The fate of a Jordanian pilot held by Islamic State has raised public pressure on King Abdullah over his country’s role in the US-led military campaign against the hardline group in Syria, fuelling the risk of broader discontent in the US ally.
After his capture in December, militants released pictures of the young pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh being led out of the water by fighters. His F-16 jet had smashed onto the banks of the Euphrates River in Islamic State’s stronghold in northern Syria.
The images of the young, newly-wed pilot shocked Jordanians and brought home the stakes of the US-ally’s involvement the war. King Abdullah has defended the campaign, saying that moderate Muslims need to combat a group whose ideology and brutality have insulted the spirit of Islam.
But in Kasaesbeh’s hometown of Karak dozens of young people protested, chanting anti-coalition slogans and calling on the King to pull out of the campaign.
“We will not be a sacrificial cow for America!” angry youths chanted last month in a city whose tribes have long been a bulwark of support for the Hashemite monarchy.
King Abdullah’s father, King Hussein, did not take part in a US-led military campaign against former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein after his invasion of Kuwait in 1990, going along with public opinion which was against military involvement.
By contrast, his son has taken a bolder role in this campaign by sending its jets to Syria — the first time Jordan took part on bombing missions abroad rather than just providing intelligence and logistical support.
King Abdullah’s stance stems from his concern about the heightened threat of jihadis to his kingdom. Al Qaeda launched a series of deadly attacks in Jordan including a bombing on a hotel in Amman in 2005, killing 60 people.
Islamic State has called for the release of Sajida al-Rishawi, one of the hotel attackers who was convicted after her explosive belt failed to detonate. It has said it will spare Kasaesbeh’s life if she is let go but has not said it will release the pilot.
Seeking to rally his people, King Abdullah has said concern about the pilot’s plight united all Jordanians and his capture proved the war must be won. But as he comforted Kasaesbeh’s parents and wife in the royal palace, demonstrations took place.
“There is not a hour in the day that me and the armed forces are not working on this, our hero the pilot. Unfortunately the war today is one within the Islamic world and it’s our war,” the King told a group of tribal elders in a visit ten days ago.