Jaim Weizmann (1 de enero de 1983). The Letters and Papers of Chaim Weizmann: series B. Transaction Publishers. pp. 102-. ISBN978-0-87855-297-9. «On 25 November 1936, testifying before the Peel Commission, Weizmann said that there are in Europe 6,000,000 Jews ... ‹for whom the world is divided into places where they cannot live and places where they cannot enter›.»
Benny Morris (2004). The Birth of the Palestinian Refugee Problem Revisited. Cambridge University Press. pp. 11, 48, 49,. ISBN978-0-521-00967-6. Consultado el 25 de julio de 2013. «while the Zionist movement, after much agonising, accepted the principle of partition and the proposals as a basis for negotiation (p. 11); In the end, after bitter debate, the Congress equivocally approved –by a vote of 299 to 160 – the Peel recommendations as a basis for further negotiation (p. 49).»
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Finkelstein, Norman (2005), Beyond Chutzpah: On the Misuse of Anti-semitism and the Abuse of History, University of California Press, p. 280, ISBN9780520245983, «However, even Zionist leaders accepting partition did only so as the first step toward the total conquest of Palestine. Although Dershowitz ignores it, his main historical source—like all other studies of the period—concludes that both Weizmann and Ben-Gurion ″saw partition as a stepping stone to further expansion and the eventual takeover of the whole of Palestine...».