In Syria, farmers paying the price for an Israeli power play

Clinging to the fringe of a sweeping plateau at the southernmost tip of Syria, a cluster of six quiet farming communities has emerged as an unlikely, but hotly contested, geopolitical fault line.

Above the Yarmouk Valley in Daraa province, 25,000 villagers find themselves squeezed between two regional superpowers.

On one side is Israel, whose troops have seized a United Nations-designated demilitarized zone and pushed into a sliver of Syrian territory that includes the villagers’ homes and farms. Its aim is to push forces loyal to Syria’s new Islamist-leaning government far from the borders of the strategic Golan Heights, which Israel occupied in 1967.

Why We Wrote This

With Israel now occupying slivers of additional territory in southeast Syria, simple farming villages find themselves cut off from the rest of their country and struggling to live on a geopolitical fault line between Turkey and Israel.

On the other side is Turkey, which in recent years has adopted an increasingly adversarial stance toward Israel, and which this week signed a security alliance with Syria and Jordan. The prospect of Turkish soldiers operating from Syrian military bases south of Damascus is adding to Israel’s alarm.

Because Israel has stationed troops here, the Syrian army, police, and government-aligned militia cannot enter, leaving villagers cut off from the rest of the country and fending for themselves.

Israeli reconnaissance drones hover overhead. Israeli soldiers regularly stage nighttime raids on people’s homes.

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