Thursday, August 07, 2008

The 1967 Myth

Guy Senbel for Guysen International News
(In case you missed it a few months ago-replay)

This week, we wish to draw our readers’ attention to the issue of Israel’s return of the Golan Heights to Syria in return for peace. While Syria may be bluffing again with the aim to make everyone believe that the solution to peace is in the hands of Israel, this time, Jerusalem did not deny the rumor. Ehud Olmert said last week that he was working on an “important initiative” for peace with Damascus. Sunday Apr. 20, Bashar Assad claimed that “friendly parties” were “making efforts to make contacts between Syria and Israel. Turkish Prime Minister Recept Tayyp Erdogan is already playing the role of mediator and has officially informed the Syrian President of “M. Olmert’s good disposition towards a full withdrawal from the Golan…”

If peace with Syria represents an obvious strategic interest for the stability of the region, all residual talks about the return to the 1967 borders nevertheless contributed to the creation of a geopolitical myth – the principle of land in exchange for peace – that would be the foundation, the sine qua non for peace and stability in the region.

To make peace with Syria… The stakes are many and crucial indeed. Damascus plays the role of terror intermediary and unifier. Between Tehran and the Lebanese Hezbollah, Syria is a strategic crossing point for terror expansion. And let us not forget that Syria harbors leaders of Hamas and Islamic Jihad, two Palestinian organizations that advocate the eradication of Israel. While the West is trying to isolate Iran on an international level, Syria is currently its best ally. French President Nicolas Sarkozy repeated last week that he would not talk to his Iranian counterpart Mahmoud Ahmadinejad because of the latter’s wish to wipe Israel off the map. Sarkozy has made it a question of principle.

There is an urgency to prevent Syria from exacerbating tensions in the Middle East. If Damascus chooses to side with moderate countries, Syria will not be longer able to play the role of and arms smuggler and will have to commit to cease its attempts to build nuclear reactors, support Hamas and Hezbollah and stop its mortal intrusions in the Lebanese political arena… We know today that the nuclear reactor destroyed by Israel in September 2007 was a few weeks away from completion…

While it is essential, peace with Syria carries many threats. The Golan, conquered by Israel in 1967 and annexed following a fundamental law voted at the Knesset in 1981, is first and foremost a huge water reservoir in a semi-arid region. It feeds water to the Sea of Galilee that provides 40% of water supplies to Israelis. As for its topography – its heights and plateau – it is said that whoever controls the Golan – Israel or Syria – poses a deadly threat to the other.

Also, Syria remains an authoritarian and military regime. What is the signing of peace treaty worth with a neighbor that resembles so much a dictatorship? Will the Syrian president resist the anti-US pressure of Islamists? Will it give up trying to draw US allies such as Egypt, Jordan and Saudi Arabia to its rebellious axis with Iran?

Before negotiating land for peace, guarantees must be given. And the myth of a return to the 1967 borders to which Syria has laid claim to has neither founded nor justified the various agreements and treaties signed between Israel and its neighbors.

The experience of peace between Israel and Egypt has become a legend because it belongs to legend. The images of Sadat at the Knesset and those of Begin in front of the pyramids not only put an end to a three decade long open conflict between Israel and Egypt, they held a biblical symbolism. When they were slaves, the Hebrews fled the Egypt of Ramses. Free, Israelis waged war and signed peace with the Arab Republic of Egypt.

The signing of peace between Jordan and Israel did not allow the Hashemite Kingdom to recover its sovereignty over East Jerusalem.

And finally, the experience of the Gaza disengagement for the sake of peace with the Palestinians is an obvious failure – both for the cohesiveness of a future Palestinian State and for the security of Israel. Inter-Palestinian violence and the thousands of Qassams that fall on the Negev are the sad symbol of this failure.

The return to the 1967 borders does not mean the return to peace. Quite the opposite. In 1967, tensions and threats existed on a daily basis, and the risk of seeing Israel disappear was real. At that time, foreign artists including French stars were volunteering in the IDF. French composer and singer Serge Gainsbourg wrote “Le sable d’Israël” (The Sand of Israel). The Six Day War brought to light a vulnerability that Israelis could no longer assume. Forty years later, the terms of the contract have not really changed.

And while Israel would settle for the signing of peace with Syria in exchange of the Golan, Syria would still not be satisfied. Did Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Mouallem not declare during his visit to Tehran that possible negotiations with Israel should not “influence the Palestinian issue of the negotiations nor be used to reinforce the blockade on Gaza and continue the Israeli aggression against the Palestinian people?”

The Golan has been under Israeli administration longer than under Syrian control. The Syrian President still makes it a question of “honor and dignity.” If Ehud Olmert pursues negotiations with Syria, may the honor and dignity of Israel bear the names of Gilad Shalit, Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev.

Tonight, we are thinking of the families of the three soldiers abducted by Hamas and Hezbollah, held hostage for 671 days.

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