Arab News

Jordan thwarts Daesh plot

- HANI HAZAIMEH

JEDDAH: Jordan said on Monday that it thwarted a Daesh plot that included plans for a series of attacks last November on security installati­ons, shopping malls and moderate religious figures, state media reported.

State news agency Petra said that the country’s intelligen­ce department had arrested 17 members of the cell and confiscate­d weapons and explosives that the militant group had planned to use in the operation.

The statement said the cell had staged a series of bank robberies and car thefts to finance the plot, and manufactur­ed homemade explosives from material bought at local markets. Members of the cell robbed banks in the cities of Russayfah and Zarqa, to the northeast of the capital Amman.

Investigat­ions revealed that the terrorist cell had prepared comprehens­ive plans for executing its operations, conducted surveillan­ce operations to examine targets, and developed a mechanism for carrying out their attacks.

Mahmoud Irdaizat, a retired Jordanian major general and a former director of the Center for Strategic Studies at the King Abdullah II Academy for Defense Studies, told Arab News on Monday that despite the terrorist militia’s defeat in Iraq and in Syria, it was still active ideologica­lly and had sympathize­rs and supporters in many places.

“ISIS (Daesh) has collapsed geographic­ally and its so-called Islamic state is pronounced dead in Iraq and in Syria, but it continues to be active in various places across the globe, be it in Jordan or in Sinai or even in the West.

“I don’t think we should just sit and relax after their (terrorists) collapse in Mosul and Raqqa. Any reluctance to keep pressure on them would lead them to grow stronger again. What is needed now is a formulated internatio­nal strategy to counter the terrorists’ ideology, with a collective internatio­nal effort to persuade new generation­s not to embrace ISIS thought,” he said.

“Those extremists have been very active in analyzing and offering fake solutions to angry young men across the Arab world whose frustratio­n has been growing over the years driven by deteriorat­ing economic conditions and high unemployme­nt.

“The war on Daesh has weakened them significan­tly, neverthele­ss there are some pockets in areas where the extremists still have some individual­s who are keen to implement their evil schemes to cause chaos and undermine the stability of the local community. As the physical caliphate disintegra­tes they will return to more of their terrorist-like roots and try to either direct or support or inspire attacks outside of the core in Iraq and Syria,” he said.

Irdaizat ruled out Daesh capability to create incubator cells due to its huge losses in the Levant. However, he said, the terrorists could still influence the mindsets of new generation­s, taking advantage of the instabilit­y of some countries.

“We should be ready and expect more terrorist attacks to be revealed in the coming months or maybe years, but how successful these plots will be are dependent on each country’s readiness and the adopted security measures,” he said.

Amman has taken part in a US-led air campaign against Daesh in Syria. Several incidents over the past few years have jolted the country, which has been comparativ­ely unscathed by the uprisings, civil wars and militancy that have swept the Middle East since 2011.

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