GIBRALTAR | Britain's Unsolvable Dispute?
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- Опубліковано 6 сер 2024
- In this video, we delve into the ongoing territorial dispute over Gibraltar between Britain and Spain. After years of negotiations, both sides are close to a deal addressing issues stemming from the United Kingdom’s decision to leave the European Union (Brexit). However, this agreement won’t end the 300-year-old sovereignty conflict over this strategically vital region.
Gibraltar, a small yet significant rocky peninsula at the southern tip of Spain, has been under British control since the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. Its strategic position overseeing the Mediterranean makes it crucial for both military and trade purposes. However, post-Brexit, Gibraltar faces new challenges, particularly regarding border controls and economic relations with the EU. While a potential agreement could ease daily operations, fundamental differences remain unresolved. Britain upholds the principle of self-determination, emphasising that any status change must be approved by Gibraltar's residents, who favour British rule. Conversely, Spain maintains its historical claim to the territory, advocating for joint sovereignty-a proposal the Gibraltarians reject. This video explores the intricate history, current negotiations, and future prospects of the Gibraltar issue. Join us as we analyse this longstanding international conflict and its implications for global diplomacy.
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VIDEO CHAPTERS
00:00 Introduction and Titles
00:43 Gibraltar and Long-Standing Disputes in International Relations
01:44 Gibraltar: History and Location
02:17 A Short History of Gibraltar
04:34 Gibraltar under British Rule
06:00 Gibraltar and Decolonisation
07:33 Gibraltar and Anglo-Spanish Relations, 1975-2016
12:24 A Final Agreement on Gibraltar?
SOURCES AND FURTHER READING
Government of Gibraltar
www.gibraltar.gov.gi
Parliament of Gibraltar
www.parliament.gi
British Foreign and Commonwealth Office
www.gov.uk/government/organis...
Gibraltar | Spanish Ministry of Foreign Affairs
www.exteriores.gob.es/en/Poli...
HM Government of Gibraltar | UA-cam Channel / @gibraltargov
Gibraltar Parliament | UA-cam Channel
/ @officialparliamentgi
Article X | Treaty of Utrechtwww.gibnet.com/texts/utrecht.htm
Lisbon Statement (1980) and Brussels Declaration (1984)
publications.parliament.uk/pa...
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#Gibraltar #Spain #UK
Well, what did you expect me to cover this week!? :-) I wasn't going to do this for a while. But the surprise English advancement to the Euro final against Spain made this impossible not to do! Seriously though, what are your thoughts on this? Is this a dispute that has just to be managed in perpetuity? Or is there a formula to settle it? Perhaps the Gibraltarians will eventually give up on British rule as the effects of Brexit wear them down. As always, let me know what you think.
Bosnia, as always :D that Resolution breakdown is long overdue professor, if you don't mind me saying!
Then you should have made the video last year when the Lionesses won the Euros against Spain 😉
Everyone forgets the ladies have been there first.
I don't get why Gibraltar is seen as so strategic when Tarifa and Ceuta stick out more into the strait.
@@olliestudio45 It is for the UK, as it would otherwise not have a presence in the region. Trade through the Suez canal goes through the straight of Gibraltar too. It is not strategic for Spain though, as it has other options. The issue for Spain is different, as if France controlled the Cliffs of Dover, the UK would naturally want to take it back.
@@olliestudio45 I think its just people parroting for the most part. In sail and steamboat times that would have been a very valuable spot.
And thats what got written down, and its been an echo ever since.
Some people seem to assume its right on the strait/tip.
Although I suppose it does still have some middling strategic value.
Never know when these little places come in useful, the little UK airbases on Cyprus are looking useful recently.
Great timing for that video with the Euro 2024 final.
Hopefully England could win this one they didn't play great throughout the tournament but last game they showed the team is talented at all positions I hope southgate could bring it home the media has destroyed that guy.
Indeed. I had been working on the script for this for a few weeks, but planned to do it another time. And then England get through to the final and there seemed like no better time to tackle it! :-)
The winner takes Gibraltar
@@rodox2832 thought they already had?
Good thing I checked the comments before saying the same thing!
Es decir. En 1704 GB-NL toman Gibraltar SIN PREGUNTARLE NADA A SU POBLACIÓN en nombre del PRETENDIENTE HABSBURGO AL TRONO DE ESPAÑA. Pero a partir de 1960 GB sí "tiene que" preguntar. Curioso, muy curioso. También intentaron conquistar Málaga en agosto de 1704 y se quedaron con las ganas.
You always release these on Fridays around the end of the work day here in the U.S., which means I always get to start my weekend with them. 🎉😎🎉
Great stuff! Thanks. 🙏🏻👏👏👏😀
Well Dr. Lindsay deleted my comments like always while we have another opinion than him . I write my opinion very politely again Dr.
Its is very clear that the wish of the Gibraltar citizens have to bee respected . But it also have to come with consequences. You can not vote to stay in British colony but simultaneously have the benefit as an EU member state ,and the profits of the Spanish territory surrounding you. I believe Spain have been very soften regarding the issue . I would force a very stronger policy so you just wish to be apart of Spain
@@mussajavdan8203 a) it was probably youtube, not the channel creator, deleting your comments
b) even if it was the channel operator, honestly if you're gonna spam the same thing across all the Top Comments, comments the content of which doesn't seem to actually matter to you since you're just copy+pasting and not modifying them to fit, then I'd probably delete them too. It's annoying.
@@mussajavdan8203A policy of trying to "force" the Gibraltarians is likely to produce the opposite result.
It is a good summary, but a bit one-sided (I do not mean that in a bad way). For example, Gibraltar wasn't held by a succession of foreign powers (Phoenicians, Greeks, Romans, and the Ummayyad Caliphate) without any intervention from the locals until 1462.For the vast majority of antiquity, it belonged to a local Iberian tribe (Turdetani). When Gibraltar was taken in the 1700s,the locals were expelled by the invading troops. They were later replaced with people loyal to the UK, hence the lack of Spanish identity nowadays. Common then, but now we call it ethnic cleansing. Nevertheless, I agree that regardless of how we got here, there is no point in ignoring the will of the Gibraltarians. In relation to the Treaties of Utretch, the nuance is that they refer to "the rock and the castle," not including the ithsmus or the surrounding waters. The issue with that is the fishing rights, which Spain argues were never ceded, and the UK claims naturally follow from possession of the land. This is literally a daily headache in the area. Also, in mid or late 1800s (I dont remember the exact date), disease was going rampant through the barracks in Gibraltar. Spain allowed, on an interim basis, that new barracks were built on the ithsmus, to separate the ill from the healthy, and better deal with the outbreak. The UK never returned the ithsmus as per the agreement. That piece of land was not included in the Treaties of Utretch, but taken by the UK after a Spanish gesture of goodwill, which naturally bothers Spain to no end. In addition, Gibraltar's airport was built on the ithsmus, and extending over the water (that Spain maintains was never ceded), so you see how the thing itches to Spanish people familiar with the topic. There is a UN resolution from the 1960s requiring Gibraltar to be decolonised, but it was obviously ignored. In relation to Schengen, and border control issues, the UK didn't join Schengen, therefore, Gibraltar didn't either. Gibraltar has complained to EU's Frontex many times about excessive controls on the border, but Frontex has always ruled that they are proportionate and consistent with a non-Schengen border. Many issues arose by Gibraltar's understandable zeal with keeping authority over its surrounding waters, which Spain equates with providing safe harbour to smugglers and drug dealers pursued by the Spanish civil guard. There were also issues in the past with oil tankers anchoring in Gibraltar to operate as floating petrol stations, which ended up polluting Spanish waters due to frequent spills. As it is now, Gibraltar and the Spanish side (La Línea) have a situation of co-dependence, they need each other. Brexit has dealt a terrible hand to Gibraltar. A few years ago some colleagues who live there said that, after Brexit, they get a weekly ship from the UK, restocking M&S, but the shelves are empty again by the evening. What keeps the place supplied is the Spanish supermarket. They also depend on Spanish hospitals for healhcare, and many Gibraltarians actually lived in Spain because housing in Gibraltar is so scarce that it became prohibitive. The place's strategic value is no more for as long as Spain and UK are in NATO. Rota, in nearby Cadiz, is the best NATO base in the area, and the most used. Even the Royal Navy uses it primarily over Gibraltar. Ironically, Cadiz was the original target of the Anglo-Dutch force that landed in Gibraltar. They were repelled, dug in, and met the end of the war still there. I hope you find the extra information that I have added interesting, maybe to have a better understanding of why it is such an issue for some Spaniards.
It is common practice to divide text into paragraphs .
Nice info! Thank you for taking the time to fill in some gaps.
Very good point, well made! Sadly, this is essentially European history in a nutshell. Almost no borders have been created without war and ethnic cleansing.
The information fails to point out that under the UN convention on the Law of the Seas specifically demarcate the sea boundaries around Gibraltar, which was adhered to by the Franco dictatorship.
