Urging international community to recognise Israel's claim on territory, Netanyahu tells Kerry that it is doubtful Syria can return to what it was. | |||||
JERUSALEM
- Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed Sunday that the
Israeli-annexed Golan Heights would "forever" remain in his country's
hands as his cabinet held its first meeting in the territory.
"The
Golan Heights will remain in the hands of Israel forever," Netanyahu
said at the start of the cabinet meeting, in comments broadcast on
public radio.
"Israel will never withdraw from the Golan Heights."
Israeli
media have reported that Netanyahu planned the cabinet meeting as a
statement amid fears Israel could come under pressure to return the
Golan -- which it seized from Syria in 1967 -- as part of a future peace
deal for its war-torn neighbour.
Haaretz newspaper
quoted officials from Netanyahu's office as saying Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad had demanded as part of peace talks that the Golan "be
considered occupied territory that must be returned to Syria".
Urging
the international community to recognise Israel's claim on the
territory, Netanyahu said he told US Secretary of State John Kerry on
Saturday night that it was doubtful Syria can return to what it was.
The premier also plans to meet President Vladimir Putin in Russia, a key backer of Assad, on Thursday.
"The time has come for the international community to recognise reality, especially two basic facts," Netanyahu said.
"One,
whatever is beyond the border, the boundary itself will not change.
Two, after 50 years, the time has come for the international community
to finally recognise that the Golan Heights will remain under Israel's
sovereignty permanently."
Israel fears the Lebanese
Shiite militia Hezbollah could establish a front against it along the
Syrian border and that militants linked to Al-Qaeda and the Islamic
State group could also pose a threat.
It is also concerned about the presence of its arch-enemy Iran in Syria, with Tehran supporting the Assad regime.
Israel
seized 1,200 square kilometres (460 square miles) of the Golan Heights
from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967 and later annexed it in a move
never recognised by the international community.
Netanyahu's
comments come amid a fragile ceasefire in Syria and indirect
negotiations in Switzerland between Assad's regime and the opposition.
Brokered
by Russia and the United States, the ceasefire deal does not include
the fight against ISIS or Al-Qaeda's affiliate in Syria.
The
truce had largely held across parts of Syria since late February,
despite frequent accusations both sides were committing breaches.
But
recent violence around Aleppo has sparked concerns the ceasefire may
not last, partly because rebels are involved in the battles there too.
Netanyahu
said he told Kerry "we will not oppose a diplomatic settlement in
Syria, on condition that it not come at the expense of the security of
the state of Israel."
This meant "that at the end of the day, the forces of Iran, Hezbollah and (ISIS) will be removed from Syrian soil," he said.
More
than 270,000 people have died since Syria's conflict broke out in 2011,
and millions more have been forced to flee their homes.
Israel
has sought to avoid being dragged into the conflict, though Netanyahu
publicly acknowledged for the first time last week that it had attacked
dozens of convoys transporting weapons in Syria destined for Hezbollah.
"We
act when we have to act, including here, on the other side of the
frontier, with dozens of strikes aimed at preventing Hezbollah from
obtaining weapons that could alter the balance of power," Netanyahu said
while visiting troops in the Golan.
In the summer of
2006, Israel and Hezbollah fought a devastating war in Lebanon that
killed nearly 1,200 Lebanese, mostly civilians, and about 160 Israelis,
mostly troops.
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blog archive
Monday 18 April 2016
Israel vows to never return Golan Heights to Syria
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Middle-East-Online
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