Not sure of which years, but on some years they used a Loc Tite that was a stronger bond than the torque needed to remove the bolt. 50/50 chance the bolt would snap before the Loc Tite would give.
Tap on the top of the bolt being careful not to ding the bolt head up too much. Or heat with a flame. I've got a butane torch with a needle flame which is about perfect for this. It doesn't have to be red hot. One technique that has worked out for me is to heat it up, then spray it with WD40 or similar spray lube to shock cool it, repeat. A few cycles of heating and cooling (expansion and contraction) usually does the trick, works great on rear brake lines.
I've got a pretty good touch and haven't snapped one off yet, but have helped many others who screwed the pooch. If you do snap it off all isn't lost, drill into the bolt until you pop through, use a long thin punch to force the rest of the bolt parts/pieces out the other side, the bolt hole goes all the way through, the threads only partway. Replace the bolt with a rolled steel pin, some come that way anyway, not all have locking bolts. Just for insurance I usually spot weld (MIG) the cross pin on both ends. An angle grinder makes short work of a spot weid.