Overview
Country, Middle East, southwestern Asia, lying east of the Jordan River.
Jordan has 16 mi (26 km) of coastline on the Gulf of Aqaba. Area:
34,495 sq mi (89,342 sq km). Population (2006 est.): 5,505,000. Capital:
Amman. The vast majority of the population are Arabs, about one-third of
whom are Palestinian Arabs who fled to Jordan from neighbouring Israel
and the West Bank as a result of the Arab-Israeli wars. Language: Arabic
(official). Religion: Islam (official; predominantly Sunni). Currency:
Jordan dinar. Four-fifths of the country is desert; less than one-tenth
of the land is arable. The highest point of elevation, Mount Ramm (5,755
ft [1,754 m]), rises in the uplands region on the east bank of the
Jordan River. The Jordan Valley region contains the Dead Sea. Jordan’s
economy is based largely on manufacturing and services (including
tourism); exports include clothing, phosphate, potash, pharmaceuticals,
fruits and vegetables, and fertilizers. Jordan is a constitutional
monarchy with two legislative houses; the head of state and government
is the king, assisted by the prime minister. Jordan shares much of its
history with Israel, since both occupy parts of the area known
historically as Palestine. Much of present-day Jordan was once part of
the kingdom of Israel under David and Solomon (c. 1000 bc). It fell to
the Seleucids in 330 bc and to Muslim Arabs in the 7th century ad. The
Crusaders extended the kingdom of Jerusalem east of the Jordan River in
1099. The region became part of the Ottoman Empire during the 16th
century. In 1920 the area comprising Jordan (then known as Transjordan)
was established within the British mandate of Palestine. Britain
recognized Transjordan’s partial independence in 1923, although the
British mandate did not end until 1948. In 1950, after the end of
hostilities with the new State of Israel, Jordan annexed the West Bank
and east Jerusalem, administering the territory until Israel gained
control of it in the Six-Day War of 1967. In 1970–71 Jordan was wracked
by fighting between the government and guerrillas of the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO), a struggle that ended with the PLO being
expelled from Jordan. In 1988 King Ḥussein renounced all Jordanian
claims to the West Bank in favour of the PLO. In 1994 Jordan and Israel
signed a full peace agreement. Ḥussein died in 1999 and was succeeded by
his son Abdullāh II.
Profile
Official name Al-Mamlakah al-Urdunnīyah al-Hāshimīyah (Al-Urdun)
(Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan)
Form of government constitutional monarchy with two legislative houses
(Senate [551]; House of Representatives [110])
Head of state and government King assisted by Prime Minister
Capital Amman
Official language Arabic
Official religion Islam
Monetary unit Jordanian dinar (JD)
Population estimate (2008) 5,844,000
Total area (sq mi) 34,277
Total area (sq km) 88,778
1Appointed by king.
Main
Arab country of Southwest Asia, in the rocky desert of the northern
Arabian Peninsula.
Jordan is a young state that occupies an ancient land, one that bears
the traces of many civilizations. Separated from ancient Palestine by
the Jordan River, the region played a prominent role in biblical
history; the ancient biblical kingdoms of Moab, Gilead, and Edom lie
within its borders, as does the famed red stone city of Petra, the
capital of the Nabatean kingdom and of the Roman province of Arabia
Petraea; of Petra British traveler Gertrude Bell said, “It is like a
fairy tale city, all pink and wonderful.” Part of the Ottoman Empire
until 1918 and later a mandate of the United Kingdom, Jordan has been an
independent kingdom since 1946. It is among the most politically liberal
countries of the Arab world, and, although it shares in the troubles
affecting the region, its rulers have expressed a commitment to
maintaining peace and stability.
The capital and largest city in the country is Amman—named for the
Ammonites, who made the city their capital in the 13th century bc. Amman
was later a great city of Middle Eastern antiquity, Philadelphia, of the
Roman Decapolis, and now serves as one of the region’s principal
commercial and transportation centres as well as one of the Arab world’s
major cultural capitals.
Land
Slightly smaller in area than the country of Portugal, Jordan is bounded
to the north by Syria, to the east by Iraq, to the southeast and south
by Saudi Arabia, and to the west by Israel and the West Bank. The West
Bank area (so named because it lies just west of the Jordan River) was
under Jordanian rule from 1948 to 1967, but in 1988 Jordan renounced its
claims to the area. Jordan has 16 miles (26 km) of coastline on the Gulf
of Aqaba in the southwest, where Al-ʿAqabah, its only port, is located.
Relief
Jordan has three major physiographic regions (from east to west): the
desert, the uplands east of the Jordan River, and the Jordan Valley (the
northwest portion of the great East African Rift System).
The desert region is mostly within the Syrian Desert—an extension of
the Arabian Desert—and occupies the eastern and southern parts of the
country, comprising more than four-fifths of its territory. The desert’s
northern part is composed of volcanic lava and basalt, and its southern
part of outcrops of sandstone and granite. The landscape is much eroded,
primarily by wind. The uplands east of the Jordan River, an escarpment
overlooking the rift valley, have an average elevation of 2,000–3,000
feet (600–900 metres) and rise to about 5,755 feet (1,754 metres) at
Mount Ramm, Jordan’s highest point, in the south. Outcrops of sandstone,
chalk, limestone, and flint extend to the extreme south, where igneous
rocks predominate.
The Jordan Valley drops to an average of 1,312 feet (400 metres)
below sea level at the Dead Sea, the lowest natural point on the Earth’s
surface.
Drainage
The Jordan River, approximately 186 miles (300 km) in length, meanders
south, draining the waters of Lake Tiberias (better known as the Sea of
Galilee), the Yarmūk River, and the valley streams of both plateaus into
the Dead Sea, which occupies the central area of the valley. The soil of
its lower reaches is highly saline, and the shores of the Dead Sea
consist of salt marshes that do not support vegetation. To its south,
Wadi al-ʿArabah (also called Wadi al-Jayb), a completely desolate
region, is thought to contain mineral resources.
In the northern uplands several valleys containing perennial streams
run west; around Al-Karak they flow west, east, and north; south of
Al-Karak intermittent valley streams run east toward Al-Jafr Depression.
Soils
The country’s best soils are found in the Jordan Valley and in the area
southeast of the Dead Sea. The topsoil in both regions consists of
alluvium—deposited by the Jordan River and washed from the uplands,
respectively—with the soil in the valley generally being deposited in
fans spread over various grades of marl.
Climate
Jordan’s climate varies from Mediterranean in the west to desert in the
east and south, but the land is generally arid. The proximity of the
Mediterranean Sea is the major influence on climates, although
continental air masses and elevation also modify it. Average monthly
temperatures at Amman in the north range between 46 and 78 °F (8 and 26
°C), while at Al-ʿAqabah in the far south they range between 60 and 91
°F (16 and 33 °C). The prevailing winds throughout the country are
westerly to southwesterly, but spells of hot, dry, dusty winds blowing
from the southeast off the Arabian Peninsula frequently occur and bring
the country its most uncomfortable weather. Known locally as the
khamsin, these winds blow most often in the early and late summer and
can last for several days at a time before terminating abruptly as the
wind direction changes and much cooler air follows.
Precipitation occurs in the short, cool winters, decreasing from 16
inches (400 mm) annually in the northwest near the Jordan River to less
than 4 inches (100 mm) in the south. In the uplands east of the Jordan
River, the annual total is about 14 inches (355 mm). The valley itself
has a yearly average of 8 inches (200 mm), and the desert regions
receive one-fourth of that. Occasional snow and frost occur in the
uplands but are rare in the rift valley. As the population increases,
water shortages in the major towns are becoming one of Jordan’s crucial
problems.
