Israel ordered troops Friday to prepare to remain throughout winter on Mount Hermon — a strategic peak inside a buffer zone that has existed for decades with Syria but which Israeli forces have seized in the wake of the Assad regime’s collapse.
It was the latest sign that Israel may maintain a presence in Syria for a prolonged period, defying international pressure to halt its advances and airstrikes as the world hopes to secure a peaceful transition in the country.
On Friday crowds massed in central squares across Syria to celebrate the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad, urged on by the head of the Islamist group who led the stunning rebel advance.
The U.S. has defended Israel’s actions in Syria. Washington’s latest bid to prevent wider conflict in the Middle East has raised hopes of a cease-fire deal with Hamas, despite local officials in Gaza reporting that dozens were killed in the latest Israeli airstrike on a refugee camp in the Palestinian enclave.
Israel to keep troops on Mt Hermon
Israel has said that its actions in Syria are temporary and defensive, but backlash has grown over what United Nations chief António Guterres on Thursday called “extensive violations of Syria’s sovereignty and territorial integrity” as he urged Israeli forces to withdraw from the buffer zone.
He also expressed concern over hundreds of Israeli strikes on locations across Syria following the toppling of the Assad regime, which Israel has said are aimed at preventing the regime’s arsenal falling into the hands of militants.
“Due to what is happening in Syria, there is a huge security importance to our holding of the Hermon peak and everything must be done to ensure the IDF’s preparations in the area, to allow the troops to stay there in the difficult weather conditions,” Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz said in a statement Friday.
He shared a photo on X that he said showed him with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu overlooking Mount Hermon with binoculars, saying the site had “returned to Israeli control after 51 years.”
“An exciting historical moment,” he wrote.
Netanyahu’s office has said that the collapse of the Assad regime “created a vacuum on Israel’s border and in the buffer zone,” which was established as part of a ceasefire between the countries following the 1973 Arab-Israeli War.
“Israel will not permit jihadi groups to fill that vacuum and threaten Israeli communities on the Golan Heights,” his office said.
Israel occupied and later annexed the Golan Heights after the 1967 Mideast war, a move not recognized by most of the international community.
At over 9,000 feet, Mount Hermon stands as the highest peak in the eastern Mediterranean coast. Israel has drawn swift backlash over its seizure of the area in the past week, with critics accusing the country of exploiting the situation with a land grab.
In Syria, tens of thousands gathered across the country for mass rallies celebrating Assad’s ouster after worshippers gathered for the first Friday prayers since his family’s 50 years of brutal rule was brought to an end.
Abu Mohammad al-Jolani, the leader of the main rebel group that ousted Assad, called on Syrians in a video message to “take to the squares to celebrate the victory.”
But he urged revelers to celebrate without firing bullets or causing a commotion “so that we can then move on to building this country.”