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An atmosphere of instability and crisis

World leaders gather at King Hussein's funeral

By Peter Symonds
10 February 1999

The public funeral of King Hussein of Jordan conducted with great pomp and
ceremony this Monday in the capital of Amman, was an extraordinary, if
rather bizarre, spectacle that has served to underscore the highly
inflammable and contradictory character of political relations throughout
the region, and internationally.

Delegations and representatives of 75 different countries were in
attendance--a greater turnout than for the funeral of either Yitzhak Rabin,
the Israeli prime minister assassinated in 1995, or Anwar Sadat, the
Egyptian President who met a similar fate in 1981. The US delegation
included Bill Clinton as well as three former US presidents--Bush, Carter
and Ford--senior officials and policy advisers. French President Jacques
Chirac, British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Prince Charles were present
as was Russian President Boris Yeltsin who dragged himself from his sick
bed and, against the advice of his doctors, flew to Amman only to leave
before the service.

The funeral brought together bitter enemies in the strangest of political
paradoxes. At the last moment, Syria's President Hafez Assad, who in 1958
had ordered his jet fighters to shoot down Hussein's plane and had set in
motion numerous other assassination attempts, arrived in Amman to head his
country's delegation. For the first time, Assad took part in a public
ceremony alongside a 23-person delegation from Israel, including Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

Top officials from Iraq and Libya, countries still technically at war with
Israel, were present as were representatives from the Islamic
fundamentalist group Hamas. The guests included Hamas leader Khaled Meshal,
who was the target of an assassination attempt in Amman in 1997, and Efraim
Halevy, director of the Israeli intelligence service Mossad, who ordered
the failed attack.

The turnout at the ceremony was only matched by the gushing tributes in the
international media for King Hussein and his family. The TV cameras
focussed attention on the grief displayed by Jordanians in the streets over
the death of the king. Commentators variously portrayed him as a man of the
people, a popular monarch with "the common touch," as the builder of the
modern Jordanian nation and the "greatest peacemaker" in the so-called
Middle East peace process.

What was missing from all accounts was any explanation as to why the dead
monarch should merit a level of attention and glorification at odds with
the actual political and economic significance of Jordan--an artificial
construct of the great power intrigues during and after World War I. It is,
after all, a country the size of the US state of South Carolina, seven
eighths of which is arid desert, with a population of around 5 million, a
GDP of about $US8 billion, lacking in oil or other valuable natural
resources, and hemmed in all sides by larger, more powerful and often
hostile nation states.

The significance of the focus on Hussein and Jordan is two-fold. Firstly,
the leaders were not paying their respects to a representative of the Arab
masses but were mourning the loss of a valuable political asset who for 47
years served as a rather shameless tool for the machinations of the major
powers, including Israel, in the region. The outpouring of praise appeared
to be in direct proportion to the subservience of the Jordanian regime. It
is worth noting that the Israeli leadership, for whom Jordan has become
virtually a client state, declared a day of mourning to mark Hussein's
death and flew its flags at half-mast.

There was also no doubt an element of admiration for an autocrat who had
clung to power so tenaciously for so long, surviving at least 12
assassination attempts and seven coup plots through a mixture of
ruthlessness, cunning and sheer luck. No-one believed when Hussein was
proclaimed king at the age of 16 in 1952 that his reign would last for more
than four decades. Yet with the backing first of Britain, then of the US,
he and his semi-feudal regime were able to continually tack through the
ever-changing and conflicting interests of the Middle East--and survive.

Secondly, the attendance of world leaders is a mark of the great
instability of the times--in Jordan, the neighbouring West Bank and Israel,
throughout the region and internationally. It is ironic that for all the
absurd talk about Hussein as the father of peace and stability within the
region, the growing economic and political crisis in Jordan itself could
turn out to be the spark which ignites the Middle Eastern tinderbox. Just
days before his death Hussein conducted what amounted to a palace coup,
inserting his 37-year-old son Abdullah as his successor in place of his
younger brother Hussan. The new king is a virtual unknown with no political
experience, whose only training is in elite schools and colleges in Britain
and the US and a career in the Jordanian military, specialising
significantly in counter-terrorism.

