“David’s Crossing”: Behind the Scenes of the Zionist Regime’s Overreach in Syria

Syria

PNN – The Zionist regime’s aggressive policies in Syria and Iraq are based on a Talmudic plan that has its roots in the shameful history of the Zionist regime’s existence.

According to the report of Pakistan News Network, citing Al Jazeera, the Israeli regime’s attack on southern Syria has continued since the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government late last year, and according to reports from human rights organizations, it has reached about 200 operations, covering approximately 600 square kilometers.

The Talmudic Roots of David’s Passage

Many experts believe that the Israeli invasion of Syria is linked to the regime’s plan for the “David’s Pass,” which is part of the illusory plan for a “Greater Israel.” The pass is named after a Jewish legend about a supposed state that existed during the time of Prophet David. Therefore, this gives David’s Passage Talmudic and military importance and reflects the expansionist views of the Zionist regime in the region.

According to theorists of Talmudic Zionism, this imaginary passage begins in northern Palestine and the Golan Heights, passes through the provinces of Daraa and Sweida, the eastern desert of Homs and Deir Ezzor, and east of the Euphrates on the Syrian border with Turkey and Iraq, and ends in Iraqi Kurdistan.

The David’s Pass plan stems from deep ideological roots in Zionist doctrinal thought and is fed by indicators of the conflict in Syria.

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The Syrian Dialogue Center writes in a report by Dr. Muhammad Salem that the Zionist regime hopes to create a land artery that will allow it to expand geographically to the east, access oil and economic regions, and achieve new strategic depth, providing an opportunity to break its geographical isolation.

He adds that the roots of the idea of ​​this passage are not new and are based on traditional Zionist ambitions. This notion also appears in the writings of Theodor Herzl and other founders of the Zionist movement. The idea of ​​the crossing is linked to the “Environment Plan” presented by Ben-Gurion, the first Prime Minister of the State of Israel. This plan seeks to unite with ethnic and religious minorities to break up the Arab depth and reshape the map of the region.

Geographical challenges of the David Passage project

David’s Passage crosses vast territories deep in Syria and Iraq, which will pose serious challenges for the armies of these countries.

Muhammad Za’al al-Salloum, a researcher of the geography of southern Syria, says that the geography of southern and eastern Syria is rugged, and if the Zionist regime were to take possession of the aforementioned crossing, it would have to pass through numerous provinces whose total area within the crossing is more than 30 times the area of ​​Gaza. Therefore, this is almost impossible.

However, since the fall of the former Syrian government, the Israeli regime has occupied strategic areas such as the Jabal al-Sheikh heights, which allows it to monitor areas as wide as 200 kilometers inside Syria.

Anthropological Challenges of David’s Passage

The residential areas within the hypothetical crossing area include numerous and diverse ethnic and religious communities, while Syrian society generally pursues anti-Israeli policies and has deep-rooted opposition to any Zionist occupation.

Talal Mustafa, a researcher and professor of sociology at Damascus University, said in an interview that the David Pass project in Syria will face numerous and complex demographic problems because the population composition of this environment is diverse and dense.

Talal Mustafa believes that the majority of religious and sectarian components of this region, despite minor differences, do not consider themselves part of a foreign, especially Zionist, plan and reject any convergence with the ideas of this regime.

Although migration, displacement, and the Syrian war have somewhat changed the demographic structure of Syria, these changes have not led to the creation of a population vacuum that could be used to create a crossing.

Mohammed al-Sukri, a researcher on Arab affairs, told Al Jazeera that civil society in southern Syria, with the exception of Sweida, is organized in the form of local communities due to the lack of government support. However, the northwestern regions of Syria have experienced some degree of civil society organization due to the presence of international support.

Political Challenges of David’s Passage

In this regard, an American official and two Israeli officials told the Axios website that the administration of US President Donald Trump is trying to mediate to establish a “humanitarian corridor” between the Israeli regime and the city of Sweida in southern Syria. Analysts believe that this move is nothing more than a prelude to the David Crossing plan. Of course, it is natural that the Golani regime strongly opposes this plan.

Samir Abdullah, a researcher at the Hermon Studies Center, says that creating a crossing of this size and location is a step of a separatist nature, as it connects two areas outside the central control of the Syrian government, which will lead to the fragmentation of the map and deepen the field and political divisions created during the years of conflict.

The Zionists’ inability to create the David Pass

Military expert Abdul Jabbar al-Aqidi told Al Jazeera that the Israeli army, despite its air superiority, cannot create this crossing because it does not have sufficient human capabilities to cover the area, and airstrikes alone cannot lead to a ground occupation.

He believes that even though the current Syrian army does not have many military capabilities, the confrontation in this scenario may turn from a military confrontation to a guerrilla war in a vast and widespread area.

Al-Aqidi concludes by saying that David’s Crossing is currently militarily impossible to create, and the Zionist regime can only continue to fantasize about creating it.

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