Tags

, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Kremlin (KGB) connections to PLFP (People’s Liberation Front of Palestine) are documented in both the Bukovsky and Mitrokhin archives. Putin worked for the KGB and may have been a terrorist handler in Germany. The Bukovsky archives refer to the head of external operations section of the People’s Liberation Front of Palestine, W. Haddad, as a “trusted KGB intelligence agent”. https://bukovsky-archive.com/2016/07/01/16-may-1975-1218-a/
Alexandr Litvinenko confirmed the connection between the KGB-FSB and Haddad, Carlos the Jakal, as well as Arafat.

They also had literal Nazi connections. Francois Genoud met Hitler in 1932, and remained committed to Hitler’s ideas until his death in 1996. Genoud also funded the Ayatollah Khomeini during his stay in France prior to the Iranian Revolution. Genoud supported Arab groups, including Palestinian ones: “As the owner of a private bank in Geneva, he supported the Palestinian resistance with money and know-how, carrying on his own anti-Semitic struggle against Israel. Thus, in October 1969, Genoud met Wadi Haddad, one of the most notorious leaders of the Palestinian militants, in Beirut. From then on, the two, who had a common enemy in Israel, worked closely together.https://web.archive.org/web/20230617100630/https://www.nzz.ch/english/new-leads-in-unsolved-1970-death-lead-to-nazi-allied-swiss-banker-ld.1741613
Haddad was born into a family of Palestinian Christians (Greek Orthodox) in the city of Safed in 1927… Haddad died on 28 March 1978 in East Germany, reportedly from leukemia. According to the book Striking Back, published by Aaron J. Klein in 2006, Haddad was killed by Mossad, which had sent the chocolate-loving Haddad Belgian chocolates coated with a slow-acting and undetectable poison…https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wadie_Haddad

Black September (Arabic: أيلول الأسود Aylūl al-ʾAswad), also known as the Jordanian Civil War,[9] was an armed conflict between Jordan, led by King Hussein, and the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), led by chairman Yasser Arafat. The main phase of the fighting took place between 16 and 27 September 1970, though certain aspects of the conflict continued until 17 July 1971.

During the 1967 Six-Day War, Israel militarily occupied what had been the Jordanian-annexed West Bank. Following this development, the Palestinian fedayeen relocated to Jordan and stepped up their attacks on Israel and the newly Israeli-occupied territories. Tensions began when an Israeli reprisal operation took place in Jordan in 1968, developing into the full-scale Battle of Karameh. Within the Arab world, the perceived joint victory of Jordan and the Palestinians against Israeli troops led to a surge in support for the fedayeen in Jordan. Drawing in both new recruits and financial aid, the PLO’s strength in Jordan grew rapidly, and by the beginning of 1970, groups within the PLO had begun calling for the overthrow of Jordan’s Hashemite monarchy.

Acting as a state within a state, the fedayeen openly disregarded Jordanian laws and regulations. On two occasions, they attempted to assassinate Hussein, leading to violent confrontations with the Jordanian Armed Forces by June 1970. Hussein wanted to oust them from the country by force, but had been hesitant to strike; he feared that his enemies would leverage such an offensive by equating the Palestinian fighters with civilians.

Continued PLO activities in Jordan culminated in the Dawson’s Field hijackings of 6 September 1970, when the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) seized three civilian passenger flights and forced their landing in the Jordanian city of Zarqa, where they took foreign nationals as hostages and later blew up the planes in front of journalists from around the world. Hussein saw this as the last straw and ordered the Jordanian Army to take action.[10]

On 17 September 1970, the Jordanian Army surrounded all cities with a significant PLO presence, including Amman and Irbid, and began shelling Palestinian refugee camps, out of which the fedayeen were operating.

The next day, 10,000 Syrian troops bearing PLA markings began an invasion by advancing 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 to a coordinated aerial–ground offensive by the Jordanians.

Mounting pressure from other Arab countries, such as Iraq, led Hussein to halt his offensive. 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 Palestinians were driven out of the cities, one by one, until 2,000 fedayeen surrendered after they were encircled during the Ajlun offensive on 17 July, formally marking the end of the conflict.[11]

Jordan allowed the fedayeen to relocate to Lebanon via Syria. Four years later, the fedayeen became involved in the Lebanese Civil War, which would continue until 1990.

The Palestinian Black September Organization was founded after the conflict to carry out attacks against Jordanian authorities in response to the fedayeen’s expulsion; their first notable attack was the assassination of Jordanian prime minister Wasfi Tal in 1971, as he had commanded parts of the military operations against the fedayeen.

The organization then shifted its focus to attacking Israeli targets and later carried out the Munich massacre, in which they murdered 11 Israeli athletes in a high-profile attack at the 1972 Summer Olympics.

