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Lion of Jordan

Page 87

by Avi Shlaim

2. Adiba Mango, ‘Jordan on the Road to Peace 1988–1999’ (unpublished D.Phil. thesis, University of Oxford, 2002), 236–7.

  3. Bruce Maddy-Weitzman, ed., Middle East Contemporary Survey. Volume XXII: 1998 (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2001), 362–8.

  4. Interview with Prince El Hassan bin Talal.

  5. Ibid.

  6. Samir A. Mutawi, Jordan in the 1967 War (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987), 19–20.

  7. Maddy-Weitzman, ed., Middle East Contemporary Survey. Volume XXII: 1998, 366.

  8. Interview with Adnan Abu-Odeh.

  9. Philip Robins, A History of Jordan (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003), 196. Queen Noor denied that she influenced her husband to change the succession. Her main mission throughout their time in Mayo was to save her husband, and the situation did not seem hopeless until the very end. She kept hoping that the treatment would work and that he would recover. She is emphatic that she did not discuss the succession with her husband until he was about to tell Abdullah. Whenever relatives raised the issue, she replied it was the will of God and the judgement of Hussein. Whenever Abdul Karim Kabariti referred to the matter, she changed the subject. She had very little contact with General Samih Batikhi, and she certainly did not conspire with him against Hassan. Nor did she lobby for her son Hamzah, who was only eighteen at the time. Once the decision was made, she gave Abdullah all her support. All the rumours surrounding her role in the crisis emanated from Amman, and they were baseless. As for the letter that Hussein sent to Hamzah on his eighteenth birthday, it was written without Noor’s knowledge. When she read the letter in the press, she thought it was unfortunate and pointed out to her husband that it may not be well received by Hassan. She did not push her son forward because there was an incumbent crown prince. Besides, Hussein and Hamzah had an excellent relationship; they were the best of friends. Hussein could talk to Hamzah directly about this or any other matter if he wanted to. Conversation with Queen Noor, Oxford, 12 Nov. 2006.

  10. Interview with Marwan Kasim.

  11. Interview with Princess Basma bint Talal.

  12. Maddy-Weitzman, ed., Middle East Contemporary Survey. Volume XXII: 1998, 365.

  13. Noor, Leap of Faith, 413.

  14. Dennis Ross, The Missing Peace: The Inside Story of the Fight for Middle East Peace (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2004), 448–9.

  15. Ibid., 450.

  16. Noor, Leap of Faith, 415.

  17. Ibid., 416.

  18. Interview with Ihsan Shurdom.

  19. Maddy-Weitzman, ed., Middle East Contemporary Survey, 1998, 381–2.

  20. Noor, Leap of Faith, 416–18.

  21. Randa Habib email to Avi Shlaim, 12 December 2006.

  22. Maddy-Weitzman, ed., Middle East Contemporary Survey. Volume XXII: 1998, 364–6.

  23. Interview with Hussein Majali.

  24. Interview with Christopher Prentice, Oxford, 7 November 2006. Mr Prentice was the British ambassador to Amman, 2002–6.

  25. Interview with King Abdullah bin Hussein.

  26. Noor, Leap of Faith, 419–20.

  27. Interview with Prince El Hassan bin Talal and Princess Sarvath, London, 11 January 2007.

  28. Interview with Hussein Majali.

  29. Interview with King Abdullah bin Hussein.

  30. Noor, Leap of Faith, 420–21.

  31. Ibid., 420.

  32. Interview with Adnan Abu-Odeh.

  33. Noor, Leap of Faith, 424.

  34. CNN transcript of 20 January 1999 interview with His Majesty King Hussein conducted by CNN Chief International Correspondent Christiane Amanpour in Amman. King Hussein’s interviews and press conferences, www.kinghussein.gov.jo.

  35. Prince Hassan to King Hussein, 21 January 1999, reproduced in Journal of Palestine Studies, 28:3 (Spring 1999).

  36. Twelve-page letter from El Hassan bin Talal to HM King Hussein, Amman, 28 January 1999.I am grateful to Prince Hassan for placing a copy of this letter, in its original Arabic and in its English version, at my disposal. Prince Hassan expected this letter to be published because it was a reply to the king’s letter of 25 January 1999, which was released to the media immediately. But the king’s aides did not release the reply. General Samir Batikhi instructed Prince Hassan not to make any statements to the media following his dismissal. The lengths to which General Batikhi went to silence and neutralize Hassan suggest that he was afraid that Hassan might mount a counter-coup.

