As public cries for vengeance, Jordan talks of wider intervention in Syria
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| Amman and Karak, Jordan
Grief here over the Islamic State鈥檚 brutal killing of a Jordanian pilot has given way to calls for war, with Jordanian officials dropping hints of a wider Jordanian effort in Syria.
A visit Thursday by King Abdullah II to the mourning tent of the fallen pilot, Lt. Muath Kassasbeh, quickly escalated into a pro-war rally, with young men pledging their 鈥渂lood and soul鈥 to wage war against the Islamic State (IS).
鈥淢uath was not the first martyr and will not be the last martyr for this country,鈥 said Mohammed Kassasbeh, the pilot鈥檚 cousin, who declared his desire to join Jordan鈥檚 fight during the King鈥檚 visit. 鈥淲e are at war and we are all prepared to fight.鈥
The sentiments represented a dramatic reversal of what had been growing opposition to participation in the US-led air fight against IS, including among the pilot鈥檚 family members, and Jordan has successfully turned rage over the pilot鈥檚 graphic death into a rallying cry for even greater military commitment 鈥 and sacrifice.
On Thursday Jordanian war planes reportedly carried out strikes against IS targets in Syria, then flew over Lt. Kassasbeh鈥檚 village after returning to Jordanian air space in what officials described as a 鈥渧ictory lap.鈥
The declaration marked a departure for Jordan, which had up until Thursday refused to detail its role in US-led airstrikes
King Abdullah has talked tough about his country鈥檚 retaliation against the Islamic State upon returning home from the United States Wednesday, telling a group of senior generals that Jordan will 鈥渂e on the lookout for these criminals and hit them in their own homes.鈥
Jordan鈥檚 execution early Wednesday of Al Qaeda in Iraq members Saijda Rishawi and Ziyad Karbouli, both sentenced to death years ago, did little to quell the growing public clamor for vengeance. The pair's release had been sought by IS in exchange for sparing Kassabeh's life - though most evidence points to his murder being carried out in early January.
Officials point to IS threats against other Jordanian pilots in the graphic video of Kassasbeh being burned alive, and its publishing Wednesday of satellite images of the pilots鈥 homes and an offer of a 100 golden-dinar-bounty, as an official declaration of war.
'Next logical step'
Jordanian officials and members of Parliament described direct military intervention in Syria 鈥 including the dispatch of ground-troops 鈥 as the 聽鈥渓ogical鈥 Jordanian response.
鈥淭he Islamic State declared war on Jordan, its pilots, and security,鈥 says Jawad Anani, a Jordanian senator and former foreign minister. 鈥淲e are going to see a military escalation, and the dispatch of ground forces is the next logical step.鈥
State-run media have floated the idea of intervention in Syria 鈥 a common practice to gauge public opinion 鈥 in what in what is being framed as Jordan鈥檚 鈥渞ight to defend its territory.鈥
鈥淛ordan is now engaged in two wars, one against extremism at home and against the Islamic State abroad,鈥 says Maher Abu Tair, a political analyst and columnist for the state-run Ad Dustour newspaper, who wrote this week of the growing possibility of a Jordanian venture in Syria.
鈥淛ordan may have to intervene in Syria, particularly southern Syria, to prevent the formation of a Taliban state at its doorstep.鈥
Officials compared the current 鈥渢urning point鈥 in public sentiment to the reaction to the 2005 Al Qaeda triple hotel bombings, which killed about 60 people and fed wider support for Jordan鈥檚 war on terror. Rishawi was one of the hotel attackers, but her suicide belt failed to explode.
Growing threat perception
鈥淭he Islamic State has made a very huge error 颅鈥 instead of dividing Jordan they have united it, and support for war,鈥 says Marwan Muasher, a former Jordanian foreign minister and a vice president at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.
For six months, Jordan has cracked down at home on IS, jailing more than 100 alleged supporters and tightening its borders.
More than 1,500 Jordanians are estimated to have joined the ranks of the IS, with dozens rising to leadership positions, bringing with them intimate knowledge of Jordanian society and potential security weaknesses.
With the IS intelligence department issuing the names of Jordanian pilots and satellite images of their homes and calling on their followers to carry out attacks, observers and officials say Amman鈥檚 worst fears of a homegrown threat were realized.
鈥淭he Islamic State has the ability to reach into Jordan, and the military campaign in Syria has become a preemptive war, the first line of defense,鈥 says Hassan Abu Haniya, an Amman-based expert on jihadist movements.
By directly threatening the IS leadership, officials say Jordan has made it clear it aims to strike the group at the heart of its operations, hitting the IS leadership before they strike first.
Jordanian special forces
The Jordan Armed Forces boast over 110,000 active personnel, including an elite Royal Special Operations Force that numbers in the thousands, has trained along US forces, and leads the way in regional anti-terror capabilities.
Jordan has devoted an undisclosed number of F-16 fighter jets to the coalition air raids, carrying out dozens of bombing runs in northern Syria.
With the US reluctant to put boots on the ground, and the lack of strong special forces among other Arab states, many analysts long believed that should the coalition commit ground forces, Jordanians would lead the way.
鈥淲hen we look in the region there are no other ground forces that can be committed other than Jordanian. If the time should arrive, it would most likely be Jordanian forces,鈥 says Samih Maaytah, former minister of media affairs and managing director of the state-run Al Rai newspaper.
Jordanian officials have been vague on the type of military action they will take against the Islamic State, promising an 鈥渆arth-shattering鈥 and 鈥渞elentless鈥 military campaign.
According to a senior military official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, the leading scenario for Jordan is the use of special operations forces to push the Islamic State from its strongholds in northern Syria. He didn't say how many soldiers are being considered, with current estimates being that they might number in 鈥渢he hundreds.鈥
Southern Syria buffer zone
Another scenario being mulled in Amman is greater training and assistance to the Free Syrian Army, a rebel group that fights both Bashar al-Assad and IS and has some support from the US, to create a 鈥渂uffer-zone鈥 in southern Syria free of jihadis.
鈥淎 key part of Jordan鈥檚 external war are the moderate Syrian opposition forces. They will be relied upon to keep the Islamic State at bay,鈥 Mr. Abu Tair said.
Jordan has long been used as a strategic hub for the FSA, with the Jordanians providing logistical and intelligence cooperation to the band of army defectors. Forces in the south along the Jordanian border number some 20,000, according to FSA officers, and have succeeded in keeping both Syrian regime forces and the IS at bay.
However, pledges of support, training and arms have not materialized for the rebel army, and the FSA is struggling.