ISRAEL: FIGHTING TERROR WITH TERROR

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CIA-RDP80-01601R000600090001-9
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RIPPUB
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K
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25
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November 16, 2016
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April 4, 2000
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1
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Publication Date: 
October 15, 1972
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NSPR
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Approved For Release 20130/0M 6 1 1K%RDPW & ~'16v'I RO 77" ? i7 0 ( `h 4 , .,ij ` . if 114 ~ ~ t; 7 ,I y Raphael 151thsteht 'e-au thor of the book. "Fedayecn: Guerrillas Against Israel," Rothstchi re- -catIy revisited Israel. SRAEL has been in an angry, vengeful mood since the guerrilla attack on its athletes at Munich last month. The hawks in the Cabinet- Premier Golda Mein, Itefense Minister Moshe Da;;an, Transsport. Minister Sln- mon Peres, Police 'Minister Shlonto Hillel and Minister E'ithouI Portfolio Israel Galili-now have the upper ]rand over the more dovish element, which includes Foreign Minister Abba Eban, Deputy Premier Yigal Allen and Finance Minister Pinhas Sapir. At present, Israeli leaders stress their determination to strike at the guerrillas in all possible ''legal' mays, such as reprisal raids against. fedayeen bases in Lebanon and Jordan. But within Israeli intelligence and military circles, plans are being made for selec- tive counterterror reprisals, both in Arab countries and in Eurrope, In the more than two decades of the Arab-Israel conflict, both sides have honored a kind of gentiemen's agree- ment not to go after each other's lead- ers. Thus, the Egyptians never tried to kill Premier Ben-Gurion and Israel rc trained from attempts on President., grasser's Iife. But the fedayeen have never abided by any kind oI unspoken agreement with Israel. The Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine mce even tried to assassinate Fen-Gur- ion in Sweden. Now the fcda'Vicen lead- !rs are particularly vulnerable to Is- raeli reprisals, The Popular Front tpoheinan, poet and novelist Ghasan Khanafani, was killed by a booby trap rigged to his car shortly after boasting :hat the Front was responsible for the Lydda airport massacre of May 30. his successor was blinded by an exploding 2ackage. Other fedayeett leaders, in- ;luding Yasir Arafat, have been tar- pts in the past. Informed Israeli sources say, how- ever, that these past attempts were esultory. Now the best minds of the 14osad (the Israeli central intelligence thence), the Shin Bet (the agency re- iponsible for internal security, equiva- .ent to the FBI), and army intelligence re considering how best to destroy the fedayeen leadership, High on the assassination list. of the 4losad is Salah halal, 31 known other- wise by the I,Om de guerre Abu Ayad, me basis for specific missions. Sharing a priority plq,,ee on Israeli intelligence's tat are two other Black September commanders, At Salame, the son of Hassan Salame, an Arab gang leader and Nazi sympathizer dur- ing the British Mandate in Palestine, and Razi ci Iu:,-cini, son of Ahdul Khadcr, an Aral, fighter who died in the 1948 war with Israel. The, War 5 covet to Europe LTI-IOUGFI BEIRUT is the center of Fatah and its affiliate, Black September, marry fedayeen operatives are active in Europe, where Arab em- bassies provide sanctuary and diplo- matic passports. An official at the Yemen embassy in Geneva, Daoud Darakat, is believed to have given Black September cover during the Munich operation, and some terrorists now being sought by Dutch and Belgian police are thought to be hid- ing in various Arab embassies in Eu- rope. One of the questions now being dis- cussed by Israeli intelligence and mil: tary leaders is whether or not to attack Arab embassies abroad that have aided fedayeen. The debate revolves on whether the attacks Should be massive or selective. The prevailing, view re- portedly is that counterterror must be selective and precise, striking only at the guilty and avoiding injury to the innocent. Whatever is clone, of course, Israel will not take public responsibil- ity. The recent: bombing; of a Palestine Liberation Organization library and bookstore in Paris was carried out by a group calling itself the "11lassada Ac- tion and Defense Movement" after the shrine in Israel that commemorates the Jewish zealots who fought to the last man against the Romans. The group is linked to the Front Etudiants Juif, which in turn is part of an inter- national Jewish strident activist organi- zahon. In the New York area, a 7G-member Jewish Student Front is