Muscat Daily

Trump Heights: A symbol of US shift on Mideast policy

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Golan Heights - On a dusty plain in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, a golden-lettered sign with Israeli and American flags stands before a rusty wire fence as the gateway to ‘Trump Heights’.

But this is no luxury hotel or golf course set up by the property developer turned president.

Instead, it is an Israeli settlement, inaugurate­d in June 2019 by Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu as a celebratio­n to mark US President Donald Trump’s recognitio­n of the Golan as Israeli territory.

For residents, it is the most visible legacy Trump has had here.

“There is indeed a big change,” said Haim Rokach, head of the Golan regional council, his eyes sparkling at the mention of the US President’s name.

“Since Trump’s declaratio­n and the decision to build the place, we see a lot of interest from investors.”

The Golan Heights, a strategic military zone, was seized by Israel from Syria in the Six-Day War of 1967.

Trump’s recognitio­n of Golan was the latest in a string of steps away from global consensus, including recognisin­g Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, and giving Netanyahu the green light to build settlement­s deemed illegal under internatio­nal law.

Along with Trump’s backing for normalisat­ion deals between Israel, the UAE and Bahrain - lamented by Palestinia­ns as a ‘stab in the back’ - Trump has changed the dynamics of the dispute between the Jewish state and the Palestinia­ns.

As he battles to stay in the White House for a second term, Trump’s strongly pro-Israel stance has further endeared him to evangelica­l Christians, a powerful voting bloc.

Settlement expansion

While the Trump Heights sign is new, the settlement is not. It was founded in 1991, following the collapse of the Soviet Union when hundreds of thousands of Jewish people emigrated to Israel.

One group of around 15 families carved out a Jewish settlement here, but the associated farming life is tough. Many struggled to make ends meet, and just five families of Israeli settlers remain, many of them elderly.

Naming the settlement after Trump has given Israeli authoritie­s an opportunit­y to revive the community, and 20 Jewish families are due to move to the remote spot by the end of November.

Diggers were recently levelling the land ready for their homes, with the aim of 20 families arriving each year for the next decade, said Shai Toni Yeheskel, from the local Golan council.

“For the first time in almost 30 years they have hope,” Yeheskel said.

“It’s going to become one of the centres of the Golan.”

Living in run-down houses, the ageing residents have steered clear of outsiders who have visited the settlement since it was renamed.

But a group of teenagers live in the community, where they are put through a six-month programme ahead of national service.

“There are some lonely elderly residents here,” said Ayelet Schwab (18) from the settlement of Efrat in the occupied West Bank.

“We help them, to carry things they buy, we talk to them, we check on them.”

Standing beside her, 18 year old Adi Hazan said one of their goals was to have more people move in.

“New people will arrive to build this place, they will bring life to it,” said Hazan, from Porat in central Israel, as the other teenagers painted stones to decorate a campfire site.

Around 25,000 Israeli settlers live in the Golan Heights, along with some 23,000 Druze, who remained on the land after it was seized in 1967. The numbers of settlers are far greater in the occupied West Bank, where around 450,000 Israelis live in settlement­s - alongside over 2.8mn Palestinia­ns.

While settlement-building has been Israeli government policy for decades, their approval slowed when US president Barack Obama was in charge.

Trump reversed this trend. The number of settlement homes approved nearly doubled in the first three years of his presidency, compared to the last three years of Obama’s leadership, Israeli anti-settlement organisati­on Peace Now calculate.

Israel has approved over 12,000 West Bank homes in 2020, a record high for Jewish building in occupied Palestinia­n territory, it says.

“Settlement building really does coincide with Trump,” said Brian Reeves from Peace Now.

With a time gap between approval and constructi­on, Reeves says repercussi­ons will be felt over the next three years - even if Trump is not re-elected in November.

“Trump has done irreparabl­e damage to the entire internatio­nal consensus on... how you can get to peace,” Reeves said.

The Palestinia­ns have cut ties with the Trump administra­tion over its pro-Israeli stance, rejecting a US initiative published in January which included plans for Israel to annex swathes of the West Bank.

In Golan, the US policy shift encouraged investors because the land will remain under Israeli control indefinite­ly.

There may even be an opportunit­y for a luxury hotel.

“We have plenty of hotels in the Golan, but not enough rooms. Especially exclusive rooms,” said the local council’s Yeheskel.

“Hopefully we’ll have many more hotels here in the near future.”

Time will tell if one of those will be a Trump Hotel.

 ?? (AFP) ?? This file photo shows Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) and US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman (left) unveiling the place-name sign for the new settlement of ‘Ramat Trump’ or ‘Trump Heights’ in English, in the Golan Heights on June 16, 2019
(AFP) This file photo shows Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu (right) and US Ambassador to Israel David Friedman (left) unveiling the place-name sign for the new settlement of ‘Ramat Trump’ or ‘Trump Heights’ in English, in the Golan Heights on June 16, 2019

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