May or may not be true but ISIS is claiming female American aide worker
who they've been holding hostage for a while, 26 year old Kayla Jean
Mueller was killed today February 6th during Jordan's retaliation
airstrikes on the group in Northern Syria. ISIS claimed the woman was
being held in the building pictured right and shared pics of it's
destruction, claiming it was destroyed by Jordan's airstrike
Islamic State named the alleged victim of the strike as Kayla Jean Mueller
The group provided no other proof for the claim beyond pictures of the alleged site of the air strike, in Raqqa, the group's stronghold in Syria.
The White House said it was "deeply concerned" by the reports but that it has yet to verify them.
Ms Mueller was working with Syrian refugees when she was kidnapped in 2013.
'Upping the ante' Jordan said it carried out aerial bombardments on IS targets in Syria on Thursday, including on Raqqa.
Local activists and IS sympathisers reported fresh strikes in the city on Friday, but these have not been confirmed by officials.
The strikes were carried out in response to the killing of a Jordanian fighter pilot by IS militants.
A video of Moaz al-Kasasbeh being burned alive in a cage was posted online by IS earlier this week.
He was captured by militants in December after his F-16 fighter jet crashed in Syria. The video is believed to have been filmed on 3 January.
Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh said Thursday's strikes were "the beginning of our retaliation" against IS.
"We're upping the ante. We're going after them wherever they are, with everything that we have," he said.
Thousands rallied in Jordan's capital, Amman, on Friday morning in support of their government's military response.
Among those marching was Jordan's Queen Rania who told the BBC the country was "united in our horror".
She said Lt Kasasbeh's killing had made Jordanians "determined to rid the world of this evil".
The Jordanian military has struck hard at ISIS targets in Syria, parts of its efforts to avenge the death of one of its pilots. But did it end up killing an American hostage in the process?
Planes belonging to the Jordanian Royal Air Force fly over the headquarters of the family clan of pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh in the city of Karak Feb. 4, 2015. (Reuters)
Jordanian fighter jets flew over the hometown of a pilot killed by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group and the capital Amman on Thursday after completing a mission, state television said without giving the location of their sortie, Reuters reported.
However, Iraqi media said that the Jordanian airstrikes have killed 55 ISIS militants including a senior commander known as the “Prince of Nineveh.”
Jordan’s ‘severe’ response to ISIS after it killed an air force pilot by burning him alive, came just hours after King Abdullah vowed to avenge Maaz al-Kassasbeh’s death.
"The blood of martyr Maaz al-Kassasbeh will not be in vain and the response of Jordan and its army after what happened to our dear son will be severe," Said King Abdullah in a statement released by the royal court on Wednesday.
Jordan had previously been divided on its participation in airstrikes against ISIS, with many question why the country was involving itself in the fight.
But it was a divide that largely vanished after the revelation of Kassasbeh’s brutal execution.
Jordan’s information minister, Mohammad al-Momani told AFP: Amman was “more determined than ever to fight the terrorist group Daesh.” And a government spokesman said Jordan would step up its role in the U.S.-led fight against the militant group.
King Abdullah cut short a visit to Washington, returning to his country where he held emergency talks with his military.
But before his return to the Middle East he met with President Barack Obama, who slammed the pilot’s killing as an act of "cowardice and depravity," and he offered the king “his deepest condolences” White House spokesman, Alistair Baskey said.
Meanwhile Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said radical Islam’s “cruelty knows no borders, the greatest threat to humanity would be if these extremists get their hands on nuclear weapons," referring to Iran's nuclear program.
The airstrikes came just hours after Jordan executed two militant prisoners in response to the killing of Kassasbeh.
But the pilot’s father told Reuters the two executions were not enough to avenge his son’s death, adding: "I want the state to get revenge for my son's blood through more executions of those people who follow this criminal group that shares nothing with Islam." Safi al-Kassasbeh told Reuters.
It did not say where the targets were located -- Isis holds swathes of Syria and Iraq -- but said they were destroyed and the aircraft returned to base safely.
Jordan's military pledged to "destroy this terrorist group and kill the evil in its own place", saying it would punish Isis "for the heinous act" of burning the pilot alive.
Personifying the nation's grief and deep anger over the horrifying murder, Abdullah visited the airman's family, which has urged the government to "destroy" the jihadists, to pay his condolences.