conducting surveillance and espionage among sum poked Fatah sympathizers and pro-fe- dayeen radical circles. Arab consulates and United Nations missions have been warned that any acts of terrorism by the Palestinians will be avenged, and a reliable informant says the Jew- ish Student Front maintains a training camp and arsenal near New York. Israeli authorities are concerned But for Fatah, Black Seiitemher, the Popular Front and a dozen other groups in the fedayeen kaleido- scope, Europe is the preferred zone of operation. It is out of range of Israeli artillery and jets and the Israelis cannot necessarily control distant vigilante groups. The fadaycen, a; outlaws, are bound by no legal or dip- lonlatic convention. Israel is stressi'lg these Points to European authorities in its efforts to win understanding for its new policy of acting directly in Europe instead of relying on defensive intela- gence-gathering and local police ac- hion. Israel has often been disap- pointed by the inability or refusal of local police to act on tips. A recent: example occurred v;hen Israeli agents gave Italian police ilia names of Pales- tinian terrorists active in Rome-with no result. Days later the saute terror- ists arranged for two English girls to smiiggle an explosive device aboard an EI Al plane. Inevitably, Israeli-sponsored terror- ism v;ill lead to political repercussions, but despite this Israel will make every effort to act selectively to keep the fc- dayeen frightened and on the run. "The idea," one Israeli analyst said, "is to make Europe uncomfortable for the fedayeen, to end their feeling of sanc- tuary there." Ianielligeaiee Groupir_ngt SIIAELI INTELLIGENCE has -divid- I r L cd Europe into three groupings. The first consists of Germany, Italy and Au?- tria, nations where there are large con- ceutra.tions of Palestinians. West C;cr- many alone has 1000 to 4,000 Palestinian students and residents among almost 50,0(10 Arabs, and Fatah is believed to maintain two cells there. These three countries are considered likely locales of future fedayeen activities because they have already operated there and have the necessary apparatus and cover for clandestine missions. Israeli counterterror activity in these nations is expected to be considerable in the months ahead, A second group of nations Includes Denmark, England and Belgium, toler- ant countries that Palestinian terror- ists use as transfer point. and where propaganda and recruitment are car- ried on fairly openly. e is chief of Fatah intelligence and is o iiouana ana Sweden are part. of a ON } , 1 'lily f a r grab ac )chewed IoA %provedrFrriR asgi ,Q (' j1 :1~C`1~j n t P8Qt?016C~1?R000600090i?O11a are very novini; spirit behind Black September, lance groups like the Jewish Defense much on the alert to Palestinian ter- vhich is largely a loose collection of League, and are determined to di,-.cour- rorisrn, especially since the Croatian DAILY roa STATINTL Approved For Release 2000/05/151:8C-80-01 601 R000 V 09 Egyptians say Hussein plan a CIA plot dan's King Hussein for a semi-autonomous Palestinian state as1a plot of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency, which played a principal role in the contacts between Hussein and the Israelis. They noted that in her speech rejecting the plan, Israeli Prime Minister Golda Meir acted as a mother scolding her son, but giving Hussein a cue to come up with a more acceptable version. Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601R000600090001--9 JIHIIN IL Approved For Release 26N 6 k 4I-RDP80-01 601 R (JORDANIAN DENIES UNILATERAL MOVE Aide Says Hussein Seeks No Accord With Israel Special to The New York Times BEIRUT, March 17-Foreign Minister Abdullah Salah of Jordan denied today that King Hussein was seeking a unilat-1 eral peace settlement with Israel. In an interview published in the pro-Amman newspaper Al Jarida here, Mr. Salah said that "certain Arab quarters want to see Jordan take this step because they themselves want such a settlement." He did not identify the quar- ters, but it was clear that he was alluding to Egypt, whose President, Anwar el-Sadat, sup- ports an interim settlement with Israel involving the re- opening of the Suez Canal. Egypt and her partners in the Federation of Arab Repub- lics, Syria and Libya, have not yet taken a formal stand on the plan that King Hussein pro- posed Wednesday for reorgan- :zing his kingdom to include the East Bank and the Israeli- occupied West Bank- of the Jordan River in a federation. Rejected by Guerrillas Reports from Damascus, Syria, today said that the three Governments, which had said they wanted to consult with the Palestine Liberation Organiza- tion - the over-all guerilla group - would issue a joint statement within 48 hours. A guerrilla leader, in an ar- ticle in a newspaper here, said