Jordan hanged two Iraqi jihadists on Wednesday, including a female militant, in response to an Islamic State video showing a captured Jordanian pilot being burnt alive by the hardline group.
The Islamic State had demanded the release of the woman, Sajida al-Rishawi, in exchange for a Japanese hostage who it later beheaded. Sentenced to death in 2005 for her a role in a suicide bomb attack in Amman, Rishawi was executed at dawn, a security source and state television said.
Jordan, which is part of the U.S.-led alliance against the Islamic State, has promised an "earth-shaking response" to the killing of its pilot, Muath al-Kasaesbeh, who was captured in December when his F-16 crashed over northeastern Syria.
Jordan also executed a senior al-Qaida prisoner, Ziyad Karboli, an Iraqi man who was sentenced to death in 2008.
The fate of Kasaesbeh, a member of a large tribe that forms the backbone of support for the country's Hashemite monarchy, has gripped Jordan for weeks and some Jordanians have criticized King Abdullah for embroiling them in the U.S.-led war that they say will provoke a militant backlash.
King Abdullah cut short an official visit to the United States on Tuesday. In a televised statement to the nation, he urged national unity and said the killing was a cowardly act of terror by a criminal group that has no relation to Islam.
The Jordanian army has vowed to avenge his death, and some analysts believe it could escalate its involvement in the campaign against the Islamic State, which has seized large areas of Iraq and Syria, Jordan's neighbors to the north and east.
Kasaesbeh's father said the two executions were not enough and urged the government to do more to avenge his death. "I want the state to get revenge for my son's blood through more executions of those people who follow this criminal group that shares nothing with Islam," Safi al-Kasaesbeh said.
"Jordanians are demanding that the state and coalition take revenge with even more painful blows to destroy these criminals," he said, speaking to Reuters by telephone.
The prisoners were executed in Swaqa prison, a large facility about 45 miles south of the capital, Amman, just before dawn, a security source who was familiar with the case said. "They were both calm and showed no emotions and just prayed," the source added without elaborating.
Rishawi, in her mid-forties, was part of an al-Qaida network that targeted three Amman hotels in suicide bombings in 2005. She was meant to die in one of the attacks — the worst in Jordan's history — but her suicide bomb belt did not go off.
Scores of Jordanians, infuriated by Kasaesbeh's killing, gathered at midnight in a main square in Amman calling for revenge and her quick execution.
Holding placards showing images of the pilot, several youths chanted "Death, Death to Daesh," using a pejorative Arabic acronym for the Islamic State.
Jordan said on Tuesday the pilot had been killed a month ago. The government had been picking up intelligence for weeks that the pilot was killed some time ago, a source close to the government said.
Disclosing that information appeared to be an attempt to counter domestic criticism that the government could have done more to strike a deal with the Islamic State to save him.
In Karak, Kasaesbeh's hometown in southern Jordan, a small anti-government protest erupted late on Tuesday when his death was announced. The protesters, who attacked a government building, blamed the authorities for failing to do enough. The demonstration ended when tribal elders intervened.
"The horror of the killing, the method of killing is probably going to generate more short-term support for the state," said a Western diplomat. "But once that horror dies down, inevitably some of the questions revert on Jordan's role in the coalition."
U.S. ALLY
Jordan is a major U.S. ally in the fight against hard-line Islamist groups and hosted U.S. troops during operations that led to the invasion of Iraq in 2003. It is home to hundreds of U.S. military trainers bolstering defenses in the Syrian and Iraqi borders.
Jordanian state television broadcast archive footage of military maneuvers with patriotic music, with a picture of Kasaesbeh in his army uniform in the corner of the screen.
Jordan is determined to keep the jihadists in Syria away from its border. It has tightened security on its frontier since Syria descended into civil war in 2011 and has helped to keep the Islamic State out of southern Syria.
U.S. officials said on Tuesday the killing of Kasaesbeh would likely harden Jordan's position as a member of the coalition against the Islamic State.
The executed woman came from Iraq's Anbar province bordering Jordan. Her tribal Iraqi relatives were close aides of the slain Jordanian leader of al-Qaida in Iraq, Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, from whose group the Islamic State emerged.
The Islamic State had demanded her release in exchange for the life of Japanese journalist Kenji Goto. However, Goto was later beheaded by the group, with images of his death released in a video last Saturday.
Jordan had insisted that it would only release the woman as part of a deal to free the pilot.
Several politicians have called on the government to pull out of the coalition. The authorities said his death would not weaken resolve to fight militant Islamist groups.
The Jordanian pilot is the first from the coalition known to have been captured and killed by the Islamic State.
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