Jordanian Military Effectiveness in the War of Israeli Independence

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Jordanian Military Effectiveness in the War of Israeli Independence

Glubb Pasha (1953)

The conduct of the Arab Legion against the nascent Israeli
army in 1948 was, without doubt, the best performance of any Arab military
against any foe of the modern era. Alone among the Arab armies, the legion
acted and fought like a modern, professional military. Its units demonstrated
remarkable cohesiveness, sticking together and clinging to their positions even
under the most severe pressure, such as in the second battle of Latrun. The
soldiers themselves regularly displayed a high level of personal courage, and
there are any number of stories from both the Israeli and Jordanian sides to
attest to this. The Jordanians demonstrated a good grasp of combined-arms
operations, regularly integrating infantry, armored cars, and artillery better
than the Israelis. Their marksmanship was very high, and their counterattacks
were usually well timed and aggressive. Jordanian units covered their flanks
well and were not paralyzed when the Israelis did succeed in turning them. The
legion patrolled constantly, often precluding Israeli surprises and even
surprising the Israelis on several occasions. Jordanian junior officers showed
real initiative, seizing fleeting opportunities – such as attacking the Latrun
police fort when the Israelis had left it dangerously undermanned – that proved
to be critical to their war effort. Jordan’s tactical leaders led well-timed
and effective counterattacks that frequently were the decisive factor in
combat. Finally, legion officers regularly employed operational maneuver to
gain an advantage in combat, although at the tactical level, many Jordanian
attacks were simple frontal assaults.

Nevertheless, at least two qualifiers must be kept in mind
when considering Jordanian performance during this conflict. First, while the
Jordanians unquestionably fought better than any of the other Arab armies, and
in many ways they fought as well as or better than the Israelis, their
performance does not exactly rank as one of the great campaigns of military
history. The Jordanians did not face a very capable adversary, and they had
several important advantages in their favor. Myths of Israeli invincibility
aside, the Haganah of 1948 was a very mediocre force. Its unit capabilities
were uneven, with some brigades performing well and others giving a rather poor
account of themselves. The Israelis were inadequately armed and trained and
suffered from political infighting. They had all kinds of problems with
personnel and languages and with the incompatibility of their hodge-podge of
weaponry. Some Haganah units paid too little attention to reconnaissance and so
were surprised by Jordanian actions that might easily have been discovered and
averted. The Jordanians were able to defend the superb terrain of Judaea and
Samaria, while the Israelis were mostly forced to attack from the coastal plain
up into the central hills. Finally, the Israelis also had to fight five other
Arab armies, which prevented them from concentrating decisive force against the
Jordanians.

Despite all of these advantages, Jordan’s forces only
succeeded in fighting the Israelis to a draw. The Jordanians consistently
defeated Israeli attacks against their prepared defensive positions. Most of
the successful Israeli offensives in the Jerusalem area (such as at Lod, Ramla,
and Mount Zion) were conducted against small Arab Legion forces, while larger
Jordanian units in the Old City and Latrun held their ground against numerous
determined Israeli assaults. Of course, in virtually all of these cases, the
Israeli attacks were clumsy frontal assaults that played right into Jordanian
hands. Although the legion defeated most Israeli attacks, they fared little
better in their own offensives. The only significant gains the Jordanians were
able to make against Israeli resistance were the conquests of the Etzioni bloc,
the Jewish Quarter of the Old City, and the Shaykh Jarrah area. All of these
successes came in the first weeks of the war, before the first truce, and were
all modest achievements. In none of these battles did the Jordanians face a
large, well-armed, and adequately trained force. For example, in Shaykh Jarrah,
a legion infantry battalion supported by artillery and armored cars defeated
seventy infantrymen from the Irgun. Even with the advantage of urban terrain on
the Israeli side, this was a mismatch, and the legion’s victory cannot be taken
as a sign of real prowess on the part of the Jordanians. Conversely, the moment
that they ran into better-trained or larger Israeli units – such as in the
Mandlebaum Gate area and at Notre Dame-their attacks went nowhere.

An additional qualifier that must be attached to Jordanian
performance is the contribution of the Arab Legion’s British officers. There is
a consensus among experts on the Jordanian military and the 1948 war that it
was the British influence and presence that was the single most important
element of Jordanian military effectiveness. For instance, Brig. Gen. S. A.
El-Edroos, an unabashed admirer of the Jordanian military, remarked, “The
credit for the excellence of the Arab Legion’s performance during the war of
1948 and later, during the border wars of 1951-1956, must in all fairness be
given to Glubb Pasha and the contingent of British officers who served with the
Arab Legion from its formation in 1921 to the exodus of 1956.”‘ Col.
Trevor Dupuy has similarly noted that the principal source of Jordanian
military effectiveness was “decades of British leadership and military
tradition.”