Plant and animal life
The flora of Jordan falls into three distinct types: Mediterranean,
steppe (treeless plains), and desert. In the uplands the Mediterranean
type predominates with scrubby, dense bushes and small trees, while in
the drier steppe region to the east species of the genus Artemisia
(wormwood) are most frequent. Grasses are the prevalent vegetation on
the steppe, but isolated trees and shrubs, such as lotus fruit and the
Mount Atlas pistachio, also occur. In the desert, vegetation grows
meagrely in depressions and on the sides and floors of the valleys after
the scant winter rains.
Only a tiny portion of Jordan’s area is forested, most of it
occurring in the rocky highlands. These forests have survived the
depredations of villagers and nomads alike. The Jordanian government
promotes reforestation by providing free seedlings to farmers. In the
higher regions of the uplands, the predominant types of trees are the
Aleppo oak (Quercus infectoria Olivier), the kermes oak (Quercus
coccinea), the Palestinian pistachio (Pistacia palaestina), the Aleppo
pine (Pinus halepensis), and the eastern strawberry tree (Arbutus
andrachne). Wild olives also are found there, and the Phoenician juniper
(Juniperus phoenicea L.) occurs in the regions with lower rainfall. The
national flower is the black iris (Iris nigricans).
The varied wildlife includes wild boars, ibex, and a species of wild
goat found in the gorges and in the ʿAyn al-Azraq oasis. Hares, jackals,
foxes, wildcats, hyenas, wolves, gazelles, blind mole rats, mongooses,
and a few leopards also inhabit the area. Centipedes, scorpions, and
various types of lizards are found as well. Birds include the golden
eagle and the vulture, while wild fowl include the pigeon and the
partridge.
People
Ethnic groups
The overwhelming majority of the people are Arabs, principally
Jordanians and Palestinians; there is also a significant minority of
Bedouin, who were by far the largest indigenous group before the influx
of Palestinians following the Arab-Israeli wars of 1948–49 and 1967.
Jordanians of Bedouin heritage remain committed to the Hāshimite regime,
which has ruled the country since 1923, despite having become a minority
there. Although the Palestinian population is often critical of the
monarchy, Jordan is the only Arab country to grant wide-scale
citizenship to Palestinian refugees. Other minorities include a number
of Iraqis who fled to Jordan as a result of the Persian Gulf War and
Iraq War. There are also smaller Circassian (known locally as Cherkess
or Jarkas) and Armenian communities. A small number of Turkmen (who
speak either an ancient form of the Turkmen language or the Azeri
language) also reside in Jordan.
The indigenous Arabs, whether Muslim or Christian, used to trace
their ancestry from the northern Arabian Qaysī (Maʿddī, Nizārī, ʿAdnānī,
or Ismāʿīlī) tribes or from the southern Arabian Yamanī (Banū Kalb or
Qaḥṭānī) groups. Only a few tribes and towns have continued to observe
this Qaysī-Yamanī division—a pre-Islamic split that was once an
important, although broad, source of social identity as well as a point
of social friction and conflict.
Languages
Nearly all the people speak Arabic, the country’s official language.
There are various dialects spoken, with local inflections and accents,
but these are mutually intelligible and similar to the type of Levantine
Arabic spoken in parts of Palestine, Lebanon, and Syria. There is, as in
all parts of the Arab world, a significant difference between the
written language—known as Modern Standard Arabic—and the colloquial,
spoken form. The former is similar to Classical Arabic and is taught in
school. Most Circassians have adopted Arabic in daily life, though some
continue to speak Adyghe (one of the Caucasian languages). Armenian is
also spoken in pockets, but bilingualism or outright assimilation to the
Arabic language is common among all minorities.
Religion
Virtually the entire population is Sunni Muslim; Christians constitute
most of the rest, of whom two-thirds adhere to the Greek Orthodox
church. Other Christian groups include the Greek Catholics, also called
the Melchites, or Catholics of the Byzantine rite, who recognize the
supremacy of the Roman pope; the Roman Catholic community, headed by a
pope-appointed patriarch; and the small Syrian Orthodox Patriarchate of
Antioch, or Syrian Jacobite Church, whose members use Syriac in their
liturgy. Most non-Arab Christians are Armenians, and the majority belong
to the Gregorian, or Armenian, Orthodox church, while the rest attend
the Armenian Catholic Church. There are several Protestant denominations
representing communities whose converts came almost entirely from other
Christian sects.
The Druze, an offshoot of the Ismāʿīlī Shīʿite sect, number a few
hundred and reside in and around Amman. About 1,000 Bahāʾī—who in the
19th century also split off from Shīʿite Islam—live in Al-ʿAdasiyyah in
the Jordan Valley. The Armenians, Druze, and Bahāʾī are both religious
and ethnic communities. The Circassians are mostly Sunni, and they,
along with the closely related Chechens (Shīshān)—a Shīʿite group,
numbering about 1,000, who are descendants of 19th-century immigrants
from the Caucasus Mountains—make up the most important non-Arab
minority.
Settlement patterns
Bedouin
The landscape falls into two regions—the desert zone and the cultivated
zone—each of which is associated with its own mode of living. The
tent-dwelling nomads (Bedouin, or Badū), who make up less than one-tenth
of the population, generally inhabit the desert, some areas of the
steppe, and the uplands. The tent-dwelling Bedouin people have decreased
in number because the government has successfully enforced their
permanent settlement; urban residents who trace their roots to the
Bedouin make up more than one-third of Jordanians.
The eastern Bedouin are principally camel breeders and herders, while
the western Bedouin herd sheep and goats. There are some seminomads, in
whom the modes of life of the desert and the cultivated zones merge.
These people adopt a nomadic existence during part of the year but
return to their lands and homes in time to practice agriculture. The two
largest nomadic groups of Jordan are the Banū (Banī) Ṣakhr and Banū
al-Ḥuwayṭāt. The grazing grounds of both are entirely within Jordan, as
is the case with the smaller tribe of Sirḥān. There are numerous lesser
groups, such as the Banū Ḥasan and Banū Khālid as well as the Hawazim,
ʿAṭiyyah, and Sharafāt. These traditionally paid protection money to
larger groups. The Ruwālah (Rwala) tribe, which is not indigenous,
passes through Jordan in its yearly wandering from Syria to Saudi
Arabia.
Rural settlement
Rural residents, including small numbers of Bedouin, constitute about
one-fifth of the population. The average village contains a cluster of
houses and other buildings, including an elementary school and a mosque,
with pasturage on the outskirts. A medical dispensary and a post office
may be found in the larger villages, together with a general store and a
small café, whose owners are usually part-time farmers. Kinship
relationships are patriarchal, while extended-family ties govern social
relationships and tribal organization.
Urban settlement
Some three-fourths of all Jordanians live in urban areas. The main
population centres are Amman, Al-Zarqāʾ, Irbid, and Al-Ruṣayfah. Many of
the smaller towns have only a few thousand inhabitants. Most towns have
hospitals, banks, government and private schools, mosques, churches,
libraries, and entertainment facilities, and some have institutions of
higher learning and newspapers. Amman and Al-Zarqāʾ, and to some extent
Irbid, have more modern urban characteristics than do the smaller towns.
Demographic trends
The population structure is predominantly young; persons under age 15
constitute roughly two-fifths of the population. The birth rate is high,
and the country’s population growth rate is about double the world
average. The average life expectancy is about 70 years. Internal
migration from rural to urban centres has added a burden to the economy;
however, a large number of Jordanians live and work abroad.
Some one-third of Jordan’s population are Palestinians. The influx of
Palestinian refugees not only altered Jordan’s demographic map but has
also affected its political, social, and economic life. Jordan’s
population in the late 1940s was between 200,000 and 250,000. After the
1948–49 Arab-Israeli war and the annexation of the West Bank, Jordanian
citizenship was granted to some 400,000 Palestinians who were residents
of and remained in the West Bank and to about half a million refugees
from the new Israeli state. Many of these refugees settled east of the
Jordan River. Between 1949 and 1967, Palestinians continued to move east
in large numbers. After the 1967 Arab-Israeli war, an estimated 310,000
to 350,000 Palestinians, mostly from the West Bank, sought refuge in
Jordan; thereafter immigration from the West Bank continued at a lower
rate. During the Persian Gulf War (1990–91), some 300,000 additional
Palestinians fled (or were expelled) from Kuwait to Jordan, and as many
as 1.7 million Iraqis flooded into the kingdom during the war and the
years that followed. Another smaller wave arrived in 2003 after the
start of the Iraq War. Most of these Iraqis left, but perhaps 200,000 to
300,000 remain. Only a small fraction are registered as refugees.