"The failed Jordanian aircraft killed an American female hostage. No mujahid was injured in the bombardment, and all praise is due to Allah.” the group said in a statement released on their site.ISIS had been demanding $6.6 million for Kayla's release. She's the last American held by the group. Jordan had promised to destroy ISIS and step up airstrikes after the group released the shocking video of the brutal killing of their pilot. Kayla's alleged death hasn't been verified by independent sources.
Islamic State named the alleged victim of the strike as Kayla Jean Mueller
Islamic State (IS) militants claim that a US female hostage has been killed in a Jordanian air strike in Syria.
IS named the woman as aid worker Kayla Jean Mueller in statements posted online.The group provided no other proof for the claim beyond pictures of the alleged site of the air strike, in Raqqa, the group's stronghold in Syria.
The White House said it was "deeply concerned" by the reports but that it has yet to verify them.
Ms Mueller was working with Syrian refugees when she was kidnapped in 2013.
'Upping the ante' Jordan said it carried out aerial bombardments on IS targets in Syria on Thursday, including on Raqqa.
Local activists and IS sympathisers reported fresh strikes in the city on Friday, but these have not been confirmed by officials.
The strikes were carried out in response to the killing of a Jordanian fighter pilot by IS militants.
A video of Moaz al-Kasasbeh being burned alive in a cage was posted online by IS earlier this week.
He was captured by militants in December after his F-16 fighter jet crashed in Syria. The video is believed to have been filmed on 3 January.
Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh said Thursday's strikes were "the beginning of our retaliation" against IS.
"We're upping the ante. We're going after them wherever they are, with everything that we have," he said.
Thousands rallied in Jordan's capital, Amman, on Friday morning in support of their government's military response.
Among those marching was Jordan's Queen Rania who told the BBC the country was "united in our horror".
She said Lt Kasasbeh's killing had made Jordanians "determined to rid the world of this evil".
The Jordanian military has struck hard at ISIS targets in Syria, parts of its efforts to avenge the death of one of its pilots. But did it end up killing an American hostage in the process?
That's
what ISIS said in an online posting Friday, claiming that a female
American it was holding captive had died in a Jordanian airstrike on
ISIS's de facto capital, Raqqa. The posting included a picture of a
collapsed building that ISIS claimed the woman was being held in.
But it did not show her or provide any proof of her death.
Jordanian Interior Minister Hussein Majali swiftly and firmly knocked down the report, calling it another "PR stunt" by ISIS.
"They
tried to cause problems internally in Jordan and haven't succeeded,"
Majali said. "They are now trying to drive a wedge between the coalition
with this latest low PR stunt."
Previously,
ISIS has held a number of hostages from the United States, Britain and
Japan. As of now, at least two Westerners are thought to be in its
custody: British journalist John Cantlie, who has appeared in a number
of ISIS-produced videos, and the American woman, who is a 26-year-old
aid worker.
Asked Friday about ISIS's
claim of the American's death in Raqqa, State Department spokeswoman
Marie Harf said that she could not "confirm those reports in any way."
"Obviously
(we are) deeply concerned by these reports. We have not, at this point,
seen anything that corroborates (ISIS's) claims," Harf added.
Most of ISIS's hostages have been executed by the terror group, which then touted the grisly deaths online.
That was the case with Jordanian pilot Lt. Moath al-Kasasbeh,
who was captured by the Islamist extremist group after his F-16 fighter
jet crashed while on an anti-ISIS mission near Raqqa. Video emerged
Tuesday of ISIS burning him alive while he was locked in a cage.
After
the video came out, Jordanian officials said they have reason to
believe al-Kasasbeh was actually killed in early January. That suggested
that during the month between, while signaling its openness to a
prisoner exchange with Jordan, ISIS had known all along that the pilot
was dead.
On Wednesday, Jordan executed two jihadist prisoners in retaliation for al-Kasasbeh's death.
Islamic State extremists claim an American woman they held hostage was killed in a Jordanian airstrike in northern Syria. However, the Jordan Government dismissed the statement as "criminal propaganda" and the US said it had not seen any evidence to corroborate the report.
The woman was identified as aid worker Kayla Jean Mueller, 26, but there was no independent verification of the militants' claim on a website the group uses and also is distributed by Islamic State-affiliated Twitter users.
Mueller, of Prescott, Arizona, is the only known remaining US hostage held by Isis.
This week the extremists released a video showing Jordanian air force pilot Muath al-Kaseasbeh, also 26, being burned to death in a cage in gruesome images that caused outrage around the world.
Mueller's parents said they still hoped she was alive.
