Netanyahu to meet Trump with Golan Heights recognition on tap

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu will meet
with Donald Trump in Washington on Monday amid expectations the US president
will formally recognize the Jewish state's sovereignty over the Golan Heights.
Trump broke with longstanding international
consensus last week over the status of the Golan Heights, which Israel seized
from Syria in the 1967 Six Day War, saying the US should recognize Israeli
sovereignty over the strategic plateau.
Israel's foreign minister said the US president will
go one step further on Monday when he welcomes a grateful Netanyahu -- who is
looking for an electoral boost ahead of April 9 parliamentary polls -- to the
White House.
"President Trump will sign tomorrow in the
presence of PM Netanyahu an order recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the
Golan Heights," Israel Katz tweeted.
Netanyahu has long pushed for such recognition, and
many analysts saw Trump's statement, which came in a tweet on Thursday, as a
campaign gift.
Netanyahu is locked in a tough election fight with a
centrist political alliance headed by former military chief Benny Gantz and
ex-finance minister Yair Lapid.
New opinion polls last week showed Netanyahu losing
ground to his electoral rivals, and the Washington visit was seen as an
opportunity to regain momentum.
The prime minister has a "working meeting"
at the White House on Monday and a dinner on Tuesday.
- Trump's latest pro-Israel move -
Netanyahu is also set to address the annual
conference in Washington of the American Israel Public Affairs Committee
(AIPAC) on Tuesday. Gantz speaks at the high-profile event on Monday.
The Golan Heights decision is the latest major move
in favor of Israel by Trump, who in 2017 recognized the disputed city of
Jerusalem as the country's capital.
Syria and other states in the region condemned
Trump's pledge, saying it violates international law. France said the same.
Israel annexed the Golan Heights in 1981 in a move
never recognized by the international community.
Netanyahu phoned Trump to tell him he had made
"history," and called the gesture a "Purim miracle," a
reference to the Jewish holiday that Israel was celebrating that day.
Although Trump professed no knowledge of the Israeli
politics in play, Netanyahu's relationship with the US president has long been
a central feature of his campaign.
Trump appears on giant campaign billboards in Israel
shaking hands and smiling with Netanyahu, and the premier has shared video of
the US leader calling him "strong" and a "winner."
On the same day as Trump's Golan Heights tweet, US
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo was in Jerusalem, where he joined Netanyahu in a
visit to the historic Western Wall, offering his host a prime pre-election
photo opportunity.
It was the first time such a high-ranking American
official had visited one of the holiest sites in Judaism, located in mainly
Palestinian east Jerusalem, with an Israeli premier.
Trump relies on pro-Israel evangelical Christians as
part of his electoral base and has moved US policy firmly in Israel's favor.