SWEDISH COUNT FOLKE BERNADOTTE
The Swedish diplomat and U.N. mediator in Palestine was killed in Jerusalem in 1948 by the Stern Gang, a group of Jewish militants that counted future Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Shamir among its members. During World War II, he had negotiated and helped secure the release of thousands of Jewish prisoners in German concentration camps. The Swedish nobleman’s efforts at forging truce followed by a formal peace after the first Arab-Israeli war in 1948 led to his death. He would be one of several key figures slain over war and peace in the bitterly disputed Holy Land.
KING ABDULLAH I OF JORDAN
The monarch was killed in front of Al-Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem at 1951 by an Arab follower of the former mufti of the city. King Abdullah had incorporated the portion of British mandated territory, including Jerusalem and what is now the West Bank, that bordered Jordan the year before. Following Britain’s departure from Mandate Palestine, the mufti presented himself as the key driver of creating an Arab state in the territory and the Jordanian king was his political nemesis. Jordan held onto the Palestinian lands until Israel captured and occupied them in the 1967 Six Day War. The status of Jerusalem remains the thorniest all of all issues defining the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
KING FAISIAL OF SAUDI ARABIA
The House of Saud suffered an assassination that sent tremors around the region in 1975 when King Faisal was killed by a nephew. He had been a strong proponent of Palestinian independence and leveraged Riyadh’s oil clout against the U.S. and other Western powers in the early 1970s. Nearly 50 years later, Saudi Arabia and Israel now have an alliance of convenience, mostly behind closed doors, in their shared view of Iran as a staunch enemy causing regional mayhem.
EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT
Just three years after formalizing a peace treaty with Israel and sharing the Nobel Peace Prize with Israel’s Menachem Begin, the Egyptian leader and firm U.S. ally was killed in 1981 by the country’s Islamic Jihad group in a spectacular attack during an annual parade in Cairo commemorating the 1973 October war against Israel. The accord had infuriated Islamic groups who had been previously mostly pacified. Egypt has never truly emerged from the grip of autocratic rule, which continued under Sadat’s successor Hosni Mubarak. There was brief hope during the Arab Spring uprising in 2011 but subsequent years of turmoil brought to power general-turned-president Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi, whose government has cracked down on critics and dissent.