The Isis statement said Mueller was killed in airstrikes that
targeted "the same location for more than an hour" in northern Syria.
It published photos purportedly of the bombed site, showing a severely damaged three-storey building.
The statement said no Islamic State militants were killed in the airstrikes.
Jordanian government spokesman Mohammed al-Momani said it was investigating. "But as a first reaction, we think it's illogical and we are highly sceptical about it. How could they identify a Jordanian warplane? What was the American lady doing in a weapons warehouse?" al-Momani said.
"It's part of their criminal propaganda. They have lied that our pilot is alive and tried to negotiate, claiming he is alive while they had killed him weeks before," he said.
American officials said they also were looking into the report.
Bernadette Meehan, the spokeswoman for President Barack Obama's National Security Council, said the White House has "not at this time seen any evidence that corroborates the claim. We are obviously deeply concerned by these reports," she added.
Mueller had been working in Turkey assisting Syrian refugees, according to a 2013 article in the Daily Courier, her hometown newspaper. She told the paper that she was drawn to help with the situation in Syria.
"For as long as I live, I will not let this suffering be normal," she said. "It's important to stop and realise what we have, why we have it and how privileged we are. And from that place, start caring and get a lot done."
According to the newspaper, Mueller had been working with the aid agency Support to Life, and a local organisation that helped female Syrian refugees develop skills.
Mueller's identity had not been disclosed until now out of fears for her safety.
Jordan has stepped up its attacks against the Islamic State group after the extremists announced al-Kasaesbeh's execution.
Islamic State extremists claim an American woman they held hostage was killed in a Jordanian airstrike in northern Syria. However, the Jordan Government dismissed the statement as "criminal propaganda" and the US said it had not seen any evidence to corroborate the report.
The woman was identified as aid worker Kayla Jean Mueller, 26, but there was no independent verification of the militants' claim on a website the group uses and also is distributed by Islamic State-affiliated Twitter users.
Mueller, of Prescott, Arizona, is the only known remaining US hostage held by Isis.
This week the extremists released a video showing Jordanian air force pilot Muath al-Kaseasbeh, also 26, being burned to death in a cage in gruesome images that caused outrage around the world.
Mueller's parents said they still hoped she was alive.
It published photos purportedly of the bombed site, showing a severely damaged three-storey building.
The statement said no Islamic State militants were killed in the airstrikes.
Jordanian government spokesman Mohammed al-Momani said it was investigating. "But as a first reaction, we think it's illogical and we are highly sceptical about it. How could they identify a Jordanian warplane? What was the American lady doing in a weapons warehouse?" al-Momani said.
"It's part of their criminal propaganda. They have lied that our pilot is alive and tried to negotiate, claiming he is alive while they had killed him weeks before," he said.
American officials said they also were looking into the report.
Bernadette Meehan, the spokeswoman for President Barack Obama's National Security Council, said the White House has "not at this time seen any evidence that corroborates the claim. We are obviously deeply concerned by these reports," she added.
Mueller had been working in Turkey assisting Syrian refugees, according to a 2013 article in the Daily Courier, her hometown newspaper. She told the paper that she was drawn to help with the situation in Syria.
"For as long as I live, I will not let this suffering be normal," she said. "It's important to stop and realise what we have, why we have it and how privileged we are. And from that place, start caring and get a lot done."
According to the newspaper, Mueller had been working with the aid agency Support to Life, and a local organisation that helped female Syrian refugees develop skills.
Mueller's identity had not been disclosed until now out of fears for her safety.
Jordan has stepped up its attacks against the Islamic State group after the extremists announced al-Kasaesbeh's execution.
Jordanian airstrikes follow pilot's death
The horrific killing spurred outrage in Jordan and beyond.
Safi
al-Kasasbeh, Moath's father, afterward called on Jordan and its allies
to "annihilate" ISIS. Government officials appear, at least in their
rhetoric, determined to do just that.
"(Jordan will extract) revenge that equals
the tragedy that has befallen the Jordanians," government spokesman
Mohammad al-Momani said.
On Thursday, the Middle Eastern nation launched its first strikes since the news emerged about al-Kasasbeh.
The
late pilot's father said that King Abdullah II told him 30 Jordanian
warplanes participated in Thursday's action, which were focused in and
around Raqqa.
It
wasn't immediately clear how many jets took part in Friday's airstrikes,
or what they managed to achieve. The anti-ISIS activist group, "Raqqa
is Being Slaughtered Silently," reported warplanes in that Syrian city
as well as loud explosions, releasing a photo of dark smoke rising
above.
