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The Martyr Muath Operation - First Revenge

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Tens of JAF F-16s have raided ISIL pigs positions at once:


The F-16s fly over Amman and Karak (Muath's home town) after the return from the raids:

It is true that king abdullah will lead the attack himself
 
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Jordan jets 'strike Islamic State' after pilot's death

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King Abdullah (right) paid a visit to Safi al-Kasasbeh, the father of the murdered pilot, in the tribe's village

Jordan says its warplanes have carried out their first air strikes on Islamic State (IS) targets since the militants released a video showing the killing of a captured Jordanian pilot.

On their way back, the planes flew over the village of pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh.

Their flight coincided with a visit to the village by Jordanian King Abdullah II, who was meeting the pilot's family.

The king has vowed to the step up the fight against IS. Jordan is part of a US-led coalition bombing the militants.

Lt Kasasbeh was captured by the militants last year after his F-16 fighter jet crashed in Syria. IS this week released a video showing the pilot being burned alive in a cage, sparking outrage and calls for revenge in Jordan.

State television pictures on Thursday showed the king sitting sombre-faced with Saif al-Kasasbeh, the pilot's father, at a gathering in Aya village, near the city of Karak, south of the capital Amman.

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The Jordanian aircraft flew over the pilot's tribal village, south of Amman

The king gestured to the skies as the warplanes flew overhead, the Associated Press news agency said.

Mr Kasasbeh told mourners that the aircraft were returning from a raid on Syria's Raqqa, the de facto capital of the militants' self-declared caliphate, which spans territory in Iraq and Syria.

While Jordan did not specify the location of the air strikes, a security official quoted by Reuters news agency said they had targeted IS in Syria.

However, anti-IS activists in Raqqa said there were no coalition air strikes in the city on Wednesday.

"The response of Jordan and its army after what happened to our dear son will be severe," the king said, after cutting short a trip to the US this week.

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Failed suicide bomber Sajida al-Rishawi had been on death row in Jordan for nearly a decade

Jordan responded to the release of the gruesome video, which depicted the caged pilot engulfed in flames, by executing two convicts, including Sajida al-Rishawi, a failed female suicide bomber.

Jordan had earlier sought to secure the pilot's release in a swap involving Rishawi.

However, it is now believed that IS had killed the pilot a month ago. The BBC's Paul Adams in Amman says talk of an exchange appears to have been an IS tactic to string Jordan along and foster doubt among Jordanians over its role in the US-led coalition.

Joint resolve
On Thursday, Mr Kasasbeh praised the king and condemned the militants.

"You are a wise monarch," the Reuters new agency quotes him as saying. "These criminals violated the rules of war in Islam and they have no humanity. Even humanity disowns them."


Mr Kasasbeh had earlier said the Jordanian government must do "more than just executing prisoners".

"I call for [IS] to be eliminated completely," he told reporters on Wednesday.

Earlier this week, King Abdullah and US President Barack Obama reaffirmed their joint resolve to destroy the group at a meeting in the White House before the monarch returned to Jordan.

Jordan is one of four Arab states to have taken part in the anti-IS air strikes in Syria. The other countries are Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar.

US officials told the BBC on Wednesday that the UAE had suspended its involvement in the strikes after Lt Kasasbeh was captured in December.

The New York Times quoted officials as saying the UAE wanted the Pentagon to improve its search-and-rescue efforts in Iraq before it resumed bombing missions.

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Timeline: Jordanian pilot held hostage
24 December 2014: Jordanian Lt Moaz Youssef al-Kasasbeh captured by IS after his plane crashes

25 December 2014: Pilot's father urges IS to show mercy

20 January 2015: IS threatens to kill two Japanese hostages unless Japan pays $200m ransom within 72 hours

24 January: IS releases video of Japanese hostage Kenji Goto holding a picture apparently showing Haruna Yukawa's decapitated body

24 January: IS calls for release of Sajida al-Rishawi, an Iraqi militant sentenced to death in Jordan

28 January: Jordan offers to release Rishawi in exchange for Lt Kasasbeh

29 January: Deadline to kill Lt Kasasbeh and Mr Goto expires

31 January: Video released appearing to show Kenji Goto's body

3 February: Video released appearing to show Lt Kasasbeh burnt alive, with Jordanian media suggesting he was killed weeks earlier


BBC News - Jordan jets 'strike Islamic State' after pilot's death

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Just a knee-jerk reaction or there is a viable strategy behind these attacks? Even after so much brutality and bloodshed the countries surrounding Syria and Iraq cannot sit together at a table and come up with a plan to extirpate the menace of DAESH, so much mistrust and hate for each other.
 
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.ما حدث لمعاذ الكساسبة أمر بعيد كل البعد عن الإسلام وعن أى دين آخر

.رحم الله الشهيد البطل وخالص التعازي للشعب الأردني

:cry:أبشع فترة نعيشها في حياة البشرية. لا حول ولا قوة إلا بالله. متى يتحد العرب؟

 
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It is true that king abdullah will lead the attack himself
No, lol. People saw an old (2014) photo of him in an Air Force training exercise and thought it was new.

Just a knee-jerk reaction or there is a viable strategy behind these attacks? Even after so much brutality and bloodshed the countries surrounding Syria and Iraq cannot sit together at a table and come up with a plan to extirpate the menace of DAESH, so much mistrust and hate for each other.
The purpose behind these specific attacks is just to calm the anger of the people while they plan a significant attack.
 
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The purpose behind these specific attacks is just to calm the anger of the people while they plan a significant attack.

Do you mean Arabs will send ground troops? And how will they do that if Assad opposes?
 
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Do you mean Arabs will send ground troops? And how will they do that if Assad opposes?
Maybe, most likely only in specific special operations. Assad won't do anything, otherwise he would be defending daesh thus admitting his alliance with them.

And certainly not Arabs, only Jordanians, the emiraties have already pulled out while the other arab members of the coalition don't want to get too involved (because they're- well, I'll just not say anything)
 
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