Also Gibraltar isn't a colony it's a British Overseas Territory
I always find it funny how Spain🇪🇸has such a problem with Gibraltar🇬🇮but when Morocco🇲🇦complains of Ceuta and Melilla - it falls on deaf ears 🤷♂️
Spain's argument about both Ceuta and Melilla is that they were seized before Morocco came into being so therefore it has right to control the territory.
Ceuta and Melilla should go back to Morocco since Spain wants to play that game.
🤷🏿♂️
Cuesta and Melilla have been Spanish far longer than Gibraltar was british as well as th fact Moroccans are grateful to Spain for generous ally ceding large amounts of Spanish land in africa to Morocco
@@demonke7829 So the Morroccans should be grateful to Spain for occupying their land? Pull the other one!
@@demonke7829Gibraltar has been British far longer than it has been Spanish
Spain: We need our territory back
UK: What about Melilla and Ceuta
Spain: We are not talking about that right now
@@abbofun9022 Gibraltar has been under UK control longer than Spanish control
@@eamonreidy9534 the fact you managed to hold on to it for so long doesn’t make it any less a theft
@@abbofun9022 It's not a theft if they literally gave it to you
@@abbofun9022 I'm not British. Maybe Britain and Spain should return it to a caliphate, or the Turks, or a reformed emirate of Grenada, or maybe the Roman Empire. You irredentist type people are silly
@@abbofun9022 Look it has been British for 300 years, people living there want to be British, that should really be the end of the matter tbh
England: "Let us win the Euros and we will give you Gibraltar."
Spain: "I' will get back to you Monday"
you joke but this is modern soccer
@@valuetraveler2026 football
Lmao! !
Gibraltar doesn’t belong to england. it’s British
@thomassummerhill6357 technically it's overseas territories of the United Kingdom and Northern Ireland, so its a sovereign territory essentially apart of the United Kingdom even though its not geographically linked, but does make you wonder why Spain has a hard on to try and claim it as much as they do, but I guess it's the same with the falklands
As for Schengen, rememeber that the UK never was a part of it, which would then raise the question why the Rock should be part of it.
Geography is kind of important......
It doesn't necessarily follow that every part of a nation needs the same rules. Denmark includes the Faroe Islands which aren't in the EU, for instance, mainly because they don't want to allow all EU nations to over-fish the Faroe waters.
@@lqr824 I know about Faroe Islands, they are covered with the Nordic Community, and Denmark cover travel into schengen. But if they travel to fx. Germany directly, then they need to show passport.
@@timoakley277 not really, Gibraltar is a UK area, which is "within" UK borders, when you decide to leave Gibraltar then you (as you must with you travel from the UK mainland into Schengen) show passport. The only exception is Nother Ireland to RAI, but there the passport control have moved to between UK mainland and (North) Ireland.
The UK need a special agreement with Spain (and the rest of the EU) and then there has to be a passport control when you travel from Gibraltar to mainland UK and vise versa.
Nothing comes for free.
No directamente español
From an Americans perspective, it was very instructive to watch your presentation to not only see the history of Gibraltar, but the ongoing issues of British sovereignty over a slice of territory that is physically connected to Spain. I was particularly fascinated to hear that the local population is so strongly opposed to Spain taking over sovereignty, when it appears that many of the locals travel to Spain every day or at least very regularly.
@freebeerfordworkers The British Government fucked everything up with Brexit, were you not listening?
He forgot when UK asked Spain to used temporarily neutral and spanish territory to figth an epidemic and when that finish they still occupying that land
@@joebullwinkle5099 from Mercian perspective we Americans do have our own version of Gibraltar called Guantanamo Bay but has a lack of tourism
@@RayThackeray That's the problem with the concept of democracy. People like you only support it when you like the decisions.
You do know about Ceuta and Melia?
How about Gibraltar introducing VAT like in the UK and EU? Also stopping cigarettes being smuggled into Spain would be nice.
Well Dr. Lindsay deleted my comments like always while we have another opinion than him . I write my opinion very politely again Dr.
Its is very clear that the wish of the Gibraltar citizens have to bee respected . But it also have to come with consequences. You can not vote to stay in British colony but simultaneously have the benefit as an EU member state ,and the profits of the Spanish territory surrounding you. I believe Spain have been very soften regarding the issue . I would force a very stronger policy so you just wish to be apart of Spain
@@greattobeadub They impose a purchase tax
More cigarettes are smuggled into Algeciras
And more drugs into La Linea
Hth
I’m sure smuggling is not an official policy. What about if Spain removed vat? Several countries have no vat, it’s a sign of intelligent governing.
@@truxton1000 It is actually a EU requirement
@@truxton1000 EU law requires VAT, as does the UK. If Gibraltar wants to act like a big duty free shop let it. That’s a choice. We can make the choice of closing the border. Take back control as it were.
Jhon Bright, político británico, 16 de Noviembre de 1811, 27 de Marzo de 1889.
Rochdale, Lancashire
Declara que "El Peñón fué tomado y retenido por Inglaterra cuando no estabamos en guerra con España y su apropiación fué contraria a todas las leyes de la moral y del honor"
haha nice one man, with the football final coming up this is good time to get this out
Indeed! I really couldn’t do anything else. Luckily, I had been working on the script for a while and so had it handy! :-)
And the sovereignty of Crimea should be decided on the basis of self determination, too?
They already did.
Exactly. Referendum results show 99% in favor of remaining Russian.
It's quite different, unless the government of the country agrees no part of that country can just separate. In fact, that would be undemocratic if the rest of the country doesn't agree to that. That same goes for autonomous regions and whatnot, unless there's some other agreement in place.
@@Maria-ig1bd If you believe that it was valid.
The land is within Ukraine's international borders.
England has used the same strategy every where in the world, take the land, colonize it, and 200 years later when the majority is English make a referendum in the name of democracy. 😂😂😂
@@ojloub well yes, but to be fair, no one there now is "conquered" and most have ancestors from Britain. Just the same as the people in the Falklands. The Spanish nor the Argentinians ever lived there either. And when Britain did give Hong Kong back, look how it has worked out? The Chinese in Hong Kong used to having a say in the government and social freedoms are now dealing with Beijing. Think they don't want the Brits back?
The Brits gave up almost every colony they ever had and likely would have here too if the Spanish didn't make it so plain they were hostile to the Brits being there at all. Never mind that it was British through a treaty. Never mind the UK never threatened Spain in modern years. Never mind the two nations outside of this never really had issue with each other in modern times. But the Spanish have never understood the best way to get the UK to walk away from a Colony is to let them find out it is not worth the cost on their own. Forcing the issue or making threats just turned the people in the colony off.
@@marklittle8805 creo que estas equivocado, aunque si es verdad que en los tiempos modernos hemos sido y somos aliados España no puede dejar de presionar por recuperar una conquista con engaño, evidentemente una guerra es impensable hoy día, pero diplomaticamente estos obligados, los gibraltareños evidentemente quieren conservar su estatus de paraíso fiscal ,hay más empresas que habitantes y cruzar la frontera para comprar barato en España es muy cómodo, sin contar que hasta ahora se beneficiaban de nuestra seguridad social. Con respecto al tratado de utrech se le cedió el peñón y el puerto pero no las aguas territoriales de Algeciras, y para colmo si miras un mapa antiguo verás que el territorio cedido era más pequeño, cuando Gibraltar sufrió una crisis sanitaria España les cedió terreno para poder atenderlos ,en vez de irse cuando controlaron la enfermedad se establecieron allí, hoy día se sigue ganando terreno al mar que no les pertenece y atacando los pesqueros de Algeciras que son los dueños legítimos de las aguas,los enfrentamientos entre vuestra policía y la guardia civil protegiendo los pesqueros y persiguiendo narcos que se refugian en Gibraltar son constantes, solo espero sinceramente que no pase a mayores,ya nos hemos peleado bastante en la historia 😅. Un saludo.
Thank you so much James!
Thanks Vlad! I hope all is well.
Well Dr. Lindsay deleted my comments like always while we have another opinion than him . I write my opinion very politely again Dr.
Its is very clear that the wish of the Gibraltar citizens have to bee respected . But it also have to come with consequences. You can not vote to stay in British colony but simultaneously have the benefit as an EU member state ,and the profits of the Spanish territory surrounding you. I believe Spain have been very soften regarding the issue . I would force a very stronger policy so you just wish to be apart of Spain
Gibraltarians want the best of both worlds. Though it's fair that they stay under British rule if they voted to for that.
@@MidnightTheOne Yes have their cake and eat it. That was tried to exhaustion by Theresa May and her succesors but unfortunately the other party in the negotiations held stronger cards !
The Spanish rely on Gib far more. Thousands of workers go into the border each day. Gibraltarians just want to pop over for some cheap shopping
They settlers pbiusly they want to be keep in english rule
We actually have a great residential retreat on one of our beaches called Both Worlds...:)
When I compare Gibraltar to the similar situation in Northern Ireland, I feel that the same principles leads to radically different outcomes. I can imagine the population of Northern Ireland one day voting for reunion with the Republic of Ireland. I also know that the Republic respects the people of Northern Ireland in their right to make that decision. But I can't ever see Gibraltar voting themselves into Spain, nor that Spain will genuinely respect their decision not to join.
