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a very personal one.  The King had developed strong friendship with the Head of

                   Jordan’s Air Force John Dalgleish who taught the young King how to fly.  In late 1955


                   the Pasha decided to have Dalgleish replaced by February 1956.  Dalgleish left


                   Jordan on 28 February only hours prior to Glubb’s sacking.  Glubb’s decision might

                   have affected Hussein’s general attitude towards the Pasha.  485   The British Cabinet


                   alluded to a telegram from Sir Charles Duke, the British Ambassador to Jordan, who

                   proposed that Glubb’s dismissal might have been a personal affair and not one


                   aimed against Britain’s influence in the region.  However the Ambassador was also

                   concerned that British personnel could no longer effectively regulate the Legion


                   and, as a result, Jordan would fall under the influence of a ‘neighbouring state’. 486

                          Glubb’s dismissal was celebrated by Jordanians and demonstrators thronged


                   the streets chanting anti-colonial slogans. 487   Keith Morfett of the London

                   newspaper the Daily Express reported demonstrators to have shouted ‘Down with


                   Glubb!  Out with Glubb the imperialist!’, similar chants would be echoed later in

                   Bahrain.  Adding insult to British injury, Morfett also reported rumours that


                   involved Jordan joining Egypt’s Southern Tier alliance and that the Legion would be

                   put under the direct command of Egypt’s Commander-in-Chief, General Abdel-


                   Hakim Amer.  488

                          To Glubb, the decision to dismiss him was partly due to efforts by Lieutenant-


                   Colonel Ali Abu Nuwar a close friend of Hussein.  The friendship between the two

                   developed first in France when the former served as a military attaché at the


                   485  R. Lamb, The Failure of the Eden Government (London: 1987), 187-88.
                   486  TNA, CAB 128/30, C.M. (56) 18  conclusions, 5 March 1956.
                                                th
                   487  Nutting, No End of a Lesson: The Story of Suez (London: 1967), 28, hereafter No End of a Lesson.
                   488  K. Morfett, ‘What Glubb told me in Amman did not add up in Cairo’, Daily Express, 3 March 1956, 1.


                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                       155
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