Sunday, October 29, 2023

US Sends Forces to Jordan Amid Buildup in “Defense of Israel”

Ali Abunimah and Tamara Nassar 

The Electronic Intifada 

29 October 2023

Warplane mid-air appears to be landing in an open field in a dimly lit sky 

An American F-15 fighter jet deployed as part of President Joe Biden’s regional buildup following the 7 October resistance offensive that routed Israel’s army. Twitter

Jordan has strongly condemned Israel’s genocidal war on Gaza and its diplomats were instrumental in passing a UN General Assembly resolution on Friday calling for a ceasefire.

The country’s King Abdullah was quick to order humanitarian aid for Gaza even before any such supplies started to trickle in.

The monarch has also been calling for an end to Israel’s bombing campaign in Gaza and for a lifting of Israel’s suffocating siege on the territory.

He has also warned that Israeli attempts to forcibly displace Palestinians would be a war crime.

And Jordan’s Queen Rania has garnered warm praise at home and abroad for her forthright condemnation of Israel’s “butchery at a mass scale” of Palestinian civilians, in a recent interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour.

“Why is it that whenever Israel commits these atrocities it comes under the banner of self-defense, but when there’s violence by Palestinians it is immediately called terrorism?” Queen Rania asked.

“There’s real double standards here that we’re seeing,” she added, undoubtedly channeling the sentiments of millions of Jordanians.

Jordan must “act in line” with its policy

At the same time, reports that Jordan is permitting the United States to station additional military forces on its soil as Israel exterminates Palestinians in Gaza are generating disquiet.

At a protest near the Israeli embassy in Amman on 24 October, Jordanians expressed opposition to the American military presence in their country. One sign read, for example, “no to US military bases,” and another condemned Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and US President Joe Biden as “partners in crime.”

The Arab Organisation for Human Rights in the UK has also criticized Jordan “for allowing the US to use its territory” to transport military equipment into the region as part of an American deployment to defend Israel.

The group urged Amman “to act in line with its policy and the strong statements issued by the Jordanian government confirming that it is against the unjust war launched by Israel with Western support on the Gaza Strip.”

“It is unacceptable for Jordan to call in public to stop the war, while allowing US military support for Israel,” AOHR UK states.

That is a sentiment likely to be widely shared across the region, including by Jordan’s own population.

“The defense of Israel”

But what role is Jordan playing in the US military buildup ordered by President Biden following the 7 October offensive by Gaza-based Palestinian resistance fighters who routed Israel’s vaunted army in a matter of hours?

The regional US deployment is intended to “assist in the defense of Israel,” Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austin explained on 21 October.

It includes positioning two aircraft carrier strike groups in the Eastern Mediterranean, bolstering air defenses across the region as well as placing “an additional number of forces on prepare to deploy orders,” Austin announced.

Meanwhile, by last Sunday, more than 60 American and Israeli cargo aircraft had landed in Israel as part of an airlift ordered by Biden to ensure that Tel Aviv does not run out of bombs to drop on Palestinian families in Gaza.

“Most of them are civilian aircraft leased to carry weapons and spare parts,” according to the Israeli newspaper Haaretz.

This number is certain to have increased significantly in recent days.

Warplanes in Jordan

In the same 24 October article, Haaretz reported that US military transport aircraft have been landing all over the region.

Citing open-source information, the newspaper said eight heavylift planes which took off from supply centers in the US and Europe landed at a Jordanian base.

The Wall Street Journal also reported on 24 October that the US was “scrambling to deploy nearly a dozen air-defense systems to countries across the Middle East ahead of Israel’s expected land invasion of Gaza,” listing Jordan as one of six Arab states where the US would station Patriot surface-to-air missile systems.

And according to a 16 October Haaretz report, “a squadron of US F-15E Strike Eagle bombers based in Britain was deployed … at the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base east of the Jordanian capital of Amman,” along with a squadron of A-10 ground attack aircraft and Florida-based American special forces.

Consistent with these reports, the United States Air Force announced on 14 October that a day earlier, “the 494th Expeditionary Fighter Squadron’s F-15E Strike Eagle aircraft arrived in the US Central Command area of responsibility.”