(On a personal level, I really dislike when national leaders put historical claims over and above the rights of people living in the area. Unless that history is very recent or still has deeply negative consequences today (I can imagine such an example but won't name it), I don't respect people who do this. History doesn't have feelings and can't be offended by the present. We should concentrate on fixing the moral wrongs of today, not the perceived wrongs of the past.)
You have decided the two are legitimately comparable under international law but they are not.
@@rapier1954You can always compare the two cases, whether or not international law aligns with your viewpoint
Why on earth would you ask the transplants? That's like me and three mates occupying your garden and then holding a referendum amongst us four if we want to keep it or return it to you. It's your garden and we're occupying it, nothing changes that regardles if it has been 8 days or 800 years.
@mnk9073 Well, by your analysis, we should redraw all Europe boundaries then.
@@leor7870 Those forced upon the local people by a foreign power, yes absolutely.
As usual, nothing was said for the benefit of the UK.
Dispute... surely not? The treaty of Utrecht (1713) has some pretty final key words... "for ever, without any exception or impediment whatsoever."
The territory has been British for longer than it was Spanish.
it didn't include 'sovereignty'
These are diplomatic terms with little meaning. Remember each of these treaties back then stated there would be "perpetual friendship" between the former enemies, who nevertheless frequently fought each other a few years after the treaty. So much for parchment garantees...
@@BuckDanny2314that still doesn’t change the fact that it’s British
@@MrTangolizard Did I say otherwise? Of course it's a British territory for now, nobody disputes this.
@@BuckDanny2314 “diplomatic terms with little meaning” well they mean a lot to the people who live there
Excellent work as always very informative and historically helpful thank you Professor James Ker-Lindsay
Thank you!
Well Dr. Lindsay deleted my comments like always while we have another opinion than him . I write my opinion very politely again Dr.
Its is very clear that the wish of the Gibraltar citizens have to bee respected . But it also have to come with consequences. You can not vote to stay in British colony but simultaneously have the benefit as an EU member state ,and the profits of the Spanish territory surrounding you. I believe Spain have been very soften regarding the issue . I would force a very stronger policy so you just wish to be apart of Spain
I'm from the UK but I live in southern Spain. I've visited Gibraltar easily over a hundred times since moving to Spain two years ago as I visit it every week. Everyone I've spoken to in Gibraltar is proudly British Gibraltarian and none of them have announced any interest in joining Spain
como no, no son Españoles son extranjeros, los verdaderos Gibraltareños son los que viven en San Roque, fundado por los refugiados españoles que poblaban el peñón antes de la invasión rastrera y sin previa declaración de guerra, estos sí votan por España. Antes de comentar cosas informate o piense un poco el por qué solo miran hacia Londres.
@@lordgeminismagno7360In every referendum on Gibraltarian sovereignty the result has always been 99% in favour of Britain
@@oliversherman2414 repito, NO SON ESPAÑOLES, los verdaderos pobladores fueron expulsados y se creó una base militar, luego permitieron que se llenara de gente de muchos lugares e ingleses pero no son oriundos de la zona, España posee la soberanía, solo cedió el castillo, la plaza y la Roca hasta que decidiera prescindir del territorio, no lo puede vender, no se puede independizar, no puede ser estado libre asociado, etc, es un territorio con características restringidas dictadas por el tratado de Utrech, si deciden ignorarlo estarían contradiciendo dicho tratado anulandoce este y teniendo que devolver el territorio, lo curioso es que ningún gobierno inglés pensaría devolverlo pase lo que pase, como si lo venden y el problema ya no sería de ellos a pesar de estar escrito que no pueden venderlo, Reino unido nunca a sido un país de fiar ya que solo miraba por sus intereses sin mirar a sus aliados
@@lordgeminismagno7360 You've never been to Gibraltar, have you? It's not like everyone there is English. In fact, Spanish is just as widely spoken across the territory. Many Gibraltarians actually speak Spanish more than English. But, despite this, they still have no interest in joining Spain. They've democratically elected to stay with the UK more than once, which is more than can be said about Cueta and Melilla which Spain refuses to so much as consider a referendum for
@@oliversherman2414 And? They speak Spanish because they need to, as a large part of the essential supplies and services, such as food and consumer goods, come from Spain. Many Gibraltarians don't even work there; they work in Spain. Honestly, Spain should close the borders and not let anyone through. In that case, we'd see how much longer Gibraltarians would want to remain part of the UK (which isn't really their decision anyway). If the politicians in London decide they don't want Gibraltar anymore, they'll just abandon them, regardless of what the people there want.
After all, no referendum was held for the people of Hong Kong to decide if they wanted to return to China. The decision to transfer Hong Kong's sovereignty to China was based on international agreements between the UK and China. Or to put it another way, the UK simply couldn't maintain Hong Kong anymore, so they decided to leave with dignity and abandoned them to their fate.
I appreciate your coverage of this intriguing topic, professor.
I must admit, I've been quite invested in this ongoing dispute between Spain and UK for quite some time now. It's rather fascinating to witness a clash of interests between two Western nations over territorial boundaries, especially when their own double standards are glaringly obvious and hypocrisy is being exposed.
Take, for instance, Spain's assertion of Gibraltar's sovereignty and criticism of UK for not yielding control back to Spain, all the while Spain blatantly refusing to acknowledge Morocco’s rightful sovereignty claims to numerous Spanish territories enclaves inside Morocco such as Melilla/Ceuta.
Quite the perplexing situation, isn't it?
More importantly, 3🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉🍉
Those sovereignty claims are rightful according to whom? According to you, according to Morocco or what?
I think Dr, Lindsay just deleted my comment on this issue . We have been disagreed on several topics and we had some conversations in the past . I did not thought it could go so far as deleting peoples comments ,just because we don't share your opinion . WHAT A SHINE DEMOCRAT YOU TRULY ARE . And what a shame
It seems to me that the main problem lies in the Isthmus and the waters. As for the waters, the Netherlands and Germany had a long standing border issue concerning the mouth of the Ems river. It was concluded fairly recently (I think around 2000??) with the waters now being administered by both countries.
@@ronaldderooij1774 Very sensible. But here you have one party with too much pride and too little empathy. I will take bets on which one 😂
Great video Professor. Historical claims frequently prove to be an especially messy aspect of international relations. It irks me that the UN is adamant about their wishes on respecting the will of local populations, except where the local populations are of European descent.
UN is ideologically captured and it's positions on many issues should be disputed.
I think it matters what the 'locals' want. They are the ones who have to deal with the implications of any changes. I suspect that on a purely human level their feelings are not based on anything really heavy duty, largely about pride in who they think they are ! And the Brits are particularly belligerent about their status IMO. I'm a Brit myself. So while the technical details might be annoying, I say leave well alone & deal with it. The very same Brits who get nervous over their ownership of places are quite happy to buy a holiday home in any of those other countries, so the arguments are a little irrational ! Of course if we take 'the locals' argument to it's ultimate conclusion we would have to listen to a lot of different groups arguing for their 'rights' in various places & governments tend to stomp on such claims to keep control !
It migth be even that the locals' wishes are based on economic reasoning, as it was presumably for the Falkland Islands 2013. However. even that would be valid as the UN does not second guess the will od the locals.
The UN is not answering the bigger questions of Ukraine, South Philippine seas and such like as Russia and China pose a bigger threat to Europe and the World at present. Spain is petulant about Gibraltar like the Argentinians are for the Falklands, they don't want to invest anything into the Island/ Peninsula they just want to take it for nowt!?!
Gibraltar is obviously part of Spain, occupied by another nation.
How about Olivença, with Portugal.Spain is obliged by treaty to return the occupied territory, and is yet to comply.
Come on, what difference does Olivenza make? Both countries are part of the EU. Besides, ethnically the Portuguese and Spanish are essentially the same people. I crossed the Spanish Portuguese border a few years ago and it was a non-event. The people in Olivenza can speak whatever language they want and they use the Euro. They can also come and go between Spain and Portugal as they please. The case for Gibraltar is very different, the people there are as English as the Turks. It is a place where illegal activities abound. They should not have been allowed to settle there to begin with. The British should have limited their presence to military personnel only. They created a "self determination" issue to have an excuse to remain there.
@@Fast58Eddie It might be the same thing to you. I don't get why Catalans want independence cause they all seem spanish to me, the same with the scotish and the english... all the same to me...Denmark, Sweden and Norway? Being three different countries almost blows my mind...
But Spaniards and Portuguese? Spaniards come from the Iberians, while the Portuguese come from Lusitanian Celts; the Visigoths colonized Spain, Portugal was colonized by the Suebi, Spaniards had 300 y+ of arab rule than Portugal...etc etc etc...
So... nothing against my Spaniard friends on a personal sense, they are great neighbours (most of the time), awesome party goers, and have a very beautiful country, but if you can't spot the differences, we can... And we have had the same borders since 1297... without any problem... so why ruin that?
Spain is bound by treaty to return the territory... it should do so.. as simple as that...
When you have to resort to whataboutery, you've generally lost the argument.