  37. Interview with Prince El Hassan bin Talal.

  38. Interviews with Hussein Majali and Fayez Tarawneh.

  39. Interview with King Abdullah bin Hussein.

  40. Noor, Leap of Faith, 426.

  41. Interview with Prince Talal bin Muhammad.

  42. Noor, Leap of Faith, 427.

  43. Interview with Hussein Majali.

  44. King Hussein to Prince Hassan, 25 January 1999, text reproduced in Journal of Palestine Studies, 28:3 (Spring 1999).

  45. El Hassan bin Talal to King Hussein, Amman, 28 January 1999. See Note 36.

  46. Interview with Marwan Kasim.

  47. Interview with Prince Talal bin Muhammad.

  48. Ibid.

  49. Interview with Hussein Majali. At St John’s Eye Hospital in Jerusalem there is a photograph of King Hussein taken in 1961 signing a piece of paper that declared that on his death his eyes were to be removed and used to give sight to someone. He was the first person ever to issue such an instruction at the hospital, but for medical reasons when he died his eyes could not be used. I am grateful to Jill, Duchess of Hamilton, for this piece of information.

  50. Noor, Leap of Faith, 431–2.

  Jordanian Secret Meetings

  with Israeli Officials

  Date

  Place

  Participants

  24.9.1963

  London

  King Hussein, Dr Yaacov Herzog

  2.5.1964

  London

  Hussein, Herzog

  19.12.1964

  London

  Hussein, Herzog

  19.9.1965

  Paris

  Hussein, Golda Meir

  2.7.1967

  London

  Hussein, Herzog

  19.11.1967

  London

  Hussein, Herzog

  20.11.1967

  London

  Hussein, Herzog

  3.5.1968

  London

  Hussein, Zaid Rifa’i, Abba Eban, Herzog

  5.5.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  6.5.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  19.6.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  20.6.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  22.8.1968

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Herzog

  24.8.1968

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Herzog

  27.9.1968

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Yigal Allon, Eban, Herzog

  29.9.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  16.10.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Gen. Amer Khammash, Gen. Chaim Bar-Lev, Herzog

  18.10.1968

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Khammash, Bar-Lev, Herzog

  19.11.1968

  Aqaba Bay

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Sharif Nasser bin Jamil, Allon, Eban, Herzog

  19.12.1968

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  26.1.1969

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  28.1.1969

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Herzog

  20.2.1969

  Aqaba Bay

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Allon, Eban, Herzog

  23.4.1969

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  25.4.1969

  London

 
Hussein, Rifa’i, Herzog

  27.4.1969

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  25.5.1969

  Coral Island

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Eban, Allon, Herzog

  26.7.1969

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  17.9.1969

  London

  Rifa’i, Herzog

  28.9.1969

  London

  Rifa’i, Sharif Nasser, Bar-Lev, Herzog

  3.10.70

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Allon, Herzog

  21.3.1972

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Meir

  29.6.1972

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Meir, Moshe Dayan

  19.11.1972

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Meir, Dayan

  9.5.1973

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Meir

  6.8.1973

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Meir

  25.9.1973

  Tel Aviv

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Meir, Mordechai Gazit

  26.1.1974

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Meir, Dayan, Gazit

  7.3.1974

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Meir, Dayan, Gazit

  28.8.1974

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Itzhak Rabin, Allon, Shimon Peres, Gazit

  19.10.1974

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Rabin, Allon, Peres

  28.5.1975

  Wadi Araba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Rabin, Allon, Peres

  March 1977

  Tel Aviv

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Rabin, Allon, Peres

  22.8.1977

  London

  Hussein, Dayan

  19.7.1985

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Peres

  5.10.1985

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Peres, Yossi Beilin

  March 1986

  Strasbourg

  Hussein, Rabin

  July 1986

  Aqaba

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Rabin, Peres, Gen. Moshe Levy

  11.4.1987

  London

  Hussein, Rifa’i, Peres, Beilin, Efraim Halevy, Nahum Admoni

  18.7.1987

  Sussex

  Hussein, Itzhak Shamir, Elyakim Rubinstein, Yossi Ben-Aharon, Halevy, Brig. Azriel Nevo

  4–5.1.1991

  Ascot

  Hussein, Sharif Zaid bin Shaker, Adnan Abu-Odeh, Brig. Ali Shukri, Shamir, Rubinstein, Ben-Aharon, Major-General Ehud Barak

  26.9.1993

  Aqaba

  Hussein, Prince Hassan, Shaker, Shukri, Rabin, Rubinstein, Eitan Haber, Halevy

  2.11.1993

  Amman

  Hussein, Hassan, Abdul Salam Majali, Peres, Avi Gil, Halevy

  19.5.1994

  London

  Hussein, Hassan, Rabin, Rubinstein, Halevy

  25.7.1994

  Washington

  Hussein, Majali, Rabin, Peres, Itamer Rabinovich

  The Hashemite Dynasty

  Chronology

  14 Nov. 1935

  Hussein bin Talal born in Amman.

  22 Mar. 1946

  Anglo-Jordanian treaty signed, granting Transjordan independence.

  15 May 1946

  Amirate of Transjordan renamed the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan.

  29 Nov. 1947

  UN resolution for the partition of Palestine.

  15 Mar. 1948

  Anglo-Jordanian treaty of alliance signed.

  14 May 1948

  Proclamation of the State of Israel.

  15 May 1948–7 Jan. 1949

  First Arab–Israeli War.

