King Abdullah I ruled Jordan
after independence from Britain. After the assassination
of King Abdullah I in 1951, his son King Talal ruled
briefly. King Talal's major accomplishment was the
Jordanian constitution. King Talal was removed from the
throne in 1952 due to mental illness. At that time his
son, Hussein, was too young to rule, and hence a
committee ruled over Jordan.
King Abdullah I
After Hussein reached 18,
he ruled Jordan as king from 1953 to 1999, surviving a
number of challenges to his rule, drawing on the loyalty
of his military, and serving as a symbol of unity and
stability for both the Bedouin-related and Palestinian
communities in Jordan. King Hussein ended martial law in
1991 and legalized political parties in 1992. In 1989
and 1993, Jordan held free and fair parliamentary
elections. Controversial changes in the election law led
Islamist parties to boycott the 1997 elections.
King Abdullah II
succeeded his father Hussein following the latter's
death in February 1999. Abdullah moved quickly to
reaffirm Jordan's peace treaty with Israel and its
relations with the United States. Abdullah, during the
first year in power, refocused the government's agenda
on economic reform.
King Abdullah was
schooled at St. Edmund's School in Surrey, England as
well as Eaglebrook School and Deerfield Academy in the
United States. His university training was at Pembroke
College, Oxford. In 1980, Abdullah left Pembroke and
entered the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst in the
United Kingdom as a cadet. He joined the 13th/18th Royal
Hussars (Queen Mary's Own) upon commission as a Second
Lieutenant the following year. King Abdullah retains
close links with the British Army and is the
Colonel-in-Chief of The Light Dragoons, a tank regiment
and the successor to the 13th/18th Royal Hussars. In
1987, he completed an advanced studies and research
program at the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service
at Georgetown University. He took full command of the
Jordanian special forces in November 1993, becoming a
Major general. He commanded the special forces until
1996, when he was instructed to reorganize the special
forces and other special units under the special
operation command SOCOM. Upon assuming his
constitutional powers, he became the commander-in-chief.
King Abdullah holds the ranks of Field Marshal in the
Jordan Arab Army and Marshal of the Royal Jordanian Air
Force. |