Former American President Jimmy Carter summed up Jordan's founding in Time Magazine on 11 October 1982:
[Jordan's King] Hussein is personally courageous but an extremely timid man in political matters. That timidity derives almost inevitably from the inherent weakness of Jordan. As a nation it is a contrivance, arbitrarily devised by a few strokes of the pen.
Transjordan remained part of the Mandate for Palestine until Britain granted it independence on 25 May 1946 when it was renamed "The Hashemite Kingdom of Transjordan".A further name change to Jordan only came in 1950 after Transjordan had conquered Judea and Samaria and East Jerusalem in 1948 – expelling all the Jews living there and uniting those areas with Transjordan to form a single territorial unit until their loss to Israel in the 1967 Six Day War.
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Israel and Jordan signed a peace treaty in 1994 which remains in force today despite many events that could have derailed it.
The two-state solution first contemplated in 1922 for Palestine:
- one for the Jews within 22% of the Mandate territory
- one for the Arabs exclusively in the remaining 78%
still remains the only realistic and politically-achievable basis for any two-state solution in 2021.
Subdividing Judea and Samaria (West Bank) and Gaza– 5% of the Mandate territory where sovereignty still remains unallocated – between Israel and Jordan – the two successor States to the Mandate for Palestine exercising sovereignty in the other 95% – remains the key to ending the Arab-Jewish conflict.
After 100 years - Jordan's ruling Hashemite dynasty finally needs to end its timidity.
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