RECKLESS ABANDON: CAN EITHER ISRAEL OR THE U.S. AFFORD RABIN’S BID TO ‘BET THE (GOLAN) FARM’?
(Washington, D.C.): In the face of the
palpable failure of his first
peace-making gamble with the PLO, Israeli
Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin is making
the sort of mistake that keeps casinos
around the world profitable: He
is recklessly putting all his chips on an
even wilder bet — a peace treaty with
Syria.
Regrettably, in so doing, Rabin is
playing with loaded dice against one of
the most notorious hustlers on the
international stage. Worse yet, the
“chips” he is now playing fast
and loose with are nothing less
than the future survival of the Jewish
state and — in the hopes of mitigating,
or at least sharing the risk —
the lives of American
“peacekeeping” troops he
apparently wants to install on the Golan
Heights. In fact, without the
prospect of such an ostensible U.S.
safeguard, it seems unlikely that the
majority of Israelis would tolerate any
further risk-taking by the Rabin
government.
Consequently, American Jews
and others committed to the security of
Israel will shortly be asked to support
Prime Minister Rabin’s bid to “bet
the (Golan) farm” in this manner.
They will be told that the deployment of
a U.S. military tripwire there is a
critical ingredient to both the future
defense of Israel and the preservation of
close U.S.-Israeli ties. Unfortunately,
neither of these contentions is likely to
prove true. To the contrary,
enmeshing the United States in a Golan
peacekeeping mission may translate into
immense new vulnerabilities for Israel
and add a highly corrosive element in
this vital bilateral relationship.
Assad — A Man Who Cannot
Be Trusted
A central tenet of the Rabin gamble on
Syria is the proposition that its
despotic ruler, Hafez Assad, is a man of
his word. If he enters into a deal with
Israel, so this reasoning goes, he can be
relied upon to honor his commitments and
he will have the power to ensure that his
constituents do so as well. The Rabin
government seems to believe that a new
land-for-peace deal with a man who
putatively exhibits these qualities is
the only way to recover from the
political costs of having made such a
deal with Yasser Arafat, a man virtually
everyone agrees does not.
In fact, the record of
Israeli-Syrian agreements demonstrates
that Assad is can be as unreliable as
Arafat. Indeed, Syria’s dictator has
repeatedly shown himself willing to
violate his solemn commitments — or to
allow them to be violated by his proxies
— when it suits his purposes.
Consider the following examples:
- Syrian terrorist and military
attacks against Israel increased
after Assad’s Ba’ath Party came
to power in 1963, leading
ultimately to Syria’s involvement
in the 1967 Six Day War in
violation of the 1949 armistice
agreement between the two states. - Major violations by Syria of the
cease-fire and disengagement
agreements occurred after the
1973 Yom Kippur war. Between
October 1973 and May 1974, for
example, Assad’s violations of
the cease fire on the Golan
heights resulted in the deaths of
54 Israeli soldiers and six
civilians killed and 176 soldiers
wounded.(1) - Shortly after the 31 May 1974
cease-fire was replaced by a
disengagement-of-forces accord,
Assad took a number of steps that
deliberately violated the terms
of that agreement. These included
sealing the border and stationing
larger numbers of weapons in a
“reduced forces zone”
on the Golan than were permitted.
