Muath al-Kasasbeh

Muath al-Kasasbeh
Native name معاذ صافي يوسف الكساسبة
Birth name Muath Safi Yousef al-Kasasbeh
Born 29 May 1988
Karak, Jordan
Died c. 3 January 2015 (aged 26)
Raqqa, Syria
Buried at Syria
Allegiance  Jordan
Service/branch Royal Jordanian Air Force
Years of service 2009–15
Rank Captain (promoted posthumously)
Unit No. 1 Squadron
Battles/wars Military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
Spouse(s) Anwar Al-Tarawneh

Muath Safi Yousef al-Kasasbeh (Arabic: معاذ صافي يوسف الكساسبة  South Levantine pronunciation: [mʊˈʕaːð-, mʊˈʕaːz ˈsˤɑːfi ˈjuːsef el kaˈsaːsbe]; 29 May 1988[1] – c. 3 January 2015)[2] was a Royal Jordanian Air Force pilot.

Al-Kasasbeh's F-16 fighter aircraft crashed near Raqqa, Syria, on 24 December 2014 during the military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). United States and Jordanian officials said that the crash was caused by mechanical problems, while ISIL claimed that the plane was hit by a heat-seeking missile.[3][4]

ISIL held al-Kasasbeh captive before killing him in early January 2015. It then conducted negotiations with the Jordanian government, claiming it would spare al-Kasabeh's life and free Japanese journalist Kenji Goto in exchange for Sajida al-Rishawi, a woman sentenced to death by Jordan for attempted terrorism and possessing explosives.[5] After the Jordanian government insisted on freeing al-Kasasbeh as part of the deal and showing proof that he was alive before it would exchange al-Rishawi, the Islamic State released a video on 3 February 2015 showing al-Kasasbeh being burned to death while trapped inside a cage.

Personal life

Al-Kasasbeh was one of eight children, including an elder brother, Jawdat Safi al-Kasasbeh, born to Issaf and Safi Yousef al-Kasasbeh, a retired education professor, in Al Karak, Jordan.[6][7][8] He was a Sunni Muslim.[9] The al-Kasasbehs are a prominent Jordanian family of the influential Sunni Muslim Bararsheh tribe from southern Jordan.[10] His uncle, Fahed al-Kasasbeh, was a Major General in the Royal Jordanian Army.[11][12]

Al-Kasasbeh married engineer Anwar al-Tarawneh in September 2014.[13] Prior to his capture, al-Kasasbeh lived in the village of Ay in the Karak Mountains in Karak Governorate, 90 miles (140 km) south of Amman.[10][14]

Career

In 2009, al-Kasasbeh graduated from the King Hussein Air College and joined the Royal Jordanian Air Force. He completed additional F-16 tactics training with the Republic of Korea Air Force's 120th Flying Squadron, at the Seosan Air Base under a joint South Korean-Jordanian exchange programme. By 2012, he qualified as an operational F-16 pilot and was assigned to No. 1 Squadron at the Muwaffaq Salti Air Base.[8]

At the time of his capture, al-Kasasbeh was a First Lieutenant.[11] He was posthumously promoted to the rank of Captain.

Capture

Jordanian F-16s, similar to those operated by al-Kasasbeh, in October 2009

The plane al-Kasasbeh was piloting, a Lockheed Martin F-16 formerly used by the Royal Belgian Air Force, crashed after suffering from mechanical problems on 24 December 2014 during a bombing raid on a brick factory during the military intervention against the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.[4] The Jordanian government said a technical failure caused him to eject after flying at low altitude, but the Islamic State claimed it shot down his aircraft.[4][15] He ejected and parachuted into a lake near Raqqa, Syria. He was quickly captured by Islamic State militants and pulled from the water.[11][16][17][18] An airborne search had been launched after he went down according to US officials, but he was not able to evade capture."[17] On 30 December 2014, Muath appeared in a detailed interview with ISIS's Dabiq magazine.[19][20]

