Israel annexed the 452-square-mileGolan Heights in 1981. This was done after
defeating Syrian aggression in June 1967, and after the Yom Kippur surprise
attacks of October 1973. When Israeli opponents of the annexation argued that
application of Israeli law did not apply sovereignty, the Israeli Supreme Court
ruled otherwise.
Now Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert seeks a "settlement" with Syria.
Damascus shares with Iran a determined commitment to destroy Israel and to
support assorted terrorist groups with the same goal. Mr. Olmert's position is
premised on an exchange of Golan for a codified peace with Syria. He fails,
however, to appreciate the strategic consequences of such territorial surrender.
Nor does he acknowledge the historic importance of Ramat HaGolan in Jewish
nationhood.
If Syrian President Bashar Assad were serious about peace, he would agree to
crack down on Lebanon's Hezbollah and also to close down offices of the many
terrorist organizations that still thrive in his country. If formal talks were
reopened, Syria would be risking nothing. Israel's risks would be existential.
Before 1967, Syria routinely attacked Israeli settlement east of the
Kinneret (Sea of Galilee). Today, an Israeli Golan withdrawal, from an area less
than 1 percent of Syria's total size, could leave the northern region of Israel
open to wider Syrian or even Iranian invasion through the Jordan Valley. History
records that hundreds of assaults on Israeli land west of the Jordan have been
launched from or through Golan. Such a withdrawal would uproot 32 Golan Jewish
communities and threaten a third of Israel's water supply. As Syria is a
riparian state, any Golan transfer would also damage Israel's tourism and
fishing industries.
The proposed Olmert argument is based on a naive legalism. An Israel-Syria
agreement would allegedly require a demilitarized Golan Heights. In reality, a
Syrian demilitarization of Golan, which is roughly the size of New York City's
borough of Queens, could never happen. The prime minister's incorrect reasoning
lies in the limits of legal guarantees in our anarchic world. A related problem
concerns ever-changing missile and satellite technologies.
For real security, the Israeli military must retain its surveillance
positions on Golan, especially on Mt. Harmon. Pre-1967 warning stations do not
have a clear line of sight deep into Syrian territory. Israel should not be
dependent upon third parties for crucial intelligence. Even a demilitarized
Golan with advanced early warning systems involving the United States would be
inadequate. This was already understood shortly after the June 1967 war, when
the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff issued a report advising permanent Israeli
retention of the Golan.
Ironically, Israel's border with Syria has been more quiet than that
country's borders with Egypt and Jordan, states with which Israel is "at peace."
Damascus still demands that Israel withdraw to the pre-1967 line -- not to the
international border, but all the way to the Sea of Galilee. Yet, before 1948,
the lake was entirely within Mandatory Palestine.
Syria has missiles that place all of Israel within easy range of WMD
warheads. Any Israeli abandonment of Golan would exacerbate this condition. It
would also enlarge the prospect of war on the Lebanese front, and the influence
of terrorist factions still based securely in Damascus.
Golan, which ranges up to a height of 7,300 feet, dominates the Jordan
Valley as well as the Bashan Plateau. Here there are only two natural terrain
bottlenecks. These choke points are defensible. With this plateau in Syrian
hands, however, enemy tanks, backed up by missiles and aircraft, could
potentially penetrate Israel. This would remain true even if the area were
"demilitarized."
Surrender of Golan Heights would be inconsistent with Israel's overall
security. Israel must properly define its northern borders accordingly. Such
definition is logically prior to defense.
Israel and the United States have coincident regional interests. Both
countries must now "stand up" together to a determined Syrian enemy of peace and
democracy in the Middle East. It is not in Israel's or America's interest to
encourage renewed Syrian aggressions, or to enlarge geographic opportunity for
radical Islamist sanctuaries. By resisting any additional Israeli territorial
loss on Golan, there would also be far greater safety for the citizens of New
York, Chicago and Los Angeles as well as for citizens of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv.
Could anything be more important?
Louis Rene Beres lectures and publishes widely on Israeli security matters and
international law. Maj. Gen. Paul E. Vallely (retired) is a military analyst and
host of the radio show "Stand Up America."
Washington Times