'', 25 October 1920, reporting on the active discussions regarding the boundary line The boundary between the forthcoming
British and
French mandates was first defined in broad terms in the 1920 "Franco-British Convention on Certain Points Connected with the Mandates for Syria and the Lebanon, Palestine and Mesopotamia", signed in
Paris by the
British Ambassador to France,
Charles Hardinge and the French Foreign Minister,
Georges Leygues, on 23 December 1920. That agreement placed the bulk of the
Golan Heights in the French sphere. The treaty also established a joint commission to settle the precise details of the border and mark it on the ground. The 1932 commission concluded that the 1920 agreement had been reached on the basis of the “British International 1:1,000,000 map published in 1916 and revised in 1918”, formally known as the
Asia 1: 1,000,000. Projection of the International Map compiled at the Royal Geographical Society under the direction of the Geographical Section, General Staff. Drawn and printed at the War Office, 1916, today known as "GSGS 2555". ==March 1923 agreement==