that the commandos had al- ready said no to King Hussein and asked, "What stand will the' Arab states take now?" The leader, Shafik al-Hout, head of the Palestine Libera- tion Organization office here, was referring to the statement Issued last night by the organ- ization's 13-man- Executive committee rejecting the King's plan "categorically and conclu- sively" and declaring that the Palestinians alone had the right to determine their own destiny. A bulletin circulated here by the extreme leftist guerrilla group, the Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Pal- estine, said that the Palestine Liberation Organization had decided to call for an Arab summit conference to discuss adoption of a uniform stand against Hussein's proposals. The guerrilla leader Yasir Arafat arrived in Baghdad to- day for talks with the Iraqi Government, which proposed a union with Egypt and Syria to foil the Hussein plan. 'A Minefield,' Heykal Say CAIRO, March 17 (UPI)- Mohammed Hassanein Heykal; editor of the semiofficial daily Al Ahrain and a confidant of President Sadat, today termed King Hussein's proposal "a minefield from beginning to end." He said in his weekly article, "Behind this plan is the Amer- ican Central Intelligence Agen- cy, which played a principal role in the contacts between Hussein and the Israelis and the American State Depart- ment." Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000600090001,-9 OAKLAND, CAL. TRIBUtrov"fir Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 E - 225,03$ 534 S o 251, --~~: uraeli-Jurdanian Ta. lks Reported ~ a . ? BY RAYMOND LAWRENCE I For more than two years beer Moslem holy, places. Is- that the Hashemite kingdom rael has repeatedly declared will never again join another there have been persistent re- it ?' Familiar Refrain twice attempted showdowns with the guerrillas. Both times he lost. Jordan's troubles also threatened to Last week made it three defeats in a e engulf Lebanon. In Beirut, guerrillas row. Yasser Arafat, who heads the Al- gathered in front of the Jordanian em- Fatah guerrillas and last week was 41 . , bassy to demonstrate against Hussein. named commander in chief of the twelve They ultimately became so agitated that major guerrilla organizations, new mto they burned down the building. Though Amman from Cairo to arrange a truce. directed against Jordan, the demonstra- In an all-night session at the palace, he dire was probably a message to the Leb- tion and Hussein hammered out a ten-point anese government as well. This week pact, mostly favorable to the fedayeen. Beirut is scheduled to begin enforcing In a major concession, the King a tough new decree forbidding guerrillas agreed to accept the. "resignation" of to fire across the border into Israel, his uncle, Major General Sherif Nasser Ben Jamil, as commander in chief of Jor- HABASH AT INTERCONTINENTAL HOTEL plant mines along the frontier or carry in populated areas. Such decrees dan's army. The fedayeen and many "We have the right to do anything." arms have been issued before to discipline other Jordanians despise the obese She- riff Nasser, who became rich enough want Amman to become the Hanoi of the fedayeen and avoid Israeli retali- from smuggling guns and hashish to the Arabs, but we do not want it to be- ation,,but they have the always been quick- build a .$900,000 palace for himself come another Saigon." ly ignored. Leba army, and his young second wife. Mainly, how- After Arafat and the King reached embarrassed by continuing Israeli pa- ever, the fedayeen feared that Sherif their agreement, the battle flared up trols inside Lebanon, has orders to make Nasser was using his relationship and ac- again, then finally faded. At the Jordan the decree stick. cess to the King's ear to provoke a show- Intercontinental, sleepy hostages were Whether it can do so is doubtful. down with them. They were almost sure- roused from bed and assembled to meet "There's no question that we could crush ly right. Sherif Nasser apparently feared P.F.L.P. Leader Habash. "We believe the commandos," said a senior Lebanese that the guerrillas were rapidly growing that we had thetright ssureuon the Jor the who ecpr blem. Any'movetwe'make e u t h p o p ues strong enough to topple Hussein, and your v rnment and on the Amer- against them brings 300,000 Palestinian e d am an go he proposed that they be stopped. To- f their camps and down gether he and Hussein started visiting icans," he told them. "I must be frank refugees out o cope them army camps two months ago to re- and tell you that we were near toineex- on our necks. d and we cannot Most w with them and inforce loyalty to the King and to Jor- ecuting our plan. We were a em dan. On a visit to the Saiqa regiment, to blow up the hotels. You must try to with the commandos." That was be- the in resented 'each soldier with a understand why..we did iCOor~ ears, coming a sadly familiar arefrain in the boA0I coed For. Release 2004 5b!eVW-Rtn -fffttROU696 6 0~1-9 AMMAN; June 17-King Llke a li11nefield Hussein in his first public ap- I Am Useful,' STATINTL Won't Abdicate ,. pearance since last week's cri- The king said last week's sis that rocked Jordan, ruled fighting and the atmosphere It out the possibility today that created was like "moving through a minefield. he would abdicate "as long as ? Tits V"a1vG,.CUN Post Approved For Release 2000/05/15 1(8IeUNL7 O0-01601 R00 Hussein Says I am useful to my people." I We are Sul a that what hap- Describing the clashes be- polled here was not n mere al.