Black September - traducción al Inglés
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Black September - traducción al Inglés

CIVIL WAR (1970–1971) IN JORDAN BETWEEN KING HUSSEIN’S FORCES AND THE PALESTINE LIBERATION ORGANISATION
Palestinian exodus from Jordan; Black September (Jordan); Jordan Civil War; ‘Black September’; Black september in jordan; Jordanian Civil War; 1970 Jordanian civil war; Black September in Jordan; Aylul Aswad
  • PLO leaders [[Yasser Arafat]], [[Nayef Hawatmeh]] and [[Kamal Nasser]] speaking at a press conference in Amman after the June events, 1970
  • fedayeen]] in front of international press, 12 September 1970
  • King Hussein]] on the first day of the operation meeting with his advisors, Prime Minister [[Wasfi Tal]] (right) and Army Chief of Staff [[Habis Majali]] (left), 17 September 1970
  • Jordanian army unit escorts rescued families back to Amman, 9 September 1970.
  • Centurion tank]] in [[Irbid]] to face off the Syrian invasion, 17 September 1970
  • King Hussein after checking an abandoned Israeli tank on 21 March 1968 during the [[Battle of Karameh]]. The perceived joint Palestinian-Jordanian victory led to an upsurge in support for the fedayeen in Jordan.
  • Newsreel about King Hussein's challenges in 1970
  • Map showing fedayeen concentrations in Jordan prior to September 1970, and the Syrian invasion
  • emergency Arab League summit]] in Cairo on 27 September 1970. Nasser died the following day, of a heart attack.
  • Fedayeen of the [[Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine]] (PFLP) in Jordan, early 1969
  • PFLP patrol in Amman, 12 June 1970
  • A group of fedayeen surrendering to an Israeli border patrol after having fled across the [[Jordan River]], 21 July 1971
  • [[Wasfi Tal]] (right) with [[Yasser Arafat]] (left) on 12 December 1970 during ceasefire negotiations. Tal was assassinated on 28 November 1971 in Egypt by the [[Black September Organization]].
  • View of Jabal Al-Hussein Palestinian refugee camp in Amman

Black September         
Zwarte September (terreurarm van "Fatach"in het buitenland)
September 11         
DAY OF THE YEAR
September 11th; 11 September; 11th September; Sept 11; Sep 11; September eleventh; Sep11; 11 sep; 11 Sep; Sept11; September 9/11; 11th of September
n. 11 september 2001, datum waarop een vernietigende terroristische aanval tegen de Verenigde Naties was verricht door Islamitische terroristen die twee passagierstoestellen opzettelijk in de Twin Towers in New York vloog en deze totaal vernielden en ineen deden storten (ongeveer 3000 mensen verloren daarbij hun leven)
Fatah Revolutionary Council         
PALESTINIAN TERRORIST GROUP
Fatah Revolutionary Council; Fatah-Revolutionary Council; Abu Nidal organization; Abu Nidal Organisation; Fatah - the Revolutionary Council; Fatah al-Qiyadah al-Thawriyyah; Black June; Fatah - Revolutionary Council; Abu Nidal group; Fatah – Revolutionary Council; Abu Nidal Organization (ANO)
revolutieraad van de Fatach

Definición

Lampblack
·noun The fine impalpable soot obtained from the smoke of carbonaceous substances which have been only partly burnt, as in the flame of a smoking lamp. It consists of finely divided carbon, with sometimes a very small proportion of various impurities. It is used as an ingredient of printers' ink, and various black pigments and cements.

Wikipedia

Black September

Black September (Arabic: أيلول الأسود; Aylūl Al-Aswad), also known as the Jordanian Civil War, was a conflict fought in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan between the Jordanian Armed Forces (JAF), under the leadership of King Hussein, and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), under the leadership of Yasser Arafat, primarily between 16 and 27 September 1970, with certain aspects of the conflict continuing until 17 July 1971.

After Jordan lost control of the West Bank to Israel in 1967, Palestinian fighters known as fedayeen moved their bases to Jordan and stepped up their attacks on Israel and Israeli-occupied territories. One Israeli retaliation on a PLO camp based in Karameh, a Jordanian town along the border with the West Bank, developed into a full-scale battle. The perceived joint Jordanian-Palestinian victory against Israel during the 1968 Battle of Karameh led to an upsurge in Arab support for the fedayeen in Jordan, in both new recruits and financial aid. The PLO's strength in Jordan grew, and by the beginning of 1970, groups within the PLO had begun openly calling for the overthrow of the Hashemite monarchy.

Acting as a state within a state, the fedayeen disregarded local laws and regulations, and even attempted to assassinate King Hussein twice—leading to violent confrontations between them and the Jordanian Army in June 1970. Hussein wanted to oust them from the country, but hesitated to strike because he did not want his enemies to use it against him by equating Palestinian fighters with civilians. PLO actions in Jordan culminated in the Dawson's Field hijackings incident of 6 September, in which the PFLP hijacked three civilian aircraft and forced their landing in Zarqa, taking foreign nationals as hostages, and later blowing up the planes in front of journalists from around the world. Hussein saw this as intolerable, and ordered the army to take action.

On 17 September, the Jordanian Army surrounded cities with significant PLO presence including Amman and Irbid, and began shelling Palestinian refugee camps where the fedayeen were established. The next day, forces from the Syrian Army, with Palestine Liberation Army markings, intervened in support of the fedayeen and advanced towards Irbid which the fedayeen had occupied and declared to be a "liberated" city. On 22 September, the Syrians withdrew from Irbid after suffering heavy losses in an air-ground offensive launched by the Jordanians. Mounting pressure by Arab countries (such as Iraq) led Hussein to halt the fighting. On 13 October he signed an agreement with Arafat to regulate the fedayeen's presence in Jordan. However, the Jordanian military attacked again in January 1971, and the fedayeen were driven out of the cities, one by one, until 2,000 fedayeen surrendered after being surrounded in a forest near Ajloun on 17 July, marking the end of the conflict.

Jordan allowed the fedayeen to leave for Lebanon via Syria, and the fedayeen later participated in the 1975 Lebanese Civil War. The Black September Organization was founded after the conflict to carry out reprisals against Jordanian authorities, and the Organization's first noted attack was the assassination of Jordanian Prime Minister Wasfi Tal in 1971 who had commanded parts of the operations that expelled the fedayeen. The Organization then shifted to attacking Israeli targets, including the highly publicized Munich massacre of Israeli athletes. Even though Black September did not reflect a Jordanian-Palestinian divide, as there were Palestinians and Jordanians on both sides of the conflict, it paved the way for such a divide to emerge subsequently.

Ejemplos de uso de Black September
1. Its name is "Black September" –– a reference to the Jordanian crackdown on Palestinians in September 1'70. 1'72: Black September attacks the Israeli Olympic team during the games in Munich, Germany.
2. He also was fatalistic: If Black September wanted him dead, they‘d get him.
3. Black September, right around the corner, was the test of this obligation.
4. Then came Black September and Even Blacker October and it turned out Taleb had been right.
5. The armed Black September terrorists crept into the village late at night and they were spotted.