At the very least, the latest strikes prove that Jordan's mission, dubbed "Moath the Martyr," is not a one-day affair.
Sermonizing against ISIS, supporting the fight
Until
now, ISIS hasn't shown any inclination to back down. Just the opposite,
in fact: The terror group has been relentless and brutal in its quest
to establish a vast caliphate under its strict, twisted version of
Sharia law.
The organization's savagery
seemingly knows no bounds, not only in its use of captives' killings as
grisly propaganda tools but in its campaign of mass killings, rapes,
kidnappings and other atrocities while taking over swaths of Iraq and
Syria.
Just this week, a U.N. report claimed ISIS has stepped up its use of children in its bloody campaign, even putting price tags on some and selling them as slaves.
Jordan has released a slickly-edited
video that shows its war planes being prepared for bombing strikes
against Islamic State jihadists in Syria.
The footage, understood to have been
broadcast on state TV, shows troops messages on plane-mounted missiles
before the fleet of fighter jets are launched from the base.
The mission – dubbed Operation Martyr
Moaz in memory of the pilot brutally killed by ISIS – is the latest show
of force from the nation, which has promised a ‘harsh’ war against the
terror group.
It comes just hours after Jordanian
fighter pilots made a diversion over the hometown of their murdered
comrade, Moaz al-Kasasbeh, on their return from an air raid this
morning.
Dozens of jets bombed ISIS training
centers and weapons storage sites in Syria and struck targets
neighbouring Iraq for the first time – intensifying attacks against the
militants.
The assault came after Jordan’s King Abdullah II visited the grieving Kasasbeh family in Aya village.
Amman was “more
determined than ever to fight the terrorist group Daesh.” And a
government spokesman said Jordan would step up its role in the U.S.-led
fight against the militant group.
King Abdullah cut short a visit to Washington, returning to his country where he held emergency talks with his military.Planes belonging to the Jordanian Royal Air Force fly over the headquarters of the family clan of pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh in the city of Karak Feb. 4, 2015. (Reuters)
Jordanian fighter jets flew over the hometown of a pilot killed by Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group and the capital Amman on Thursday after completing a mission, state television said without giving the location of their sortie, Reuters reported.
However, Iraqi media said that the Jordanian airstrikes have killed 55 ISIS militants including a senior commander known as the “Prince of Nineveh.”
Jordan’s ‘severe’ response to ISIS after it killed an air force pilot by burning him alive, came just hours after King Abdullah vowed to avenge Maaz al-Kassasbeh’s death.
"The blood of martyr Maaz al-Kassasbeh will not be in vain and the response of Jordan and its army after what happened to our dear son will be severe," Said King Abdullah in a statement released by the royal court on Wednesday.
Jordan had previously been divided on its participation in airstrikes against ISIS, with many question why the country was involving itself in the fight.
But it was a divide that largely vanished after the revelation of Kassasbeh’s brutal execution.
Jordan’s information minister, Mohammad al-Momani told AFP: Amman was “more determined than ever to fight the terrorist group Daesh.” And a government spokesman said Jordan would step up its role in the U.S.-led fight against the militant group.
King Abdullah cut short a visit to Washington, returning to his country where he held emergency talks with his military.
But before his return to the Middle East he met with President Barack Obama, who slammed the pilot’s killing as an act of "cowardice and depravity," and he offered the king “his deepest condolences” White House spokesman, Alistair Baskey said.
Meanwhile Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said radical Islam’s “cruelty knows no borders, the greatest threat to humanity would be if these extremists get their hands on nuclear weapons," referring to Iran's nuclear program.
The airstrikes came just hours after Jordan executed two militant prisoners in response to the killing of Kassasbeh.
But the pilot’s father told Reuters the two executions were not enough to avenge his son’s death, adding: "I want the state to get revenge for my son's blood through more executions of those people who follow this criminal group that shares nothing with Islam." Safi al-Kassasbeh told Reuters.
Jordan's King Abdullah II (L) greeting Safi, the father of Jordanian
pilot Maaz al-Kassasbeh. Main photo, a Jordanian jet returns from
bombing Isis targets. Photo / AFP, AP
The military said "dozens of jet fighters" struck Isis targets
overnight, "hitting training camps of the terrorist groups as well as
weapons and ammunition warehouses."It did not say where the targets were located -- Isis holds swathes of Syria and Iraq -- but said they were destroyed and the aircraft returned to base safely.