Unsuccessful negotiations took place for his release. His family applied pressure on the Jordanian government to arrange for his release. Originally, it was proposed to trade him and a kidnapped Japanese journalist, Kenji Goto, for Sajida al-Rishawi, a failed Iraqi suicide bomber incarcerated in Jordan since she took part in the 2005 Amman hotel bombings, and sentenced to death.[21] The Jordanian government insisted on proof that al-Kasasbeh was still alive before it could proceed with a swap. The Islamic State refused and published the video of his killing.[22] Some analysts have assessed ISIL's offer of prisoner exchange as a gimmick that was meant to put into disrepute or mock the commitment of the Jordanian government to the military intervention against it. There have also been suggestions that the proposal was a tactic intended to free its valued member in exchange for a corpse.

A military operation to free al-Kasasbeh, possibly by Jordanian special forces, may have been made on 1 January 2015. Members of an anti-ISIL group in Raqqa, named Raqqa Is Being Slaughtered Silently, said they witnessed coalition jets bombing targets in Raqqa in some of the fiercest strikes of the anti-ISIL campaign, while four helicopters dropped off soldiers wearing purported Jordanian Army uniforms. The mission was aborted when ISIL fighters in the area began firing anti-aircraft missiles at the helicopters, forcing a retreat.[23]

Death

Al-Kasasbeh was burned to death by ISIL members in January 2015.[5][24] His killing was recorded on video and shown near the end of a 22-minute "snuff film" entitled Healing the Believers' Chests, credited to the Islamic State's official Al Furqan Media Foundation and distributed via a Twitter account known as a source for ISIL propaganda, and on video-sharing sites.[21][25][26][27]

The video shows him with a black left eye, first at a table and then confined in a black steel cage outdoors and dressed in an orange jumpsuit doused in gasoline. He was burned alive while numerous armed men in sand-colored balaclavas and desert-style camouflage watch. A truck finally extinguishes the fire by dumping rocks and sand on it.[26]

Before he was burned to death, al-Kasasbeh was made to reveal the names and workplaces of a number of his fellow Royal Jordanian Air Force pilots.[28][29] Their names and photographs were displayed at the end of the video, with an ISIL bounty offer of 100 gold dinars (approximately $20,000) for each Jordanian Air Force pilot killed.[28][29]

Most Western media outlets refused to show the full video, sometimes describing it or showing images immediately preceding al-Kasasbeh's immolation.[30] Fox News posted the complete video on its website.[31]

The Jordanian government assessed that al-Kasasbeh was killed by burning on 3 January, rather than 3 February, when the video was released on Twitter. If correct, it would confirm that the Islamic State never intended to exchange him for al-Rishawi. Other news reports suggest that he may have been killed a few days later, on 8 January, according to a tweet posted by a Syrian activist from Raqqa that day claiming he saw individuals from ISIL celebrating the death of al-Kasasbeh on 8 January.[32] It was reported that al-Kasasbeh was deprived of food beginning five days before he was killed.[32]

On 25 February 2015, al-l'tisam, a media arm of ISIS, released a video entitled Message to Jordan. It showed new excerpts from the video of al-Kasasbeh's burning.[33][34]

Reaction

Al-Kasasbeh's killing provoked outrage in Jordan; even some of those who had been opposed to the country's participation in airstrikes against ISIL started demanding revenge.[35]

King Abdullah II cut short a visit to the United States, and the Jordanian government announced that all prisoners in its custody who had been convicted of association with ISIL would be executed "within hours" in retaliation for al-Kasasbeh's killing.[36] In further response, Mamdouh al-Ameri, a Jordanian military spokesman, said: "While the military forces mourn the martyr, they emphasize his blood will not be shed in vain. The revenge will be as big as the calamity that has hit Jordan."[37]

On 4 February 2015, al-Rishawi and another Iraqi jihadist who was also on death row, Ziad Khalaf al-Karbouly, were executed by hanging in Swaqa Prison, expedited in response to al-Kasasbeh's death.[38][39][40]

