As Israel Plots Endgame in Occupied Golan, Bennett Must Remember Lessons of the Past

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By Ramzy Baroud – Jan 5, 2022
With Syria still embroiled in its own war, Israel has been actively rewriting the rule book regarding its conduct in this Arab country. Gone are the days of a potential return of the illegally occupied Golan Heights to Syrian sovereignty in exchange for peace, per the language of yesteryears. Now, Israel is set to double its illegal Jewish settler population in the Golan, while Israeli bombs continue to drop with a much higher frequency on various Syrian targets.
Indeed, a one-sided war is underway, casually reported as if a routine, everyday event. In the last decade, many āmysteriousā attacks on Syria wereĀ attributedĀ to Israel. The latter neither confirmed nor denied. With theĀ blanket supportĀ given to Israel by the Donald Trump administration, which recognized Israelās illegal annexation of the Syrian Golan Heights of 1981, Israeli reluctance to take credit for the frequent and increasingly destructive and bloody air raids hasĀ dissipated.
Briefly, some in the Israeli government wereĀ concernedĀ by the possible repercussions of the advent of Joe Biden to the White House in January 2021. They worried that the new president might reverse some of the pro-Israel decisions enacted by his predecessor, including theĀ recognitionĀ of the āSovereignty over the Golan Heights,ā due to the āstrategic and security importance to the State of Israelā. Biden, a long-time supporter of Israel himself, did no such thing.
The initial concern about a shift in US policy turned into euphoria and, eventually, an opportunity, especially as Israelās new Prime Minister, Naftali Bennett, is eager to break the Rightās historic dominance over the Jewish settlement movement in occupied Palestinian and Arab lands.
āThis is our moment. This is the moment of the Golan Heights,ā BennettĀ declaredĀ triumphantly at an Israeli government cabinet meeting held specially to officiate plans regarding the further colonization of the Golan on December 26.
The following statement by Bennett speaks volumes about the context of the Israeli decision, and its future intentions: āAfter long and static years in terms of the scope of settlement, our goal today is to double settlement in the Golan Heights.ā The reference to āstatic yearsā is an outright rejection of the occasional freezing of settlement construction that mostly took place during the so-called āpeace process.ā Bennett ā who, in June 2021,Ā was embracedĀ by Washington and its western allies as the political antithesis to the obstinate Benjamin Netanyahu ā has effectively ended any possibility of a peaceful resolution to Israelās illegal occupation of the Golan.
Aside from predictable and clichĆ©d responses by Syria and the Arab League, Israelās massive push to double its settlement activities in the Golan is going largely unnoticed. Not only Israelās right-wing media, but the likes of Haaretz are also welcoming the governmentās investment ā estimated at nearly $320 million. The title of David Rosenbergās article in Haaretz tells the whole story: āPicturesque but Poor, Israelās Golan Needs a Government Boost to Thrive.āĀ The articleĀ decries government āneglectā of the Golan, speaks of employment opportunities and merely challenges Bennettās government on whether it will āstay the courseā. The fact that the occupation of the Golan, like that of Jerusalem, the West Bank and Gaza, is illegal under international law is absent from Israeli media coverage.
Namely, Israelās main focus currently is to normalize its occupation of Arab land entirely. But if that mission has failed over the course of 54 years, can it succeed now?
For Israel, the illegal settlement enterprise, whether in the Syrian Golan or in occupied Palestine, is synonymous. It is inspired by deep-rooted ideological and religious beliefs, compelled by economic opportunities and political interests and assuaged by the lack of any meaningful international response.
In the case of the Golan, Israelās intention was, from the onset, to expand on its agricultural space, as the capture of the fertile Syrian territory almost immediately attracted settlers, who set the stage for massive agricultural settlements. Although the home of merelyĀ 25,000 Jewish settlers, the Golan became aĀ major sourceĀ of Israeli apples, pears and wine grape production. Local tourism in the scenic Golan, dotted with numerous wineries, thrived, especially following the Israeli annexation of the territory in 1981.
The plight of the steadfast Golan Arab Druze population of nearlyĀ 23,000Ā is as irrelevant in the eyes of Israel as that of the millions of occupied Palestinians, whether under siege in Gaza or living under a perpetual occupation or apartheid in the West Bank and East Jerusalem. The Golan population is equally isolated and oppressed but, like the Palestinians, continues to resist despite the heavy price of their resistance. Their hardship, however, is likely to increase with the expected doubling of the Jewish settler population.
Israel is, of course, aware that popular uprisings will eventually be mounted in response to its latest colonial endeavors, but various factors must be giving Bennett the confidence to continue with his plans. A major source of reassurance is that it could take Syria years to achieve any degree of political stabilization before mounting any source of challenge to the Israeli occupation. Another is that the Palestinian leadership is in no mood for confrontation, especially that it is, once again, onĀ good termswith Washington, which has resumed its funding of the PA soon after Bidenās inauguration.
Moreover, in Israel, the anti-settlement movement has long subsided, crystallized mostly into smaller political parties that are hardly critical in the formation or toppling of government coalitions.
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More importantly, Washington has no interest to initiate any kind of diplomatic efforts to lay the ground for future talks involving Israel, the Palestinians and certainly not Syria. Any such attempt now, or even in coming years would represent a political gamble for Bidenās embattled administration.
Israel understands this absolutely and plans to take advantage of this opportunity, arguably unprecedented since the Madrid talks over thirty years ago. Yet, while Bennett is urging Israelis in their quest for settlement expansion with such battle cries as āthis is our momentā, he must not underestimate that the occupied Palestinians and Syrians are also aware that their āmomentā, too, is drawing near. In fact, all popular Palestinian uprisings of the past were initiated at times when Israel assumed that it had the upper hand, and that peopleās resistance has been forever pacified.
Featured image: Israeli Government approves a plan to double the number of illegal Jewish settlers in the Golan Heights. (Photo: via Prime Minister of Israel Twitter page)