Earlier this week, this correspondent visited the Mount Hermon ski resort in the Golan. The parking lots were almost entirely empty; a few families had come to see the snow that had fallen overnight. Amid the fog at the peak of the Hermon, one could barely make out the houses of Al-Hader across the border just a few kilometers away.

The Syrian Druzxe town of Al-Hader, pictured in 2012 (Ofer 249 / Wikipedia)

The Syrian Druzxe town of Al-Hader, pictured in 2012 (Ofer 249 / Wikipedia)

A few months ago, Israeli soldiers stationed in the area could watch with the naked eye the fighting taking place around the town — rebels coming from the town of Mazraat Beit Jinn, to the northeast, and firing on Al-Hader from a ridge overlooking it, while pro-regime forces attempted to ambush them.

On a clear day, the soldiers can still make out the smuggling roads heading northwest from Mazraat Beit Jinn across the border into Lebanon. Those routes are also sometimes used to evacuate wounded opposition fighters, by so-called “donkey ambulance,” up the tortuous inclines to medical treatment in Israel.... Read More: Times of Israel