Most Palestinians are employed and hold full Jordanian citizenship.
By the early 21st century, approximately 1.6 million Palestinians were
registered with the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine
Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA), an organization providing education,
medical care, relief assistance, and social services. About one-sixth of
these refugees lived in camps in Jordan.
Economy
Although Jordan’s economy is relatively small and faces numerous
obstacles, it is comparatively well diversified. Trade and finance
combined account for nearly one-third of Jordan’s gross domestic product
(GDP); transportation and communication, public utilities, and
construction represent one-fifth of total GDP, and mining and
manufacturing constitute nearly that proportion. Remittances from
Jordanians working abroad are a major source of foreign exchange.
However, although Jordan’s economy is ostensibly based on private
enterprise, services—particularly government spending—account for about
one-fourth of GDP and employ roughly one-third of the workforce. In
addition, Jordan has increasingly been plagued by recession, debt, and
unemployment since the mid-1990s, and the small size of the Jordanian
market, fluctuations in agricultural production, a lack of capital, and
the presence of large numbers of refugees have made it necessary for
Jordan to continue to seek foreign aid. The Jordanian government has
been slow to implement privatization. Despite efforts by the
International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank to boost the
private sector—including agreements to write off the country’s external
debt and loans from the World Bank designed to revitalize Jordan’s
economy—it was only in 1999 that the government began introducing a
number of economic reforms. These efforts included Jordan’s entry into
the World Trade Organization (in 2000) and the partial privatization of
some state-owned enterprises.
Perhaps most importantly, Jordan’s geographic location has made it
and its economy highly vulnerable to political instability in the
region. The Jordanian economy was resilient and growing before the
Six-Day War of June 1967, and the West Bank, prior to its occupation by
Israel during that conflict, contributed about one-third of Jordan’s
total domestic income. Economic growth continued after 1967 at a slower
pace but was revitalized by a series of state economic plans. Trade
increased between Jordan and Iraq during the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88),
because Iraq required access to Jordan’s port of Al-ʿAqabah. Jordan
initially supported Iraqi president Ṣaddām Ḥussein when Iraq occupied
Kuwait during the Persian Gulf War, but it eventually agreed to the
United Nations’ trade sanctions against Iraq, its principal trading
partner, and thereby put its whole economy in jeopardy. External
emergency aid helped Jordan weather the crisis, and the economy was
boosted by the sudden influx of Palestinians from Kuwait in 1991, many
of whom brought in capital. During 2003 the construction industry
recovered with the arrival of many thousands of people fleeing Iraq, and
Jordan became a major service centre for those working to reconstruct
that country. Despite the support of the government for IMF and World
Bank plans to increase the private sector, the state remains the
dominant force in Jordan’s economy.
Agriculture
Only a tiny fraction of Jordan’s land is arable, and the country imports
some foodstuffs to meet its needs. Wheat and barley are the main crops
of the rain-fed uplands, and irrigated land in the Jordan Valley
produces citrus and other fruits, potatoes, vegetables (tomatoes and
cucumbers), and olives. Pastureland is limited; although artesian wells
have been dug to increase its area, much former pasture area has been
turned over to the cultivation of olive and fruit trees, and large areas
have been degraded to the point that they can barely support livestock.
Sheep and goats are the most important livestock, but there are also
some cattle, camels, horses, donkeys, and mules. Poultry is also kept.
Resources and power
Mineral resources include large deposits of phosphates, potash,
limestone, and marble, as well as dolomite, kaolin, and salt. More
recently discovered minerals include barite (the principal ore of the
metallic element barium), quartzite, gypsum (used as a fertilizer), and
feldspar, and there are unexploited deposits of copper, uranium, and
shale oil. Although the country has no significant oil deposits, modest
reserves of natural gas are located in its eastern desert. In 2003 the
first section of a new pipeline from Egypt began delivering natural gas
to Al-ʿAqabah.
Virtually all electric power in Jordan is generated by thermal
plants, most of which are oil-fired. The major power stations are linked
by a transmission system. By the early 21st century the government had
completed a program to link the major cities and towns by a countrywide
grid.
Beginning in the final decades of the 20th century, access to water
became a major problem for Jordan—as well as a point of conflict among
states in the region—as overuse of the Jordan River (and its tributary,
the Yarmūk River) and excessive tapping of the region’s natural aquifers
led to shortages throughout Jordan and surrounding countries. In 2000
Jordan and Syria secured funding for constructing a dam on the Yarmūk
River that, in addition to storing water for Jordan, would also generate
electricity for Syria. Construction of the Waḥdah (“Unity”) Dam began in
2004.
Manufacturing
Manufacturing is concentrated around Amman. The extraction of phosphate,
petroleum refining, and cement production are the country’s major heavy
industries. Food, clothing, and a variety of consumer goods also are
produced.
Finance
The Central Bank of Jordan (Al-Bank al-Markazī al-Urdunī) issues the
dinar, the national currency. There are many national and foreign banks
in addition to credit institutions. The government has participated with
private enterprise in establishing the largest mining, industrial, and
tourist firms in the country and also owns a significant share of the
largest companies. The Amman Stock Exchange (Būrṣat ʿAmmān; formerly the
Amman Financial Market) is one of the largest stock markets in the Arab
world.
Trade
Jordan’s primary exports are clothing, chemicals and chemical products,
and potash and phosphates; the main imports are machinery and apparatus,
crude petroleum, and food products. Major trading partners include Saudi
Arabia, the United States, and the European Union (EU). In 2000 Jordan
signed a bilateral free trade agreement with the United States. The
value of exports has been growing, but it does not cover that of
imports; the deficit is financed by foreign grants, loans, and other
forms of capital transfers. Although Jordan’s trade deficit has been
large, it has been offset somewhat by revenue from tourism, remittances
sent by Jordanians working abroad, earnings from foreign investments
made by the central bank, and subsidies from other Arab and non-Arab
governments.
Services
Services, including public administration, defense, and retail sales,
form the single most important component of Jordan’s economy in both
value and employment. The country’s vulnerable geography has led to high
military expenditures, which are well above the world average.
The Jordanian government vigorously promotes tourism, and the number
of tourists visiting Jordan has grown dramatically since the mid-1990s.
Visitors come mainly from the West to see the old biblical cities of the
Jordan Valley and such wonders as the ancient city of Petra, designated
a World Heritage site in 1985. Income from tourism, mostly consisting of
foreign reserves, has become a major factor in Jordan’s efforts to
reduce its balance-of-payments deficit.
Labour and taxation
Jordan has also lost much of its skilled labour to neighbouring
countries—as many as 400,000 people left the kingdom in the early
1980s—although the problem has eased somewhat. This change is a result
both of better employment opportunities within Jordan itself and of a
curb on foreign labour demands by the Persian Gulf states.
The majority of the workforce is men, with women constituting roughly
one-seventh of the total. The government employs nearly half of those
working. About one-seventh of the population is unemployed, although
income per capita has increased. Labour unions and employer
organizations are legal, but the trade-union movement is weak; this is
partly offset by the government, which has its own procedures for
settling labour disputes.
About half of the government’s revenue is derived from taxes. Even
though the government has made a great effort to reform the income tax,
both to increase revenue and to redistribute income, revenue from
indirect taxes continues to exceed that from direct taxes. Tax measures
have been adopted to increase the rate of savings necessary for
financing investments, and the government has implemented tax exemptions
on foreign investments and on the transfer of foreign profits and
capital.
