperial strategy. Without British control of Palestine, its favorable treatment of Zionist institutions, and its suppression of Arab resistance, the rapid transformation of Palestine’s demographics and political structures would have been unlikely. The British may not have intended to create a future regional conflict of such magnitude, but by privileging one nationalist movement over another under a colonial mandate, they laid the foundation for a state whose birth was marked by war, displacement, and a refugee crisis that persists to this day. Whether seen as a sanctuary for a persecuted people or as a colonial project enabled by imperial powers, Israel’s creation remains inseparable from the British policies that made it possible.
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