Episode 15

Black September

We address the Palestinian revolution in Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan–leading up to the 1970 conflict that the national movement had with the Jordanian state and the violent expulsion of PLO guerillas that followed during Black September. Then, Egypt and Syria checked Israel’s power in the October War of 1973–only for Anwar Sadat, Nasser’s successor, to lead Egypt into Kissinger’s plan to pacify the Arab revolution.

Black September
Discussion Questions
Reader
Transcript
  • Abed offers a definition and theory of revolution in this episode, based on the historical experience of Palestinian revolutionary forces distributed across the many borders and boundaries of the region. What is it? What do you think about it? What makes this theory different from some classical notions of revolution?
  • As the space for internal political maneuver within the occupied territories shrinks, the Palestinians, “a refugee people” as Abed says in this episode, shift the locus of politics to Jordan, Lebanon and Syria. How would you describe the relationships between the PLO and these governments and polities?
  • George Habash said that the road to Palestinian liberation runs through the Arab capitols, or, in other words, is ultimately a regional struggle which depends on the power marshalled outside of the occupied territories. Does the historical experience of this episode seem to confirm or complicate that story?
  • Whereas other forces within the Palestinian national movement advocated for Arab states to allow Palestinians to undertake action against Israel from their borders, the theory of the Palestinian left, the PFLP and particularly the DFLP, argued that a precondition of a successful liberation struggle would be the overthrow of reactionary Arab powers, including the Jordanian King. What do you think of this theory, on the basis of Abed’s recounting? What information, context, and concrete analysis would you need to evaluate the claims of different tendencies in the moment?
  • What was the political aftershocks of Black September in Jordan for Beirut, for the region as a whole?
  • What was the American imperial strategy in this period? What is new about it, what seems to be the same?