Transportation and telecommunications
Jordan has a main, secondary, and rural road network, most of which is
hard-surfaced. This roadway system, maintained by the Ministry of Public
Works and Housing, not only links the major cities and towns but also
connects the kingdom with neighbouring countries. One of the main
traffic arteries is the Amman–Jarash–Al-Ramthā highway, which links
Jordan with Syria. The route from Amman via Maʿān to the port of
Al-ʿAqabah is the principal route to the sea. From Maʿān the Desert
Highway passes through Al-Mudawwarah, linking Jordan with Saudi Arabia.
The Amman-Jerusalem highway, passing through Nāʿūr, is a major tourist
artery. The government-operated Hejaz-Jordan Railway extends from Darʿā
in the north via Amman to Maʿān in the south. The Aqaba Railway
Corporation operates a southern line that runs to the port of Al-ʿAqabah
and connects to the Hejaz-Jordan Railway at Baṭn al-Ghūl. Rail
connections also join Darʿā in the north with Damascus, Syria.
Royal Jordanian is the country’s official airline, offering worldwide
service. Queen Alia International Airport near Al-Jīzah, south of Amman,
opened in 1983. Amman and Al-ʿAqabah have smaller international
airports.
In 1994 Jordan introduced a program to reform its telecommunication
system. The government-owned Jordan Telecommunications Corporation, the
sole service provider, had been unable to meet demand or provide
adequate service, particularly in rural areas; it was privatized in
1997. Since then, the use of cellular telephones has mushroomed, far
outstripping standard telephone use. In addition, Internet use has grown
dramatically.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
The 1952 constitution is the most recent of a series of legislative
instruments that, both before and after independence, have increased
executive responsibility. The constitution declares Jordan to be a
constitutional, hereditary monarchy with a parliamentary form of
government. Islam is the official religion, and Jordan is declared to be
part of the Arab ummah (“nation”). The king remains the country’s
ultimate authority and wields power over the executive, legislative, and
judicial branches. Jordan’s central government is headed by a prime
minister appointed by the king, who also chooses the cabinet. According
to the constitution, the appointments of both prime minister and cabinet
are subject to parliamentary approval. The cabinet coordinates the work
of the different departments and establishes general policy.
Jordan’s constitution provides for a bicameral National Assembly
(Majlis al-Ummah), with a Senate (Majlis al-Aʿyan) as its upper chamber,
and a House of Representatives (Majlis al-Nuwwāb) as its lower chamber.
The aʿyan (“notables”) of the Senate are appointed by the king for
four-year terms; elections for the nuwwāb (“deputies”) of the House of
Representatives, scheduled at least every four years, frequently have
been suspended. The ninth parliament, elected in 1965, was prorogued
several times before being replaced in 1978 by the National Consultative
Council, an appointed body with reduced power that debates government
programs and activities. The parliament was reconvened, however, in a
special session called in January 1984. Since then the parliament has
been periodically suspended: from 1988, when Jordan severed its ties
with the West Bank, until 1989 and from August until November 1993, when
the country held its first multiparty elections since 1956. In 2001 the
king dissolved the Majlis al-Nuwwāb to reformulate the electoral system;
new deputies were elected in 2003.
Local government
Jordan is divided into 12 administrative muḥāfaẓāt (governorates), which
in turn are divided into districts and subdistricts, each of which is
headed by an official appointed by the minister of the interior. Cities
and towns each have mayors and partially elected councils.
Justice
The judiciary is constitutionally independent, though judges are
appointed and dismissed by royal irādah (“decree”) following a decision
made by the Justices Council. There are three categories of courts. The
first category consists of regular courts, including those of
magistrates, courts of first instance, and courts of appeals and
cassation in Amman, which hear appeals passed on from lower courts. The
constitution also provides for the Diwān Khāṣṣ (Special Council), which
interprets the laws and passes on their constitutionality. The second
category consists of Sharīʿah (Islamic) courts and other religious
courts for non-Muslims; these exercise jurisdiction over matters of
personal status. The third category consists of special courts, such as
land, government, property, municipal, tax, and customs courts.
Political process
Jordanians 18 years of age and older may vote. Political parties were
banned before the elections in 1963, however. Between 1971 and 1976,
when it was abolished, the Arab National Union (originally called the
Jordanian National Union) was the only political organization allowed.
Although not a political party, the transnational Muslim Brotherhood
continued, with the tacit approval of the government, to engage in
socially active functions, and it captured over one-fourth of the lower
house in the 1989 election. In 1992 political parties were legalized—as
long as they acknowledged the legitimacy of the monarchy. Since then,
the brotherhood has maintained a significant minority presence in
Jordanian politics through its political arm, the Islamic Action Front.
Security
Although their political influence has now diminished, the Bedouin,
traditionally a martial desert people, still form the core of Jordan’s
army and occupy key positions in the military. Participation in the
military is optional, and males can enter service at age 17. The
Jordanian armed forces include an army and an air force equipped with
sophisticated jet aircraft; it developed from the Arab Legion. There is
also a small navy that acts as a coast guard. The king is commander in
chief of the armed forces.
Health and welfare
The country’s infant mortality rate is lower than those of several other
countries in the region. Most infectious diseases have been brought
under control, and the number of physicians per capita has grown
rapidly. Comprehensive health facilities are operated by the government,
but hospitals are found only in major urban centres. A national health
insurance program covers medical, dental, and eye care at a modest cost;
service is provided free to the poor. Welfare services were private
until the mid-1950s, when the government assumed responsibility. Besides
supervising and coordinating social and charitable organizations, the
ministry administers welfare programs.
Housing
The housing situation has remained critical despite continuing
construction. Surveys conducted in Amman and the eastern Jordan Valley
show that most households live in one-room dwellings. The Housing
Corporation and the Jordan Valley Authority build units for low-income
families, and urban renewal projects in Amman and Al-Zarqāʾ have
provided new and renovated units. Housing outside of the cities and
major towns remains austere, and a small number of Bedouin still live in
their traditional black tents.
Education
The great majority of the population is literate, and more than half
have completed secondary education or higher. Jordan has three types of
schools—government schools, private schools, and the UNRWA schools that
have been set up for Palestinian refugee children. Schooling consists of
six years of elementary, three years of preparatory, and three years of
secondary education. The Ministry of Education supervises all schools
and establishes the curricula, teachers’ qualifications, and state
examinations; it also distributes free books to students in government
schools and enforces compulsory education to the age of 14. The majority
of the students attend government schools. Jordan’s oldest institutions
of higher learning include the University of Jordan (1962), Yarmūk
University (1976), and Muʾtah University (1981). Many new universities
were established in the 1990s. In addition to Khadduri Agricultural
Training Institute, there are agricultural secondary schools as well as
a number of vocational, labour, and social affairs institutes, a
Sharīʿah legal seminary, and nursing, military, and teachers colleges.
Cultural life
Daily life and social customs
Jordan is an integral part of the Arab world and thus shares a cultural
tradition common to the region. The family is of central importance to
Jordanian life. Although their numbers have fallen as many have settled
and adopted urban culture, the rural Bedouin population still follows a
more traditional way of life, preserving customs passed down for
generations. Village life revolves around the extended family,
agriculture, and hospitality; modernity exists only in the form of a
motorized vehicle for transportation. Urban-dwelling Jordanians, on the
other hand, enjoy all aspects of modern, popular culture, from
theatrical productions and musical concerts to operas and ballet
performances. Most major towns have movie theatres that offer both Arab
and foreign films. Younger Jordanians frequent Internet cafés in the
capital, where espresso is served at computer terminals.