- tween the Jordanian army and eldent, though we are unable Palestinian guerrillas as his to' determine at this point most serious crisis in his 17' what was Intended here." years as Jordan's monarch, The king did not Identify Hussein said: who or what group he had in "I'm not the type of person mind, but left the Impression who can quit. This nation is, hh was referring to some of t f i P l i part of me. I am part of it, and so is my family. I am always fighting its bat ties and I'll do so to the end." The fighting, which brought the army to brink of mutiny and the guerrillas to the point of forcing an armed showdown with the king, claimed about 1,000 casualties. No More Phantoms e e t-w ng a estin an guer- rilla groups. Through, most of the press conference, which was divided into Arabic and English ses- sions, Hussein spoke in low, somber tones. He was wearing a khaki uniform with open neck and the sleeves turned up in neat folds above his el- bows. When the English portion of The king, speaking at a'his press conference opened, press conference in Basman Hussein was asked whether ,Palace, which was surrounded the events of last,week altered! by camouflaged armored vehi. Jordan's sta-rid on the 1967. Iles, said relations with the U.N. Security Council resolu U it d St t were directl tion that calls for the Political feel that Hussein's ability to' make a peace and make it stick Is impaired by the guer- rillas who have demonstrated, their power to influence the king's policies. "Such questions," the king said, "I believe have been al- ways aimed at trying to create suspicions and disunity." The khig said he will be going to Cairo shortly for talks with President Nasser. Observers in' Jordan said Hus- sein will probably ask for- wider Arab help in improving relations beeween his govern- ment and the Palestinian guer- rilla organizations. Several times Hussein spoke with praise about the Pales- tine Liberation Organization (PLO), the main Palestinian political group, and Al Fatah, the largest guerrilla group, headed by Yasser Arafat. Arafat is also chairman of the PLO executive committee. Both groups are generally con- sidered to be moderate. Provocative Groups have been as it Is today,' he said. Both men were accused by sole guerrilla groups of ad- vising the king to crack down on the guerrillas In Jordan. The Jordanian Army has been Smarting for Some time at the, growth of guerrilla power In the small Arab kingdom. Hussein did not make a di- rect reference to reports of a mutiny by some-army troops, but said there was a morale problem in the ranks of the predominantly Bedouin force. [George Habash, who heads. the Popular Front for the Lib eration of Palestine, said yes terday in an interview in Bei- rut's -Al Nahar that he did not 'foresee a possibility that Hus-' sofa would abdicate; but if that were to happen, then "we ,will form a liberated zone, the first of its kind, bordering Israel." He defined the zone a k, a revolutionary state ' eom 4 ;Posed 'of -workei's -and filth e ;" two ,u *Zft4 &,*L- Y- connected with the U.S. att[ settlement of the Middle East When referring to left-wing Jude toward Israel. "We cer- Crisis. ' commando calls for him to dis- tainly are not happy or likely The king exploded In anger, band the Jordanian Army spe- to be happy if more Phantoms saying: "Indeed, to hell with cial forces, the king described arrive in Israel," he said. the 22 of November 1907 reso- them as "provocative" and "We have always tried to lotion, and this is not the~time said such groups "will have to keep bridges open through to discuss of talk about it. bear responsibility for them." which better understanding Hussein, however, Indicated "I. don't think they will get can bring about an improve- Jordan still held out hope for support for the majority of ment in the situation and in a political solution.. the people," he said. this part of the world." "I said repeatedly that there + Following last week's fight- The king did not answer is no peaceful solution or war- ing, the radical Popular Front questions about Palestinian like solution. There is one so-, for the