  1 Dec. 1948

  Palestinian Congress in Jericho votes for the absorption of the West Bank into Jordan.

  3 Apr. 1949

  Jordanian–Israeli armistice agreement signed.

  24 Apr. 1950

  Parliament approves unification of East and West banks.

  20 July 1951

  King Abdullah I assassinated in Jerusalem.

  6 Sept. 1951

  King Talal’s formal accession to the throne.

  9 Sept. 1951

  Hussein bin Talal named crown prince.

  1 Jan. 1952

  New Jordanian constitution promulgated.

  23 July 1952

  Free Officers’ Revolution in Egypt.

  11 Aug. 1952

  King Talal abdicates; Hussein bin Talal proclaimed king.

  2 May 1953

  King Hussein’s formal accession to the throne.

  14–15 Oct. 1953

  The Qibya raid.

  24 Feb. 1955

  Iraq and Turkey sign the Baghdad Pact.

  5 Apr. 1955

  Britain joins the Baghdad Pact.

  16 Apr. 1955

  King Hussein marries Princess Dina (Dina Abdul Hamid).

  27 Sept. 1955

  Nasser announces the ‘Czech’ arms deal.

  20 Oct. 1955

  Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia sign defence pact.

  15 Dec. 1955

  Jordan prepares to join the Baghdad Pact.

  16–19 Dec. 1955

  Anti-Baghdad Pact riots in Jordan.

  7–9 Jan. 1956

  Second wave of anti-Baghdad Pact riots.

  1 Mar. 1956

  King Hussein dismisses Glubb Pasha.

  12 Mar. 1956

  Egypt, Syria and Saudi Arabia offer to replace the British subsidy.

  24 May 1956

  Ali Abu Nuwar appointed chief of staff.

  26 July 1956

  Egypt nationalizes the Suez Canal Company.

  10 Oct. 1956

  IDF raid on Qalqilyah.

  21 Oct. 1956

  National Socialist Party wins election to the lower house.

  22–4 Oct. 1956

  Protocol of Sèvres.

  24 Oct. 1956

  Defence pact signed by Jordan, Egypt and Syria.

  27 Oct. 1956

  Suleiman Nabulsi appointed prime minister.

  29 Oct.–7 Nov. 1956

  The Suez War.

  5 Jan. 1957

  The Suez War.

  19 Jan. 1957

  Anti-communist Eisenhower Doctrine proclaimed.

  13 Mar. 1957

  King Hussein signs Arab solidarity agreement.

  8 Apr. 1957

  Anglo-Jordanian treaty abrogated.

  10 Apr. 1957

  First Armoured Car Regiment surrounds Amman.

  13 Apr. 1957

  King Hussein dismisses Prime Minister Nabulsi.

  22 Apr. 1957

  Ali Abu Nuwar’s coup and Hussein’s counter-coup.

  23 Apr. 1957

  A National Congress of left-wing parties is held in Nablus.

  24 Apr. 1957

  Demonstrations against the Eisenhower Doctrine and the government of Fakhri al-Khalidi.

  25 Apr. 1957

  Washington offers Jordan financial help under the Eisenhower Doctrine.

  29 Apr. 1957

  Ibrahim Hashem forms new government, martial law imposed and political parties banned.

  24 June 1957

  US approves an annual grant to Jordan of $10 million.

  1 Feb. 1958

  King Hussein divorces Princess Dina.

  14 Feb. 1958

  Syria and Egypt merge to form the United Arab Republic (UAR).

  14 July 1958

  Arab Union is formed by a merger of Jordan and Iraq.

  16 July 1958

  Revolution in Iraq and assassination of royal family.

  17 July 1958

  King Hussein requests military assistance from Britain and America.

  29 Oct. 1958

  British troops arrive in Jordan for ‘Operation Fortitude’.

  Mar. 1959

  British troops are withdrawn f
rom Jordan.

  5 May 1959

  King Hussein’s visit to Washington.

  17 May 1959

  Hazza’ al-Majali succeeds Samir Rifa’i as prime minister.

  29 Aug. 1960

  Arrest and conviction of General Sadiq al-Shar’a.

  25 May 1961

  Prime Minister Hazza’ al-Majali assassinated in Amman.

  28 Sept. 1961

  Hussein marries Princess Muna (Antoinette Gardiner).

  28 Jan. 1962

  Syrian coup leads to dissolution of UAR.

  30 Jan. 1962

  Wasfi al-Tall forms his first government.

  2 July 1962

  Birth of Crown Prince Abdullah.

  Sept. 1962

  Wasfi al-Tall presents his White Paper on Palestine.

  8 Feb. 1963

  Outbreak of war in Yemen.

  8 Mar. 1963

  Ba’thist coup in Iraq Ba’thist coup in Syria.

  17 Apr. 1963

  New United Arab Republic proclaimed by Egypt, Syria and Iraq. Pro-Arab unity demonstrations in Jordan.

  21 Aug. 1963

  Establishment of diplomatic relations between Jordan and the Soviet Union.

 

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