The country’s cuisine features dishes using beans, olive oil, yogurt,
and garlic. Jordan’s two most popular dishes are msakhan, lamb or mutton
and rice with a yogurt sauce, and mansaf, chicken cooked with onions,
which are both served on holidays and on special family occasions. Daily
fare includes khubz (flatbread) with vegetable dips, grilled meats, and
stews, served with sweet tea or coffee flavoured with cardamom.
Holidays that are celebrated in the kingdom include the Prophet
Muhammad’s birthday, the two ʿīds (festivals; ʿĪd al-Fiṭr and ʿĪd
al-Aḍḥā), and other major Islamic festivals, along with secular events
such as Independence Day and the birthday of the late King Ḥussein.
The arts
Both private and governmental efforts have been made to foster the arts
through various cultural centres, notably in Amman and Irbid, and
through the establishment of art and cultural festivals throughout the
country. Modernity has weakened the traditional Islamic injunction
against the depiction of images of humans and animals; thus, in addition
to traditional architecture, decorative design, and various handicrafts,
it is possible to find non-utilitarian forms of both representational
and abstract painting and sculpture. Elaborate calligraphy and geometric
designs often enhance manuscripts and mosques. As in the rest of the
region, the oral tradition is prominent in literary expression. Jordan’s
most famous poet, Muṣṭafā Wahbah al-Ṭāl, ranks among the major Arab
poets of the 20th century. After World War II a number of important
poets and prose writers emerged, though few have achieved an
international reputation.
Traditional visual arts survive in works of tapestry, embroidery,
leather, pottery, and ceramics, and in the manufacture of wool and
goat-hair rugs with varicoloured stripes; singing is also important, as
is storytelling. Villagers have special songs for births, circumcisions,
weddings, funerals, and harvesting. Several types of dabkah (group
dances characterized by pounding feet on the floor to mark the rhythm)
are danced on festive occasions, while the sahjah is a well-known
Bedouin dance. The Circassian minority has a sword dance and several
other Cossack dances. As part of its effort to preserve local performing
arts, the government sponsors a national troupe that is regularly
featured on state radio and television programs.
Jordan has a small film industry, and sites within the country, such
as Petra and the Ramm valley, have served as locations for major foreign
productions, such as director David Lean’s Lawrence of Arabia (1962) and
Steven Spielberg’s Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade (1989).
Cultural institutions
Jordan has numerous museums, particularly in Amman. The capital is home
to museums dedicated to coins, geology, stamps, Islam, Jordanian
folklore, and the military. The Jordan National Gallery of Fine Arts
houses a collection of contemporary Arab and Muslim paintings as well as
sculptures and ceramics. The ancient ruins at Petra, Qaṣr ʿAmrah, and
Umm al-Rasass near Mādāba have all been designated UNESCO World Heritage
sites; there are also several archaeological museums located throughout
the country.
Sports and recreation
The most popular team sports in Jordan are football (soccer) and
basketball; handball and volleyball are also widely played. In
individual sports, boxing, tae kwon do, and swimming are the most
widespread. Jordan has fielded teams for the Pan-Arab Games (Jordan
hosted the event in 1999), the West Asian Games, and the Islamic Games.
The participation of Jordanian athletes in various international
competitions, notably those held in the Middle East, has encouraged
better relations in the region. The country first competed in the Summer
Olympic Games in 1984; it has not participated in the Winter Games.
Media and publishing
Most newspapers, such as the English-language daily Jordan Times, are
privately owned, but the government owns major shares in two of Jordan’s
largest dailies, Al-Raʾy (“The Opinion”) and Al-Dustour (“The
Constitution”). There are extensive press restrictions, and in 1998 a
law was put into effect that further limited press freedoms. Since 2000,
however, there has been an easing of some prohibitions. Jordan has
several literary magazines as well as scientific and topical
periodicals. Radio and television stations, which are government-owned,
feature programs from both Arab and Western countries.
Kamel S. Abu Jaber
Ian J. Bickerton
History
Jordan occupies an area rich in archaeological remains and religious
traditions. The Jordanian desert was home to hunters from the Lower
Paleolithic Period; their flint tools have been found widely distributed
throughout the region. In the southeastern part of the country, at Mount
Al-Ṭubayq, rock carvings date from several prehistoric periods, the
earliest of which have been attributed to the Paleolithic-Mesolithic
era. The site at Tulaylāt al-Ghassūl in the Jordan Valley of a
well-built village with painted plaster walls may represent transitional
developments from the Neolithic to the Chalcolithic period.
The Early Bronze Age (c. 3000–2100 bc) is marked by deposits at the
base of Dhībān. Although many sites have been found in the northern
portion of the country, few have been excavated, and little evidence of
settlement in this period is found south of Al-Shawbak. The region’s
early Bronze Age culture was terminated by a nomadic invasion that
destroyed the principal towns and villages, marking the end of an
apparently peaceful period of development. Security was not
reestablished until the Egyptians arrived after 1580 bc. It was once
believed that the area was unoccupied from 1900 to 1300 bc, but a
systematic archaeological survey has shown that the country had a
settled population throughout the period. This was confirmed by the
discovery of a small temple at Amman with Egyptian, Mycenaean, and
Cypriot imported objects.
Biblical associations
Biblical accounts of the area, dating from the Middle Bronze Age onward,
mention kingdoms such as Gilead in the north, Moab in central Jordan,
and Midian in the south. At the time of the Exodus, the Israelites tried
to pass through Edom in southern Jordan but were refused permission.
They were at first repelled by the Amorites, whom they later defeated.
The Israelite tribes of Gad and Reuben and half of the Manasseh group
nonetheless settled in the conquered territory of the Ammonites,
Amorites, and Bashan and rebuilt many of the towns they had partially
destroyed. A record of this period is the Mesha (or Moabite) Stone found
at Dhībān in 1868, now in the Louvre Museum in Paris. It is inscribed in
an eastern form of Canaanite, closely akin to Hebrew.
The next few centuries (1300–1000 bc) were marked by constant raiding
from both sides of the Jordan River. David attacked and devastated Moab
and Edom. Although held for a time, Ammon with its capital, Rabbath
Ammon (modern Amman), regained independence on the death of David (c.
960 bc). Solomon had a port on the Gulf of Aqaba at Ezion-geber (modern
Elat, Israel), where copper ore was smelted from mines in the Wadi
al-ʿArabah and trade was carried on with the southern Arabian states.
However, hostilities remained constant between Judah and Edom; a Hebrew
king, Amaziah, even captured Sela (Petra), the capital.
The next invaders were the Assyrians, who under Adadnirari III
(811/810–783 bc) overran the eastern part of the country as far as Edom.
Revolts against Assyrian rule occurred in the 760s and 750s, but the
country was retaken in 734–733 by Tiglath-pileser III (reigned 745–727
bc), who then devastated Israel, sent its people into exile, and divided
the country into provinces under Assyrian governors. This policy of
direct rule continued until the fall of the Assyrian empire in 612 bc.
The Assyrian texts are the first source to refer to the Nabataeans, who
at this time occupied the land south and east of Edom (ancient Midian).
After the fall of Assyria, the Moabites and Ammonites continued to raid
Judah until the latter was conquered by the Neo-Babylonians under
Nebuchadrezzar II. Little is known of the history of Jordan under the
Neo-Babylonians and Persians, but during this period the Nabataeans
infiltrated Edom and forced the Edomites into southern Palestine.
It was not until the Hellenistic rule of the Seleucids and the
Ptolemies that the country prospered, trade increased, and new towns
were built. Rabbath Ammon was renamed Philadelphia, and Jarash became
Antioch-on-the-Chrysorrhoas, or Gerasa. Hostilities between the
Seleucids and Ptolemies enabled the Nabataeans to extend their kingdom
northward and to increase their prosperity based on the caravan trade
with Arabia and Syria. The northern part of Jordan was for a time in
Jewish hands, and there were constant struggles between the Jewish
Maccabees and the Seleucids. Most of the Dead Sea Scrolls date from this
period.
