Israeli settler activists affiliated with Halutzei HaBashan (“Pioneers of Bashan”) stage repeated cross-border actions from the occupied Golan Heights into southern Syria, pushing for Jewish settlements beyond the 1974 ceasefire line. In mid-May, activists chained themselves to the fence near Majdal Shams while at least ten crossed into Syrian territory; the Israeli military says soldiers returned the activists to Israeli territory and transferred them to the police. The movement describes Bashan as part of Israel’s ancestral homeland and links its actions to a broader “Greater Israel” concept with no defined borders. Founded in April 2025 after Israel seized land in southern Syria following the fall of Bashar al-Assad’s government in December 2024, Halutzei HaBashan has grown from a fringe effort into a more coordinated political force, with some ministers and Knesset members publicly supporting it. The outlets report that its ideology includes calls to expel Sunni and Shia residents from the Bashan area. Journalists cited in the reporting say the group aims for long-term permanent settlements and operates through lobbying and digital mobilization. The reports also describe a rapid escalation of incursions from 2025 through May 2026 amid a security vacuum in southern Syria, while noting that direct armed clashes with local residents have not yet broken out.