Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Asad Ghanma

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Native name
  
أسعد غنما

Years of service
  
1945-1972

Allegiance
  
Jordan

Place of burial
  
Jordan

Buried at
  
Jordan

Name
  
Asad Ghanma

Birth name
  
Asad Ghanma

Rank
  
Brigadier General


Asad Ghanma httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaendd9Asa

Born
  
14 February 1930 Al Husn, Jordan (
1930-02-14
)

Died
  
July 18, 2006, Amman, Jordan

Battles and wars
  
Samu Incident (1966), Six-Day War (1967), Battle of Karameh (1968)

Similar People
  
Uzi Narkiss, Moshe Dayan, Levi Eshkol, Yitzhak Rabin, Abu Ali Iyad

Service/branch
  
Royal Jordanian Army

Asad Ghanma (14 February 1930 – 18 July 2006) (Arabic: أسعد غنما‎‎) was a Jordanian Orthodox Christian general. From the town of Al Hisn in north of Jordan, he served as major and commander of the 48th Infantry Battalion of the Jordanian army during 1967 Arab-Israeli War and the Battle of Karameh. After the 1967 war, he was promoted to brigadier general and remained in Jordanian Armed Forces until retirement. He is well known for his role in the Samu Incident.

Samu Incident

Asad Ghanma was the commander of the 48th Infantry Battalion of the Jordanian army during the Samu Incident, which was the first Jordanian force to arrive at the battlefield. At the time of the Israeli raid into Samu, the Jordan's troops were strained, having been deployed across the 600-kilometer border with Israel and Ghanma's unit was the only one present in Samu's vicinity. The Israeli force consisted of eleven Centurion tanks, fifty armored half-tracks and 500 paratroopers and was backed by Ouragan bombers and eight field guns from the Israeli side of the border to counter any potential Jordanian armored vehicles or artillery.

As the Israelis entered Samu and surrounding villages, Ghanma's forces, divided into three companies headed directly towards the Israelis' blocking position and were intercepted northwest of Samu. Two other Jordanian companies were also intercepted from the northeast, but a Jordanian platoon managed to enter the town and engaged in close quarter fighting with the Israelis until the latter routed them. Fifteen Jordanian soldiers and three civilians were killed, 54 were wounded and much of Samu's buildings and infrastructure were heavily damaged or destroyed. An Israeli commander was killed and ten soldiers wounded. After the battle, Asad Ghanma received the Medal of Bravery from the King Hussein, for his role in the battle.

References

Asad Ghanma Wikipedia