During 64–63 bc the kingdom of Nabataea was conquered by the Romans
under Pompey, who restored the Hellenistic cities destroyed by the Jews
and set up the Decapolis, a league of 10 ancient Greek cities. The
country remained independent but paid imperial taxes. Roman policy seems
to have been to maintain Nabataea as a buffer state against the desert
tribes. In 25–24 bc it served as a starting point for Aelius Gallus’s
ill-starred expedition in search of Arabia Felix. Nabataea was finally
absorbed into the Roman Empire by Trajan in ad 106 as the province of
Palaestina Tertia. Under Roman rule Jordan prospered, and many new towns
and villages were established. The whole country, except the Decapolis,
was made part of the new province called Arabia Petraea, with its
capital first at Petra and later at Buṣrā al-Shām in Syria. After 313,
Christianity became a recognized religion, and a large number of
churches were built.
The Latin kingdom and Muslim domination
The area was devastated in the 6th and 7th centuries by the intermittent
warfare between Byzantium and Sāsānian Persia. In 627 the emperor
Heraclius finally defeated the Persians and reestablished order, but
Byzantium, gravely weakened by the long struggle, was unable to face the
unexpected menace of a new power that had arisen in Arabia. In 636 the
Muslims—led by the famous “Sword of Islam,” Khālid ibn
al-Walīd—destroyed a Byzantine army at the Battle of the Yarmūk River
and brought the greater part of Syria and Palestine under Muslim rule.
The caliphs of the Umayyad dynasty (660–750) established their
capital at Damascus and built hunting lodges and palaces in the
Jordanian desert. These can still be seen at sites such as Qaṣr ʿAmrah,
Al-Kharānah, Al-Ṭūbah, and Qaṣr al-Mushattā. Many Roman forts were also
rebuilt. After the ʿAbbāsids seized power in 750, the capital was
transferred to Baghdad, and Syria, which had been the Umayyad
metropolitan province, was severely repressed. Jordan, now distant from
the centre of power, became a backwater and slowly returned to the old
Bedouin way of life. With the capture of Jerusalem by the Crusaders in
1099, the Latin kingdom of Jerusalem was extended east of the Jordan, a
principality known as Oultre Jourdain was established, and a capital was
set up at Al-Karak. After the Crusaders retreated, the history of Jordan
remained mostly uneventful. Not until the 16th century did it submit to
Ottoman rule and become part of the vilāyet (province) of Damascus.
In the 19th century the Ottomans settled Circassian, Caucasian, and
other refugees in Jordan to protect their communications with Arabia;
assisted by Germany, they completed in 1908 the Hejaz Railway linking
Damascus and Medina.
Verity Elizabeth Irvine
Transjordan, the Hāshimite Kingdom, and the Palestine war
During World War I the Arabs joined the British against the
Ottomans. In a revolt of 1916, in which they were assisted by Colonel
T.E. Lawrence, the Arabs severed the Hejaz Railway. In July 1917 the
army of Prince Fayṣal ibn Husayn (of the Hāshimite [or Hashemite]
dynasty) captured Al-ʿAqabah, and by October 1918 Amman and Damascus
were in Allied hands. In 1920 the Conference of San Remo in Italy
created two mandates; one, over Palestine, was given to Great Britain,
and the other, over Syria, went to France. This act effectively
separated the area now occupied by Israel and Jordan from that of Syria.
In November 1920 ʿAbdullāh, Fayṣal’s brother, arrived in Maʿān (then
part of the Hejaz) with 2,000 armed supporters intent on gathering
together tribes to attack the French, who had forced Fayṣal to
relinquish his newly founded kingdom in Syria. By April 1921, however,
the British had decided that ʿAbdullāh would take over as ruler of what
then became known as Transjordan.
Effectively, Turkish rule in Transjordan was simply replaced by
British rule. The mandate, confirmed by the League of Nations in July
1922, gave the British virtually a free hand in administering the
territory. However, in September, the establishment of “a Jewish
national home” was explicitly excluded from the mandate’s clauses, and
it was made clear that the area would also be closed to Jewish
immigration. On May 25, 1923, the British recognized Transjordan’s
independence under the rule of Emir ʿAbdullāh, but, as outlined in a
treaty as well as the constitution in 1928, matters of finance,
military, and foreign affairs would remain in the hands of a British
“resident.” Full independence was finally achieved after World War II by
a treaty concluded in London on March 22, 1946, and ʿAbdullāh
subsequently proclaimed himself king. A new constitution was
promulgated, and in 1949 the name of the state was changed to the
Hāshimite Kingdom of Jordan.
Throughout the interwar years ʿAbdullāh had depended on British
financial support. The British also assisted him in forming an elite
force called the Arab Legion, comprising Bedouin troops but under the
command of and trained by British officers, which was used to maintain
and secure the allegiance of ʿAbdullāh’s Bedouin subjects. On May 15,
1948, the day after the Jewish Agency proclaimed the independent state
of Israel and immediately following the British withdrawal from
Palestine, Transjordan joined its Arab neighbours in the first
Arab-Israeli war. The Arab Legion, commanded by Glubb Pasha (John [later
Sir John] Bagot Glubb), and Egyptian, Syrian, Lebanese, and Iraqi troops
entered Palestine. ʿAbdullāh’s primary purpose, which he had spelled out
in secret discussions with Jewish envoys, was to extend his rule to
include the area allotted to the Palestinian Arabs under the United
Nations partition resolution of November 1947. Accordingly, he engaged
his forces in the region of Palestine now popularly known as the West
Bank (the area just west of the Jordan River) and expelled Jewish forces
from East Jerusalem (the Old City). When the Jordan-Israel armistice was
signed on April 3, 1949, the West Bank and East Jerusalem—an area of
about 2,100 square miles (5,400 square km)—came under Jordanian rule,
and almost half a million Palestinian Arabs joined the half million
Transjordanians. One year later, Jordan formally annexed this territory.
Israel and Britain had tacitly agreed to ʿAbdullāh keeping the area, but
the Arab countries and most of the world opposed the king’s action; only
Britain and Pakistan recognized the annexation. The incorporation into
Jordan of the West Bank Palestinians and a large refugee population that
was hostile to the Hāshimite regime brought severe economic and
political consequences. On the other hand, ʿAbdullāh gained such Muslim
shrines as the Dome of the Rock in Jerusalem’s Old City, which
compensated for his father’s loss of Mecca and Medina to Ibn Saʿūd a
generation earlier.
ʿAbdullāh was assassinated at Al-Aqṣā Mosque in Jerusalem on July 20,
1951, by a young Palestinian frustrated by the king’s hostility toward
Palestinian nationalism. In August 1952 the parliament declared
ʿAbdullāh’s son and successor, Ṭalāl, mentally unfit to rule, and he
abdicated in favour of his eldest son, Ḥussein ibn-Ṭalāl, who was
crowned king on his 18th birthday, May 2, 1953.
Jordan under King Ḥussein
Securing the throne, 1953 to c. 1960
The history of Jordan after 1953 was largely shaped by King Ḥussein’s
policies to secure his throne and to retain or regain the West Bank for
the Hāshimite dynasty. Jordan’s relationship with Israel in the first
decade of the Jewish state’s existence was uneasy but tolerable, though
bloody raids and acts of terrorism carried out by both sides added to
the tension. Jordan’s involvement in the Palestinian question led as
much to a contest with Egypt over Jordan’s future as it did to a
struggle with Israel. In particular, it repeatedly forced Jordan to
balance relations with and between various Arab nations, the
Palestinians, and the West and Israel. Thus, popular demonstrations,
especially in the West Bank, and pressure from Egypt prevented Ḥussein
in 1955 from signing the Baghdad Pact, a pro-Western mutual defense
treaty that he had initiated between Great Britain, Turkey, Iran, and
Iraq. The next year Ḥussein—bowing to popular pressure and in a show of
support for Egyptian efforts at pan-Arab leadership—dismissed his
British advisers, including Glubb, and abrogated the Anglo-Jordanian
treaty of 1946. However, when members of the National Guard, drawn
mainly from the West Bank, attempted a coup in April 1957, the king,
supported by loyal East Bank Bedouins, purged the legislature of
Palestinian nationalists and extremists, banned political parties, and
set up a royal dictatorship to curb domestic unrest.