Ironically, it fell to
then-Defense Minister Shimon
Peres to reveal the latter
violation.(2) - In the following year, terrorists
crossed the ostensibly
“sealed” Syrian border
to murder Israeli civilians and
Syria beefed up its military
presence and capabilities on the
Golan plateau: For example, it
paved a road on the Mount Hermon
ridge; it declined to relocate
civilians to the abandoned town
of Quenitra in favor of increased
troop deployments there; and it
installed mortars and tanks in
excess of the levels allowed by
the disengagement agreement.(3) - In March 1976, Assad reached an
understanding with Israel
limiting Syrian forces in
Lebanon, then engulfed in civil
war. It included: a ban on the
deployment of Syrian combat
aircraft, naval vessels,
surface-to-air missiles, tanks
and aircraft anywhere within
Lebanese territory; a ceiling of
one Syrian brigade there; and a
complete ban on Syrian troops in
South Lebanon.(4) - In January 1977, Syrian forces
moved south of the
“redline,” retreating
only after Israel threatened
military action. Later that year,
Assad reneged on a commitment to
support the Christian Lebanese
community against the PLO,
encouraging the latter not only
to attack the former but also to
conduct strikes against Israeli
civilians. Such behavior
eventually precipitated Israel’s
“Operation Litani” in
the spring 1978. - From early 1979 until June 1982
when Israel once again was
compelled to strike at terrorists
based in Lebanon, Assad’s forces
repeatedly violated the
“redlines”: Syrian
warplanes began mixing it up with
Israeli fighters over Lebanon;
Syrian helicopter-backed army
units launched devastating
attacks against the Christian
Lebanese community of Zahle;
Syria deployed surface-to-air
missiles in the Bekka Valley and
elsewhere in Lebanon; Syrian
ground and air units also engaged
Israeli forces during the
latters’ 1982 incursion into
Lebanon. - As recently as July and August
1993, Syria violated the
“redline” agreements
when it aided and abetted attacks
against Israeli forces and
civilians by assisting in the
shipment of Iranian Katyusha
rockets to terrorist
organizations based in Lebanon.
Within two months, Syria had
160 tanks and 6,000 troops —
substantially more than a brigade
— in northern Lebanon. Today, it
has an estimated 30,000 troops
there.
Israel Is Not The Only
Victim of Assad’s Duplicity
What is more, Hafez Assad’s
untrustworthiness is not limited to his
dealings with Israel. He has
proven no more faithful to his
commitments to fellow Arabs made
in September 1989 concerning respect for
Lebanese sovereignty and the redeployment
of Syrian forces.(5)
These agreements were reached in Taif,
Saudi Arabia under Arab League
sponsorship and with the active support
of the Bush Administration.
In fact, Syria continues to violate
the obligation freely assumed in those
accords to withdraw its troops from all
but the eastern Bekaa Valley by 22
September 1992. The government of
Hafez Assad has, instead, continued to
refuse to fulfill its commitment to
relinquish physical control over Lebanon.
Even if Hafez Assad has somehow been
transformed from a thoroughly
unscrupulous, devious individual into a
model of integrity and dependability, one
natty problem remains: He is an old man,
reportedly afflicted with cancer. There
are serious doubts about succession
arrangements; there can be no certainty
that the next Syrian despot will chose to
honor this one’s commitments, even if —
against all odds — Assad chooses to do
so.
U.S. Forces on the Golan
Are No Hedge Against Assad’s Cunning
Against this backdrop, it is obvious
why the Israeli people are reacting with
considerable skepticism to the idea of
giving up the Golan in exchange for yet
another set of promises from Hafez Assad.
Even many of those who were willing to
make a leap of faith concerning Rabin’s
September deal with Yasser Arafat —
something increasing numbers of Israelis
have already begun to regret(6)
— are much more cautious about any deal
with Assad’s Syria.
Consequently, the difficulties of
selling an agreement that would return
Golan to effective Syrian control may
lead Rabin to ask that U.S. peacekeeping
troops be deployed there. Little good is
likely to come of such a deployment,
however: Should Hafez Assad
and/or his Iranian allies and their
terrorist cadres decide — once the
strategic high ground of Golan has been
regained — that they have little use for
the peace the Americans are supposed to
“keep,” it is doubtful that a
U.S. human “tripwire” will keep
new blood from being shed there. In
all probability, some of it will be that
of the American forces.
Consider the following, serious
problems with such an American deployment
on the Golan Heights(7):
- Terrorist Attacks Against
U.S. Forces on the Golan:
The Golan Heights exceedingly
limited road system would mean
that U.S. troops operating there
would be at considerable risk of
ambush or violent harassment from
a hostile population — a sort of
Intifada or Somalia on the Golan.