@kevinnolan1339 I generally agree. But this isn’t exactly whataboutery. I’d usually consider whataboutery to focus on a rather different case as a way of deflecting the debate on a specific issue. For example, responding to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine by asking what about the US and Iraq. In this case, there is a direct link between Spain’s claim to Gibraltar and the fact that it doesn’t respect the fact that it is in a similar situation with other territories. Also, while Spain refutes Britain’s arguments over Gibraltar, it employs the same arguments regarding Ceuta and Melilla.
@@Tusiriakest Maybe I am mistaken but the treaty that compels Spain to give back Olivenza also said that the portuguese had to give back some territories in the south of Brazil to the Banda Oriental, now better known as Uruguay. The Brazilians got their independence before that happened, so the treaty is no longer valid
After years of wanting to, I finally got to visit Gibraltar twice in March of this year. What an interesting place.....
Dear Prof.
Many thanks -- great delivery
Thank you so much! Really appreciated! :-)
Great video! I'm in Spain right now so I watched it with particular interest! I can't remember if you've made a video about Ceuta, but I've never quite understood what appears to be a very inconsistent position by Spain. Thanks again!
Thanks Fredo. I hope you are having a good time over there. I have some a video on Melilla and Ceuta. It was rather a long time ago and so I might need to revisit it. In the meantime, I really had to resist the temptation to point out the rather obvious double standards. (Although no doubt we can expect Spanish nationalists to explain why the two cases can’t possible be compared!)
logic from the far-right? what did you expect
@@JamesKerLindsay Spain's argument about both Ceuta and Melilla is that they were seized before Morocco came into being so therefore it has right to control the territory. Morocco btw is also on shakey legal ground having annexed the Spanish (now Western Sahara) in 1976 without consulting the local Sahrawi people who had initially taken up arms, in the form of the POLISARIO against the Spanish in the dying days of the Franco regime in 1973. Now there's another idea for a video.
@@gawkthimm6030 no far right bin Europe. Or you call Le Pen Far Right?
Have you visited Gibraltar yet?
🗣️
Well shouldn't it be left up to people of Gibraltar? To vote on ! Weather they want to belong to Spain or Britain or even become an independent state? The people should have the last say on the destiny of their island?.
@davidhowells-rl9li they did. A referendum was held in 1968 and they voted to stay British
@@fil_britbunnyboi872 only 99%? wow, interesting
The first time I visited Gibraltar, in 2004, I was staggered at the strength of feeling among the Gibraltarians I spoke to, who very firmly wanted to retain their ties to Britain. I've not been back since 2009, but I'd be surprised if this attitude has changed very much (although I'd be interested to hear from locals or more recent visitors); indeed, it is possibly even stronger now.
@@Khayyam-vg9fw I visited in 2021. General sentiment was overall towards the UK
@@fil_britbunnyboi872 Thank you for that information. It is what I would have expected.
I hadn't realized, until seeing the map in this video, that Gibraltar is not, in fact, the very southernmost point of the Iberian Peninsula, but is in fact slightly east of it. A point in Spain a bit west of Gibraltar extends slightly further south.
Indeed!
Great video, thank you!
Watching this video I learned that the Utrecht treaty clearly says "property" and not "sovereignty". This was shocking to me. Later, it mentions the "sale" of the property, giving Spain priority to buy it. It seems clear to me that property does not imply sovereignty, as I own property in other countries but those are still under the sovereignty of those countries. The same happens with property of states abroad, e.g. a building with land, does not imply sovereignty. Thanks for the information.
"The Catholic King does hereby, for himself, his heirs and successors, yield to the Crown of Great Britain the full and entire propriety of the town and castle of Gibraltar, together with the port, fortifications, and forts thereunto belonging; and he gives up the said propriety to be held and enjoyed absolutely with all manner of right for ever, without any exception or impediment whatsoever." - (A) it's one sovereign yielding land to another sovereign, (B) to be held and enjoyed absolutely with all manner of right for ever, without any exception or impediment whatsoever. Neither A nor B apply to your property. You are not the supreme authority over your land.
@@arfurascii2232 Does that mean if Britain becomes a Republic the deal if off ?
@@user-qs3rf4hh5n We can only speculate but it seems to me the republic would claim to be the 'continuator' state, with the sovereign territory, treaty obligations and memberships of international organisations etc that the UK had.
@@arfurascii2232 Let's hope so, there's so much uncertainty in all fronts these days. If climate change continues apace
Southern Spain including Gibraltar might become uninhabitable and the whole for ever issue in the treaty become irrelevant.
Minorca is also British by virtue of the Utrecht treaty.
And Benidorm.
No it’s not
Supereded by the war of Jenkins ear !
@@stunimbus1543 Correction was. The treaty of Amiens changed all that.
Very insightful and interesting. Learning a lot to understand the history of this tiny plot of island.
Thank you so much!
Learned a lot, thank you!
Great video, as always.
Apart from the issue of the isthmus, Spain is very hard to sympathise with. One of the foremost colonial powers of all time signs a bit of land away in a treaty. They come to regret that. That piece of land develops its own separate culture, and overwhelmingly rejects annexation into Spain. Some international conflicts are shades of grey, but this one is just tedious nationalist irredentism. No amount of decolonial verbiage can hide the hypocrisy.
Culture genocide is development?
Agreed. I hate to have to side with Britain on this one but they have all the rights to Gibraltar as long as Spain holds Ceuta and Melilla. Can’t have hypocrisy when you’re trying to portray yourself as the victim.
Thanks. I would agree. I find these types of dispute very interesting for all sorts of reasons. It’s one thing when we talk about colonialism. It’s another when two European states continue to fight over artificial lines on maps drawn U.K. after otherwise long forgotten wars. If every European state opened up questions about lost territory we’d be in a real mess. I don’t have any particular attachment to Gibraltar (or Northern Ireland for that matter), but I can accept the argument that it is up to the people in question to decide. On top of that, I also recognise the inherent hypocrisy of this situation as Spain complains about Gibraltar but somehow insists that Melilla and Ceuta are completely different. Still, they’ll probably get the upper hand in the football. So, there always that. :-)
Well, the way I see it, Gibraltar is rightfully Spanish, Ceuta and Melilla are rightfully Moroccan, and Western Sahara (SADR) is rightfully a sovereign nation (of which Morocco illegally occupies much of)
Of course, Gibraltar should have extensive autonomy within Spain, Ceuta and Melilla should have extensive autonomy in Morocco; furthermore Catalonia and Basque should have the right to vote for independence from Spain if a majority of their people wish it
@@dairebulson7122No land belongs to a state by right. Countries font have rights, people do.
So if Spain held it from 1462, it has been British for about 80 years longer than it was Spanish.
And Moorish for longer than both combined
@@gibraltarik and lusitanian before that.
And Roman, way longer. Britain needs to finally understand, that shit does not belong to them, just because they want it.
@@matt47110815 you tell that to Spain who have cities in Morocco
@@matt47110815 by that logic it shouldn’t belong to Spain either
Very, very good, indeed.
Would you be willing to take a look at the issue of Olivença. It's similar, in some ways. Thank you!
Thank you so much. This is coming up a lot. I really should take a look at it.
@@JamesKerLindsay Thank you, sir. Although I do not intervene a lot, I do love your videos. Thank you for them and for your response.
It's a fascinating territory, and I'm sure we'll hear more about it because of Gibraltar's obvious stratregic value. Hopefully, local residents will be able to live in circumstances that makes sense to them as well as the U.K. and Spain.
Thanks again for the great video!
I would say stability was brought about by NATO. As for wider European involvement in Gibraltar, it's always been clear. No clear access for the Atlantic based navies, no or very limited NATO patrols of the Mediterranean.
Last I checked, Spain was part of Nato so the impact of Gibraltar in this context is irrelevant.
The act of union between England and Scotland was in 1707. Therefore it was not a British fleet in 1700 when the war of the Austrian Succession started and also it was not a British fleet in 1704 (when "British fleet" was first mentioned here). In both cases it was an English fleet.
Admittedly, by the time that war ended in 1711, it WAS a British fleet (if only in name only), but still...
Yes, I know. But when trying to make a short 10-15 minute video sometimes explaining things like this takes up time and potentially confuses viewers. As I always say, every small diversion to explain a side issue often requires a long path to get back to the main story!
@JamesKerLindsay Understood, but this kind of thing is likely to automatically annoy all the Scots among your viewers. I'm not even a Scot but I did spend my first three school years at a Junior School in South Glasgow and thus apart from knowing how to pronounce Kirkcaldy and to couple it with Linolium, I also know that James I was in fact James VI and various other perhaps trivial facts that have stayed in my memory ever since - including the need for care when using British rather than English.
[In a somewhat later life I also learnt how to pronounce Cholmondeley. My father got around...]
Er... the Act of Union involved adoption of all agreements except those sorted in Council.
@flashtrash7830 It didn't apply retroactively in making a 1700 (or 1704) English fleet a British fleet.
A good reminder that in IR not all disputes are resolved, but just perpetually managed
Indeed. :-)
the deliberate timing of this was hilarious 😂
It would seem that I'm missing some context…
Another very informative video, thank you.