There is a great deal of validity to this assessment. Most
of the successes the Jordanians enjoyed and most of the competent military
practices they demonstrated were attributable to their officer corps, which was
comprised entirely of British and Jordanians with long years of British
schooling and military training. The aggressive counterattacks, battlefield maneuvers,
flexible operations, and acts of opportunistic initiative were all exercised by
the (British-dominated) officer corps. Likewise, the high level of individual
soldiering skills found in the Arab Legion, such as its excellent marksmanship,
is directly attributable to the British emphasis on long-term-service
professionals, who thereby benefited from iron discipline and lengthy training.
The very competent strategic direction of the war, itself another element of
Jordan’s praiseworthy showing in this conflict, was entirely the product of
British officering. It is hard to discount the pervasive British influence as a
source of the various skills displayed by the Arab Legion in 1948.

Jordanian-Israeli
Clashes, 1949-66

Almost immediately after the conclusion of the war in
Palestine, Amman inaugurated plans to enhance its military capabilities both
quantitatively and qualitatively. Although ‘Abdallah and his British military
chiefs had generally been pleased with the performance of the Arab Legion against
the Israelis, they recognized that it was too small a force to adequately
defend the new nation against the variety of threats it now confronted. In the
years after the Arab defeat in 1948, Arab nationalists overthrew several of the
Arab monarchies and narrowly failed to unseat many others. The new regimes in
Egypt, Syria, Iraq, Yemen, and elsewhere bore little love for the remaining
monarchs like ‘Abdallah and mounted both clandestine and overt challenges to
their rule. In the face of these threats, Amman began a major campaign to
augment the Arab Legion.

This expansion, however, did not imply a move to a mass
army. The British officers in particular were adamantly opposed to diluting the
caliber of manpower by adopting large-scale conscription. Instead, they chose
to retain the same long terms of service and rigorous discipline and training
but accept more volunteers. In addition, as another important way of increasing
the overall combat power at its disposal, Amman began pursuing newer and
heavier weapons, particularly tanks and combat aircraft, to improve the
firepower and mobility of the legion.

The war in Palestine had also pointed out other shortcomings
that Jordan attempted to address in the years thereafter. The legion combat support
and combat-service-support branches had proven to be weak links. Prior to 1948,
the Arab Legion had relied on British military forces in the Middle East to
take care of its various logistical and support functions as well as provide
air cover, signals, and combat-engineer units. When the British pulled out of
Palestine in 1948, they took these support personnel with them, forcing the
legion to improvise during the war with Israel. In particular, the Jordanians
had suffered from a dearth of technically competent personnel to man signals,
artillery, combat engineering, logistics, and maintenance billets.

Across the board, Jordan and its British officers tried to
remedy these problems and to expand and modernize the legion. In 1950, Amman
established an officer cadet training school followed by training programs for
technical and logistics personnel, the Royal Military College, and the Command
Staff College. In 1951 King Abdallah created the Royal Jordanian Air Force
(RJAF) with a small number of older British aircraft. In addition, the Arab
Legion began accepting large numbers of new volunteers. Throughout the 1950s
and 196os, the legion remained an extremely popular career. Its prestige was
enormous and its economic benefits excellent. Indeed, by the mid-1960s, there
was a long waiting list for volunteers, and many applicants resorted to bribery
simply to be able to serve as enlisted men. Consequently, the legion’s strength
rose from 12,000 men in nine infantry battalions and several independent
infantry companies in 1949 to 55,000 men in nine infantry brigades, two armored
brigades, and five independent tank and infantry battalions in 1967.

