The National - News

Jordan attack marks ISIL’s change of tactics there

Group tested support base in kingdom, which analysts confirm is considerab­le

- Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

AMMAN // A brazen assault claimed by ISIL in the southern Jordanian city of Karak this week signalled a change in tactics for the group, which had previously seemed reluctant to launch large-scale attacks in the kingdom, analysts said.

ISIL has not claimed any of the attacks carried out over the past two years, but analysts said the group may have been lying in wait, observing the reaction of the Jordanian public to determine how much support they had in the kingdom before directly pursuing and declaring their own operations.

Admitting it carried out Sunday’s attack in Karak, which killed 10 people and injured 34, suggests “ISIL’s open confrontat­ion with Jordan has marked a new stage”, said Mohammad Abu Rumman, a researcher at the University of Jordan’s Centre for Strategic Studies who specialise­s in the study of extremist groups.

This stage “is directly targeting Jordan” from the inside, with attacks carried out by radicalise­d Jordanians, he said.

“ISIL is growing in Jordan and this is worrying. The danger lurks inside the country.”

Sunday’s attack was the second in Jordan to be claimed by ISIL.

The group also claimed a suicide bombing at a border crossing with Syria in June that killed seven members of the Jordanian security forces.

The Karak assault came weeks after three US special forces soldiers were shot dead at a military base in the southern city of Al Jafer by a member of the Jordanian security forces.

But that attack was not claimed by ISIL and the circumstan­ces are still being investigat­ed.

With ISIL now in retreat in Syria and Iraq, it is seeking to mobilise extremist cells beyond its self-declared caliphate, Mr Abu Rumman said.

Sunday’s attack also marked the first time the group had targeted civilians in Jordan, something it had previously avoided for fear of alienating the public.

The Karak attack, in which two Jordanian civilians and a Canadian tourist were killed, suggests that this is no longer an issue.

“ISIL is no longer concerned about losing public support. There is a change in their tactics against Jordan and they have adopted an increasing­ly confron- tational approach in a country it regards as part of its orbit,” said Hasan Abu Hanieh, an independen­t expert on extremist groups.

“Now, the group is increasing­ly targeting security forces and foreigners, which sends a message to those who carry their ideology to carry out copycat attacks.”

A few weeks before the border bombing in June, five intelligen­ce agency staff were killed in a shooting attack on their office near the Baqaa Palestinia­n refugee camp near Amman.

The government described the attacker as someone who was inspired by ISIL’s ideology but acted alone.

In March, Jordanian security forces killed seven militants wearing explosive belts in a raid on an ISIL-linked cell in Irbid, a city close to the Syrian border.

A soldier was also killed during the raid and 13 militants were arrested. Since ISIL began capturing territory in Iraq in 2014, Jordan has cracked down harder on extremist groups and their sympathise­rs. But the threats continue. On Tuesday, ISIL vowed that attacks against members of the US-led coalition in Syria and Iraq – which includes Jordan – will be more severe than ever before, according to the ISIL-linked news agency Amaq.

Jordan’s state security court is looking into 70 terrorist-related cases involving 200 men, a court official said this month.

“These include attempts to join ISIL but most have to do with promoting its ideology,” he said.

On Tuesday, security forces concluded a raid on a suspected militant hideout in a village near Karak, killing one member of the cell and injuring another. Four security officers were killed in the raid. Government spokesman Mohammad Momani said that security operations would continue in Jordan until terrorists were rooted out.

Already, there are signs that ISIL propaganda is having its desired effect among some parts of the population. A survey published in June by the Internatio­nal Republican Institute, a pro-democracy, non-profit in Washington, DC, showed that 25 per cent of Jordanians believe ISIL has support in the country.

The New York-headquarte­red Soufan Group, which provides security intelligen­ce services to, government­s and multinatio­nal organisati­ons, puts the number of Jordanians fighting in Syria and Iraq with extremists at between 2,000 and 2,500, the third Arab country after Tunisia and Saudi Arabia.

Jordanians take pride in the country’s security agencies and their ability to ensure stability at a time when the wider region is in chaos.

But Mr Abu Hanieh, the expert on extremist groups, said that Jordan’s authoritie­s were still in a state of denial when it comes to the threat posed by homegrown terrorism.

“The attack on Karak exposed security gaps and weak coordinati­on among the security agencies and has shattered the myth about Jordan’s security,” he said.

“There are many sympathise­rs with ISIL in Jordan.”

 ?? Muhammad Hamed / Reuters ?? The attack in Karak marks the first time ISIL has targeted civilians in Jordan.
Muhammad Hamed / Reuters The attack in Karak marks the first time ISIL has targeted civilians in Jordan.

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