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IS captures Jordanian pilot

Published: 25 Dec 2014 - 03:42 am | Last Updated: 18 Jan 2022 - 03:00 pm

An Islamic State group fighter collecting pieces from the remains of a Jordanian warplane after it was shot down in Syria’s Raqa region yesterday.

BEIRUT: The Islamic State group captured a Jordanian pilot yesterday after his warplane from the US-led coalition was reportedly shot down while on a mission against the jihadists over northern Syria.
A senior Jordanian military official confirmed the pilot was seized, saying his plane went down in Syria’s Raqa region, a militant stronghold, early yesterday. “The pilot was taken hostage by the IS terrorist organisation,” official news agency Petra quoted the official as saying.
Jordan did not say why the plane crashed, but both the jihadists and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said it was shot with an anti-aircraft missile.
It was the first coalition warplane lost since air strikes on IS began in Syria in September.
Coalition warplanes have carried out regular strikes around Raqa, which IS has used as the headquarters for its self-declared “caliphate” after seizing control of large parts of Syria and Iraq.
The IS branch in Raqa published photographs on jihadist websites purporting to show its fighters holding the captured pilot. One showed the pilot, wearing only a white shirt, being carried from a body of water by four men. Another showed him on land, surrounded by almost a dozen armed men.
A photograph was also released of the pilot’s military identification card, showing his name as Maaz Al Kassasbeh, his birth date as May 29, 1988, and his rank of first lieutenant. The jihadists claimed to have shot down the warplane with a heat-seeking missile.
Images distributed by IS supporters of the alleged aftermath of the crash appeared to show the distinctive canopy of an F-16 fighter jet. Experts said the missile used might have been taken from Syrian rebels or from among weapons captured from Syrian and Iraqi troops.
Eliot Higgins, who posts detailed analyses of weapons in Syria and other conflicts on his blog, said IS is known to have several kinds of anti-aircraft weapons including Chinese-made and Soviet-era missiles.
The pilot’s father Youssef was quoted by Jordanian news website Saraya as saying the family had been informed by the Air Force of his capture.
He said the military promised it was “working to save his life” and that Jordan’s ruler, King Abdullah II, was following events. Jordan is among a number of countries that have joined the US-led alliance carrying out air strikes against IS.
Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Jordan and Bahrain are taking part in the air strikes in Syria alongside the United States.
The Sunni extremist IS has committed widespread atrocities in areas under its control, including mass executions and public beheadings.
The coalition first launched strikes against IS in August in Iraq, where the jihadists overran the country’s Sunni heartland weeks earlier in a major offensive.
The coalition announced it had carried out 10 strikes yesterday in Syria, including one near Raqa, where the Jordanian jet crashed, and seven in Iraq.
Iraqi security forces, backed by the strikes, Kurdish forces, Shia militias, and Sunni tribesmen, have retaken some areas, but have been facing stiff resistance from the entrenched IS militants.
Some Sunni militiamen have joined the fight against IS and a attack near a military base in the Madain area targeted Sunni fighters known as Sahwa. There was no immediate claim of responsibility but suicide bombings are a tactic almost exclusively employed by Sunni extremists in Iraq, including IS.
The Sahwa, or “Awakening” in Arabic, date back to the height of the US-led war in Iraq, when Sunni tribesmen joined forces with the Americans to battle insurgents including IS’s predecessor organisation, the Islamic State of Iraq. The Sahwa were key to sharply reducing violence, but when Iraq’s government took over responsibility for their salaries they were sometimes paid late or not at all.
AFP