Chattanooga Times Free Press

4 Jordanian troops and 3 suspected militants dead

- BY OMAR AKOUR

SALT, Jordan — Jordanian search teams pulled the bodies of three suspected militants from the rubble of their hideout, a government official said Sunday, hours after assailants opened fire and set off explosions that killed four members of the security forces trying to storm the building.

The clash late Saturday was among the deadliest between suspected militants and Jordanian security forces in recent years. It raised new concerns about attempts by domestic and foreign militants to carry out attacks and destabiliz­e the pro-Western kingdom.

Jordan has played a key role in an internatio­nal military coalition that helped push back the extremist group Islamic State in neighborin­g Syria and Iraq.

The chain of events in Jordan began Friday when assailants detonated a homemade bomb under a police car guarding a music festival in the predominan­tly Christian town of Fuheis, west of the capital, Amman. The blast killed a police officer.

King Abdullah II on Sunday denounced the “cowardly act of terrorism” and said Jordan would respond with “force and determinat­ion to eradicate terrorism and its criminal gangs.”

The kingdom’s security forces have cracked down on suspected Islamic militants in recent years, but a series of fatal attacks, including on security installati­ons, have highlighte­d Jordan’s continued vulnerabil­ity.

Jordanian authoritie­s did not say Sunday what motivated the Fuheis attackers, and there was no claim of responsibi­lity.

Security forces chasing the suspects in the Fuheis attack zeroed in on a multistory building in the nearby town of Salt on Saturday and attempted to storm it. The suspects holed up inside opened fire and set off powerful explosions, officials said. A wing of the building collapsed.

In initial statements late Saturday, government spokeswoma­n Jumana Ghuneimat said three members of the security forces were killed. She said Sunday that a fourth officer had died and the bodies of three suspects were pulled from the rubble. Five suspects are in custody.

The Hala Akhbar news website, linked to Jordan’s military, said the suspects are Jordanians and the cell had planned to attack security installati­ons and other sensitive targets. The site said the suspects had been armed with explosives, grenades and other weapons.

Jordan has been a target of Islamic State attacks in recent years.

In June 2016, a crossborde­r car bombing launched from Syria killed seven Jordanian border guards. In December 2016, a shootout at a crusader castle in the southern town of Karak left 14 people dead, including seven members of the security forces, four militants and three civilians.

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