In the corridors of the Israeli government, plans are afoot for two demilitarised buffer zones, similar to those in effect in the Golan Heights. One would be in the north between Israel and southern Lebanon, and the other would be in the south between Israel and northern Gaza.
This ‘Golan Scenario’, which is emerging as a potential strategy in Israel’s two zones of conflict, would fall under the auspices of a United Nations force, comprising international and regional stakeholders intimately invested in conflict resolution. The idea has a historical precedent. In the aftermath of the 1973 October War, Egypt and Israel separated forces, which laid the groundwork for the groundbreaking 1978 Camp David Accords.
Lessons from the Golan
The 1974 disengagement pact, which neutralised the Golan front, gave Syria political stability in this area for decades. Although it fell short of a comprehensive peace, the negotiations showed what diplomacy could achieve.
Those disengagement discussions between Syrian President Hafez al-Assad and Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir were facilitated by the then US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and were among the most intricate negotiations of that era.
Kissinger shuttled between Damascus and Tel Aviv over several weeks. Before each ceasefire proposal and before each Kissinger visit, Israel would escalate its attacks (including in Lebanon). That behaviour has echoes in Israel’s conduct of war today.