After U.S. House votes down resolution recognizing Golan Heights as Israeli, legislators lay out plan to boost U.S. support for Israeli sovereignty over the territory • Plan includes future document calling Israeli withdrawal from the Golan “unrealistic.”
Israelis visit the Golan Heights following Israeli strikes on targets in Syria Photo: Eyal Margolin / JINI
An American plan to bring the U.S. closer to recognizing the Golan Heights was laid out for Israeli and American officials in Washington last week.
The six-point plan proposed by a group of American legislators and spearheaded by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas) calls to implement trade agreements between the U.S. and Israel on the Golan Heights and formulate a letter “recognizing the changes that have taken place on the ground,” similar to a document that former President George W. Bush presented to former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon prior to the 2005 disengagement, acknowledging the existence of large Israeli settlement blocs in Judea and Samaria and saying it would be “unrealistic” to expect Israel to fully withdraw.
Last week, another initiative to cement U.S. recognition of the Golan Heights as Israeli territory, put forth by Rep. Ron DeSantis (R-Fla.), was voted down by the House of Representatives.
The current plan includes six plans of action: channeling funds into joint Israeli-American projects on the Golan Heights; expanding U.S.-Israeli agreements, such as the free trade agreement between the two nations, to apply to the Golan Heights and labeling products manufactured or grown on the Golan as “Made in Israel”; formulating a congressional document declaring that Syria will not return to the Israeli Golan Heights; sending congressional delegations to the Golan Heights; and formulating congressional documents that recognize Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights.
The U.S. National Security Council, meanwhile, issued a statement Sunday insisting that “There has been no change to our position on the Golan Heights.”
The final document stating congressional recognition of the Golan as Israeli territory has yet to be worded. One proposal for the wording suggests that it read: “In light of the changes that have taken place on the ground, including Iranian infiltration of Syria and Lebanon, it would be unrealistic to expect Israel to withdraw from the Golan Heights.”
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