Though the events of Black September did not immediately reflect a Jordanian–Palestinian divide, as there were Jordanians and Palestinians on both sides of the conflict, it did pave the way for such a divide to emerge subsequently.[12]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_September The current King of Jordan’s wife was born in Kuwait to Palestinian parents and met him in Jordan, after they fled Kuwait. https://miningawareness.wordpress.com/2023/11/16/1991-kuwait-expelled-hundreds-of-thousands-of-palestinians/

Kremlin (KGB) connections to PLFP from the Bukovsky archives:
trusted KGB intelligence agent W. Haddad, head of the external operations section of the People’s Liberation Front of Palestine” Read more here: https://bukovsky-archive.com/2016/07/01/16-may-1975-1218-a/

Francois Genoud met Hitler in 1932, and remained committed to Hitler’s ideas until his death in 1996. Genoud also funded the Ayatollah Khomeini during his stay in France prior to the Iranian Revolution. Genoud supported Arab groups, including Palestinian ones: “As the owner of a private bank in Geneva, he supported the Palestinian resistance with money and know-how, carrying on his own anti-Semitic struggle against Israel. Thus, in October 1969, Genoud met Wadi Haddad, one of the most notorious leaders of the Palestinian militants, in Beirut. From then on, the two, who had a common enemy in Israel, worked closely together.”https://web.archive.org/web/20230617100630/https://www.nzz.ch/english/new-leads-in-unsolved-1970-death-lead-to-nazi-allied-swiss-banker-ld.1741613

Swiss probe anti-U.S. neo-Nazi / Suspected financial ties to al Qaeda
By Jay Bushinsky, Chronicle Foreign Service March 12, 2002
Over the years, Genoud paid French attorney Jacques Verges to defend Ramirez and Barbie and also covered the legal expenses of Eichmann before an Israeli court in 1961. He also subsidized Khomeini’s prolonged exile in France when Iran was governed by Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi.” https://web.archive.org/web/20220819045814/https://www.sfgate.com/news/article/swiss-probe-anti-u-s-neo-nazi-suspected-2866316.php

From the Mitrokhin Archives:
In September 1970 King Hussein of Jordan, infuriated by the recent PFLP hijacking of aircraft to a Jordanian airfield and by the emergence of the PLO as a virtually independent state within his kingdom, used his army to drive it out. Thousands of Palestinians were killed in what became known as Black September. A shadowy terrorist organization of that name was set up within Arafat’s Fatah movement at the heart of the PLO when it regrouped in Lebanon. Among the atrocities committed by Black September, for which Arafat disingenuously disclaimed responsibility, was an attack on Israeli athletes competing in the August 1972 Munich Olympics, in which eleven were killed

Soviet policy remained to distance itself from terrorism in public while continuing in private to promote Palestinian terrorist attacks. When seeking Politburo approval for Haddad’s terrorist operations, Andropov misleadingly referred to them instead as ‘special’ or ‘sabotage’ operations. ‘W. Haddad’, he reported, ‘is clearly aware of our negative attitude in principle towards terrorism and he does not raise with us matters connected with this particular line of PFLP activity.’ There was, however, no coherent dividing line between the terrorist attacks which ‘in principle’ the Soviet leadership opposed and the ‘sabotage operations’ which it was willing in practice to support. On 23 April 1974 Andropov informed Brezhnev that Haddad had requested further ‘special technical devices’ for his future operations:

At the present time [Haddad’s section of] the PFLP is engaged in preparing a number of special operations, including strikes against major petroleum reservoirs in various parts of the world (Saudi Arabia, the Persian Gulf, Hong Kong and elsewhere); the destruction of tankers and supertankers; operations against American and Israeli representatives in Iran, Greece, Ethiopia and Kenya; a raid on the building of the Tel Aviv diamond centre, among other [targets].

Andropov repeated his earlier assurances that, through Haddad, the KGB retained the ability ‘to control to some extent the activities of the PFLP foreign operations department, [and] to influence it in ways favourable to the Soviet Union’. Three days later Brezhnev authorized the supply of ‘special technical devices’ to Haddad.28 In June 1974 Andropov approved detailed arrangements for the secret supply of weaponry to Haddad and the training of PFLP Special Operations Group instructors in the use of mines and sabotage equipment. In September, Haddad visited Russia, staying with his wife, son and daughter in a KGB dacha (codenamed BARVIKHA-1). During discussions on his future operations he agreed to allocate two or three of his men to the hunting down of Soviet defectors… Brezhnev was informed that Haddad was the only non-Russian who knew the source of the arms, which, as in the first weapons delivery to the PFLP five years earlier, were handed over at sea near Aden under cover of darkness…” Read: “The World Was Going Our Way: The KGB and the Battle for the the Third World” C. Andrew and V. Mitrokhin https://archive.org/details/TheWorldWasGoingOurWayTheKGBAndTheBattleForTheTheThirdWorld

A. Litvinenko: “The bloodiest terrorists in the world were or are agents of the KGB-FSB. These are well-known, like Carlos Ilyich Ramiros, nicknamed “the Jackal,” the late Yassir Arafat, Saddam Hussein, Adjalan (he is condemned in Turkey), Wadi Haddad, the head of the service of external operations of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine, Hauyi, the head of the communist party of Lebanon, Mr. Papaionnu from the Cyprus, Sean Garland from Ireland and many others. All of them were trained by the KGB, received money from there, weapons and explosives, counterfeit documents and a communication equipment for carrying out acts of terrorism worldwide”. Read: https://miningawareness.wordpress.com/2022/10/10/is-al-qaeda-a-tool-of-the-kremlin-an-interview-with-the-murdered-alexander-litvinenko/