翻訳と辞書 ・ Yusiflər ・ Yuskevich ・ Yusleinis Herrera ・ Yusmadi Yusoff ・ Yusmarg ・ Yusmay Bicet ・ Yusmeiro Petit ・ Yusmely García ・ Yusmery Ascanio ・ Yusnier Viera ・ Yuso Makihira ・ Yusef Majidzadeh ・ Yusef Mishleb ・ Yusef of Morocco ・ Yusef Sozi ・ Yusef Urabi ・ Yusef Zehi, Hirmand ・ Yusef-e Eslam ・ Yusefabad ・ Yusefabad Cham Chal ・ Yusefabad, Abhar ・ Yusefabad, Amlash ・ Yusefabad, Amol ・ Yusefabad, Anbarabad ・ Yusefabad, Ardabil ・ Yusefabad, Bostanabad ・ Yusefabad, Chaharmahal and Bakhtiari ・ Yusefabad, Chaldoran ・ Yusefabad, Chenaran ・ Yusefabad, Dorud
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Yusef Urabi Yusef Urabi (also spelled Yusuf Orabi) was a Palestinian officer in the Syrian Army as well as an early member of Fatah's armed wing, al-Assifa. In 1966 he was killed in the Yarmouk Camp in Damascus during an attempt to ease tensions between Palestinian leaders Yasser Arafat and Ahmed Jibril. ==Military career== Urabi served as a major for one of the regular Palestinian Liberation Army (PLA) units within the Syrian Army. He sympathized with Ba'athism, an ideology promoting pan-Arabism and socialism and was a close military adviser and friend of Hafez al-Assad.〔Rapoport, p.467.〕〔Rubin, p.34.〕 Urabi enlisted with al-Assifa, the armed wing of Fatah, in the late 1950s.〔Joint Publications Research Service, 1993, p.12.〕 In 1966 al-Assad, who was Defense Minister at the time, selected Urabi to head the operations of Fatah—which was based in Syria—and instructed Yasser Arafat and other Fatah leaders to recognize Urabi's authority.〔Kiernan, p.211.〕
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