Even though that population would
likely be comprised predominately
of Syrian military personnel and
their dependents (as was the case
prior to the Six Day War),
Damascus can be expected to
disavow any responsibility for
such attacks. - Attacks From Lebanon
Precipitating Israeli Retaliation
There: Should Israel be
compelled once again to respond
to Katyusha rocket strikes or
other terrorism in South Lebanon,
geography dictates that it would
have to use two lines of attack:
the coastline road and the Hula
Valley road at the foot of the
Golan Heights. Mobilization along
the latter could arguably pose a
threat to Syrian forces on the
Golan and be seized upon as a
pretext for Syria to build-up its
armored forces in the vicinity.
An outbreak of hostilities in
areas where U.S. forces are
deployed could easily ensue. - Syrian Threats to Jordan:
In the absence of Israeli control
of the Golan Heights — offering
Israel the inherent capacity for
a swift armored move against
Damascus — Syria may see fit to
threaten Jordan yet again. The
Syrian Black September operation
in 1970 and military pressure on
Jordan a decade later in
connection with Assad’s campaign
against the Muslim Brotherhood
were properly seen as posing an
existential risk to Israel. A
repetition of such aggressive
behavior in the future would
surely be viewed the same way,
possibly precipitating conflict
on the Golan and elsewhere. - Israel Would Be Obliged
to Rely Upon the U.S. for Early
Warning: Today, Israeli
facilities atop the Golan’s Mount
Hermon provide critical early
warning of attack from Syria. The
loss of these assets would
increase Israel’s reliance upon
the United States for such vital
intelligence. Even if such
monitoring stations were not
liquidated altogether and were
instead turned over to American
personnel to operate, this
dependency — which the Gulf War
suggests can be dangerous for
Israel — would grow even as
Israel would be obliged to rely
ever more on preemptive
strategies for its security. - U.S. Peacekeepers Would
Have a Disproportionate Impact on
Israeli and Syrian Options,
Calculations: Short of a
full-fledged U.S.-Israeli mutual
security pact — which, for good
reasons, is not under
consideration by either the
United States or Israel — it is
probable that a deployment of
U.S. forces on the Golan Heights
will have marginal influence on
Syrian decisions to attack
Israel. After all, if Syria
violates a peace treaty with
Israel it will have accepted, and
discounted, the risk of U.S.
displeasure.
Should Israel, on the other
hand, conclude that — by virtue
of its exposed position (akin to
that it was in prior to the 1967
war rather than that it enjoyed
in 1973) — preemption of
threatening Syrian movements is
necessary, the Jewish State is
likely to find the presence of
U.S. troops in the path to be a
much more formidable deterrent
consideration. Not only will
going to war almost certainly
mean ignoring American appeals
for further diplomatic activity,
it will mean endangering U.S.
military resupply and other
support that may be required to
secure victory.
As Mark Langfan notes in his Security
Affairs article:
“The obvious goal of
any peace agreement between
Israel and Syria would be to
create ‘greater stability.’ It
appears that any
Syrian-Israeli ‘peace’
arrangement which requires
U.S. peacekeeping forces to
be placed on the Golan
Heights would in fact be more
‘destabilizing’ than the
current status quo.
Given the high risk to U.S.
troops…U.S. policy-makers
would be well-advised to
thoroughly and slowly work
through future difficulties
on paper before U.S. troops
are risked on the
ground.” (Emphasis
added.)
The Bottom Line
The Center for Security Policy
strongly believes that the dangers
American troops would face were they to
be deployed as human trip-wires on the
Golan Heights have assuredly not been
“worked through” by U.S.
policy-makers. To the contrary, Washington’s
amateurish and ad hoc
decision-making on Bosnia appears the
very model of deliberation and careful
strategic planning compared with that the
Clinton Administration has exhibited to
date in planning for a United States
presence on the Golan.