Later on 4 February, Jordan launched its first military response to al-Kasasbeh's killing. Jordanian warplanes bombed ISIL positions in Mosul, killing 55 ISIL fighters, including a senior commander.[41] The following day, Jordan launched airstrikes against ISIL weapons and munition warehouses and training camps. According to U.S. officials, the attacks took place near Ar-Raqqah and involved 20 Jordanian F-16s, and American refueling and radio jamming aircraft assisted. After the jets completed their mission, they overflew al-Kasasbeh's hometown of Karak while on their way back to base.[42][43] The Jordan Radio and Television Corporation aired footage shot prior to those attacks, of pilots scribbling messages onto bombs slated to be used in the strikes. "For you, the enemies of Islam," read one message. Others bore verses from the Quran.[44][45]

Several clerics, leading figures of the Islamic world and news outlets roundly condemned the killing as murder. However, ISIL said it could be justified by Islamic law.[46][47]

The Jordanian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood, the Islamic Action Front, condemned the killing of al-Kasasbeh. Their statement described it as a "crime", without mentioning ISIS. The IAF's leader, Sheikh Hammam Saïd, in a 5 February interview with Radio Sawa, asked Jordan to withdraw from the anti-ISIS coalition, saying "Jordan should not be part of a coalition run by the United States."[48]

