CAIRO,
February 16 (IslamOnline.net) – The grisly assassination of former
Lebanese prime minister Rafiq Al-Hariri opened a new chapter in a bloody
book of political murders in the volatile Middle East that has for long
hardly known compromise or peaceful power-transfer.
The
equation of Arab-Israeli conflict has always added a sense of mystery to
most such bloody occurrences, along with the dominance of repressive
regimes.
One
of the highest-profile assassinations of all in recent history of the
Middle East was the murder of Egyptian president Anwar Sadat on October
6, 1981, while attending a military parade marking the victory of
October 6, 1973, over Israel.
Sadat's
murder was attributed by his assassin, Khalid Al-Islambuli, to the Nobel
Peace Prize winner’s visit to Al-Quds (occupied Jerusalem) and the
signing of a peace treaty with Israel.
The
over-half-a-century-long history of Arab-Israeli conflict was also the
driving force behind many other assassinations in the Arab world.
Chief
among the blood-dripping list was the killing of Jordanian King Abdullah
I who was shot by a Palestinian citizen in July 1951, while entering
Al-Aqsa mosque, with his nephew Prince Hussein, who became King Hussein
and father of current Jordanian King Abdullah II.
Israeli
Assassinations
Of
course the ongoing (currently on hold) Israeli killings of Palestinian
resistance leaders and international dignitaries who mediate objectively
in the deep-rooted conflict, also make remarkable spots in the bloody
file.
The
bloody cycle began with the murder of Palestinian resistance leader
Sheikh Ezz Eddine Al-Qassam on November 19, 1935 by Jewish agents. The
military wing of Palestinian resistance group Hamas is named after him.
Other
chapters of the bloody book contain the assassination of UN
representative Count Bernadot in 1948, in addition to Palestinian
resistance leaders in Lebanon in the 1960s and 1970s, at the hands of
Israeli undercover agents.
A
few years later, Palestinian resistance leader Abu Jihad was killed in
Tunisia by Israeli agents.
In
early 1996, Israel assassinated Palestinian resistance leader Yehia
Ayash in the occupied Palestinian territories.
With
the outbreak of Al-Aqsa Intifada in 2000, Israeli assassinations of
Palestinian resistance leaders – military and political – turned
into a state policy known as “targeted killings”.
Abu
Ali Mostafa, Secretary General of the Popular Front for the Liberation
of Palestine (PFLP), was killed on August 17, 2001, at his Ramallah
office by Israeli agents.
After
less than two years, wheel-chaired Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, the founder and
leader of Hamas, was torn into pieces on March 22, 2004, when an Israeli
helicopter fired three missiles at him while he was leaving the mosque
after performing dawn prayers.
His
successor Abdul Aziz Al-Rantissi was assassinated April 17, 2004, in
northern Gaza.
With
the Palestinian struggle against Israeli occupation, new chapters of the
assassination file are expected to emerge.
Mystery
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Sadat was assassinated for signing a peace agreement with Israel.
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With
Israel coming to enjoy – in the collective Arab memory – an infamous
reputation of resorting to assassinations in dealing with its enemies,
any mysterious hit in the Arab world would bring the image of
long-feared Mossad -- Israeli intelligence service – to mind.
As
a case in point, former Jordanian Prime Minister Wasfi Al-Tal was
assassinated on November 28, 1971, in front of the Sheraton Hotel in
Cairo during a meeting of the joint Arab Defense Council.
The
assassination, however, was carried out in reprisal to the bloody events
between Palestinians and Jordanian security forces in 1970, which left
hundreds of Palestinian resistance men killed.
In
some cases, seizing the murderer red-handed did not put an end to
conspiracy theories or even close assassination files.
To
name an example, former Saudi king Faisal was gunned down on March 25,
1975, by one of his nephews in the cabinet headquarters.
The
killer was arrested with the crime weapon in hand, and was executed at
sword point, but that was not enough to settle the case.
Speculations
on his motives kept raging, with some theories saying internal conflict
within the Saudi royal family was to blame and others directing the
blame at US and Zionist agents, citing the king’s role in imposing the
oil embargo on the pro-Israel nations during the October 1973 war.
Iraq,
currently under US occupation, was also the scene of very bloody chapter
of the book of political assassinations, due to internal power struggle.
During
the 1958 revolution against the British-installed monarchy, Iraqi king
Faisal and his family were crushed to death.
Just
one year later, the revolution leader Abdel Karim Qassem was also the
target of an assassination attempt in 1959.