After Egypt and Syria merged in February 1958 to form the United Arab
Republic (UAR; 1958–61), King Fayṣal II persuaded Ḥussein, his cousin,
to join in a federal union with Iraq. In July, however, Fayṣal and his
family were killed in an army coup in Iraq coordinated by Gamal Abdel
Nasser of Egypt. Ḥussein, realizing his regime was under threat, turned
to Great Britain and the United States for assistance. Washington agreed
to provide additional military and economic aid. The British government,
eager to see the pro-Western Ḥussein secure in Jordan, stationed British
paratroops in the country until late 1958. As a result, anti-Hāshimite
Palestinians supported by Nasser made no further attempts to overthrow
the monarchy. By the early 1960s the United States was providing Ḥussein
with about $100 million annually, which stimulated economic development
and, despite a number of assassination attempts, secured the king’s
future.
The PLO and the June 1967 war
The emergence in the late 1960s of the Palestine Liberation Organization
(PLO) and the militant group Fatah represented a potential threat to
Jordan’s sovereignty in the West Bank as well as to Israel. In early
1965, with the support of Egypt and the radical Baʿth Party government
in Syria, Fatah began a series of Jordan-based raids against Israel that
inflicted serious casualties and property damage. Israel retaliated by
raiding the West Bank in an effort to deter these operations. Relations
between Jordan and Syria and Egypt and between the Palestinians and
Amman soon deteriorated. Ḥussein continued private talks with Israel
over the internal and external dangers both countries faced. In late
1966 the Israeli army made a devastating raid into the West Bank village
of Al-Samu south of Hebron. Ḥussein responded by attempting to stop the
passage of Syrian-based Palestinian guerrillas coming through Jordan
into Israel, and he eventually broke off diplomatic ties with Syria.
However, as tension mounted between Israel and Egypt and Syria in the
spring of 1967, Jordan reversed its position and signed a defense pact
with Egypt and Syria. Israeli and Jordanian forces clashed in East
Jerusalem, and in June 1967 Ḥussein joined Egypt and Syria in the third
Arab-Israeli war.
The June 1967 war was a watershed in the modern history of Jordan.
Within 48 hours Israeli forces had overrun the entire territory west of
the Jordan River, capturing Bethlehem, Hebron, Jericho, Nāblus,
Ramallah, Janīn, and the city of Jerusalem. Jordan suffered heavy
casualties and lost one-third of its most fertile land; its already
overburdened economy was then faced with supporting tens of thousands of
new refugees. Ḥussein had regarded entering the war as the lesser of two
evils: he believed that if he had not joined Egypt and Syria, they would
have supported the Palestinians in overthrowing his regime. The loss of
the West Bank and Jerusalem, devastating as it was, was preferable to
the loss of his kingdom.
From 1967 to civil war
Following the June war Ḥussein faced three major problems: how to
recover from the economic losses caused by the war, how to live with
Israel’s occupation of the West Bank and the annexation of East
Jerusalem, and how to preserve the Hāshimite throne against a
considerably augmented and increasingly hostile Palestinian population.
The war reversed the progress made in Jordan’s economy prior to June
1967, even with financial aid from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, and Libya; yet
within a short period both the United States and Great Britain resumed
economic and military aid, which helped to restore its economy and to
preserve peace. In 1971 arrangements were also made with Israel enabling
Jordanians to farm in the Jordan Valley.
Despite the fact that an Arab summit meeting held in Khartoum, Sudan,
in August 1967 passed the “three noes” resolution—no peace with Israel,
no recognition of Israel, and no negotiations with Israel—Ḥussein
resumed his secret negotiations with Israel over the disposition of the
West Bank and East Jerusalem. Relations with Israel were thus
inseparably linked to the future of the Palestinians. Ḥussein sought the
return of all the lost territory but still privately recognized Israel
and cooperated with it across a wide range of issues. Even so, he was
not prepared to sign a peace treaty with the Jewish state. The two
countries were thus no longer enemies and worked together against PLO
terrorism, but little progress was made toward a lasting peace.
Ḥussein’s relations with the PLO, which under the chairmanship of
Yāsir ʿArafāt openly challenged the king’s control in East Jordan,
reached a crisis in September 1970. The Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine (PFLP), a radical Marxist Palestinian group, hijacked four
international airliners and blew up three of them in Dawson’s Field, a
deserted airstrip in the Jordanian desert. Ḥussein declared martial law,
and civil war (later remembered as Black September) erupted. When 250
Syrian tanks entered northern Jordan in support of the PLO, Ḥussein was
forced not only to call upon military assistance from the United States
and Great Britain but also to allow overflights by Israel to attack the
Syrian forces. The Syrian forces were defeated, and a peace agreement,
in which Ḥussein made concessions to the PLO, was signed by Ḥussein and
ʿArafāt in Cairo on Sept. 27, 1970; by July 1971, Ḥussein had forced the
PLO guerrillas out of Jordan.
From 1973 to the intifāḍah
Ḥussein chose not to join Egypt and Syria in their surprise attack on
Israel in October 1973, although he did make a symbolic gesture by
sending tanks to assist Syria in the Golan Heights. In negotiations
immediately following the war, Ḥussein once again demanded the return of
the West Bank and East Jerusalem from Israel. He was bitter that
Israel—in response to pressure from U.S. Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger—proposed a withdrawal of its forces from Israeli-occupied
Egyptian territory but made no such overtures to Jordan. However, by
August 1974 discussions were under way with Israel over “disengagement
accords,” which recognized Jordan as the speaker for the Palestinians
and encouraged regional economic and tactical cooperation, especially in
relation to the threat posed by Palestinian guerrilla groups. In October
leaders of the Arab League at an Arab summit meeting in Rabat, Morocco,
declared that the Palestinian people, under the leadership of the PLO
(“their sole legitimate representative”), had the right to establish a
national independent authority in liberated Palestine. In response
Ḥussein announced that his country would exclude the West Bank from
Jordan and would never enter into a federation with a Palestinian state,
as such a step would inevitably give the Palestinian population a
majority and bring about the loss of his kingdom.
Faced with American reluctance to supply arms and an Egyptian-Israeli
Sinai accord, Jordan with Syria agreed in August 1975 to form a joint
“supreme command” to coordinate their foreign and military policies in
an effort to control PLO activities. In March 1977 Ḥussein met with
ʿArafāt in Cairo, their first meeting since Black September in 1970. In
July 1977 Ḥussein, Egyptian President Anwar el-Sādāt, and U.S. President
Jimmy Carter once again discussed the possibility of a link between
Jordan and a Palestinian “entity,” but it was denounced by the PLO.
The election of the right-wing Likud bloc in Israel with Menachem
Begin as prime minister in May 1977 brought relations between Jordan and
Israel to a low ebb. Determined to annex and retain all of the West
Bank, which Israel now called Judaea and Samaria, Begin greatly
accelerated the program of constructing Jewish settlements in the West
Bank and Gaza. Under the terms of the Camp David Accords in 1978, Israel
committed itself to granting autonomy to the Palestinians and to
negotiating the future status of the occupied territories, but Ḥussein
condemned the agreement and completely broke off the 15-year secret
negotiations with Israel. From late 1977 until 1984, Jordanian contacts
with Israel essentially came to a halt. Ḥussein became increasingly
alarmed at the growing popularity in Israel of the view that Jordan was,
in fact, the Palestinian state, which would also resolve the conflict
between Israel and the Palestinians. Israel’s invasion of Lebanon in
1982 fueled fears in Amman that the first step in the process of
transferring Palestinians to the East Bank was under way.
