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XXIII, No 1, Spring 2006 |
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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
Thinking Like a Jihadist: Iraq's Jordanian
Connection
Nir Rosen
Earlier this year, Muhammad Zaki Amawi
and Marwan Othman el-Hindi, Jordanianborn
U.S. citizens, and Wassim I. Mazloum,
a Lebanese citizen, stood in a federal district
court in Ohio, accused of conspiring to
wage jihad against U.S. forces in Iraq.
According to the indictment against them,
Amawi had flown to Jordan last August
carrying laptop computers that he intended
to donate to the mujahidin in Iraq. Amawi,
the indictment stated, had "unsuccessfully
attempted to enter Iraq to wage violent jihad,
or 'holy war,' against the United States
and coalition forces."
This was the first time that such charges
had been brought in a U.S. court. But such
cases have become frequent in Jordan in recent
years, with increasing numbers of
young men being tried for terrorist activities.
The Marka military court in Amman,
Jordan, has been the scene of a number of
trials, and recently I observed several of
these proceedings. One was the trial of
four young men, ranging in age from 19
to 28, charged with conspiracy to commit
terrorist acts and with the illegal possession
of a Kalashnikov. The four had met frequently
in the home of the 19-year-old
ringleader in the city of Madaba, south
of Amman, to talk of joining the jihad
against the American invaders of Iraq. According
to the prosecution, the ringleader
had tried and failed to cross from Syria
into Iraq at the time of the U.S. invasion.
He and his friends then decided to attack
Americans training the Iraqi police in Jordan,
and began observing the routes the
Americans took to and from work. The
ringleader purchased a Kalashnikov, which
the four practiced firing. In the meantime,
the ringleader made another aborted attempt
to get into Iraq through Egypt.
On his return to Jordan, one of his coconspirators
introduced the group to three men,
one of whom was a Saudi. The strangers
agreed to help with the plot against the
Americans. They exchanged phone numbers
and met at a McDonald's where they
continued planning the operation. The
ringleader was introduced to a man called
Shadi, who was to supervise the operation.
Shadi gave him a mobile phone and he
borrowed a video camera from a friend
and filmed an intersection the Americans
crossed. On August 31, 2005, just as they
were preparing to execute their attack, the
four were arrested, the film and Kalashnikov
confiscated.
On January 2, the four paced with other
prisoners in a cage in the Marka courtroom
as their lawyers sat in the smoke-filled waiting
room, laughing and complaining about
how high their union dues were. All the
prisoners were dressed in dark blue denim
prison suits, with wool caps on their heads
and slippers on their feet. Their beards were
shaggy, as was their hair, which curled out
of their caps over their ears. They were hard
to distinguish from each other. Some had a
dark stain above their brows. It was a sima, a
sign of intense piety, acquired by kneeling
and bowing forward, placing the forehead
on the floor in prayer. One of the prisoners
grinned at his father, who also had a sima
on his forehead. The father was beaming
proudly.
I asked the father if I could talk to him
after the trial. "The verdict is already decided,"
he told me. "We can gain nothing
by talking." One prisoner chanted the
Koran. Another read a prepared statement
naming two friends who had been in prison
without trial for months. When the judge
walked in, the prisoners squatted in disrespect.
In classical Arabic, the 19-year-old
ringleader angrily shouted at the judge,
calling him an infidel. Being uncertain of
the charges against him, the young man
spoke to the judge after the hearing. "Are
you the one who called me an infidel?" the
judge asked. "I didn't call you an infidel,"
he answered, "your work is the infidel's
work." The judge lost patience. "I won't
tell you what the charge is. Go back to
your jail," he said.
* Nir Rosen, a freelance journalist, is the author of In the
Belly of the Green Bird: The Triumph of the Martyrs in Iraq (The
Free Press, forthcoming).
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