IRBIL, Iraq — Jordan executed two prisoners early Wednesday morning to avenge the burning alive of a Jordanian fighter pilot in a move that seemed likely to thrust the usually peaceful country into the front lines of the battle against the Islamic State.
Jordanian state television said one of the executed prisoners was Sajida al-Rishawi, the 44-year-old Iraqi woman whose release the Islamic State had demanded in return for the life of a Japanese hostage killed last week. The other was Ziad al-Karbouli, a jihadist who once worked with Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the founder of al-Qaida in Iraq, the organization that was the precursor to the Islamic State.
Government spokesman Mohammed al-Momani announced in Amman that two prisoners had been executed at dawn. Bothj al-Karbouli and al-Rishawi had been in prison for nearly a decade.
Jordan had announced that it would move quickly to avenge the murder of Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh whose horrific execution was made public Tuesday by an Islamic State video that showed him being led to a cage in the desert, doused with gasoline and set alight.
“While the military forces mourn the martyr, they emphasize his blood will not be shed in vain. Our punishment and revenge will be as huge as the loss of the Jordanians,” Mamdouh al-Ameri, a government spokesman, said in a statement read on Jordanian TV.
What other steps the Jordanian government might take were uncertain, but officials suggested that they would move rapidly to crack down on the group’s sympathizers and that other measures were likely, including stepping up the country’s role in the U.S.-led military coalition against the Islamic State.
The prospect of an all-out offensive against the Islamic State inside Jordan could prove unsettling to a country that has prided itself on remaining largely outside the line of fire in the region’s many wars. Even during the U.S. occupation of Iraq, Jordan remained largely free of violence, with the notable exception of a series of suicide bombings in 2005.
Al-Qaida in Iraq was the precursor of the Islamic State, which now has designs to establish a caliphate that would stretch from Iraq to the Mediterranean and take in what is known as Greater Syria — which includes the modern nations of Syria, Lebanon, Israel and Jordan.
Several experts said that by burning the Jordanian pilot to death, the Islamic State was demonstrating a new level of barbarity intended to convey several messages — a more open hostility to the Jordanians, who in addition to participating in air raids on Islamic State targets in Syria have also encouraged anti-Islamic State activists to travel to Syria to fight; to reinforce its reputation as the globe’s most barbaric terrorist group; and to enhance its efforts to recruit sympathizers from across the world.
“To my mind, the key thing about this — in much the same way it was with the decapitations — is that they are telling everyone that they are the meanest, most brutal group on Earth and that message has resonated with potential recruits who view ISIS as the real deal,” said Daniel Benjamin, a former State Department counterterrorism coordinator and now the director of Dartmouth University’s John Sloan Dickey Center for International Understanding. “This is ISIS self-presentation at its grisly best.”
At 22 minutes the lengthiest execution video the Islamic State has yet produced, the video opened with al-Kaseasbeh, dressed in the same orange jumpsuit as previous Islamic State victims, being led to a cage. Then a lone jihadi douses him with a liquid, presumably gasoline, from a jerry can as other militants look on. A trail of liquid is poured across the desert sand and ignited. The camera follows the flames as they near al-Kaseasbeh, and the video remains focused on him as he burns, standing stoically, until his body crumbles into a heap.
Jordan state television said Tuesday night that Jordanian authorities believe al-Kaseasbeh’s killing was filmed nearly a month ago, and that that was why the Islamic State refused to provide proof that al-Kaseasbeh was still alive during recent negotiations. That belief was consistent with tweets from rebel activists opposed to the Syrian government who posted on Jan. 8 that the pilot had been executed.
Jordan’s King Abdullah and Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh were in Washington meeting with Secretary of State John Kerry just moments before the video was made public. There was no hint that any of the men knew of the death as they exchanged pleasantries during a signing ceremony marking increased U.S. assistance — from $660 million to $1 billion — to help Jordan cope with the Syrian refugee crisis and rising energy costs.
Immediately after the ceremony, however, the video hit the Internet, and statements of condemnation and condolences began flowing from the Obama administration to Jordan. The president called it “one more indication of the viciousness and barbarity of this organization.”
The White House in a statement condemned the killing, even as it said U.S. authorities were attempting to verify the video. “We stand in solidarity with the government of Jordan and the Jordanian people,” the statement said.
President Barack Obama briefly addressed the killing during a forum on the Affordable Care Act at the White House.
“This organization is only interested in death and destruction,” he said, referring to the Islamic State.
Al-Kaseasbeh’s execution is likely to raise tensions in Jordan, where his family had demanded the government engage in negotiations for his release in an increasingly bizarre series of demands and counter demands that included a $200 million ransom for two Japanese hostages who’ve since been executed, and a demand for the release of al-Rishawi, who’d been on Jordan’s death row since 2005 for her part in a series of bombings that killed at least 57 people in Amman.
The fate of al-Kaseasbeh, whose plane crashed during a bombing run over Raqqa, Syria, in late December, had come to the fore only two weeks ago when one of the Japanese hostages, freelance journalist Kenji Goto, warned in an audio statement from the Islamic State that al-Kaseasbeh would be killed if the Jordanians didn’t released al-Rishawi for Goto.
Jordan immediately expressed a willingness to swap al-Rishawi for al-Kaseasbeh if evidence the pilot was still alive was provided, but the Islamic State counteroffer was that al-Rishawi be delivered by sundown last Thursday to an Islamic State-controlled border crossing with Turkey or both Goto and al-Kaseasbeh would die.
Jordan continued to press for negotiations through both tribal channels and public statements, but on Saturday, a video of Goto being killed was posted on jihadist websites.
Al-Kaseasbeh’s fate was unknown until the release of the video Tuesday.
The Islamic State, as far as is known, has never lied about the fate of the foreign captives it has executed, starting in August with the beheading of American journalist James Foley, and there was little reason to think the gruesome video was not an accurate representation of al-Kaseasbeh’s death.
The video and al-Kaseasbeh’s death is likely to deeply stress Jordan’s close-knit and tribal society. Al-Kaseasbeh’s family comes from a politically powerful tribe and had become unusually vocal advocates of a trade to keep their son alive.
Yousef al-Kaseasbeh, the pilot’s father, had demanded the release of al-Rishawi, describing her as “nothing,” in exchange for his son’s life, but at no time did the Islamic State promise to release al-Kaseasbeh, but rather only promised to kill him if the exchange for Goto failed.
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