The palace intrigue simply highlights the narrow stratum on which the
regime rests and the autocratic methods of its rule. Presiding over a
country with more than two thirds of its population Palestinian, many of
them poor workers and farmers, Hussein rested heavily on the support of his
Bedouin army drawn predominantly from his own Hashemite tribe. Throughout
his reign, Hussein ruled as a near absolute monarch with both executive and
legislative powers. From 1957 to 1990, all political parties were banned.
Only the lower house of parliament is subject to any form of elections, the
upper house or Senate being chosen from the royal family and their close
allies. Every aspect of Jordanian life is under the scrutiny of the
monarch's secret police, the Muhabarat. Only last year new press censorship
laws were imposed.

Jordan faces deepening economic woes, growing social polarisation and
political instability. But the same could be said of virtually every
country represented at Hussein's funeral. Across the Jordanian border in
the West Bank and Israel, the much vaunted peace process remains at an
impasse. Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu is facing national elections and
his ruling Likud Party breaking up so rapidly that everyone breathed a sigh
of relief after the country's delegation managed to make it through the
ceremonies without a public brawl.

The region itself is an arena of intense great power rivalry for the
control of its immediate oil reserves and of the routes for potential
pipelines from the Caspian Sea and Central Asian oil reserves. The US,
France, Britain, Germany, and Japan are engaged in a ferocious struggle
with one another and seeking their own separate deals with various sections
of the Arab bourgeoisie. In a period of enormous volatility and shifting
alliances, the funeral of Hussein provided an ideal opportunity for talks
and negotiations, both open and secret. In a certain sense, no-one could
afford not to be present.

A representative of the Arab bourgeoisie


In many ways, Hussein was a typical representative of the venal Arab
bourgeoisie--a thin, privileged layer on which imperialism has relied over
the last 50 years to defend its interests throughout the Middle East. But
in his regime, all the characteristics--duplicity, instability, autocratic
rule and dependence on great power backing--were heightened by the inherent
weakness of the Jordanian state.

Hussein was born in 1935 when the British mandate or protectorate of
Transjordan had been in existence for just 12 years. It was an artificial
creation of British colonial policy, which owed its existence to
substantial financial subsidies from London. The borders of the territory
were not determined by ancient ties or national bonds but were literally
drawn in the sands of the desert in 1923 by the then Colonial Secretary
Winston Churchill, who later boasted of having created Jordan "in an
afternoon".

Its origins lie in the ambitions of Hussein's great grandfather Sharif
Hussein, a leader of the Hashemites, a desert clan based in Hijaz, the site
of the Muslim holy places of Mecca and Medina and now part of Saudi Arabia.
If anything distinguished the Hashemites from other Arab tribes in the
Middle East it was their willingness to sell themselves to the highest
bidder. Britain initially rejected offers by Arab nationalists to conduct a
war against the Ottoman Turkish Empire in return for British recognition of
Arab independence. But in 1915, following the disastrous defeat of the
Allied landings at Gallipolli, Britain sent a letter to the Hashemites
accepting their terms.

As a result, Sharif Hussein together with his sons Abdullah and Feisal
declared in 1916 what became known as the Arab Revolt, made famous by the
popularisation of the exploits of the British agent T.E. Lawrence--better
known as "Lawrence of Arabia". Feisal led the allies into Damascus, the
present Syrian capital, in October 1918, and temporarily established his
own rule.

But the British had no intention of keeping their promises. The Sykes-Picot
agreement, signed in 1916 with the French, partitioned the Ottoman Empire
between the two powers, ceding control of Syria to French imperialism.
Having deceived the Hashemites during the war, Britain then proceeded to
use them as willing servants in its domination of the region. Feisal and
his retinue were shifted to Iraq under British tutelage.

British plans in the region were further complicated by its pledge made
under the Balfour Declaration of 1917 for "a national home for the Jewish
people" in its mandate of Palestine. Fearing the danger of local revolts as
Jewish settlers moved into the territory, the British established
Transjordan with Feisal's elder brother Abdullah as its nominal monarch in
the eastern deserts of Palestine.