In the early 1980s Ḥussein sought an accommodation with ʿArafāt and
the PLO after the PLO had been expelled from Lebanon and its bases had
been destroyed; the two men reached a temporary and somewhat uneasy
alliance. In order to strengthen his legitimacy in the eyes of
Palestinians, Ḥussein, in 1984, allowed the Palestine National Council
(a virtual parliament of the Palestinians) to meet in Amman. In February
1985 he signed an agreement with ʿArafāt pledging cooperation with the
PLO and coordination of a joint peace initiative. Ḥussein believed that
ʿArafāt would accept a confederation of the West and East Banks with
autonomy for the Palestinians of the West Bank under Jordanian
sovereignty. ʿArafāt, however, had not given up hope of an independent
Palestinian state in the West Bank, although he was agreeable to an
eventual confederation between such a future Palestinian state and
Jordan.
In February 1986 Ḥussein, frustrated by ʿArafāt’s ambiguity regarding
the PLO’s recognition of Israel and renunciation of terrorism,
repudiated the Amman agreement with ʿArafāt and broke off negotiations
with the PLO. Although the king was careful not to expel the PLO from
Jordan entirely, despite an increase in guerrilla violence in the West
Bank, he did order the closure of the PLO offices in Amman. In a
complete turnaround in the Jordanian policy that had been followed since
the Arab summit at Rabat in 1974, Ḥussein declared that he would now be
responsible for the economic welfare of the West Bank Palestinians. In
addition, the king announced that the West Bank would be included in an
upcoming five-year plan for Jordan and approved an increase in the
number of Palestinian seats (to about half) in an enlarged National
Assembly. His goal was to create a Jordanian-Palestinian-Israeli
administration that would make the West Bank independent of the PLO and
enable him to reach a settlement with Israel, in which he would regain
at least partial sovereignty of the area.
By April 1987 Ḥussein and Shimon Peres, then Israel’s foreign
minister, had agreed to a UN-sponsored conference involving all parties
to seek a comprehensive peace; Palestinian representatives would be part
of a Jordanian-Palestinian delegation. Although the proposal was
endorsed by U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak
Shamir wanted a conference with only Jordan and resisted U.S. pressure
for a comprehensive peace conference. Ḥussein scored a diplomatic
triumph by staging an Arab League summit meeting in Amman in November,
during which league members agreed to reestablish diplomatic relations
with Egypt that had been severed following the Camp David Accords. More
importantly for Ḥussein, the Palestinian issue was not the main topic;
instead, the Iran-Iraq War, then in its eighth year, took precedence.
The situation changed dramatically in December, however, with the
outbreak of the intifāḍah, a Palestinian uprising on the West Bank.
Ḥussein quickly realized that the uprising was directed against his rule
as well as that of the Israelis. His immediate response was to support
the intifāḍah publicly and to offer aid to families of victims of
Israeli reprisals in an effort to deflect the hostility toward his
regime. But the intifāḍah leaders (known as the Unified Command)
renounced the king’s overtures, and ʿArafāt quickly assumed the role of
spokesman for the revolt. The intifāḍah brought to a halt Jordanian and
Israeli plans for an economic path to peace. Ḥussein thus canceled the
five-year plan for the West Bank.
Renouncing claims to the West Bank
An emergency meeting of the Arab League in June 1988 gave the PLO
financial control of support for the Palestinians, thereby virtually
acknowledging ʿArafāt as their spokesman. In response, Ḥussein renounced
all Jordanian claims to the West Bank, allowing the PLO to assume full
responsibility there. He dissolved the Jordanian parliament (half of
whose members were West Bank representatives), ceased salary payments to
21,000 West Bank civil servants, and ordered that West Bank Palestinian
passports be converted to two-year travel documents. When the Palestine
National Council recognized the PLO as the sole legal representative of
the Palestinian people and proclaimed the independence of a purely
notional Palestine on Nov. 15, 1988, Ḥussein immediately extended
recognition to the Palestinian entity.
In November 1989 Jordan held its first parliamentary elections in 22
years. Opposition groups, particularly the fundamentalist Muslim
Brotherhood—in the form of the Islamic Action Front (IAF)—gained more
seats than the pro-government candidates, and the newly elected prime
minister, Mudar Badran, promised to lift the martial law that had been
in place since 1967—a promise not fully kept until July 1991.
From the Persian Gulf War to peace with Israel
Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait in August 1990 and the subsequent Persian Gulf
War (fought principally in January–February 1991) forced Ḥussein to
choose between two allies, the United States and Iraq. The king leaned
heavily toward Iraqi leader Ṣaddām Ḥussein, who also received a zealous
and vocal groundswell of support from the Jordanian people. In addition,
trade with Iraq represented two-fifths of the kingdom’s gross domestic
product. Kuwait’s allies immediately cut off all aid to Jordan, imposed
an air and sea blockade, and condemned King Ḥussein’s actions. To make
matters worse, between 200,000 and 300,000 refugees from Kuwait were
expelled or fled (back) to Jordan. However, by the end of 1991 the
United States and Israel were again seeking Ḥussein’s support for an
American-Israeli peace initiative.
The first multiparty general election since 1956 was scheduled for
November 1993. In August the king dissolved the 80-member House of
Representatives (the lower house of the National Assembly) and announced
that the election would be conducted on a one-person-one-vote system
rather than on the old “slate” system that allowed voters to cast as
many votes as there were representatives in their constituency. In the
election the number of seats won by anti-Zionist Islamic militants—who
made up the IAF, a coalition of Islamic groupings and the largest of
Jordan’s political parties—was reduced from 36 to 16, which gave the
king the support he needed to carry out his policy.
Ḥussein expressed public reservations over a PLO-Israeli accord in
1993 but nonetheless stated his willingness to support the Palestinian
people. He was concerned over issues relating to Jordan’s economic links
with the West Bank and the future status of Palestinians in Jordan.
About a year later, Jordan and Israel signed a peace treaty in which
Ḥussein was recognized as the custodian of the Muslim holy sites in East
Jerusalem.
Ḥussein’s last years and the ascension of ʿAbdullāh II
In January 1995 Ḥussein signed accords with the PLO pledging support for
Palestinian autonomy and the establishment of a Palestinian state that
included East Jerusalem. The Palestinians nevertheless remained hostile
to the peace treaty with Israel, as did Syria and a large segment of the
population led by the IAF. Ḥussein became increasingly frustrated with
what he considered to be the obstructionist policies of the Israeli
government, but he still played a central role in brokering a deal
between Israel and the PLO regarding Israeli withdrawal from Hebron in
the West Bank in early 1997. In addition, Ḥussein acted as a mediator
between the Israelis and Palestinians in an agreement made in October
1998 at the Wye Plantation in eastern Maryland.
By then Ḥussein’s health was failing. Shortly before his death in
February 1999, he proclaimed his son ʿAbdullāh to be his successor,
rather than his brother Hassan (Ḥasan), who had been the crown prince.
In the main, King ʿAbdullāh II continued to carry out his father’s
policies and maintained that the new government he formed in March would
focus on integrating economic reforms, bettering Jordan’s relations with
its Arab neighbours, and improving the status of women. The king faced
numerous problems, however, including a growing tide of domestic dissent
over the country’s close ties with the United States and its continued
diplomatic relations with Israel.
In subsequent years, the new monarch carved out a vigorous foreign
policy that generally reflected his original goals. Strong political and
economic bonds were formed with neighbouring Arab states—especially
Egypt and Syria—and the king reshuffled his cabinet on several occasions
while attempting to modernize and invigorate the economy. Government
security services thwarted several violent attacks by Islamic militants
(directed mostly at the security services themselves), and parliamentary
elections took place in 2003. The new parliament was made up mostly of
independents, but the IAF polled highest among the organized parties.
Ian J. Bickerton