The Center is gravely concerned that,
in the course of a trip to the Middle
East this week that is expected to focus
on advancing the Israeli-Syrian
“peace process,” Secretary of
State Warren Christopher intends further
to commit the United States to providing
peacekeeping forces for the Golan. Should
he do so — and should that commitment be
reflected in a new Arab-Israeli agreement
— several results are predictable:
- Americans will lose their
lives on the Golan. When
that occurs, U.S.-Israeli
relations will ultimately pay the
price. Inevitably, enemies of
Israel will seize upon such a
development to contend that
American soldiers are being
obliged to die for Israel’s
defense — something successive
Israeli governments have properly
and assiduously resisted. - Israel will be more
vulnerable to attack — not
less — and increasingly
dependent upon the United States
for its security. Sixty
years ago, Winston Churchill
warned against the practice of
weakening one’s friends; it is no
more prudent a policy today than
it was then. The truth of the
matter is that the United States
is ever less able to fulfill
whatever security guarantees it
might make to Israel.
Unfortunately, it must also be
noted that Washington has shown
itself unreliable when asked to
honor past security commitments
to Israel (and, for that matter,
to other allied nations).(8) - Syria is increasingly
capable of exploiting Israel’s
vulnerability and ever less
susceptible to U.S. pressure.
With its ongoing build-up in
conventional arms and weapons of
mass destruction — including a
recent $500 million purchase from
Russia — Syria is eliminating
what remains of the Israeli
military’s “qualitative
edge.” With its drug trade,
strategic relationship with Iran,
growing oil revenues and
counterfeiting of U.S. currency,
moreover, Syria is more and more
insulated from U.S. economic
suasion.
Under such circumstances, an
Israel-Syria “peace agreement”
built upon the return of the Golan
Heights to Hafez Assad and deployment of
U.S. peacekeepers is a formula for
disaster. As a result, it is incumbent
upon those committed to both
American and Israeli security and to
strong relations between the two nations
to refuse to go along with Yitzhak
Rabin’s reckless Syrian gamble.
– 30 –
1. See, Alan
James, “The United Nations on Golan:
Peacekeeping Paradox,” International
Relations, Vol. IX, No. 1, May 1987,
p.66.
2. See the New
York Times, 18 December 1974, p.16.
3. James, op.cit.,
p.74.
4. Yair Evron, War
and Intervention in Lebanon, Johns
Hopkins University Press: Baltimore,
1987, pp. 46-47.
5. In this
connection, see the Center’s Decision
Briefs entitled Will
Lebanon Ever Escape Syrian Imperialism?
Don’t Hold Your Breath!“,
(No. 92-D
122, 2 October 1992) and Syria’s
Terrorism, Hegemony in Lebanon Makes
Mockery of Mideast Peace Process,
(No. 92-D
136, 2 November 1992).
6. According to
today’s New York Times,
“[Israelis’ displeasure], greatly
deepened by a steady stream of violent
attacks against Israelis by Palestinians,
is reflected in Mr. Rabin’s shriveled
ratings in opinion polls, which are the
lowest they have been since he took
office in 1992.”
7. The first three
of these problems have recently been
discussed in a thoughtful article
entitled “U.S. Troops on Golan
‘Quicksand,'” which appeared in the
January-March 1994 edition of Security
Affairs. Its author is Mark Langfan,
a specialist in the implications of
Israel’s geography for her security.
8. For a thorough
accounting of this odious record, see
Irving Moskowitz’s monograph entitled,
“Should America Guarantee Israel’s
Safety?” Americans for a Safe
Israel, 1993.
- Frank Gaffney departs CSP after 36 years - September 27, 2024
- LIVE NOW – Weaponization of US Government Symposium - April 9, 2024
- CSP author of “Big Intel” is American Thought Leaders guest on Epoch TV - February 23, 2024