The Air Force Times noted that the F-15s were deployed “as the US looks to bolster its position in the region amid the ongoing conflict between Israel and the militant group Hamas.”

The US military did not disclose the specific country to which the fighter jets were deployed, but the US Central Command area – also known as CENTCOM – spans a number of countries including Jordan.

CENTCOM published pictures of the aircraft arriving in the region:

An account on the social media platform X (formerly Twitter), identifying itself as belonging to a French aviation spotter in Jordan, geolocated the aircraft to the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base, east of Amman, using the CENTCOM photos and other publicly available images.

The Aviationist website reported that OSINT – open-source intelligence – trackers “were quick to verify the rumor” about the destination of the American warplanes.

“The aircraft, in fact, landed at Muwaffaq Salti/Al-Azraq Air Base in Jordan, one of the usual deployment locations for US aircraft in the area,” The Aviationist stated.

Days earlier, Eurofighter warplanes from Germany’s Luftwaffe arrived at the same Jordanian air base as part of previously planned exercises called Desert Air 23.

Avi Scharf, the former editor-in-chief of Haaretz and now the newspaper’s national security, cyber and OSINT (open-source intelligence) editor, documented at least 15 American heavylift aircraft, two fighter squadrons and special forces arriving in Jordan since 7 October.

Separately on 24 October, the Pentagon announced it had deployed a squadron of F-16 fighter jets to the CENTCOM area “to help protect US troops.”

It did not name the country where the New Jersey-based warplanes would be stationed.

US-Jordan ties

While these deployments are part of Biden’s regional military buildup, Jordan has long been a base for US military personnel.

As of June this year, months before the current escalation in Gaza, the White House confirmed in a letter to Congress that nearly 3,000 US military personnel were deployed to Jordan – a fact rarely officially acknowledged in the country itself.

Over the past 15 years, US aid to Jordan has tripled, according to the Congressional Research Service, an official body that provides information to US legislators and the public.

“Jordanian air bases have been particularly important for the US conduct of intelligence, surveillance, target acquisition and reconnaissance (ISR) missions in Syria and Iraq,” according to the body.

The United States never officially acknowledged its use of the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base until after a 2021 agreement, but the Congressional Research Service cites reports that “satellite imagery shows it has hosted US Air Force (USAF) unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) and fast jets since at least 2016.”

Huge protests

Jordan’s close political, economic and military ties with Washington, the main enabler of Israel’s genocide in Gaza, sit uncomfortably with the reality that Jordan’s population staunchly and overwhelmingly supports the Palestinians in their war of liberation from Israeli occupation, colonialism and apartheid.

In 2017, a Pew Research Center survey found that Jordanians held the most negative views of the United States of any country in the region, with 82 percent viewing it unfavorably. There’s little reason to think those numbers would have improved since then.

An opinion survey commissioned by the pro-Israel think tank the Washington Institute for Near East Policy in June, found that 84 percent of Jordanians “stand opposed to having business deals with Israeli companies even if it would help their economy.”

The survey also found that “a majority (60 percent) of Jordanians view Hamas firing missiles at Israel at least somewhat positively.”

Those views too are hardly likely to have shifted in a positive direction for Israel.

Since Israel’s extermination campaign in Gaza began earlier this month, there have been large and near-constant protests in Amman.

A particular focus of the protests has been the al-Kalouti mosque, less than a mile from the Israeli embassy. The mosque is the closest Jordanian security forces allow protesters to get to the Zionist state’s diplomatic mission.

On the few occasions protesters tried to get closer to the embassy, Jordanian forces fired tear gas and beat them back.

On Friday, Jordanians held a massive protest in downtown Amman demanding cancellation of the Jordan-Israel peace treaty, one day after the 29th anniversary of its signing.

Amid outrage across the region at its barbaric slaughter of civilians in Gaza, Israel evacuated its embassies in several countries last week, including Jordan, Bahrain, Morocco and Egypt.

Yet despite the growing anger at the relentless savagery of the Washington-backed mass murder of Palestinian civilians in Gaza, not a single Arab country that has formal relations with Israel has officially broken them off.

Tamara Nassar is associate editor and Ali Abunimah is executive director of The Electronic Intifada.

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