Liberation of Palestine guerrilla allegations that the lution that we will accept and, demanded-and got-Hussein American CIA played a role in that is the return of our to fire army commander-in- Jordan's recent troubles. usurped homelands and the !chief Maj. Gen. Sharif Nasser . Jordan, the king said, was. ' . return to us of our holy ;`ben Jamil, the king's uncle, city (Jerusalem) and every -and a cousin, Maj. Gen. Zald "facing a period of crisis and inch of territory occupied in hen Shaker, leader of the ewe sort me," June, 1967. Third Armored Division. , the most ost anxious said, (time) ) in was my "We have worked and are Ile defended both former of- 'life, as a man who handles re working in every field to ffacaceers rs as men. "I honorable would and like ~pta- sponsibility in this country. . achieve that," he said. "Anxious not for myself-_ The question is a particu-' Say that had It not been for. for my people, for their unityJ larly sensitive. one In Jordon ( their combined _ efforts with OFOV9c" 'cRd1Ate Iwffflv'b` I'I~~DP80 Ahe situation:, 01601R00WNt 090001-9 By Jesse W. Lewis Jr. wsahlnrton Post Foreign eervIe. DAILY WORLD Approved For Release 2000/b /' 6WORDP80-01601 R Ir V Qt'o2r `an do~an Daily World Foreign Department The threat of U.S. intervention in the Jordan crisis grew on Friday as Washington! set up two special task forces to deal with the situation. White House spokesmen said President Richard Nixon was "very much involved" with Jordan and concerned since 1955. His ouster was de- manded by Palestinian forces in Jordan last April. They accused Symmes of being a CIA agent and of working closely with Jor- / dan's army and intelligence ser- vice to crush resistance groups. King Hussein of Jordan an-. . a -American property. a er, these reports were described as nounced on Friday that an emer- nounced late Thursday night on "unconfirmed" and "based on ? gency civil airlift would evacu- Radio Amman that he had fired fragmentary information." zae about 100 U.S. citizens from)' his uncle, Sherif , Nasser Ben Administration officials reveal- .. Jordan to the sa`rty of fascist ? Jamil, as commander-in-chief, ed Friday in Washington that the Greece and thai. Palestinian of Jordan's armed forces, and 82nd Airborne Division at Fort forces in Amman had released was taking over the job himself. Bragg, North Carolina, had been, 84 foreigners they had been hold- Also dismissed by Hussein was placed on alert late Thursday as ing hostage in two hotels. Gen. Sherif Zaid 'Ben Shaker., part of emergency plans to deal'; A newly-established special The Palestinian resistance had with the Jordan crisis. The offi- task' force on Jordan was func- ? demanded that both be removed cials denied that the U.S.was tioning in the State Dept., head- from their posts, along with for- on the point of intervening mili- ed by former U.S. ambassador. mer premier Wasfi Tal and for- tarily in Jordan. to Jorur '., Harrison M. Symmes. mer Jordan intelligence chief Marines to the rescue' ?.Symt.:e:. s .i:tcd in the book, asul el-Kailani. All four earlier Also on Thursday, the White Who's W :~ , CIA (Berlin, this year were named as those House Special Action Group, '1968), as being . woived in Cen- plotting with. Symmes and the headed by Henry A. Kissinger... tral Intelligenc.q- Ager-cy -..work,. CIA to put down the resistance. `about American residents there. A flood of reports from "U.S. Nixon's National Security Ad- officials" in Amman, the capital viser, and composed of leading of Jordan, said that Palestinian State and Defense Department resistance forces were stealing officials, discussed how to use American cars, raping American U.S. Marines from the Sixth women, and that there , was Fleet to "rescue" the 535 Ameri "widespread destruction 'of ' can citizens in Jordan. " S. State Dept. an- to T t ll But the U STATINTL Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000600090001-9 Approved For Release. 2000/0&AF (5I~i -DP80-01601 12 JUN 1970 STATINT King df -Jo~danisurge to oust pro-US. plotters Daily World Foreign Department Palestinian resistance forces, in Jordan yesterday delivered a virtual ultimatum to King Hussein to get rid of pro-U.S. and imperialist elements who have provoked this d? l ~ week's fighting, hich has led to an estimated 500 ktl Hussein said the situation in Amman. the capital, was return- ing to -normal. He made the statement in replying to an ap- peal from leaders of progressive Arab states. United Arab Republic Presi- dent Gamal Abdel Nasser and Libyan revolutionary leader Mu'- ammar al-Qaddafi in Cairo had yesterday appealed to Hussein. and Yasser Arafat, head of the Palestine Liberation Organiza. Lion, to stop the fighting. "The tragic events in Jordan have alarmed the entire Arab people at a moment when it Is necessary to unite all forces