Jordan's military pledged to "destroy this terrorist group and kill the evil in its own place", saying it would punish Isis "for the heinous act" of burning the pilot alive.
Personifying the nation's grief and deep anger over the horrifying murder, Abdullah visited the airman's family, which has urged the government to "destroy" the jihadists, to pay his condolences.
Airstrike: The slickly-edited video also
contains aerial shots that appear to show Jordanian strikes on Islamic
State targets. The Royal Jordanian Air Force launched strikes on Syria
this morning..
Preparation: A woman is seen writing a message in Arabic on a plane-mounted missile before the air assault
Take off: A plane belonging to the Royal Jordanian Air Force, above, is seen taking off in the latest video
Dozens of Jordanian fighter jets bombed ISIS
training centers and weapons storage sites on Thursday. Above, aerial
footage from the video released today appears to show a pilot seeking a
target
It has now been two days ISIS released a
horrific 22-minute long video showing the pilot being burnt alive while
locked in a cage.
The act has been widely condemned as
among the most sickening ever committed to film and has sent waves of
revulsion across the region.
In response, Jordan executed two Iraqi
militants connected with ISIS, including Sajida al-Rishawi, the female
would-be suicide bomber whose freedom ISIS had originally demanded in
exchange for releasing Kasasbeh.
The air strike video, released today on
the YouTube channel of a national radio station, is the latest show of
strength. It is understood to have been recorded at Muwaffaq Salti Air
Base.
The military’s statement, read on state
TV, was entitled, ‘This is the beginning and you will get to know the
Jordanians’ – an apparent warning to ISIS.
It said the strikes will continue ‘until we eliminate them.’
With its stirring soundtrack and complex
editing, the video is similar in style to those released by ISIS, which
have been striking in their professional use of camera and editing
equipment.
The clip shows uniformed people,
believed to be members of the Jordanian military, writing messages in
Arabic across plane-mounted missiles. One reads ‘for you, the enemy of
Islam’.
Target: This footage is believed to show Jordanian forces bombing Islamic State sites in Syria today
The video also features a pilot holding up a
sign that reads: ‘And do not think that God is unaware of what the
evildoers are doing’ – an apparent warning to ISIS militants. The
message is based on a passage in the Quran
Show of force: A fleet of Jordanian F-16 fighter jets are lined up at a base ahead of air strikes in Syria and Iraq
The video also features a pilot holding
up a sign that reads: ‘And do not think that God is unaware of what the
evildoers are doing’ – an apparent warning to ISIS militants.
There are aerial shots that appear to show Jordanian forces bombing ISIS training centres and weapon storage sites in Syria.
As part of the new campaign, Jordan is
also attacking targets in Iraq, Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh said.
Until now, Jordan had only struck ISIS targets in Syria as part of a
U.S.-led military coalition.
‘We said we are going to take this all
the way, we are going to go after them wherever they are and we’re doing
that,” Judeh told Fox News.
Asked if Jordan was now carrying out
attacks in both countries, he said: ‘That’s right. Today more Syria than
Iraq, but like I said it’s an ongoing effort.’
He added: ‘They’re in Iraq and they are in Syria and therefore you have to target them wherever they are.’
The militant group controls about one-third of each Syria and Iraq, both neighbors of Jordan.
The Jordanian military said dozens of
fighter jets were involved in Thursday’s strikes on training centers and
weapons storage sites.
Tribute: A plane belonging to the Jordanian
Royal Air Force makes a deliberate diversion over over the home town of
the pilot brutally murdered by ISIS after carrying out airstrikes
against the terror group in Syria
Visit: Local television showed a
sombre-looking King (right) sitting alongside Moaz al-Kasasbeh’s father
Saif (left), the Jordanian army chief, and other senior officials in Aya
– a village 60 miles south of the capital Amman
Embrace: Jordan’s King Abdullah II hugs Saif al-Kassasbeh, father of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh
The tribute came as Jordan’s King Abdullah II
(centre) visited Moaz al-Kasasbeh’s grieving family including his
father, Saif (left) – in Aya village and one day after he vowed to wage a
‘harsh’ war against the militants
Tribe members of slain Jordanian pilot Moaz
al-Kasasbeh receive mourners at the memorial tent set up for the
murdered pilot in his home village of Aya near Karak in Jordan this
morning
Looking for revenge: The Jordanian fighter
jets carried out new air strikes a day after King Abdullah (left) vowed
to wage a ‘harsh’ war against Islamic State militants who control parts
of neighboring Syria and Iraq
Earlier today, war planes roared
overhead as the King paid a condolence visit to the tribal family of the
pilot in his village in southern Jordan.
