Jordan’s King Is His Own Worst
Enemy
There’s much more evidence of the monarch’s poor
governance than a foreign conspiracy against him.
BY ANCHAL VOHRA
| APRIL 13, 2021, 10:14 AM
King Abdullah II bin Al Hussein of Jordan speaks at the United Nations
General Assembly on September 24, 2019 in New York City. STEPHANIE KEITH/GETTY IMAGES
A century
ago, Sharif Hussein bin Ali had big dreams for his Hashemite dynasty when he
was king of the Hejaz and emir of Mecca and Medina, Islam’s holiest sites. But
ever since the time of Lawrence of Arabia, when the Hashemites were Britain’s
main regional allies during World War I and led the Arab revolt against the
Ottoman Empire, the dynasty has been in steady decline. And with the ongoing
dispute among Hussein’s descendants in Jordan, the family may have reached a
new low.
The
Hashemite dynasty has faced myriad challenges over all those decades, both
externally and internally. Brothers in the line of succession have often been
dumped for sons, but never did the family wash its dirty linen in public—until
this month, when an internal rift became public gossip.
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On April 3,
Jordan announced that it had foiled a conspiracy to unseat its monarch and
destabilize the country. Foreign entities, top officials claimed, were
colluding with Prince Hamzah to topple King Abdullah II. Two weeks later, the
palace still has not shared a shred of evidence, and it’s becoming increasingly
clear that the tale doesn’t add up.
More likely
is that we are watching the oldest story in the world: a succession battle
playing out between royal siblings. Jordan’s monarch placed his half-brother
and former crown prince under house arrest to remove the challenge to his
throne, along with 18 alleged co-conspirators. But rather than a seditious
prince, the whole episode has revealed the authoritarian streak of an insecure
king.
Jordan’s
tribes have historically owed allegiance to the Hashemites in part due to their
religious lineage as descendants of the Prophet Mohammad, who, too, hailed from
the House of Hashim. Their support is essential for the dynasty, but they
increasingly feel marginalized and disaffected. The United States, which give
billions of dollars in aid to the country, have officially backed the king in
the feud. But they have been forced to take note of mounting repression in
Jordan under Abdullah’s leadership.
Abdullah
sold himself to the West as a Harley-Davidson-driving, laundry-washing,
pro-democracy monarch, but he has in fact consolidated power inside the palace,
gagged the press, arrested protesters, and dragged his feet on devolving actual
power to the legislature. The Hashemites, who were once seen as the more modern
monarchs, the most Westernized, are coming to be seen as rulers of just another
authoritarian Arab state.
According to
Reporters Without Borders, Jordan ranks 128th
out of 180 nations—below Afghanistan—in press freedom. Freedom House, a
U.S.-based nonprofit that conducts research and advocacy on democracy,
political freedom, and human rights, demoted Jordan’s status from “partly
free” to “not free” in the last year. Abdullah’s Jordan is not Syria or even
Saudi Arabia—yet—but those who disagree with the state run the risk of a knock
on the door from the intelligence services.
No one
believes Abdullah intends on meaningful political reforms, and his economic
reforms have produced more allegations of corruption than positive
economic results. He unleashed austerity measures to procure loans from the
international community and went on a privatization drive that some
international observers applauded. But these measures came at the cost of
losing support from the kingdom’s tribes.
Tariq Tell,
a professor of political studies at the American University of Beirut and an
expert on Jordanian politics, noted that the nationalist tribes had been
critical of the neoliberal economic reforms that had come to dominate
policymaking under the king. “The networks of East Bank tribes have been
eroding since the privatization drive,” he said. “Their children are not
getting the same jobs and benefits.” As their share of the pie, state jobs, and
benefits shrank and discontent set in, Hamzah saw an opportunity to curry favor
with this traditional support base. He began reaching out to tribal figures,
making appearances at weddings and funerals.
Little is
known about the prince’s economic and political ideology and how it compares
with his brother’s approach to governance. Hamzah has voiced the concern of the
masses but so far has not offered any solutions on how he intends to save a
country devoid of resources and flooded with refugees. His biggest asset seems
to be his looks, as he bears a close resemblance to his father, the long-ruling
and fondly remembered King Hussein bin Talal. Nevertheless, his popularity has nonetheless
risen since his arrest.