It would be interesting to know the make-up of the Gibraltarian population. How many are ethnecially Gibraltarian and how many are British from Britain? Like Northern Ireland has a high planter decendency, which influences the Irish unification debate today. Although opinion polls in Gibraltar in the high 90's persentage-wise are pretty conclusive. It would still be interesting to know the population make-up nonetheless.
They are from Genoa a lot of them, I think there are Maltese too
If they are legal residents of Gibraltar it makes little difference, Spain would just take the vote from the third house away from a white house if it meant they could take it over, it's a hill of beans and has no legitimacy of how the Gibraltar population is currently made up!?!
@@krisinsaigon I can't remember where I heard it but I was under the impression that most Gibraltans are not descended from "British" emigrants and that the majority are from various places in the Mediterranean. A legacy of the British imperial possessions and military actions over the centuries. The Maltese rings a bell. I wasn't aware of the Genoan connection but I wouldn't be surprised.
@@user-jp1ge5nb2f I actually went there about 25 years ago when I went to Morocco on holiday, and the people didn’t look ethnically British.
@@krisinsaigon Of course not the British from Great Britain would've been the navy ratings and permanent army soldiers stationed there. The civilian population were from other parts of the Empire. For the British born civilians Gibraltar was not an attractive location, insalubrios and with few amenities. It wasn't until the end of the WWII that conditions improved and the population grew.
When I heard the first live results, which came from Gibraltar, in the 2016 Referendum, I thought 'Wow, that's a done deal then!'.
Thats funny. Gibraltar is colonized by britainers 😮😅
@@nymuelovanno, they are mostly from Genoa in Italy
@@krisinsaigon I mean its true you let some mafiosos in because of the lack of proper regulation, but there are no spanish there, so obviously nobody there wants to make Gibraltar spanish.
Then the Sunderland result came in.
Thank you.
You're welcome! Thanks.
I think Dr, Lindsay just deleted my comment on this issue . We have been disagreed on several topics and we had some conversations in the past . I did not thought it could go so far as deleting peoples comments ,just because we don't share your opinion . WHAT A SHINE DEMOCRAT YOU TRULY ARE . And what a shame
Love your channel and content. Care to share links to the maps indicating trade route as well the African map. Much appreciated and thanks in advance.
Where does Gibraltar get its water and electricity from?
Desalination and a thermal plant I think.
Who cares? Probably only the English who holds Ulster
Two desalination plants and LNG generators.
Gibraltar had been embargoed by Spain for quite a while, which allowed the nation to develop self-sufficiency in these areas.
THe EU, Britain couldn't afford it.
What are you trying to articulate?@@benjamindejonge3624
I don't think you have addressed the main issue. There was a neutral zone, that was empty until the UK asked to put some temporary hospital tents and Spain agreed to that. But after the yellow fever issue ended, they left everything there and after that the UK unilaterally build the airport and other buildings. But the isthmus should be empty...
How can you talk about agreements when Spain turned around and sieged Gibraltar 13 times lol They constantly go on about the waters and the airport but fail to realize they have broken their own agreement.
@@jonathanrapley147 Which agreement does it say that you can't siege another territory? If I understand the siege as closing the border and not allowing anything to go through... A country is not obliged to open the borders for goods, right? If you capture a territory that is surrounded by another one, that's one of the drawbacks.
At one point in history, The Netherlands conquered a lot of nations including my Country Indonesia for centuries. Although, they are not as strong as England. And look what happened now, more and more Ned's colonies free and independence before the eyes of the Nederland. And I believe Nederland is only as big as the Island of Bangka, one of our medium size islands among 18000 islands stretches 5000 km along the equator. When we believe we are the strongest in the past, somehow the wheel is turning and more generations will suffer the consequences.
Thank you so much! I was hazy on the Gibralter situation.
Nothing to dispute, the people there want to remain British, unless they have a change of heart Gibralters status should remain as it is.
Folks in Northern Ireland will soon have their say too
@@jezalb2710 yeah its a part of the good Friday peace agreement, there can be called referendums and the UK has signed unto agree to that referendum... no such deal exists in Gibraltar
@@gawkthimm6030 Gibraltar's status is settled.
@@0816M3RC thats what i said...
I see your point, but rarely in human history, is what the people want a decisive factor for states. States know interests (defined by the elites), nothing else.
Franco died in the mid 70s (1975)
I was there as a foreign university student when he died...we were asked to go traveling til things calmed down. We trained down to Gibraltar and took the ferry to Morocco...Fez, Ceuta, and Tetuan
Those who hold it, may keep it.
Very interesting analysis. Balanced, serene and dispassionate. Is a delicate topic. The question I ask myself is: How would the British feel if The Isle of Portand was a territory occupied by another country? Perhaps the Spanish are better understood.
Thank yo so much. It does have the sort of quality of a famous British comedy ‘Passport to Pimlico’. Seriously, though, I think there might be a lot more sympathy for Spain’s position if it wasn’t holding on to two enclaves in North Afifa, Ceuta and Melilla. It does come across as rather hypocritical to complain about a British enclave when it has its own in Morocco.
@@pactubular Indeed !
Its convenient for the british to say that we should let the people that live in Gibraltar vote and let them decide. When you drove out the original population when you took Gibraltar in 1704. That is the reason it is considered a colony by the UN. Because the people that lived there, where displaced. And after that displacement you repopulated Gibraltar with a lot of British, not only but a lot.
You like to bring up Ceuta and Melilla a lot in this conversations but there is no point to that. As those Spanish cities have been spanish BEFORE there was any form of Morocco, at all. There is nothing that makes it a colony. As the UN says itself, Ceuta and Melilla are not colonies, but Gibraltar is a colony.
James makes great material. But in this video he left some things out. We have to be honest in that the UK has been taking advantage of Spain about the territory around Gibraltar. In the 1850s during an epidemic the Spanish gave the UK permission to built barracks in Spain outside of the agreed territory of British Gobraltar to combat the epidemic. And after the epidemic that Spain helped the UK to combat, the UK stayed and created a new border basically stealing land. And then again for example in 1908 the UK took yet more territory. Amd the uk again extends artificial land to build a god damn airport on stolen territory that is outside of the agreed area according to the treaty. Where does it say in the tready that the UK can take territory as they please?
After all of this, the UK has the b@lls to do maintanance and crewchanges on their nuclear submarines in Gibraltar. How convenient. If something horrible where ro happen, it would just happen in southern Spain so who cares, right?
We Spanish people are actually really fed up with this. There is more, but this comment is already to long.
Those are the problems problem.
"Where does it say in the treaty that the UK can take territory as they please?"
Practice is not limited to what the treaty allows. Spain accepts international law. See my post on this thread on the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea which Spain signed up to in 1997
@@flashtrash7830 i did not mention the sea, I have only talked about the landgrab...which is not on par with international law. Dont even try dude.
@@rallemeister9043 Hahaha! - it's a discussion thread not a gun-fight.
@@flashtrash7830 Hahaha yeah that is true, but I just hope that people from the UK understand that it has not been totally fair even tho we have a contract after the war of 1714
As long as Spain having its enclaves at northern Africa, Spain has no case in claiming Gibraltar. Simple.
Spain's argument about both Ceuta and Melilla is that they were seized before Morocco came into being so therefore it has right to control the territory.
💯
@@crose7412 Yes, Spain's claim on that land is incredibly flimsy.
Ceuta and Melilla are both rightful Roman clay, let’s be honest
@@g1u2y345 So wait, do we give it to the pope now, or Turkey?
James, I wonder what strategic value of Gibraltar is today?
IT seems the Gibraltar’s are really in between a rock and a hard place. I thought the Schengen Agreement solved a lot of freedom of movement issue
.
As long as Spain doesn't try to poke there finger in Gibraltars politics and life. In 2002 i voted for keeping Gibraltar British as did 9899% of the population as my family did the same in 67s. My family has been there since 1786 we may have British names but we are a ethnic diverse family with Maltese, Jewish, Arab, Spanish, British & Irish ancestors.
Thanks. That’s amazing to think you have such a long ancestry in Gibraltar. It really does underscore that it has a truly distinct identity.
lo que siempre han hecho los británicos mover población según su interes, como va la Guayana Esequiba, callados como ...
@@michael5265 Yes a little outpost of Empire serving the narrow interests of a few privileged individuals belonging to the ruling class, the military and the City
@@michael5265 The problem was that in the Referendum 99% of Gibraltarians rejected being ruled by an elected givernment based in London and chose instead to be ruled by the unelected government of the European Commission based in Belgium.
@@michael5265 Gibraltar is a colony full of settlers, so who voted in that referendum were the settlers, the native people that live it in the rock before 1713 were obligate it to live from his land.
There is no Gibraltar problem. 98% of Gibralterians have voted to stay British. Stop talking to the Spanish.
britain returned them the balearic islands¿ and they want more?, they lost the battle in british waters with elizabeth 1,and she can returned the coin taking over spain and she let it be.......
Ceuta and Melilla ruin Spain's claims. Gibraltar was ceded to Britain by the Treaty of Utrecht. No chance of Gibraltar going to Spain.
Gibraltar is a UN recognized colony . That should be decoloniced
And same number of Gibralterians wished to stay in the EU ,so there is a problem indeed.