Transjordan was to become a virtual prison camp into which Palestinians
were herded and a military bastion against the designs of France within the
area. Britain retained strict control through the establishment of the Arab
Legion, which was drawn from the Hashemite tribe; it was organised, trained
and officered by the British and became the strongest military force within
the region. Even though Jordan was granted formal independence in 1946, its
army remained under the leadership of a British general and officers. In
1948, the Jordanian army defeated the nascent Israeli state, crossing the
Jordan River to take the West Bank and the holy sites in East Jerusalem.

Hussein grew up in the world of colonial and palace intrigue. He was only
15 when his grandfather Abdullah was shot dead in 1951 by a Palestinian
assassin while both were at Jerusalem's al-Aqsa mosque. A little over a
year later, he was made king after his father was ruled unfit for office.
His education had taken place in the prestigious Victoria College in
Alexandria, Egypt, then Harrow grammar school in England, followed by six
months military training at Sandhurst, the British military college.

In his autobiography Uneasy Lies the Head published in 1962, Hussein
recalled that at a young age he recognised his precarious position: "I had
seen enough of Europe even at 17 to know that its playgrounds were filled
with ex-Kings, some of whom lost their thrones because they did not
understand the duties of a monarch... I was not going to become a permanent
member of their swimming parties in the south of France."

Shifting allegiances


In the early 1950s, Hussein faced the rising tide of Arab nationalism to
which he was compelled to accommodate himself. In 1956, he dismissed the
British commander of the Jordanian army, Sir John Bagot Glubb, replaced all
British officers with Jordanians and declared martial law. In the course of
the Suez crisis only months later, Hussein offered to put Jordan's armed
forces at the disposal of Egypt's president Nassar in the confrontation
with Britain and France.

He was constantly forced to manoeuvre with the larger Arab states--Egypt
and Syria in particular--while balancing between the major powers, facing
an increasingly powerful Israel state, and confronting the demands of the
Jordanian masses at home. The insecure nature of the Hashemite monarchs was
underscored in 1958 when King Faisal of Iraq, Hussein's cousin, was
overthrown and killed in a bloody coup. Hussein turned for help to the
British who promptly dispatched troops to Jordan to prop up his regime.

In the aftermath of the Suez crisis, Hussein began to switch his
allegiances from the British to the US. In 1977, it was revealed that he
had been on the payroll of the US Central Intelligence Agency since 1958.
His monthly cheque was supposedly discontinued after the disclosure, but
his close collaboration with the US continued. As early as 1963, Hussein
also began to meet secretly with the Zionist regime in Israel. Even towards
the end of his life, he refused to discuss details of what the Israelis
estimate to be more than 500 hours of talks with Israeli leaders except
Menachem Begin.

In 1967, Hussein joined Egypt and Syria when the Arab states were drawn
into the disastrous Six-Day war with Israel. As a result, Jordan lost the
West Bank and the Old City in Jerusalem as well as its entire airforce and
15,000 troops. Thousands of Palestinians streamed across the Jordan River
into the country's already crowded refugee camps fuelling Palestinian
nationalism and filling the ranks of the P.L.O.

Hussein joined the other Arab states, believing it inevitable that Jordan
would be drawn into the impending conflict. "We couldn't have survived an
Israeli conflict. Our only defence lay in coming together with the others,"
he commented later. After the defeat he rapidly concluded that closer
alliances--with the US and with Israel--were necessary to forestall another
disaster.

To demonstrate his bonafides, he set out to eradicate the operation of
armed Palestinian resistance groups from bases within Jordan, bringing him
into sharper and sharper conflict with the Palestinian masses who formed a
majority of the country's population. The violence culminated in September
1970, known as "Black September" by Palestinians because of the huge death
toll they suffered. Hussein ordered his regular troops, backed by heavy
armour, to launch an all-out assault on the refugee camps under pretext of
suppressing guerrilla operations.