These efforts also produced some unintended problems,
however. First, as part of the effort to improve Jordan’s ability to operate and
maintain technical equipment, Glubb encouraged the recruitment of more
technically qualified personnel, including many who simply had a passing
exposure to modern machinery and electronics. The segment of Jordan’s
population that most possessed these traits were the Hadaris, particularly the
new Palestinian refugees. The Palestinians mostly came from the big coastal
towns like Jaffa and Haifa and so had been around cars, telephones, and other
mundane technology. They also possessed the largest number of young men trained
in technical fields such as engineering and the physical sciences. But the
Hashimites had developed a very strong relationship with the Bedouin population
during the 1930s and 1940s and felt less comfortable relying on the Jordanian
Hadaris; they did not trust the Palestinians at all. Most of the Palestinians
looked down on the Hashimites and their Bedouin supporters as unsophisticated
“bumpkins.” Furthermore, the Palestinians were intent on reconquering
their homeland, a goal about which the Jordanian monarchy was ambivalent at
best. Thus, Glubb’s efforts to recruit technically skilled Palestinians and
Hadaris was regarded with misgiving in Amman, and such recruits were strictly
segregated within the military. Ultimately, “West Bankers” were
relegated to the technical services – engineering, supply and transport,
maintenance and repair, medical services, and signals -and to four of the
infantry brigades. The other five infantry brigades, the two armored brigades,
and the independent armor battalions were all kept strictly Bedouin. Moreover,
the four “Palestinian” brigades were deployed to the West Bank, while
both armored brigades and up to four of the “Bedouin” infantry
brigades were kept on the East Bank, between the West Bank units and the
capital. Amman kept a close watch on its handful of Palestinian officers, and
few were allowed to rise even as high as battalion commander (and then usually
only in support units). Command in the combat units was reserved for Bedouin
officers.

The second problem the Jordanians encountered derived from
the manning of their new officer billets. The dramatic expansion of the Arab
Legion demanded a corresponding increase in the size of the Jordanian officer
corps. Amman’s response was to secure large numbers of additional British
officers seconded from the British military. By 1955, British officers accounted
for over half of all the officer billets in the Jordanian army, more than at
any previous time. This influx proved crucial in training the hordes of new
recruits being brought in to fill out the expanded-force structure. Simply put,
there existed no readily available pool of trained officers in Jordan that
could have been drawn upon to provide adequate training to such a large number
of new personnel inducted in such a short amount of time. Had the Jordanians
not been able to obtain the services of these British officers, their expansion
program would have been less successful and might have failed altogether,
producing a larger but far less capable force. However, the addition of more
British officers created resentment among the Jordanian junior officers, who
believed that they should have been given first preference for the new command
assignments that opened up as a result of the expansion.

This disgruntlement eventually contributed to the dismissal
of the British from Jordanian service. In March 1956 the new Jordanian king,
Hussein ibn Talal, grandson of ‘Abdallah, dismissed Glubb and the other British
officers from the Arab Legion and officially renamed the force the Jordan Arab
Army al-Arabiyyah al-Urduniyyah). Although the young king and Glubb had some
differences regarding the future course of the Jordanian armed forces, the real
causes of the rupture were Arab nationalism and the ambitions of Jordan’s
junior-officer corps. Many Jordanians saw the continuing British presence in
the military as a lingering vestige of imperial control over the country. At
best, the British officers had divided loyalties, and their conduct in the war
with Israel served as proof that their first allegiance was to London. Finally,
ambitious young Jordanian officers realized that their future advancement
depended on removing the obstacle of the British officers. Consequently, they
agitated for Glubb’s dismissal under the guise of nationalism, though really
for their own self-interest.

The sudden departure of the British officers from the former
Arab Legion not only created considerable “headroom” for aspiring
Jordanian officers but also ushered in new headaches for the regime. In
particular, the Jordanians found that few among their officer candidates were
really qualified for tactical command assignments. Amman was able to find
enough competent officers to fill the relatively small number of senior slots
opened up by the British exodus but ran into difficulties adequately filling
the much larger number of lower-ranking commands. As Brig. Peter Young, a
highly decorated British commando and the commander of the Jordanian 9th
Infantry Battalion until 1956, succinctly noted, “there was a distinct
shortage of potential battalion and company commanders.”” Ultimately,
the Jordanians were forced to make do with a number of officers who would not
have passed muster under the British because they were the only men
available.”

Combat Operations

Adding to the tumult caused by these changes, the Jordanians had to be constantly on their guard against Israel. Combat never fully ceased along the border even after the December 1948 ceasefire. Palestinians, Jordanians, and Israelis found reasons to snipe at each other across the ceasefire lines, raid each others’ villages, and kidnap each others’ soldiers. Israeli forces performed poorly in these operations at first, prompting Tel Aviv to set up a special elite force, Unit 101, under the leadership of Maj. Ariel Sharon, specifically for cross border raids. In 1954 the Israelis expanded this elite force by merging Unit 101 with their paratrooper battalion to form the 202d Paratroop Brigade, again under Sharon’s leadership. Sharon’s troops dramatically altered the balance along the Israeli-Jordanian border. He proved to be a brilliant tactician, his men were superb fighters, and they regularly defeated much larger Jordanian and Palestinian forces. This string of defeats, and the increasing ferocity of Sharon’s raids, forced the Jordanians to beef up the army’s presence on the West Bank, escalating the scale of combat even further. The largest and most important clash between Sharon’s force and the Arab Legion was at the West Bank village of Qalqilyah in October 1956.