@@eugenieponleve667 gibraltar is great britain but if they add up the votes of they wanting to stay in eu they dont even come close to the global vote of britain so they are out of eu,
I think, the economics adventages can win about the political status. To find a agreement that preservate the status of Gibraltar people and to open one new economic area, could resolv this new status good to everybody
Another great video, professor!
With this issue ever ongoing with no real results, maybe it's best for both Spain and the UK to agree to just let Gibraltar go its own way and become the Singapore of Europe and become the likes of Lichtenstein, San Marino, and Monaco?
I mean, if Gibraltar wants that, but they seem pretty happy with the status quo. Spain is the only party making this an issue.
I mean Gibraltar is pretty self governing, it's has it's own government, Prime Minster, Military(tiny but yes), police, current, etc etc It's really only international relationship and defence the UK gov does stuff!
I detect the usual "errors" in the story, easy to detect when Franco appears in the story. It is the UN that urges the UK to decolonize the territory and it is the UK that responds with a supposed right of the population that inhabits Gibraltar after WWII (years in which it was emptied of people, remember), and it is then that the British refusal to fulfill the international mandate, Franco, in compliance with the Treaty of Utrecht, proceeds to close the gate. And the gate only opens as a result of Spain's accession to the European Community in the 80s.
That of meeting the wishes of the current inhabitants of Gibraltar (the originals, with their archives, flag, religious images, etc., were expelled and founded San Roque, remember) was just an excuse.
And it is an excuse because the treaty refers to the territory, and the Spanish claim is about the territory. You can believe me when I tell you that NO ONE in Spain wants the current inhabitants of Gibraltar to have a Spanish passport. It is just a smoke screen conveniently deployed to try to justify what can no longer be justified.
The negative effects of The Rock on the surrounding towns are very visible if you read the data. As you move away from The Rock the economy is better, anyone who doubts this can consult all the statistics they want. Therefore, it is feasible that tomorrow, a tough government in Spain will consider closing the gate again, complying with the Treaty of Utrecht (the only basis that legally sustains the British presence) or imposing heavy entry and exit tolls, unbearable for the weak local economy, artificially grown in recent years.
Everything else, fantasies of those who long for an Empire that is long gone.
It's not a colony and it has nothing to do with fantasies of empire, you are a child.
@@persona8991 If it stings, as I see, it means it disinfects.
what happen to democracy - the people decided to stay with the UK - end of storey - if Spain wins, then they need to give up land in Afica
Well Dr. Lindsay deleted my comments like always while we have another opinion than him . I write my opinion very politely again Dr.
Its is very clear that the wish of the Gibraltar citizens have to bee respected . But it also have to come with consequences. You can not vote to stay in British colony but simultaneously have the benefit as an EU member state ,and the profits of the Spanish territory surrounding you. I believe Spain have been very soften regarding the issue . I would force a very stronger policy so you just wish to be apart of Spain
It is a settler colonial state
@@pradeepmagan6951 I don't see the logic in your argument, the two are different things however much you want to bung them together to make a point.
@@pradeepmagan6951 To whom ? Morocco ? A Full on dictatorship with an absolutist Monarchy. You're a very generous person !
The solution should be some kind of extraterritorial agreement like for Andorra, Lichtenstein, Vatican City and Republic of San Marino. The issue here is that Gibraltar wants to be part of a foreign state far away, not a state on their own like Cyprus did.
Really interesting
Thank you!
I wonder if the British people had understood the problems leaving the EU would cause to these land ownerships. Would people have voted differently?
I always found this conflict interesting. It’s extremely similar in many aspects to the Panama Canal conflict of the late 20th century. Both were prominent naval positions taken largely unjustly via imperialism, hold a significant population from the conquering country (the Zonians are an extremely interesting topic unto themselves,) however while the UK seems to treat the Spanish government as largely equal, relative to the United States’ imperialist relationship with Panamá turned it into a nationalist issue far more tenuous than the Gibraltar debate. Without that flame, it strikes me as an issue that’ll continually be kicked down the road.
except the British had control over Gibraltar for many more years than the US did Panama, or Spain itself had control over Gibraltar
Spanish Rule 1462-1704:- 242 years
British Rule 1704 - 2024:- 320 years
Panama wasn't taken by the US as an imperial holding. Your comparison is completely false.
@@CedarHunt dont matter what you call it, what matters who has the power, authority and control, who got the panama canal profits...
@@gawkthimm6030 If it doesn't matter what we call it, then there is no reason to use those inaccurate terms.
@@CedarHunt well there sort of is, it wasn't until after Roosevelt that the US stopped taking colonial possessions from defeated enemies and was seen as a fellow "imperial great power", just a republican one, like France. Taking Puerto Rico and the Philippines from Spain. Islands of Samoa, Guam etc in the pacific. it wasn't until after ww2 the US committed to decolonizing.
Most of what you have said is very skew.
In 1938 while Spain was in a civil war, they stole more Spanish territory and built an airport.
In the 1960s, the UN voted by majority to decolonize Gibraltar.
In the 60s, England left it as a tax haven but since the border was closed they dedicated themselves to tobacco smuggling.
In the 80's when Spain opened the border it was still a tax haven, black money increased towards the new banks that were installed, and lots of online gaming companies since there were almost no taxes, so there was an economic boom in Gibraltar for the rich settled there. I suppose from the UK and associates.
They are in paradise buying luxurious mansions in Sotogrande with luxurious golf clubs, because the border is open. They continue to launder money under the umbrella of the UK, how are they going to want anything to change? no way, like this forever. That is why the British government perfidiously claims to respect the will of the inhabitants of Gibraltar, even the newcomers which the treaty you have read does not even mention inhabitants at all.
Did the UK government say that the will of the inhabitants of Hong Kong should be respected? Nope! China too big to mess around.
Sorry, but none of that makes what I said a fallacy. All you ah w down is added more detail to what I have said. So, thank you for that. (There is only so much one can cover in a 10-15 minute video.) But I should say that suggesting that I set out to device, as using the word fallacy suggests, is deeply unfair and I usually delete comments suggesting that I have lied. I make these videos in good faith. I don’t set out to deceive anytime. Please edit your comment accordingly.
Great presentation
Thank you so much!
I think one of the lessons of the last Labour government and Brexit, is that if you want to do anything on Gibraltar, you probably have to persuade the people living there first. In my opinion the Brexit issue - which 90% of Gibraltarians voted against - might provide an alternative solution similar to the Northern Ireland Protocol. I have mixed feelings on Gibraltar being under British rule. While I sympathise as an Irish person with Spain as a country that was also partitioned, the resolution of the NI conflict shows compromises are possible. Also, to be honest, Im a bit worried about the possible rise of Vox in the future. They are already around 10%, and its likely PP will enter a coalition with them next time.
Thanks. You’re right. It just come down to the Gibraltarians. But I suspect, like the people of Northern Ireland, that attitudes could well change in years ahead as the inconvenience of Brexit becomes more entrenched. The key difference is that Spain isn’t reaching out to them to show them that they have nothing to fear from joining Spain. Madrid needs to be more active in this. More generally, my sympathy for Spain is rather limited by the fact that it is doing exactly the same with two malls territories in North Africa - Melilla and Ceuta. Perhaps if it was willing to relinquish them many more might be a little more open to its claims to Gibraltar. One of the most obvious examples of hypocrisy in international politics.
@@JamesKerLindsay My prediction is that, over time, especially as you raise if Spain becomes solicitous, the allure of rejoining the EU could turn the popular Gib vote to wishing to be part of Spain. If I lived in Gib I would be an active campaigner of that position. Similiarly, if I lived in Northern Ireland I would be campaigning for a united Republic of Ireland ENTIRELY because of Brexit - if the Republic got rid of some of its archaic religious laws.
@@mango2005 We shall see, things are changing faster than in previous decades. Information flies instantaneously, countries are heavily in debt, alliances under under strain and climate change is creeping up in the background. Difficult to predict the next 20 years, let alone 50.
10:44 comparing NI to Gibraltar and the SBAs is, to put it mildly, problematic and inaccurate.
Woke up one day in 1969, and found the Spanish authorities had cut the telephone cables , sealed the border and were trying to starve us, so we would become part of Spain.
So had a Gibraltar citizen vote with observer’s from United Nations , if we wanted to become part of Spain.
The exact vote details I cannot remember, but were like
2,000 Gibraltar Citizens voted to stay under British Sovereignty.
17 Gibraltar Citizens voted to have Spanish Sovereignty.
What people forget the majority of those living in Gibraltar went there to get away from Spain !
@@skylongskylong1982 Yes Franco wasn't a patient man and got fed up with the delays to follow UN recommendations.
@@skylongskylong1982 I've heard that the flow is going the other way now.. From 2,000 in 1969 to 30,000 inhabitants is a mighty leap in population.
@@skylongskylong1982 Pues que se vuelvan a Inglaterra
What problem?
The people of Gibraltar have said we are not Spains to claim nor Britains to give away…Their desires must be met like it was in the referendums that took place..it’s not just about territory but people..The people of Gibraltar are a proud people and their wishes must be met..