to halt aggression and liberate Arab lands," Nasser and Qaddafi said. In a message from Baghdad, Iraqi called for a meeting of all Arab countries on the situation. Iraq has several thousand troops In north Jordan. Power struggle cited Despite a cease-fire agreement between Hussein and Arafat, Jor- danian "Special Forces" units continued to attack Palestinian refugee camps and resistance.. bases with tanks and artillery. _ o-- - .. - an resistance group, headed by A it. t Jo - r t d - er ay a yes Arafat, sai e Japan Press Servics dan's Crown Prince Hassan; to- gether with Jordan Army com- Jamil Ben Nasser Member of Jordanian terrupted Communist Party studying Marxism-Leninism is in- byr/oung friend. . mander .who is King Sherif Hussein's uncle), were attempting to oust Hussein Wednesday when he was caught 1968 and' one earlier this spring,: and crush the Palestinians at the in a crossfire. the army and Jordanian intelli- same time. Members of the "Popular Front gence had to give way to the "We would like to know who for the Liberation of Palestine." - Palestinians. Jordan"s security is really ruling Jordan," an Al- a terrorist group opposed to Al- chief. Maj.-Gen. Rasul al-Kailani. / Fatah spokesma9 said In Amman. Fatah, are holding 84 foreigners . a friend of the CIA. was ousted. V "There is a struggle for power hostage. in Amman's Interconti. The latest outbreak seems to be. by Hassan and those imperialist nental Hotel. William Tuohy of an attempt by pro-U.S. forces to hirelings against the king. But the Los Angeles Times and Jesse regain control, this struggle for power should 'Lewis of the Washington Post The last U.S. forces withdrew not have as its price the blood managed to slip away from the from Wheelus Air Force Base in of our people -and our revolution." hotel' and reach Beirut in Leba- -. Libya yesterday. This leaves the U.S. Army attache in Jordan, -non. U.S. with no bases of its own In Maj. Robert P. Perry, was killed in two; previous clashes, one In ? the Mid-East. Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000600090001-9 C) WASHINGTON Approved For Release 2000/05/1 v z IA bP80-01601 RO 9 JUN 1970 BEIRUT, Jordan R1P1a-Jordanian Army' troops and Arab gunfire around Am- man today, just, flours' after the guer- rillas released Ameri- can diplomat Morris Draper. Mr. Draper, 42, f I r s t secretary and political officer at the embassy, was seized at a roadblock near Sc g Moody battle Sunday - headed for Zaroa, 20 miles northeast of the between the Jordanian Army and commandos city and the scene of Sunday's battle. of the left.?wing Popular Democratic Front. Most of today's shooting was concentrated More than 100 people, including women and around the. prison belonging to the Jordanian_ hl' U>,I~ials children, were killed or wounded, This was the most serious clash between the army and the guerrillas since the country was brought to the brink of civil war in February. CEASE-FIRE Today's fighting ended with a cease-fire an- nounced by Amman Radio. Guerrilla sources said the fight started when Jordanian troops attacked the headquarters of the Palestinian Army Struggle Command, the Arab guerrilla coordinating body. Arab Commandos sealed many roads and seemed to control several districts of Amman at the time of the ceasefire. A spokesman said guerrillas turned back to Hussein's motorcade which was Amman Kin intelligence service. The cultural attache of the French embassy, Yves 'Aubyn, was shot three times in the back. His'Condition is ser- ious. The U. S. embassy was guarded like an armed camp. Embassy officials said on the telephone that Mr. Draper was back at work -today. The kidnapers had said they would hold Mr. Morris until 40 commandos arrested after Sun- day's fighting were released. The guerrillas accused the American politi-' cal officer of being the "chief plotter in the area," and said that Sunday's fighting was fomented by the Central Intelligence Agency and its "local agents." The kidnaping was a direct undermining of the authority of King Hussein, who, avoided civil war last February only by a complete backdown. Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000600090001-9 STATINTL TIM 1103T Approved For Release 2000/0111 fi W-RDP80-01601 R Arabs Seize, Tree U.S. i,King Hussein after the Cancel- n Jordaii luiioh of the planned Aprill Aidel 111 visit to Jordan of Joseph From News Dispatches AMMAN, Jordan, June 8-The second-ranking U.S. ;diplomat in Jordan was kidnaped last night by an Arab (guerrilla group which said it planned to use him as a (hostage in a new dispute with Jordanian authorities. He ,was released unharmed today. ,A U.S., Embassy. spokesman in Amman said Morris Draper has been in Amman sines June, 196&',As first sec ' retary of the embassy, he ranks second to . charge d'affaires Harry I. Odell in the absence of an ambassador. The U.S. ambassador. to Jor?; dan, Harrison Symes, was withdrawn at. the: request n# Sisco, assistant secretary of state for Near East affairs. Jesse W. Lewis Jr., of The Washington Post Foreign Serv ice, reported from Beirut: Two guerrilla groups claimed responsibility for the kidnap= ing of Draper: the Marxist oriented Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation (Sf , Palestine and the Central Corn-: mittee of the Militia, a body formed recently to police the guerrilla ranks. There was no word as to, where Draper had been held during the 24 hours he was missing, or of the circum- stances of his release. Other details are also unclear. However, an American em- bassy official in Beirut said that Draper had been on his way to a dinner party in the Jebel Ashrifiya section of Amman when he was stopped at a guerrilla roadblock and picked up. The official said that the guerrillas' demands "appar- ently were dropped," but he added thaththtare "may have been" some 'd'eal worked out' between the guerrillas and the" Jordanians concerning the re- lease of the prisoners. Draper's kidnaping follows clashes over the weekend be- tween guerrillas and the Jor ? Draper's release on orders persons were reported killed of the Palestine Armed Strug- !or injured. The; fighting took' gie 'Command would be the: place in Zerka, `a village 12, first indication that the new miles northeast of Amman, in guerrilla coordinating group, the cap ital's'outskirts. bringing together militants The kidnaping also follows and -more moderate elements charges by the Cairo-based of. the Palestinean movement,, radio of Al Fatah that the is able to control the actions Central Intelligence Agency. of combat-oriented groups: and the American embassy in such `as the Popular Front. Amman "instigated" the fight' 'Draper, .42, head of the embas- sy's political section, apparent- ly had not been ill-treated dur- ing the time he was held by the Marxist Popular Demo erotic Front for the Liberation of Palestine. The guerrilla group had 'planned to hold him until Jor- dan's government met certain demands. But a spokesman for the guerrilla group said that Draper had been released "on orders of the Palestine Armed Struggle Command," the guer- rilla-coordination body, de- ,spite the fact that the de mands had not been met. Reportedly, the demands had included release of a num- ber of guerrillas captured by Jordan in weekend clashes and, according to one. re- port, dismissal of two high- ranking army officers. The of- ficers are Sheri( Nasser ben Jamil, the commander in chief, who is an uncle of King Hussein, and All ben Nayef, commander of the special forces who were involved in .he clashes. Ing between the guerrillas ands the army: Meanwhile in Beirut the Marxist Popular Democratic Front, a small guerrilla group, said that it was holding sev-. eral Jordanian soldiers as hos- tages for the release? of de' t4ine4 commandosy Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000600090001-9 STATINTL , . soldiers - "comrades in MASS It called on Jordanian 130STON 0 bd - 237,967 :~ - 566,377 . MAY 3 1970 the conspirators to pre- vent. the army being turned into a force for the protection of enemy set- tlements and installations. The statement said the ommando dnit was tray-' c Guerrillas. J or a- 1. eking by car when nian troops stationed in the area intercepted it and Jordanian s! o pened fire. The comman- in hattle , Command announced last `., commandos to their col- : leagues and "opened fire night estine Armed Struggle hand over -two wounded', .were wounded yesterday ' ed, the statement alleged. during a 10-hour battle , ? between commandos and It went on to -say that' Jordanian troops the Pal- Jordanian troops refused to BEIRUT, Lebanon ? -,; ceasefire. But when the car Two Palestinian comman- drew near, it was fired, dos and eight civilians upon and its driver wound- Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R00 dos returned the fire. The Jordanian local commander wa$ asked to ,:. allow a Palestine Armed Reuters Struggle Command vehicle The command said a commando unit was on its way to attack a target in Israel when it was inter- cepted and fired on by Jordanian troops. The statement said the Jordanian troops used tanks, artillery and ma- on an ambulance which ar- rived at the scene to pick: up the injured." The clash was the first major. incident between the , commandos and the Jorda-. nian army since the Febru- ary crises in which more than 80 persons were be- { ' lieved to have been killed. chineguns during the A secret agreement fighting in the vicinity of Northern Shuneh in the 'ended the crisis, which Jordan ? Valley. Three erupted while Yasser Araf- at, chairman of the Pales- houses were destroyed. . _ ; tine Liberation Organiza The two wounded