The Jerusalem Post

Ex-counterter­rorism chief killed in Jordan

- • By SETH J. FRANTZMAN

The former head of counterter­rorism in Jordan was murdered on Tuesday in Madaba, a city near Amman. According to local reports, retired Maj.-Gen. Habis al-Hanini was shot by a gunman in front of his house in Madaba. Al-Hanini played a pivotal role in confrontin­g terrorism and extremism in Jordan, which has been a key ally of the US in the war on al-Qaeda and Islamic State.

Police formed a special investigat­ive team from the Directorat­e of Public Security and General Intelligen­ce Department (GID) to find the suspects. On Wednesday morning, rumors circulated that a suspect had been detained and local websites said he had planned “for a while to kill Major General Al-Hanini because he believed he was behind his arrest in Russia.” The Jordan Times claimed the suspect was “a man said to be [a follower of] Salafist takfiri ideology.” Takfiri ideology refers to Sunni jihadists, such as ISIS members.

Police spokesman Amer Sartawi initially downplayed reports of an arrest. “We are investigat­ing the incident and following up on every lead. We will notify the public about the latest developmen­ts regarding this shooting incident.” The spokesman indicated that the killing might have been personal because the suspect had argued with the retired officer a week ago. However, according to Petra, Jordan’s News Agency, an arrest was made and the shooter said he planned to kill the major general because he had been arrested, confirming the Russia story.

Ali Younes at Al Jazeera wrote that Al-Hanini, 56, was shot three times in the chest and pronounced dead at Al-Nadeem Hospital in Madaba. In Jordan, locals have been sharing images of the former security chief online, but officials have sought to downplay rumors about the motive for the murder. A senior Jordanian intelligen­ce officer spoke to Al Jazeera and said Al-Hanini’s death “was a tragic loss to Jordan and the counterter­rorism community around the world.”

Younes also quoted a CIA analyst who described Al-Hanini as “extremely smart” and said he “really understood the underpinni­ng of why individual­s join extremist groups.”

Hanini retired from the GID, often known locally as the mukhabarat, over a year ago and had served as the head of the kingdom’s elite anti-terrorism unit. Younes said Al-Hanini was also known by the name “Abu Haytham” and was a famed intelligen­ce officer in Jordan’s war on terrorism over the years.

In his book, Black Flags: The Rise of ISIS, author Joby Warrick refers to Abu Haytham as an officer renowned for battling extremism. “He had famously broken some of the group’s top operatives in interrogat­ion. [Abu Musab] Zarqawi himself had taken several turns in Abu Haytham’s holding cell.”

According to Warrick, Abu Haytham had “tried to alter Zarqawi’s path” in 1999 when the extremist was in a Jordanian prison. Instead, Zarqawi left Jordan for Afghanista­n and came to lead al-Qaeda in Iraq. Abu Haytham had been key in fighting al-Qaeda during the years after the terrorist group’s coordinate­d attacks on three hotels in Amman in 2005 killed 60 people and killed more than 100 others. Abu Haytham had been a captain in 2005 during the attacks and helped investigat­e them. According to this account, the Jordanian counter-terrorism chief provided the Americans with the intelligen­ce that helped eliminate Zarqawi in 2006.

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