Wednesday, April 7, 2021

Jordan's volatility alerts the US to Middle East reality


Jordan's domestic vulnerability


Jordan's domestic upheaval involved some Arab countries, members of the royal Jordanian family and other prominent Bedouin, who were arrested and charged with an attempted regime change.

A regime-change in Jordan could transform the strategically-located country – between Syria, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Israel - into another haven for Palestinian and Islamic terrorism. It would threaten the existence of the current regimes in Saudi Arabia, all other pro-US Gulf states and Egypt, advancing the interests of Iran's Ayatollahs, Turkey's Erdogan, the Muslim Brotherhood, China and Russia, while traumatizing regional stability and with dire Western and Israeli national security and economic consequences.

Jordan's inherent political and ideological vulnerability has been fueled by intra-Bedouin fragmentation and conflicts, dating back to 1921, when the Hashemite Bedouin family was imported to Jordan - from Hejaz in western Saudi Arabia - by the British Empire, and imposed upon the indigenous Bedouin of (mostly southern) Jordan. Furthermore, Jordan's Bedouin are deeply divided, geographically, tribally, culturally, ideologically and religiously, with some of the southern tribes considering the Hashemites "carpetbaggers" from the Arabian Peninsula, Westernized and straying away from Islam and pan-Arabism by concluding a peace treaty with the "infidel" Jewish State.

Moreover, 70% of Jordan's population are Palestinians, while Palestinian leaders (e.g., the PLO, the Palestinian Authority and Hamas) view Jordan as an artificial entity, the eastern (78%) part of "Palestine". Hence, Palestinian active involvement in subversion and terrorism in Jordan and occasional attempts to topple the Hashemite regime, such as the civil war in September 1970 and the 1989 wave of terrorism.

Therefore, Palestinians have been involved in the Muslim Brotherhood's political and terroristic subversion in Jordan, as they have been in the Brotherhood's operations against the regimes of Egypt and the Gulf States.

In addition, ISIS veterans of Iraq and Syria civil wars have settled down in Jordan, and many Islamic terrorists are among the 2 million Iraqi and (mostly) Syrian refugees, who have been absorbed in northern Jordan.

This Jordanian upheaval sheds light on the following fourteen-century-old features of the Middle East: READ MORE