They are not subjects of law in this matter.
Nobody wants them to change their passport, the discussion is about the territory.
@@LivingLifeAfterDeath Indeed ! But Historic wrongs must also be addressed.
@@user-cm9pt8bo3l You mean the territory that was awarded to Britain..Where the llanito people live..indefinitely..
@@user-qs3rf4hh5n what historic wrongs would that be?..
What’s the difference between between the UK having Gibraltar. And Spain having : Parsley Island, Ceuta and Melilla
A great question.
@@JamesKerLindsay it's always intrigued me. Geog BA Hons and fan of the channel 👍
@@JamesKerLindsay A great question, and when used in this discussion it is an undoubted symptom of the absence of real arguments in the discussion.
@@briocheoleary5043 A lot Spain would never willingly hand over Spanish provinces to an Absolutist Monarch who uses torture and imprisonment as tools of the state and still retains the death penalty.
Lots of differences. The history is totally different.
Gibraltar will probably need to be in the EU like Northern Ireland.
There would be checks between GB and Gib but not between Gib and EU
There were previously checks in while Gib was in the EU, most likely it'll continue.
Well Dr. Lindsay deleted my comments like always while we have another opinion than him . I write my opinion very politely again Dr.
Its is very clear that the wish of the Gibraltar citizens have to bee respected . But it also have to come with consequences. You can not vote to stay in British colony but simultaneously have the benefit as an EU member state ,and the profits of the Spanish territory surrounding you. I believe Spain have been very soften regarding the issue . I would force a very stronger policy so you just wish to be apart of Spain
@@asparadogThey were in the UE but not in Schengen which is different and Frontex was agree with controls
@@asparadogthey left
@@hairyhaggis7431 Northern Ireland doesn't have an Irish border force or customs officers which are sine cua non conditions for an agreement with the EU/Spain. In this case Frontex/Spanish. That's the sticking point.
Ah yes, Gibraltar, Spain and UK's perennial subject of domestic quarrel. At the very least we can safely say no war will break out over it, unlike war-over-"rightful"-territory Nr. XX.
If you do see this message, Professor, I hope you might add to your (I assume pretty large!) list of topics Colombia. Quite a fascinating story there. Guerilla movements, gangs, drugs and political assasinations (even a presidential candidate), to name but the most flashy of subjects.
Don’t need to worry about a war breaking out over it because a war already had happened for it
The treaty of Utrecht included Menorca along with Gibraltar, in the Balears Archipielago. Menorca was returned to Spain some time later. There's a trekking path around the island of Menorca (cant recall its name) but basically that was the path that british patrols took to secure the island.
Imagine if all countries wanted to change their borders to what used to exist hundreds of years ago .
Great point! That's really the deeper issue here, isnt it? Spain is aggrieved because it lost something three hundred years ago. I understand that. But let's take a look at a map of Europe from three hundred years ago. Imagine if every country followed the same idea. Also, I'm hearing a lot of people say that it is geographically Spanish. Again, I'm not very comfortable with that idea. What does geographically part of a specific country even mean? Even in the context of islands it can be very problematic. Ultimately, I support the idea that it must be up to the people of these territories to choose, either as part of a formal process of decolonisation or with a legally mandated independence process (rather than unilateral secession).
It would cause chaos
@@JamesKerLindsay your last sentence leaves out other options. The could continue as they are now - a self-governing territory with the UK responsible for security and foreign affairs. They could integrate with the UK (as French overseas territories have done) but that would come at a cost to the local economy. The idea of decolonisation is frankly absurd - Gibraltar is not a colony.
True Mongolia has a claim to most of the world as the most extensive empire in history.
@@stewatparkpark2933 Imagine if all countries decided to interfere in an internal matter of succession and took the opportunity to bite a chunk of their territory and refused to give it back. Terrible no ?
A very British take on Gibraltar's history.
Many references to "the people" and their "wishes", but not one word about the fact that the Brits first removed the original population to make the place governable way back when.
The UK, in the 1980 extracted (you can call it blackmail, if you wish) multiple concessions of Spain to allow them to join the EU on matters of Gibraltar.
Just like with Hong Kong, where the Brits introduced pseudo-democracy in the 1960's (used in today's politics as if the place was some fancy beacon of freedom and liberty under the colonial rule), and Northern Ireland, filled with unionist outsiders to "perpetuate (British) home rule", this "divide and conquer" tactic has been well established modus operandi of the British state for centuries.
From the partition of India, to the splitting of the peoples of the Middle-East, Central Asia, Africa, and beyond -- the world keeps on paying the price for centuries of British misrule, exploitation, looting and spite.
Gibraltar was the OG/modern blue print for how to fcuk up places, territories, countries, and peoples.
Next time, when you talk about "unsolvable problems", try to frame the argument in its proper historical context, because this is not the way to do it. Or, more cynically said: this is the British way of talking about history -- not a pretty sight.
As to the footie match coming up. May the best team win.
Frankly, the whole of Europe is lines drawn on maps after wars and population displacement. And, as I’ve said in another comment, I might have little more sympathy for the Spanish position if it didn’t use almost exactly the same argument for why it has a right to hold on to Melilla and Ceuta. It’s about the right of people to decide their own future. So, maybe I do give a British position on the issue. But change the dispute and it could easily be a principled Spanish argument elsewhere. So, who exactly is in the right and wrong? Really, I’m happy to engage with debates, but it helps when they are framed more in terms of fundamental principles rather than a dig at a particular country’s policy. (I don’t say this as someone British, by the way. After all, I have made many videos on British colonialism. I say it as someone who doesn’t believe that prejudice is a terribly good way to make foreign policy as it opens one up to claims of hypocrisy.)
Very well said.
Throughout this comment section you will notice the replies of the video maker confirm every word of your post.
The entirety of Spain was built on land where the Spanish forced the Muslims and Jews living there to convert or leave. Why is that okay but not Gibraltar?
Exactly what I was thinking watching this ,I live in a part of Ireland that was the most planted by the British that is not ulster so I probably have a better understanding of the British history of divide and conquer and replacement of the natives who can't vote because they have been replaced by planters than the average British subject.
@@JamesKerLindsay
I have no particular pro Spanish stance on this issue. It's complicated, as all colonial legacy issues are, even if we focus only on modern times, and present politics.
Your narrative was very, um, UK centric, hence my fry reply.
I haven't heard about the possibility of granting Gibraltar independence, and becoming a de facto member of the EU. It would be a small country, but not the smallest. Think of San Marino, Andorra, Monaco and the Vatican. Military protection might be an issue; perhaps Britain and Spain could work out some joint protection?
EU membership of UK & Ireland under wrote Northern Ireland peace. That could be an even bigger Brexit problem. Another great video.
No, it didn't. It was, and is, irrelevant.
The Falklands and Gibraltar have similarity. They are both disputed by a bigger Spanish Speaking country and its inhabitants both want to remain British. Sovereignty is not only about Independence. It is also about the wishes of the locals about their status.
Funny how Britain staunchly abides by that when it suits, but when the result is in doubt it's a different story. Such as in Scotland, after the Brexit farce, and billions of barrels of oil that "mist have fallen down the back of the sofa," then Scotland is forbidden from having a say on their own status.
In both cases, the territories are largely used as pawns in the Spanish and Argentine political landscapes to distract from ongoing internal issues as well.
In fact, this is indeed a case of size doesn't matter.
@@thepablykono
@@thesherbet Yesss
Spain ceded Gibraltar to Britain in 1713 and the Gibraltarians continue to make clear they don’t favour constitutional change. Spain hasn’t a leg to stand on in their “dispute”.
Compromises and concessions made during the imperial era should still be respected? By that logic Nigeria didn’t have a leg to stand on nor did any former colony. We live in an era governed by the rule of law. Gibraltar belongs to Spain it is part of their landmass.
The era of empire have ended. Rule of law not rule of might . I war treaty lack any legal relevance if violates territorial integrity.
The UK has agreed to decolonize Gibraltar and is therefore legally obligated to do so. Under the 1713 treaty, the colony would then return to Spain.
You're applying a libertarian argument. "Everybody should just belong to whatever country they want to belong to." That doesn't interest me. Indeed, if that argument were applied to everyone in the world, there would be total chaos. The only argument that should apply here is, what would be best for NATO and the Western Europe/World? We do, after all, have a war with Russia and its axis on the horizon, and security concerns take precedence over all others.
Now, I'm no expert, and I'm more than willing to change my mind on this if better evidence presents itself, but my admittedly layman's analysis is that Spain can better defend Gibraltar than Britain, and British military resources in Gibraltar would be better utilized in the Eastern Med and/or Eastern Europe. Am I wrong? Can Spain not be trusted as an ally? Do the British have some unique skill or resource that makes them uniquely qualified to administer Gibraltar? So unless you can convince me otherwise, I think the territory should go back to Spain, and those British forces should be redeployed elsewhere.
