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Popular Revolutionary Front for the Liberation of Palestine

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who expelled all Palestinian fighters regardless of group affiliation due to the thousands of casualties during the conflict, most of which were Palestinian. Members of the PFLP fought among themselves, as the left-wing and right-wing leaders each blamed the others for the defeat in Jordan, leading to the left-wing faction of the PFLP breaking away to form the PRFLP. Prior to this the left-wing faction was founded via a merge of the Movement of Arab Nationalists, the Palestine Liberation Front, Heroes of the Return and Vengeance Youth.
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The PRFLP had its beginnings in the wake of the Black September fighting between the Palestinian militants and the Jordanian Armed Forces during September 27, 1970 to July 1971. There was a mass exodus of Palestinian fighters traveling from Jordan to Lebanon as a result of an order by King Hussein,
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After splintering off from the PFLP, the PRFLP sought to align itself with the mainstream Fatah. They also attempted to distance itself from any Palestinians who thought the group to be jihad, as the PRFLP wanted to separate the struggles of the Palestinian people from Islamic Jihad. The PRFLP did
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The PRFLP believed in the one-state solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and rejected any ideas of political compromise. They did not recognize the state of Israel, which they felt had to be destroyed.
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Their charter espoused beliefs that they were engaged in a class war that was led by a revolutionary ideology and that the main focus of their struggle lay in Palestine.
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not conduct any known terrorist attacks following its split from the PFLP, and instead served as a left-wing Marxist-Leninist political group.
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Abukhalil, As'ad (1987). "Internal Contradictions in the PFLP: Decision Making and Policy Orientation".
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Guerrilla and terrorist organisations: a world directory and bibliography
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The PLO and Israel: From Armed Conflict to Political Solution, 1964–1994
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1980s disestablishments in the Israeli Civil Administration area
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Palestinian Resistance: Organization of a Nationalist Movement
39:. It was formed in February 1972, following a split from the 115:
The Palestinian Entity, 1959–1974: Arab Politics and the PLO
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Popular Revolutionary Front for the Liberation of Palestine
172:(1st ed.). Elsevier Science & Technology Books. 142:
Entebbe: The Most Daring Raid of Israel's Special Forces
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Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
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1972 establishments in the Israeli Military Governorate
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Al-Jabhat ash-Sha'biyah at-Thawriyah li-Tahrir Filastin
54:Other groups that split from the PFLP included the 74:After the split the group was led by Abu Shibab. 324:History of the Palestine Liberation Organization 145:. The Rosen Publishing Group, Inc. p. 9. 309:Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine 41:Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine 8: 294:Arab Nationalist Movement breakaway groups 58:, Organization of Arab Palestine, and the 104: 27:: الجبهة الشعبية الثورية لتحرير فلسطين 47:after the conflict in Jordan known as 304:Defunct Palestinian political parties 7: 260:Sela, Avraham; Maʻoz, Moshe (1997). 255: 253: 251: 299:Defunct Palestinian militant groups 193:Janke, Peter; Sim, Richard (1983). 14: 1: 340: 16:Palestinian militant group 139:Dunstan, Simon (2011). 112:Shemesh, Moshe (1988). 266:. St. Martin's Press. 166:Amos, John W. (1980). 35:group and part of the 118:. Psychology Press. 56:PFLP-General Command 33:Palestinian militant 222:Middle East Journal 37:Rejectionist Front 273:978-0-312-12906-4 206:978-0-02-916150-0 179:978-0-08-025094-6 152:978-1-4488-1868-6 125:978-0-7146-3281-0 331: 278: 277: 257: 246: 245: 217: 211: 210: 190: 184: 183: 163: 157: 156: 136: 130: 129: 109: 31:) (PRFLP) was a 339: 338: 334: 333: 332: 330: 329: 328: 284: 283: 282: 281: 274: 259: 258: 249: 219: 218: 214: 207: 192: 191: 187: 180: 165: 164: 160: 153: 138: 137: 133: 126: 111: 110: 106: 101: 92: 90:After splitting 80: 68: 49:Black September 17: 12: 11: 5: 337: 335: 327: 326: 321: 316: 311: 306: 301: 296: 286: 285: 280: 279: 272: 247: 228:(3): 361–378. 212: 205: 185: 178: 158: 151: 131: 124: 103: 102: 100: 97: 91: 88: 79: 76: 67: 64: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 336: 325: 322: 320: 317: 315: 312: 310: 307: 305: 302: 300: 297: 295: 292: 291: 289: 275: 269: 265: 264: 256: 254: 252: 248: 243: 239: 235: 231: 227: 223: 216: 213: 208: 202: 199:. Macmillan. 198: 197: 189: 186: 181: 175: 171: 170: 162: 159: 154: 148: 144: 143: 135: 132: 127: 121: 117: 116: 108: 105: 98: 96: 89: 87: 84: 77: 75: 72: 65: 63: 61: 57: 52: 50: 46: 42: 38: 34: 30: 26: 22: 262: 225: 221: 215: 195: 188: 168: 161: 141: 134: 114: 107: 93: 85: 81: 73: 69: 53: 28: 20: 18: 288:Categories 99:References 66:Background 242:82228599 234:4327585 78:Beliefs 270:  240:  232:  203:  176:  149:  122:  45:Jordan 25:Arabic 230:JSTOR 268:ISBN 238:OCLC 201:ISBN 174:ISBN 147:ISBN 120:ISBN 19:The 290:: 250:^ 236:. 226:41 224:. 62:. 51:. 276:. 244:. 209:. 182:. 155:. 128:. 23:(

Index

Arabic
Palestinian militant
Rejectionist Front
Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine
Jordan
Black September
PFLP-General Command
Popular Democratic Front for the Liberation of Palestine
The Palestinian Entity, 1959–1974: Arab Politics and the PLO
ISBN
978-0-7146-3281-0
Entebbe: The Most Daring Raid of Israel's Special Forces
ISBN
978-1-4488-1868-6
Palestinian Resistance: Organization of a Nationalist Movement
ISBN
978-0-08-025094-6
Guerrilla and terrorist organisations: a world directory and bibliography
ISBN
978-0-02-916150-0
JSTOR
4327585
OCLC
82228599



The PLO and Israel: From Armed Conflict to Political Solution, 1964–1994
ISBN
978-0-312-12906-4

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