Authorities in Jordan have disrupted a major
terrorist plot by al-Qaeda-linked operatives to launch near-simultaneous attacks
on multiple civilian and government targets, reportedly including the U.S.
Embassy in the capital, Amman, Western and Middle Eastern officials said
Sunday.
The Jordanian government issued a statement describing the plot and saying
that 11 people with connections to al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Iraq have been
arrested.
The foiled attack, described as the most serious plot uncovered in Jordan
since at least 2005, was viewed with particular alarm by intelligence agencies
because of its sophisticated design and the planned use of munitions intended
for the Syrian conflict — a new sign that Syria’s troubles could be spilling
over into neighboring countries, the officials said.
The alleged plotters are Jordanian nationals. The officials said the group
had amassed a stockpile of explosives and weapons from Syrian battlefields and
devised a plan to use military-style tactics in a wave of attacks across
Amman.
The scheme called for multiple strikes on shopping centers and cafes as a
diversionary tactic to draw the attention of police and security officials,
allowing other operatives to launch attacks against the main targets, which
included government buildings and embassies.
A Western official briefed on details of the plot confirmed that the heavily
fortified U.S. Embassy in Amman was among the targets. Like others interviewed
for this report, the official spoke on the condition of anonymity because the
investigation is still unfolding.
The Jordanian government’s statement said its intelligence service had broken
up a cell that had been planning the attacks since June, arresting 11 people
described as “supporters” of al-Qaeda in Iraq. The group had intended to use
explosives and mortar rounds acquired from Syria, as well as machine guns, car
bombs and militia-style guerrilla tactics, to ensure “the highest death toll,”
according to the statement.
The suspects had traveled to Syria multiple times and brought weapons with
them, government officials said. They were arrested less than a week after
Jordanian officials captured three Jordanians as they attempted to cross
illegally into Syria, allegedly to join radical Islamist militias fighting
Syrian loyalists there.
In a news conference late Sunday in Amman, Jordanian government spokesman
Samih Maaytah said that the plot was “not related to the Syrian crisis” and that
“Jordan will not change its approach” to the conflict in response to the
discovery.
The timing of the plot was viewed as curious. Jordan has increasingly allied
itself with forces seeking the overthrow of Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian autocrat
opposed by rebels as well as a growing cadre of foreign Islamist militants
inside Syria. Jordan hosts hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees within its
borders and has helped deliver humanitarian aid to rebel-held cities.
But intelligence gleaned from surveillance of the cell suggests that the
plotters intended to destabilize Jordan’s pro-Western government with massive
blows against government institutions and tourism-dependent economy, the
officials said.
“This was a serious plan, with a great potential for loss of life,” said a
former Western intelligence official briefed on the details. For Jordan, beset
by economic problems and deepening political unrest, he said, “this may not have
been a tipping point, but it could have been a very hard blow.”
The former intelligence official said the plotters had access to large
amounts of explosives from Syria and intended to use them to construct massive
bombs.
“Weapons are everywhere right now, flowing from Iraq into Syria, and back and
forth into Lebanon,” the former official said. “The longer the conflict goes on,
the worse it gets.”
Also Sunday, a Jordanian soldier was killed in a clash between government
security forces and a band of 16 armed militants seeking to cross illegally into
Syria, government officials said. Four of the gunmen also were killed in the
20-minute firefight, the first to claim the life of a Jordanian officer since
the Syrian uprising began.
The State Department had no immediate comment on the plot and declined to
confirm or deny that the U.S. Embassy in Amman had been on the target list.
The last major terrorist strike in Jordan occurred in 2005, when al-Qaeda
militants launched simultaneous attacks against three Amman hotels, killing 60
people and wounding 115.
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