See also

References

  1. Heather Saul and Kashmira Gander (24 December 2014). "Isis 'did not shoot down Jordan war plane' before capturing pilot, says US". The Independent. Retrieved 3 January 2015. RMC later posted a photograph of the Jordanian military identity card of the pilot identifying him as Mu'ath Safi Yousef al-Kaseasbeh who was born on May 29, 1988.
  2. Shiv Malik (4 February 2015). "Isis video shows Jordanian hostage being burned to death". The Guardian. United Kingdom. Retrieved 17 February 2015.
  3. "Profile: IS-held Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh". BBC News.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Jordan pilot ejected over Syria after 'technical failure'". Yahoo News. Yahoo. Retrieved 26 December 2014.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "Jordan committed to anti-IS coalition, despite hostage drama". Yahoo News. 1 February 2015.
  6. "Egypt reviles ISIS killing of Jordanian pilot Al-Kasasbeh – Daily News Egypt". Daily News Egypt.
  7. Rod Nordland and Ranya Kadri (3 February 2015). "Jordan Executes Prisoners After ISIS Video of Pilot's Death". The New York Times. Retrieved 4 February 2014.
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Profile of a patriotic pilot: Moaz al-Kasasbeh". Al Arabiya News. 4 February 2015.
  9. "Profile: IS-held Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh". BBC News. 3 February 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2015. Lt Kasasbeh's family urged IS to spare him, stressing that he was a devout Sunni Muslim.
  10. 10.0 10.1 "IS Hostage Pilot's Brother: 'It's Not Our War'". Sky News.
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Tribal Loyalties Drive Jordan's Effort to Free Pilot
  12. "Jordan warns Islamic State militants against harming captured pilot". www.smh.com.au. 26 December 2014. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  13. Mitchell Prothero (3 February 2015). "Jordan prepares to execute ISIS prisoners as retaliation for savage killing". McClatchy Foreign via The Telegraph. Retrieved 3 February 2015. Anwar al-Tarawneh, the wife of Jordanian pilot, Lt. Moaz al Kasasbeh, who was burned to death by Islamic State group militants, holds a poster of him as she weeps during a protest in Amman, Jordan, Tuesday, Feb. 3, 2015.
  14. Greg Botelho and Jomana Karadsheh (5 February 2015). "Jordan unleashes wrath on ISIS: 'This is just the beginning'". CNN.
  15. "Profile: IS-held Jordanian pilot Moaz al-Kasasbeh". BBC News.
  16. Laura Smith-Spark and Michael Martinez (29 January 2015). "Who was Jordanian pilot Moath al-Kasasbeh, killed by ISIS?". CNN.
  17. 17.0 17.1 "US moves pilot-rescue teams closer as Coalition steps up war against IS". arabnews.com.
  18. "ISIS terrorists capture Jordan pilot, plane not shot down". NY Daily News.
  19. http://english.alarabiya.net/en/News/middle-east/2015/02/04/Profile-of-Jordan-s-patriotic-pilot.html
  20. http://www.nbcnews.com/storyline/isis-terror/when-did-jordan-find-out-hostage-pilot-muath-al-kasasbeh-n299896
  21. 21.0 21.1 "Jordan pilot hostage Moaz al-Kasasbeh 'burned alive'". BBC News.
  22. "Jordan confirms death of pilot, says killed January 3". The Jordan Times. 27 January 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  23. "Special Forces May Have Tried To Rescue Jordanian Pilot Muath al-Kasaesbeh". International Business Times. 4 February 2015.
  24. "Pilot held by Islamic State puts Jordan's king in a tough spot". Reuters.
  25. Adam Chandler (4 February 2015). "Jordan's King Abdullah Vows Revenge for Death of Mouath al-Kasaesbeh, Who Was Burned Alive by ISIS". The Atlantic.
  26. 26.0 26.1 "Video claims to show ISIS terrorists burning pilot alive". AOL.com.
  27. "Video: IS verbrandt gevangengenomen Jordaanse piloot levend". The Post Online. 3 February 2015. (in Dutch; includes a excerpt of the immolation via LiveLeak as an inline illustration)
  28. 28.0 28.1 "Video claims to show ISIS terrorists burning pilot alive - AOL.com". AOL Article.
  29. 29.0 29.1 Martin Chulov. "Jordan executes would-be suicide bomber wanted for release by Islamic State". the Guardian.
  30. Erik Wemple (3 February 2015). "Islamic State burning video: News organizations describe it, don't show it". Washington Post.
  31. Nicky Woolf (4 February 2015). "Fox News website embeds unedited Isis video showing brutal murder of Jordanian pilot". The Guardian.
  32. 32.0 32.1 "الطيار الأردني حُرم من الطعام قبل إعدامه بخمسة أيام". صحيفة عاجل الإلكترونية.
  33. http://jihadology.net/2015/02/25/al-iti%E1%B9%A3am-media-presents-a-new-video-message-from-the-islamic-state-message-to-jordan/
  34. http://stepagency-sy.net/archives/36071
  35. Martin Chulov. "Jordanians turn their minds to revenge after Isis killing of pilot". the Guardian.
  36. John Hall and Tom Wyke and Steph Cockroft for MailOnline and David Williams, Chief Reporter for the Daily Mail (3 February 2015). "Jordan announces execution of six ISIS prisoners 'within hours' in retaliation after terrorists release lavish video of Jordanian pilot being TORCHED to death in a cage in yet another new low for humanity". Daily Mail.
  37. Michaels, Jim; Bacon, John. "Jordan executes two in response to pilot's slaying". USA Today. Retrieved 4 February 2015.
  38. "Jordan executes Sajida al-Rishawi after pilot murder". Al Arabiya News English. 4 February 2015. Retrieved 3 February 2015.
  39. "Jordan executes two terrorists after alkasasabeh murder". MehrNews.
  40. "Jordan carries out air strikes in Iraq, killing 55 IS militants". i24news.
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  43. "بالفيديو.."سيصلى نارا ذات لهب"..آيات قرآنية على صواريخ أردنية لدك داعش |اليوم السابع" (in Arabic). Youm7.com. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  44. "Jordanian pilots scribble messages for Isis on missiles: 'For you, the enemies of Islam'". International Business Times UK.
  45. Gayle, Damien (4 February 2015). "Even Al-Qaeda condemn murder of Jordanian pilot as 'deviant'... and leading Muslim cleric calls for ISIS militants to be killed, crucified and have limbs 'chopped'". Daily Mail. Retrieved 6 February 2015.
  46. Scholar Khola Hasan on Murder of Jordanian Pilot Moaz al-Kassasbeh by ISIS
  47. Yoni Ben Menachem. "Muslim Brotherhood in Jordan Refuses to Condemn Islamic State for Killing Jordanian Pilot". Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs (JCPA). Jerusalem.