Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Tuesday a deal with Syria is possible and he expects Syrian authorities to establish a demilitarised buffer zone from Damascus to Mount Hermon and other areas.
Netanyahu spoke a day after US President Donald Trump, whose administration has been trying to broker a non-aggression pact between the two countries, said it was very important that Israel maintained a "strong and true dialogue" with Damascus.
Syria does not formally recognise Israel, which has occupied more Syrian territory since December 2024. It captured the Syrian Golan Heights in a 1967 war and later annexed it, a move recognised by the United States but not by most other countries.
"What we expect Syria to do is, of course, to establish a demilitarised buffer zone from Damascus to the buffer area, including the approaches to Mount Hermon and the Hermon peak," Netanyahu said while visiting wounded soldiers in central Israel. "We hold these areas in order to ensure the security of Israel’s citizens, and that is what obligates us."
He added: "With goodwill and an understanding of these principles, it is possible to reach an agreement with the Syrians, but we will stand by our principles in any case."
Trump has backed Syria's new leader, Ahmed al-Sharaa, while Israel has voiced wariness over Sharaa's past links to Islamist militancy, but has engaged in efforts to broker a deal.
An Israeli raid in southern Syria on Friday killed 13 Syrians, Syrian state media reported.

Hamas says it will hand over one of two last hostage bodies in Gaza
Egypt calls for immediate move to Gaza peace plan phase two
Hong Kong leader orders independent probe into fire that killed 156
Pope urges crowds in Lebanon to fix troubled country at last overseas event
Witkoff and Kushner arrive in Moscow to meet Putin to discuss end to Ukraine war