Let me give you an analogy. Let's say there's a small town somewhere in Manitoba or Saskatchewan that's sovereign to the United States. About 30,000 people live there, all patriotic Americans, but more importantly, there's a huge US Army and Air Force base there... to defend the town from Canada... Dude! Canada's not a threat! Let Canada protect that place and redeploy those troops somewhere they can be useful! Like Eastern Europe or the Pacific Rim! And if the 30,000 people don't want to live in Canada, that's fine. They can move to North Dakota.
I think you see my point. Like I said, I'm a layman, but from my perspective, it makes no sense for Britain to defend that rock instead of Spain, and the British forces there would be better stationed in a more strategically important place.
@@jeffbob1776 Nigeria didn't want to remain a part of the UK, while Gibraltar does. Are you saying that after 300 years the inhabitants of the region have no say over where they live? That's longer than my country and most of those in the Americas have existed. You forget that part of that rule of law covers the will of the people too. You don't try and solve one perceived injustice by creating another.
What part of "in perpetuity" do you not understand
@@johndurrant9144 The end date.
@@johndurrant9144 What would happen if Putin drops the big in London as he's threatened to do and Britain ceases to exist. Is that covered by the treaty of Utrecht ?
Don’t worry, it’ll be sorted this Sunday mate.
Cases like Gibraltar and the Falklands are quite frustrating. The people have spoken loud and clear that they want to remain with the UK, but that doesn't stop the other country from bringing up their historical control of the areas, even though the modern locals don't even descend from the people who used to live there back then.
@FairyCRat have you heard of the terms "plantation "and "replacement " I'm irish so I'm an expert
@@John316OBrian-cm4fjthat isn't really relevant. If the people of Gibraltar want it to remain as it is, who are you to deny them that right simply because 300 years ago their distant ancestors didn't live there?
@@John316OBrian-cm4fjexpert because your people took Ireland from its inhabitants and colonized it and now won’t return it?
@@John316OBrian-cm4fjdo you know that there are 5 millon of Irish offsprings in the UK, they may technically vote the south Ireland back to UK
@@krisinsaigon do you know that there are 5 millon of Irish offsprings in the UK, they may technically vote the south Ireland back to UK
I bet if polling suggested that Gibraltarians no longer supported remaining part of the UK.... the UK would suddenly no longer care as much about "self determination" for Gibraltarians.
Of course not. Self-determination is a scam; the whole idea of it was to divest Britain of its imperial territories post-war and it destroyed the British Empire at the behest of the Russians and Americans who insisted upon its development in international law. The British dont, or shouldn't, give a damn about it.
This is essentially criticising the UK for a hypocrisy is has not yet committed to defend a disrespect for self determination that Spain is continuously committing along with the hypocrisy of owning North African territories that wish to be part of Spain.
Polls are for the Polish, Gibraltar had a referendum. "Do you approve of the principle that Britain and Spain should share sovereignty over Gibraltar?" - The result was 98.97% NO!
@@jstewart4205 the point was if the answer was YES UK Wouldn't be doing much. You can look at some other overseas territories that don't want to be ruled by the UK
@@Chameleon1616 No this is essentially looking at all the overseas territories and how they self determine and not just a few whose self determination works in their interest
Still seems highly unlikely to happen. Too much at stake on security matters. Malta which still has ties to the UK would need to be protected
let alone the canal through Egypt.
The funny thing about this situation is that the Gibraltarians, while maintaining a patina of Britishness, from a societal standpoint are much more closely related to Andalusians than any other group. There probably isn't any long-time Gibraltarian that doesn't have a significant number of Spanish relatives across the border and they all, and I mean all, speak Andalusian Spanish (a variant known as Llanito) as a native tongue. I've met a few of them in my life and if you heard them talk, you'd think that they were from Seville.
@@ulical That is the unspoken truth which the Gibraltarians don't want to be known lest it ruins the present set up. They really have it too good to be true with Gib salaries, low taxes and access to Spanish housing and goods. Who can blame them ?
@@user-qs3rf4hh5n Yes...the other thing that the Gibraltar government does at any opportunity is try to tie present Spain to it's past with Franco. That, to me, is utterly ridiculous and doesn't even begin to stand the faintest of scrutiny. I mean, Freedom House, in its rating of freedom writ-large, literally ranks Spain as free as the United Kingdom. These attempts by Gibraltar to sully Spain's reputation are analogous to someone in the 90s trying to compare Germany at that time with Germany during the Nazi period. It's purely political propaganda designed to sway low information news consumers.
@@ulical Spot on. They're old tactics, exploiting old clichés and stereotypes
I sometimes think that there must be a Ministry of Disinformation in Gibraltar as it's so repetitive. I do however think that thanks to the Internet and more traveling by people it's increasingly difficult to keep the lies going.
@@user-qs3rf4hh5n And you know what the funny thing is? There are approximately 30000 Gibraltarians living "under siege" as they call it and yet, at the same time, there are approximately another 1,000,000 British citizens living in Spain (800,000 as permanent residents) loving life. I mean, the juxtaposition of these numbers crosses into farce...life in Spain from British islanders is great, and more come every year, but for British Gibraltarians it would be a catastrophe.
Most important detail you forgot to mention: almost all the original inhabitants of Gibraltar left due to the racial cleansing carried by the British. The current inhabitants are descent of the new inhabitants brought by the UK.
Not really. Most of the original Spanish did leave, but were replaced by Catalans and Minorcans (24%), Genoese and Italians (20%), Portuguese (10%), Maltese, Sephardic Jews and Royalist French. Ethnic British represent only 27% of the population, which is why most Gibraltarians converse in Llanito.
@@thostaylor so op is right the original inhabitants were ethnically cleaned and Britain brought in new inhabitants
@@rice4550 It depends on how you define ethnic cleansing. By that definition the Spanish ethnically cleansed Gibraltar when they took it from the Moors. You would also have to regard Catalans and Minorcans as not ethnically Spanish.
Sounds like the Spanish Empire in central and South America.
There really is no conversation until the people of Gibraltar wish for a change to their sovereignty.
The sad thing is, the way UK governments have treated Gibraltarians lately, they will be happy to switch that sovereignty sooner rather than later.
Gibraltarians will never want to switch sovereignity lets be real
@@darrenmurray861 It makes no economic sense for the UK to retain Gibraltar. It is costly to maintain and you always have the problem of refugees like Hong-Kong though in this case more like climate refugees as Spain is not a dictatorship.
Britain don't have a Gibraltar "problem". Spain do.
I missed this at the beginning as we seemed to rush to the Goths & Romans…
In ancient times was this patch of land owned by the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians?
How is it strategically important to the UK ? The UK have no more righ to Gibraltar than they have to Northerm Irealnd.
The British government didn't afford the citizens of Hong Kong, the same right to self-determination
Different treaty and they were in no position to resist China, unfortunately.
@@physiocrat7143 No it was mainly the t5reaty nothing else. Plus many HKs were happy to be free of British status
And then why the Hongkongers would wish to be under the biritish few years after they were returned under mainland china ??? The umbrella movements depicted reality Hong Kong would love to be under the British rule
Norway and Denmark lost a lot of territory to Sweden 350 years ago, so not that much longer than Gibraltar has belonged to UK. Same as with Gibraltar those areas had belonged to Norway and Denmark since they were founded as nations, so you could argue that they are “occupied lands” and Norway and Denmark should get them back. And just disregard any referendums. So why are Norway and Denmark not demanding this? Because, unlike Spain they are grown ups that doesn’t sulk like small kinds over something that happened hundreds of years ago.
Norway didn't gain real independance until 1905. My great-grandmother whom I knew even lived then. Before that they were quite subdued and bossed around by us in the Swedish-Norwegian Union, and before that by Denmark for many centuries. So basically, I think they're just humble and thankful that Sweden so mercifully even allow it's neighbours to exist today. I'd support giving Skåneland back to Denmark tho just because I feel such pity for them.
@@alicelarsson165 Yes that's very funny. Norway between 1814 to 1905 was not really governed from Stockholm. As it had its own parliament, its own budget, state income and tax system, its own police and army, its own constitution and laws. So Norway was in reality independant already. Also remember Norway celebrate their independance day to be 17 May 1814, when they got their constitution, not when the Union with Sweden happened. Seden did not really interfere much at all with what the Norwegian Parliament decided. One change was in 1889 when Parlamentaianism was implented, meaning they stopped taking notice what the Swedish King had to say. But when the Norwegian parliament in 1904 voted to have its own consulates the Swedish did not agree. Before this it was actually not a majority in the Norwegian parliament to want independence from Sweden, that the Swedes refused to approve of Norwegian consulates changed this, and the Norwegian parliament voted in 1905 for Norwegian independence, later supported by a referendum, so that was that. The Norwegian army, especially the navy was strong enough to prevent Sweden from invade, (the swedish army was of course larger but both armied had similar training and equipment) as it would have led to a very bloody and expensive war. Also Swedish unions threatened with a general strike if an invation would take place, even the Swedish army threatened with mutiny.
Hi, really like the videos and also how you keep up the conversations in the comments.
Could you do one about the russian - chinese relations with a special focus on Bolshoi Ussuriysky Island (also called Heixiazi island), the general situation of chinese migration and economic interests in the russian far east and potential territorial claims that still swirl around former outer manchuria there? There were some interesting developments there in the last couple of years.