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He is
ambitious and was reportedly preferred by Hussein as a successor over his elder
brother, a choice that however proved too difficult to reconcile with Jordan’s
constitution. His consolation position as crown prince, next in line to the
throne, was removed by Abdullah and passed to his own son in 2004. That must
have hurt, but it still does not prove that he was plotting a coup against the
king.
According to
Tell, no one believed a coup was in the works. “Information coming out of the
palace is very contradictory,” he said. “The latest events seem connected to a
dispute over succession that has been going on since the removal of Hamzah as
crown prince. It seems the king wanted to end it.” Adnan Hayajneh, a professor
of international affairs at Jordan’s Hashemite University, said the palace’s
claims have left him befuddled. “From a political science perspective, I can’t
make sense of how foreign powers were involved,” he said. “The implication that
Israel must be involved does not make sense because they have good ties with
Jordan. Why would they want to destabilize Jordan? And even though the Saudis
and Emiratis have sidelined Jordan lately, they also don’t want to destabilize
the country.”
Among those
arrested for allegedly plotting the coup, just two were connected to Saudi
Arabia. But experts say these men are not linked in any way to the prince.
Bessma Momani, a professor of political science at the University of Waterloo
and a senior fellow at the Ontario-based Centre for International Governance
Innovation, said the arrest of Bassem Awadallah, a Jordanian-Saudi dual
national and advisor to Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, was
tactical. “The tribes despise Awadallah and see him as synonymous with
corruption and elitism,” Momani said. “But he has no link to Hamzah.
Awadallah’s arrest was a distraction.”
The palace’s
insinuation is that Israel and Saudi Arabia want Jordan to become an
alternative homeland for Palestinians currently residing in the West Bank as
part of a broader deal that replaces the Hashemites as the custodians of
Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem with the Al Saud family. Since Abdullah won’t play
ball, they want Hamzah to launch a coup by way of a popular uprising. But
analysts disagree and call it conjecture.
“The idea
has been floated periodically over the past half a century or so without ever
being taken that seriously, certainly not by Arab governments,” said Tobias
Borck, an associate fellow at the London-based Royal United Services Institute.
“It is often suggested that Saudi Arabia or the UAE now actually see this as a
feasible policy option. I do not believe that. I have never heard a Saudi or
Emirati policymaker seriously argue for it.”
At the heart
of the king’s insecurities is the protest movement locally described as Hirak.
In 2011, as the Arab Spring engulfed the region, Islamists of the Muslim
Brotherhood and members of Jordan’s tribes took to the streets. Tell said the
foundations of the Hirak movement were laid in the spring of 2010 by a revolt
of Jordanian military veterans: “In 2011, the military veterans released a
manifesto, and even though it did not specifically say they wanted to replace
the king with Prince Hamzah, their preference was clear.” Jordan’s security
establishment is controlled by members of Jordan’s different tribes. Even
though Abdullah has appointed the senior officers, his biggest fear is that
some might openly revolt against him in favor of the prince.
But many say
the king’s fears are exaggerated. “Despite the various ethnic and ideological
fault lines in Jordanian politics, pro-reform and pro-democracy
demonstrators—from the leftist, nationalist, and Islamist parties and also from
nonpartisan youth movements across the country —have marched and protested
against corruption and for reform almost every Friday for more than a year,”
said Curtis Ryan, the author of two books on Jordan and a professor of
political science at Appalachian State University. “This does not mean looming
revolution or civil war. Indeed, most Jordanians still support the monarchy and
want it to lead the country to genuine reform.”
The king
seems to be his own biggest enemy, rather than Hamzah or any popular
opposition. History is replete with stories of insecure kings becoming
self-destructive. Instead of arrests and unsubstantiated theories, it might
serve him well if he focused on genuine political reform and devolved power to
the parliament. Driving a Harley does not make him a modern king, but
instituting a constitutional monarchy, where he is a figurehead and no more,
would do just that.
Anchal Vohra is a
Beirut-based columnist for Foreign Policy and
a freelance TV correspondent and commentator on the Middle
East. Twitter: @anchalvohra
TAGS: AUTHORITARIANISM, JORDAN
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