This situation could only be interpreted as an Israeli premeditated war by proxy on the UN presence on the Golan Heights.
"Israel is the most interested in having (UN) peacekeepers evacuated from the occupied Golan so as to be left without international monitoring," Syria's permanent envoy to the UN, Bashar al- Jaafari, told reporters on September 17.
The UNSC seems helpless or uninterested in defending the UNDOF mandate on the Golan against Israeli violations, which risk the collapse of the 1974 ceasefire arrangements.
Syrian Foreign Ministry was on record to condemn these violations as a "declaration of war," asserting that Syria reserves its right to retaliate "at the right moment and the right place." Obviously a regional outbreak is at stake here without the UN presence as a buffer.
Upgrading unanimously Israel's status from a "major non -- NATO ally" to a "major strategic partner" of the United States by the U.S. Congress on December 3 could explain the UNSC inaction.
The undeclared understanding between the Syrian government and the U.S. -- led coalition against the self -- declared "Islamic State" (IS) not to target the latter's forces seems to have left this mission to Israel who could not join the coalition publicly for subjective as well as objective reasons.
The AP on September 18 did not hesitate to announce that the "collapse of UN peacekeeping mission on Golan Heights marks new era on Israel -- Syria front." Aron Heller, the writer of the AP report, quoted the former Israeli military liaison officer with UNDOF, Stephane Cohen, as saying: "Their mandate is just not relevant anymore." Heller concluded that this situation "endangers" the "status quo," which indeed has become a status quo ante.
Israeli strategic gains
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