Netanyahu at side, Trump proclaims Golan Heights belongs to Israel

Netanyahu at side, Trump proclaims Golan Heights belongs to Israel

US President Donald Trump (left) and Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu hold up a Golan Heights proclamation outside the West Wing after a meeting in the White House March 25, 2019, in Washington, DC. Trump on Monday signed the proclamation recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the disputed Golan Heights, a border area seized from Syria in 1967.  AFP

WASHINGTON, United States – With Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu at his side, US President Donald Trump declared Monday that the Golan Heights belongs to Israel — handing another major diplomatic victory to the premier ahead of tight elections.

Netanyahu spared no praise as he watched Trump sign the Golan proclamation at the White House, likening him to President Harry S Truman, who recognized Israel, and even to Cyrus the Great, the Persian king who freed the Jews of Babylon.

“Your decision to recognize Israel’s sovereignty on the Golan Heights is so historic,” Netanyahu told Trump. The Jewish state captured the territory from Syria during the Six-Day War of 1967.

“Your recognition is a twofold act of historic justice. Israel won the Golan Heights in a just war of self-defense, and the Jewish people’s roots in the Golan go back thousands of years,” he said.

Trump — who in 2017 took the even more momentous step of recognizing disputed Jerusalem as Israel’s capital — called the Golan declaration “a long time in the making.”

“It should have taken place many decades ago,” said Trump, who had revealed his intentions on the Golan on Thursday in a Twitter message.

Netanyahu, a wily right-winger who this year would become the longest-serving prime minister in Israeli history, is facing an unexpectedly stiff challenge in April 9 elections from centrist Benny Gantz, who also came to Washington for AIPAC.

Netanyahu was visiting Washington for the conference of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC), the pro-Israel US lobby, but cut his visit short after a rocket fired Monday from the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip hit a house north of Tel Aviv, wounding seven Israelis in an unusually long-range attack.

Just as Netanyahu entered the White House, Israeli warplanes struck targets in Gaza linked to Hamas — which denied carrying out the attack — with the prime minister vowing to respond “forcefully to this wanton aggression.”

International opposition

Trump was isolated in the move, with the United Nations and US allies France and Britain all saying that they still considered the Golan Heights “Israeli-occupied” in line with UN resolutions.

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said that Trump’s declaration “ignores all international procedures” and “could drive a new wave of tensions” in the Middle East.

Syria denounced the “blatant attack” on its sovereignty, while Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu criticized Trump for giving “virtually an election gift” to Netanyahu.

Israel annexed the Golan in 1981 but had won no international support. The territory had long been seen as a comparatively easy problem to resolve, as both Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and the Golan’s 20,000 settlers are largely secular in a region dominated by religious feuds.

But changing the strategic dynamics, Syria has been embroiled for years in a devastating civil war in which Iran has made inroads — to the staunch opposition of Israel, which has vowed to eradicate the clerical regime’s presence.

Shortly before the Golan proclamation, Vice President Mike Pence brought the AIPAC audience to its feet as he hailed Trump as “the greatest friend of the Jewish people and the state of Israel ever to sit in the Oval Office.”

Amid Trump and Netanyahu’s mutual affection and the Israeli leader’s rightward turn, top Democrats seeking the White House have steered clear of AIPAC — an absence that Pence eagerly highlighted.

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, a liberal Democrat whose city is home to 1.2 million Jews, nonetheless spoke at AIPAC, where he acknowledged differences with Netanyahu but won a standing ovation for opposing the movement to boycott Israel over its treatment of the Palestinians.

Gantz touts ‘strength’

Challenger Gantz showed virtually no daylight with Netanyahu on security issues in his AIPAC address.

Citing his mother’s experience as a Holocaust survivor and his son’s service in the military, the former military chief said that “strength and moral power come together.”

“That is why I say from this stage to the Iranian regime — never again. We will not allow you to establish yourself in Syria, we will not allow you to develop nuclear weapons,” he said.

“On my watch, you will not become a regional power and I will not hesitate to use force if and when needed,” he said.

Gantz said that Jerusalem would always be Israel’s “united and eternal capital” and added, without ruling out a Palestinian state in the West Bank, that the Jordan Valley would “always” be Israel’s eastern security border.

But he won loud cheers from the American Jewish audience when he turned to domestic issues, promising more inclusiveness at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, where women are separated from men, and chiding Netanyahu for allying with a party widely condemned as racist. /cbb

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