State television showed a sombre-looking
King sitting alongside the army chief and senior officials while
visiting Aya, a village 60 miles south of the capital Amman.
Thousands of Jordanians flocked to pay
respects in traditional Arab Bedouin style in a part of the country
where influential tribes form an important pillar of the Hashemite rule,
supplying the army and security forces with its manpower.
At one point the King pointed out the aircraft as he sat next to the victim’s father, Saif al-Kasasbeh.
‘You are a wise monarch. These criminals
violated the rules of war in Islam and they have no humanity. Even
humanity disowns them,’ he told the King.
The Jordanian fighter jets carried out
new air strikes a day after King Abdullah vowed to wage a ‘harsh’ war
against Islamic State militants who control parts of neighboring Syria
and Iraq.
The army statement did not say which country was targeted.
King Abdullah visits family of Jordanian pilot killed by ISIS
Condolences: Local television showed the King (right) sitting alongside Moaz al-Kasasbeh’s father Saif (left)
Jordan’s King Abdullah II embraces Fahed al-Kasasbeh, the uncle of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh
Brutal: This morning’s show of force came two
days after ISIS released a horrific 22-minute long video showing the
pilot being burnt alive while locked in a cage
Distraught: The pilot’s father surrounded by
family members and security forces during a mourning ceremony in the
city of Karak, Jordan, on Thursday
Uncompromising language: King Abdullah II has
said Jordan’s response ‘will be harsh because this terrorist
organisation is not only fighting us, but also fighting Islam and its
pure values’
Activists carry pictures of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kassasbeh in Amman earlier this week
Jordanian king calls killing of pilot an ‘act of cowardice’
Jordan is part of a U.S.-led military
coalition that has bombed IS targets in both countries since the autumn,
but until now Jordanian warplanes are only known to have carried out
raids in Syria.
King Abdullah II has said Jordan’s
response ‘will be harsh because this terrorist organisation is not only
fighting us, but also fighting Islam and its pure values.’
In a statement, he pledged to hit the militants ‘hard in the very centre of their strongholds’.
In Washington, leading members of Congress have called for increased U.S. military assistance to the kingdom.
Currently, the United States provides Jordan with $1 billion a year in economic and military aid.
Not true: False rumours spread online
yesterday that King Abdullah II is preparing to personally take part in
airstrikes against ISIS. The Royal Hashemite Court’s official Facebook
page later shared this image of the King wearing a pilot’s uniform,
which some mistakenly took to mean he had carried out an air raid
Clean cut: 26-year-old Moaz al-Kasasbeh is seen wearing his pilot’s uniform before being captured by ISIS
Return home: King Abdullah of Jordan arrives
as Jordanians stand along the way between Amman and Queen Alia airport
waiting to greet him upon his arrival on Wednesday
Protestors take to the streets of Jordan following ISIS execution
The visit comes after a Jordanian
government spokesman denied rumours that the King is preparing to
personally take part in airstrikes against ISIS.
In a statement Mohammed al-Momani
branded said the reports that the King – who is a trained pilot – will
soon conduct raids himself are unfounded and baseless.
Rumours spread online yesterday that the
King was considering a combat role in the war after he promised to
fight back against ISIS, insisting Kasaesbeh’s death ‘will not be in
vain’.
The Royal Hashemite Court’s official
Facebook page later shared an image of the King wearing a pilot’s
uniform, which some mistakenly – including several Iraqi news outlets –
took to mean he had carried out an air raid.
Other social media users then starting
sharing old photographs on the King sitting in a plane’s cockpit,
suggesting the images were taken on his return from a sortie to Syria.
Before becoming king, Abdullah was a military general who headed the Jordanian special forces.
He is also a fully qualified Cobra
Helicopter pilot and in 1980 joined Sandhurst – the British Royal
military academy also attended by Prince William and Prince Harry.
Rally: A Jordanian protester kisses a poster
bearing the image of Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh during a rally to
show their loyalty to King Abdullah and against the Islamic State
Jordanians hold up pictures of the King and murdered pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh while chanting slogans during a rally today
Loyalty: Protesters made their support for Jordan’s King Abdullah II clear during a rally in Amman today
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