abu_rashid wrote on Feb 3
rd, 2009 at 9:04pm:
Quote:]They DID kill him? Oh, well, that changes EVERYTHING then, doesn't it?
What it changes is the facade that your article had any credibility as a truthful and accurate source. Whilst you guys can't even get basic historical facts right, how can anyone have any faith in the idea you'd be telling the truth?
'ello, 'ello, 'ello, why was he assassinated? Because there were roumors that jordan and lebanon might want to make a - gasp* - peace deal with israel. The bloody cheek of them.
So the unerring instict for the WRONG DECISION kicks in and both the king of jordan and th PM of lebanon are assassinated by a palestinian.
And where was he assassinated? Why, in a mosque. And not any old dusty prayer tent either. In the holy mosque built upon the stone whence Mahomet acended to heaven. Nice.
Ten conspirators were accused of plotting the assassination and were brought to trial in Amman. The prosecution named Colonel Abdullah Tell, ex-Military Governor of Jerusalem, and Dr. Musa Abdullah Husseini as the chief plotters. The Jordanian prosecutor asserted that Col. Tell had given instructions that the killer, made to act alone, be slain at once thereafter to shield the instigators of the crime. Tell and Husseini fled to protection in Egypt and four local co-conspirators were sentenced to death in Amman. Jerusalem sources added that Col. Tell had been in close contact with the former "Grand Mufti of Jerusalem", Amin al-Husseini, and his adherents in Arab Palestine.
Amin al-Husseini? Where have we heard that name before? Ah yes, "In 1937, wanted by the British, he fled Palestine and took refuge successively in Lebanon, Iraq, Italy and finally Nazi Germany where he met Adolf Hitler in 1941." Ah,
that Grand Mufti, eh? Santly man, that mufti. And waddaya know? The king's assassin was Mustafa Shukri Ashu, "a Palestinian from the Husseini clan." Yes, the mufti's clan.
The palestinians, with the clan and family as the only organisational glue, are more like an arab Camorra or Cosa Nostra than a people.