PA TV host praises commander of Black September terror group as a “mastermind” who made Israel “feel in true danger”
Official PA TV News report on the 39th anniversary of the death of terrorist Ali Hassan Salameh, a commander of the Black September terror organization
Official PA TV reporter: “Israel began to feel in true danger, because a man like Abu Hassan [Ali Hassan Salameh] (i.e., a commander of the Black September terror organization) could have destabilized the strongholds of power of the [Zionist] entity through ‘the war of explosive envelopes,’ of which shards of fear reached the entire occupying entity and made it obsessed with ‘this mastermind.’ Israeli entity Prime Minister at the time Golda Meir termed him ‘the Red Prince’ and called to kill him (sic., PMW could find no evidence that Meir came up with the nickname).”
Ali Hassan Salameh (son of Hassan Salameh, born 1940, killed Jan. 22, 1979, also called Abu Hassan) - Commander of operations in Europe of the Black September terror organization, a secret branch of Fatah. He planned many terror attacks, including the attack on the Israeli team at the Munich Olympics in 1972, in which 11 Israeli athletes were murdered. (Deception p. 260)
Official PA TV reporter: “Israel began to feel in true danger, because a man like Abu Hassan [Ali Hassan Salameh] (i.e., a commander of the Black September terror organization) could have destabilized the strongholds of power of the [Zionist] entity through ‘the war of explosive envelopes,’ of which shards of fear reached the entire occupying entity and made it obsessed with ‘this mastermind.’ Israeli entity Prime Minister at the time Golda Meir termed him ‘the Red Prince’ and called to kill him (sic., PMW could find no evidence that Meir came up with the nickname).”
Ali Hassan Salameh (son of Hassan Salameh, born 1940, killed Jan. 22, 1979, also called Abu Hassan) - Commander of operations in Europe of the Black September terror organization, a secret branch of Fatah. He planned many terror attacks, including the attack on the Israeli team at the Munich Olympics in 1972, in which 11 Israeli athletes were murdered. (Deception p. 260)