A few weeks ago one kept on hearing people say that peace between Syria and Israel
was possible and within grasp. It's no secret that former PM Olmert pushed for a
deal, though how strong he did and if it could even be OK ed in the Knesset is
another matter entirely. The general shape of the deal would be peace between
Israel whereby the Golan Heights would be returned to Syria, and, in exchange,
Syria would sever its ties with Iran and stop arming Hezbollah. Basically it's a
land-for-peace deal with some broader Middle East positioning thrown
in.
Such a deal would be immensely beneficial for Syria, which has long
demanded the Golan, having claimed to reacquire it by any means possible.
However, for Israel, this deal makes no sense whatsoever, with perhaps one
possible exception.
There are many obvious reason for not giving back the
Golan from the Israeli perspective: it's an excellent military position, it
gives Israel complete control of Lake Kinneret (the Sea of Galilee), and the
general fact that countries should never give up land unless they absolutely
have to. Land is a country's most valuable resource, and the Golan is especially
fertile land, a relative rarity in Israel. Not to mention the fact that Israel
isn't exactly a huge country - giving up the Golan would amount to about an 8%
reduction in territory, which is a huge economic and militaristic
loss.
However, let us suppose that Israel was given such a tempting
offer, no rockets from Hezbollah and Iranian isolation. Would it make sense for
Israel to give up this land for peace?
It is doubtful, and one answer is
simple: once the government leaves the Golan they will not enter it again
without force. Possession is key here, and while it is hard to walk away from a
huge chunk of fertile land, it is even harder to ensure that what you walked
away from will be delivered. In essence, Israel has no reason to trust Syria
that it will keep up its end of the bargain, and even less reason to believe
that even if Syria stops arming Hezbollah, they won't get their rockets from
somewhere else.
It's not land-for-peace, it's land-for-promises, which
are far less valuable than possession. Israel would be crazy to trust Syria,
bearing in mind that if they're ever double-crossed their only option is a
full-scale invasion of the Golan, which absolutely no one would want.
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