In his book Palestine and the Palestinians, Samih Farsoun described what
took place: "By 1970 the regime succeeded in orchestrating an
anti-guerrilla propaganda campaign and unleashed against them a savage
military attack in September (Black September), which drove them out of the
camps and the city of Amman at a horrendous cost in lives of innocent camp
civilians, estimated in the tens of thousands. In 1971 the mountain-based
Palestinian guerrillas were driven out of the western hills of Jordan; they
took refuge in southwestern Lebanon. After their departure, the Palestinian
camps and other population concentrations in Jordan lived under a police
state until the 1990s, when Jordan instituted some political liberalisation
and some democratic reforms." [page 162]

The Arab bourgeoisie cynically stood by and watched the slaughter. A
halfhearted intervention by the Syrian regime in support of the Palestinian
fighters came to nothing. At any rate, Israel, with the backing of the US,
had put its armed forces on alert and was prepared to intervene on behalf
of Hussein if the Syrian army threatened to tip the balance of forces
against him.

The Black September massacres cemented the closer relations with the US and
Israel. Jordan only had a token military role in the Yom Kippur War with
Israel in 1973 and in fact secretly warned the Zionist state that Egypt and
Syria were about to launch military attacks--warnings that were ignored.

By the 1980s, the Reagan administration increasing turned to Hussein as the
US began to look for a means of establishing a new imperialist arrangement
with the Arab bourgeoisie in the Middle East. In 1988, following the
outbreak of the intifada revolt in the Israeli occupied territories,
Hussein relinquished control of the West Bank and severed most
administrative links with the area.

During the 1990-91 Persian Gulf war, he was compelled by widespread anti-US
demonstrations and protests at home to publicly criticise the military
onslaught by America and its allies on Iraq. But in its aftermath, he
rapidly backed away from his support for Saddam Hussein in order to win
back crucial financial backing from Saudi Arabia and the other Gulf States.
The US administration quickly forgave him and he played a key role on its
behalf at the Palestinian-Israeli talks in Madrid later in 1991.

Hussein backed the Middle East peace process following the Gulf War in the
hope that a deal would open up the region, Jordan included, to substantial
international investment. In 1994, following the signing of the Oslo peace
accord between Israel and the PLO in 1993, Hussein signed his own agreement
with Israel opening up trade relations between the two countries. Last year
he was wheeled out of the Mayo Clinic in Minnesota where he was being
treated for cancer, to help salvage the US-sponsored Wye Plantation talks
between Arafat and Netanyahu to patch up the tottering Oslo accord.

But Hussein's expectations have come to very little. The election of the
Netanyahu government threw the process of political and economic
normalisation into crisis and blocked the flow of investment. Jordan was
further hit by the decision of the US, Saudi Arabia and the Gulf States to
temporarily cut off desperately needed financial support as punishment for
Hussein's support for Iraq in 1990-91. Furthermore the continuing UN
economic sanctions on Iraq have had a devastating impact on what was
Jordan's main market. The country's foreign debt stands at $8 billion, more
than its GDP.

Hussein had initially welcomed the intervention of the International
Monetary Fund as a means of attracting foreign investment. But as the IMF
austerity measures savagely hit living standards, he was confronted with
growing unrest and protests. Annual per capital income has stagnated at
$1,500, below the level of the Palestinian West Bank. Unemployment is 15
percent and climbing, and about 20 percent of the population is living
below the poverty line.

In 1996, demonstrations broke out in southern Jordan against the ending of
price subsidies for wheat and the doubling overnight of the price of bread.
Police armed with tear gas and backed by helicopters moved in to carry out
Hussein's instructions to "hit with an iron fist... anyone who challenges
security and instigates dissent". He suspended the session of parliament in
which less than half of the MPs had voted for the price rises.

Far from being one of peace and stability, Hussein's legacy in Jordan and
throughout the region will be one of social and political upheaval. The
mood in Jordan itself was perhaps summed up by one of the wealthier
onlookers at his funeral: "You hear these figures on the television, like
$300 million [in US aid], but the people won't see any of it. We have
people whose meals are tea and bread. The new King needs to prove he can
make the economy better and, and needs to do it soon."

See Also:
Fifty years since Israel's founding
[29 May 1998]



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