(Reuters) - As Jordan joins a military campaign against Islamic State militants in Syria,
tensions in Jerusalem pose a potentially bigger risk to a nation only
slightly scathed by the turmoil sweeping the Middle East. The U.S. ally has been
alarmed and angered by recent Israeli actions at the sacred al-Aqsa
compound in Jerusalem, where tensions are raising the prospect of a new
Palestinian uprising that would add to the crises at Jordan's borders
and may even spill into the kingdom. For
Jordanian King Abdullah, a majority of whose 7 million subjects are
Palestinian, a one-day closure of al-Aqsa last week amounted to a
personal affront: his Hashemite dynasty derives part of its legitimacy
from its custodianship of the holy site. "One
of the major things that angers the Jordanian state and people is the
Israeli behavior in Jerusalem. On the one hand we are trying to combat
terrorism and extremism, and on the other hand we are confronted with
this reckless behavior," said Mohammad Al-Momani, minister of state and
government spokesman. While Israel
says it is sensitive to Jordan's views and blames extremists for
stirring up trouble at the site, Amman is responding in unusually tough
terms. It has even suggested the crisis could imperil the countries'
1994 peace treaty - an idea not heard from Amman during much bloodier
Israeli-Palestinian flare-ups such as the July-August Gaza war. This
underlines just how seriously King Abdullah views a crisis that
complicates his bid to keep his kingdom free from the type of turmoil
that has toppled other Arab leaders and produced numerous civil wars in
the region since 2011. The timing could not be worse for Jordan, less than two months after it joined the air strikes on Syria that radical Islamists - including some in Jordan - are portraying as an attack on Islam rather than the Islamic State group. Some
Jordanians are not convinced by the logic of joining that U.S.-led war,
fearing it could draw retaliation from Islamic militants in Jordan
where - like elsewhere in the Muslim world - Islamic State is finding
sympathizers and recruits. The
Jerusalem situation will provide King Abdullah's Islamist opponents,
who range from jihadists to the mainstream Muslim Brotherhood, with new
grounds to criticize the Western-backed leader unless he is seen to take
a tough stance. Jordan on Wednesday recalled its ambassador to Israel
in protest, the first time it has done so since they made peace in 1994
though the post was also vacant for two periods since then. "WATERED" WITH JORDANIAN BLOOD Jordanian
stewardship of the al-Aqsa compound was recognized in the 1994 peace
treaty with Israel but dates back to 1924 when Palestinian leaders in
Jerusalem granted custodianship to King Abdullah's great grandfather,
Sharif Hussein. The
custodianship was reaffirmed in an agreement signed last year between
the Palestinian Authority and King Abdullah. The area, which is also
home to the Dome of the Rock, is known to Muslims as the Noble Sanctuary
and to Jews as the Temple Mount. A
tinder-box for Israeli-Palestian conflict, it is the third holiest site
in Islam and the holiest in Judaism. Several hundred Jordanian civil
servants run the site. They allow Jews to visit, but not to pray there. Israel
closed the site last Thursday in response to the shooting of an
Israeli-American far-right religious activist who has led a campaign for
Jews to be allowed to pray there. It was reopened the next day after
what Jordanian officials have described as a personal intervention by
King Abdullah. It was the
first such closure at the site since 2000 - the year a visit to the site
by the then Israeli opposition leader Ariel Sharon helped to ignite the
second Palestinian Intifada. King
Abdullah has used unusually harsh language in recent criticism of
Israel. He recently likened Islamic extremists to Zionist extremists. In
a speech this week, he said Jerusalem's soil was "watered by the blood
and sacrifices of our martyrs" - a reference to Jordanian soldiers
killed there fighting Israeli forces in the 1948 war that resulted in
the establishment of Israel. Jordan,
which governed the West Bank including East Jerusalem from 1948 to
1967, would confront "through all available means, Israeli unilateral
policies and measures in Jerusalem and preserve its Muslim and Christian
holy sites". "He's very
annoyed and worried ... Jerusalem is everything," said a diplomat in
Amman. "You can't overstate how important it is. It's the last thing
they need. There's enough going on in Syria and Iraq and Jordan is impacted by both," he said. "Whenever
we have a big bout of extremism in the region then Jordan feels that
wind blowing. That's cause for worry but not cause for thinking there
will be short-term instability." COMBUSTIBLE MIX Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has said the status quo of the
al-Aqsa compound agreed with Jordan after the 1967 war will not be
altered. But he is under pressure, even from within his own Likud Party.
A far-right Likud member defied Netanyahu's calls for restraint by
visiting the site on Sunday. Israel
says it wants stability in Jordan and is sensitive to its position.
"Our greatest fear nowadays is that someone is trying to create
disturbances on the Temple Mount in order to ignite the region, in order
to harm both Jordan and Israel," Daniel Nevo, Israel's ambassador to
Jordan told Israel Radio in an interview aired on Wednesday. For
Jordan, the specter of another big flare-up of the conflict between
Israel and Palestinians brings risks unlike those arising from the
expansion of Islamic State in Syria and Iraq.
Jordan has received waves of Palestinian refugees in the 1948 and 1967
Middle East wars, and restive Palestinian nationalism has been a source
of concern for decades. Add
to that socioeconomic malaise - unemployment is running at 11.4
percent but unofficial figures put it at twice that level - and slow
pace of political reform, and Jordan faces the same combustible mix that
set off the Arab uprisings in 2011. On
a clear night, the lights of Jerusalem can be seen from the Amman
outskirts, proximity that also sets the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
apart from the wars in Syria and Iraq. Some
of Amman's poorer districts are actually Palestinian refugee camps that
with time have become permanent residential areas, home to the
descendents of Palestinians forced to flee by wars in 1948 and 1967.
Jerusalem means much more to these Palestinian Jordanians than the war
against Islamic State. "In
Syria, people are facing injustice and want to be free from injustice.
But Palestine and Jerusalem are occupied and usurped land," said Thaer
Dawood, 46, an Amman shopkeeper whose family hail from a village near
Ramallah in the West Bank. "You
don't quite know what is going to happen because you have a lot people
from the West Bank here. Nobody here will consent to what is happening
in Palestine," he said, speaking at a coffee shop in a mostly
Palestinian district of Amman. Jordan managed to navigate the last two Palestinian uprisings without major instability. "We
are doing a good job in maintaining peace and security," Momani, the
minister, said. "More and more Jordanians are subscribing to the idea
that stability and security is the oil of this country. That is why we
protect it dearly." But
combined with Jordan's internal challenges -unemployment, poverty and a
lack of political inclusiveness - conflict in Jerusalem will only make
it easier for groups like Islamic State to recruit. "The
public protests (over Jerusalem) will be strong, but the frustrations
inside individuals will be much stronger," said Taher al-Masry, a former
Jordanian prime minister from a prominent Palestinian family. "The
danger from Daesh (Islamic State) is not from it coming over the
borders, but from feelings or frustrations concerning the deteriorating
economic conditions."
Jerusalem tension leaves Jordan more exposed to Mideast turmoil
Reuters
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