THE BATTLE OF QALQILYAH

In September and October 1956, a group of Palestinian
fedayeen guerrillas conducted a series of attacks on Israel from the Qalqilyah
area that left nine Israeli civilians dead. Tel Aviv decided to mount a
reprisal raid using Sharon’s 202d Paratroop Brigade. The target of the strike
would be the Jordanian military headquarters at Qalgilyah for sanctioning, or
at least not preventing, the operations of this Palestinian group. Qalqilyah is
about twenty kilometers northeast of Tel Aviv at the western tip of a salient
that sticks out into Israel from the West Bank territories to create the
narrowest point of Israel’s narrow waist. The town was defended by elements of
the Jordanian 9th Infantry Battalion. At least another company of the battalion
was in reserve at Azzun, several miles to the east, waiting to counterattack
any Israeli reprisal raid.

On 10 October Sharon led elements of his brigade against
Qalqilyah. Israel’s political leadership placed several unusual constraints on
his operation so as not to jeopardize the ongoing negotiations with Britain and
France for a combined military campaign against Egypt. Sharon’s plan had been
to deploy a blocking force along the Qalqilyah-Azzun road; another force would
seize the Zuffin Hill, which overlooked the Azzun road; a third force would
clear the Jordanian strongpoints south of Qalqilyah; and another force would
actually seize and demolish the military headquarters. However, Tel Aviv vetoed
the capture of Zuffin Hill, and the attack against the strongpoints south of
the town, they feared, would make the operation seem too large.”

As a result of these changes, the raid turned into a pitched
battle. When Sharon’s units drove eastward into Qalgilyah, the Jordanian company
in the strongpoint south of town opened fire on them. Although these troops did
not get out of their positions and counterattack the Israelis to prevent them
from reaching the military headquarters, their fire was accurate, and since it
came at the Israelis from the flank, it slowed down their operation. Meanwhile,
the reserve elements of the 9th Battalion came racing down the Azzun-Qalqilyah
road as soon as they received radio reports of the Israeli attack only to
blunder into the Israeli blocking force, which threw them back with heavy
losses. The Jordanian reinforcements were considerably larger than the Israeli
blocking force, however, and their size prompted the Israelis to fall back to
another ambush position. The Jordanians regrouped and attacked down the road
again, and again they were surprised and mauled in an Israeli ambush. Once more
they fell back in disarray, regrouped, attacked again, and were again ambushed.
After this third bloody nose, the Jordanian commander deployed a part of his force
to move north of the road into a flanking position. It is unclear whether he
intended to mount a flanking attack on the Israeli blocking force or had given
up and was simply deploying to prevent the Israelis from driving farther east
into Jordan.

Regardless of its purpose, this move suddenly turned things
in favor of the 9th Battalion. By this time, the Israeli main body had
completed demolishing the headquarters compound in Qalgilyah and were ready to
withdraw back to Israel. As part of the withdrawal, the small Israeli blocking
force was ordered to pull back, not west, but north to the Israeli kibbutz of
Eyal, which caused them to run into the Jordanian flanking position. The
Jordanians surprised the Israelis and inflicted a fair number of casualties on
them. At that point, the Jordanian commander realized he had caught a small
Israeli unit in a bad position and threw all of his forces against them. He
attacked the pinned-down Israelis but sent part of his force west to occupy
Zuffin Hill to cut their escape route west to Qalqilyah. The Israelis did try
to escape westward and were then caught in an ambush by the Jordanians on the
hill. Sharon eventually was forced to call in artillery and to dispatch a small
force of Ares he had been holding in reserve, which cut their way through the
Jordanian lines and extracted the trapped unit at the cost of one of the Arcs
lost to antitank fire. All told, the Israelis suffered 18 dead and 60 wounded,
while the Jordanians suffered between 120 and 300 casualties.

By MSW
Forschungsmitarbeiter Mitch Williamson is a technical writer with an interest in military and naval affairs. He has published articles in Cross & Cockade International and Wartime magazines. He was research associate for the Bio-history Cross in the Sky, a book about Charles ‘Moth’ Eaton’s career, in collaboration with the flier’s son, Dr Charles S. Eaton. He also assisted in picture research for John Burton’s Fortnight of Infamy. Mitch is now publishing on the WWW various specialist websites combined with custom website design work. He enjoys working and supporting his local C3 Church. “Curate and Compile“
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