coin- mandos were taken pris- oner by the Jordanian forces who refused to re- turn them, the statement t..said..? The statement, issued by the command here, said the clash started as the commandos headed north toward the Israeli- settle ment of Nahareim to blow up a new reservoir. The statement said the Jordanian action was r' is proof that certain army commanders were "per- a i s t i n g in their. plot against the Palestine revo- lution," tion's executive committee, was on a visit to Moscow. But on Thursday the "., Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine said that along with other commando organizations it had foiled a plot, perpe- trated in Jordan, to liqui-' date the Palestine resis- tance movement and as sassinate its leaders. The U.S. CentzaLT1UGilige? Ageaicy,(CIA,?), was said to be involved., At a press conference in Beirut, a spokesman for the front charged that, Maj Gen Sheriff Nasser Ben Jamil, commander in chief of the armed forces and King Hussein's uncle, was the man responsible for the alleged. plot.. . Asked why Fatah had not participated in an-.' nouncing the alleged plot,- the spokesman said this, was for, purely technical reasons and because it was uncovered by , the popular front. The leaders said to have ti been marked for assassi-,'I nation were named as George Habash, the front's leader, and Arafat. Yacoub Ziadin, a lead- ing Communist, was, ;lo :.; t'.; have been, abducted. Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 R000600090001-9 Approved For Release 2000/05/15: CIA-RDP80-01601 06?'idbd oooi -9 WASHINGTON DAILY NEWS 2 9 APR 1970 Henry J. Taylor , alarm SHOCKED by Assistant Se- most seriously wounded commandos and they cretary of Slate Joseph J. Sis- are being sent there. Habeche himself is away co's secret report on the Mid- from Amman at the moment and is believed to east emergence of fanatical ,be in Red China. Palestine Arab Yasser Arafat, v- Arafat shuns all know U. S. diplomats. and ?~ President Nixon now confronts was the power behind King Hussein's recent an added question in that part demand for recall of American Ambassador of the pressure-cooker world. Harrison M. Symmes from Jordan and is simi- On July 12, 1968, I revealed. larly pressing the Lebanese government for for the first time that Presi- the recall of Ambassador Dwight J. Porter: - / dent Johnson had privately But in a piece of remarkable tanning by CIA Y advised his policy intimates Director Richard M. Helms, his undercover ? that the e x p 1 o s I v e Middle East problem agents have penetrated Arafat's circle, a true,,,, alarmed him even more than the Vietnam coup. war. Seeing this at the time I published it, Mr. ? ? ? 1 Nixon told me that he felt the same. Mr. A Nixon now feels still further alarmed. For, 'A RAFAT is proving evasive about the results ?i behind the scenes, fiery-eyed Arafat has visit- of his Kremlin visit, saying only that "the r ed Moscow. hearts there are warm and the snow is cold." Communist Party Secretary Leonid Brezh He clearly got, recognition, however, as a.: :,'nev quietly invited him to the Kremlin, not power thruout the Arab world in his own.right, only as the leader of Al Fatah, the largest pendent of the Arab governments. Arab guerrilla commando group, but as the Arafat feels that, except perhaps for the So- leader of the all-encompassing United Com- 'viet Union, the outside world "is living in the mando Command thru-out the Arab world. past, still tied to the power-balance days of the ? ? ? ' 1956 Suez crisis. But now our movement; 1 ARAFAT, alais Abu Ammara has now made makes reliance on any Mideast 'governments. his headquarters in Amman, Jordan's capital. .totally unworkable." He sits in a shabby room with an automatic Altho Arafat teaches his immense number of *?.rifle on the table in front of him. He is guard- :followers to hate Zionism and not individual ed even more heavily than Castro by what he Jews, he insists that "we can lose two, three, I calls his."armed militia" in camouflaged uni- jour times ?over~ The Israelis' can lose only 1 forms. once." His second leader is former Syrian diplomat President Nixon Is convinced that the United Ahmed Shukairy. Next comes George Ha. Commando Command is far along in an Arab beche, a Palestinian who became a doctor 'in ` world revolution. And now Brezhnev's injec-. r? Lebanon. Habeche has all but taken over the tion of the Soviet Union into the revolutionists" } Palestinian Red crescent, affiliated to the In- - good graces raises the further 'question: The. ternational Red Cross In Geneva. Moreover, he ,U.S.S.R. already has a Mideast Castro in Nas- -has now made a special arrangement with Yu-,., ser. Is, it to have, with Arafat,' anothe'!Whb gos1av1a and Bulgaria:-. to, Hospitalize Arafat's .? even better-4p tea the alb worid7 ??: ~:` ' a' ama; t)r, i;+~~