Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
03AMMAN1798
2003-03-25 15:56:00
SECRET
Embassy Amman
Cable title:  

TFIZ01: KING ABDULLAH, GOJ RETRENCH IN FACE OF

Tags:  PREL MOPS IZ JO 
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S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 AMMAN 001798 

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/25/2013
TAGS: PREL MOPS IZ JO
SUBJECT: TFIZ01: KING ABDULLAH, GOJ RETRENCH IN FACE OF
PUBLIC ANGER AGAINST WAR IN IRAQ, BUT STILL SUPPORT US
WHERE IT MATTERS

REF: A. AMMAN 1675

B. AMMAN 1706

C. AMMAN 1718

D. FBIS GMP20030323000339

E. FBIS GMP20030323000308

F. FBIS GMP20030323000292

G. FBIS GMP20030324000163

H. AMMAN 1774

Classified By: A/DCM Doug Silliman for reasons 1.5 (B) and (D)

-------
SUMMARY
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S E C R E T SECTION 01 OF 02 AMMAN 001798

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/25/2013
TAGS: PREL MOPS IZ JO
SUBJECT: TFIZ01: KING ABDULLAH, GOJ RETRENCH IN FACE OF
PUBLIC ANGER AGAINST WAR IN IRAQ, BUT STILL SUPPORT US
WHERE IT MATTERS

REF: A. AMMAN 1675

B. AMMAN 1706

C. AMMAN 1718

D. FBIS GMP20030323000339

E. FBIS GMP20030323000308

F. FBIS GMP20030323000292

G. FBIS GMP20030324000163

H. AMMAN 1774

Classified By: A/DCM Doug Silliman for reasons 1.5 (B) and (D)

--------------
SUMMARY
--------------


1. (S) The sharp and angry public reaction to the start of
war in Iraq has forced King Abdullah and the GOJ to alter
their public line to deal with the public ire. In a speech
by King Abdullah on March 21, a press conference the next day
with the PM, FonMin and InfoMin, and official news agency
reports of cabinet and other meetings, the GOJ is trying to
create the impression that it is working to end the war in
Iraq. PM Abul Ragheb told the Ambassador March 24 that GOJ
officials will have to say things the U.S. does not like to
address public anger, but will choose their words carefully.
The King has decided that he needs to be seen as working to
end hostilities, although he has backed off slightly from an
announced new diplomatic initiative, including a planned
phone call to President Bush. Despite the public pressure,
the GOJ has continued its support to coalition forces, has
frozen Iraqi government assets, and has expelled Iraqi
intelligence officers. END SUMMARY.

--------------
ANGRY PUBLIC REACTION RATTLES GOJ
--------------


2. (S) The enraged Jordanian public reaction to the
beginning of hostilities in Iraq (refs a and b and septel)
has caused senior GOJ officials to rethink their public
strategy. Our security liaison contacts have expressed
concern over the mounting level of anti-U.S. feeling the war
has engendered, and do not want those emotions projected onto
the King or government.


3. (SBU) The King, Prime Minister Abul Ragheb, other senior
officials, and the official Petra news agency have
consequently focused their statements on expressions of
opposition to hostilities (in almost exclusively humanitarian
terms) and sympathy with the Iraqi people. The King in his
March 21 speech to the nation (ref c) called for calm in
Jordan, and tried to focus attention on what Jordan can do

for the future of Iraqis. In a joint press conference March
23 with Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher and Information
Minister Mohammad Adwan, the Prime Minister announced the
GOJ's opposition to the war, as well as a new Jordanian
diplomatic initiative to end it (refs d and e). The King was
quoted as telling a cabinet meeting on March 23 that "we must
work to stop the war against Iraq quickly," and denying that
coalition aircraft were using Jordanian airspace to attack
Iraq (ref f). The King reiterated the no-overflight
statement to members of the Senate March 24, and said
Jordanian territory would not be used to convey troops into
Iraq that were to have gone through Turkey (ref g).

--------------
PM: WE'LL HAVE TO SAY THINGS YOU WON'T LIKE
--------------


4. (S) PM Abul Ragheb told the Ambassador March 24 that he
had carefully chosen his words during the March 23 news
conference, noting that he had not used "words like killing,
aggression, bombing," but instead had spoken of "military
action" and the need to work to "save people's lives." That
said, "we need to show our people we are really doing
something" to end the war. Hence, Jordan was launching a new
diplomatic offensive "to find a resolution acceptable to all
parties."


5. (S) He said that, long before the outbreak of war, he
had told the Ambassador that the GOJ "would have to say
things you won't like." Foreign Minister Marwan Muasher,
Abul Ragheb said, had also made this point to Secretary
Powell in their recent phone conversation. The bottom line,
the PM emphasized, is that Jordanians see pictures of people
getting killed in Iraq in a war they do not support, and they
are angry. The GOJ is taking steps to keep the level of
public protest down, and he planned to meet with opposition
party leaders in the next few days to reiterate that the GOJ
will permit pre-approved rallies, but will crack down on
un-approved protests or the use of violence.


6. (S) The Ambassador pushed back, saying that, now that
the war has begun, it is clear that Saddam Hussein and his
regime are finished. Jordan would have to consider the
effect of its statements now on a post-Saddam government in
Baghdad, and on the U.S. Backpedaling somewhat, Abul Ragheb
responded that the GOJ has "determined that this will not be
like 1991."
--------------
POSITIVE NEWS AS WELL
--------------


7. (S/NF) Despite the increasingly anti-war public
statements, the GOJ continues to take more quiet steps to
support the coalition. The GOJ has continued its previously
agreed military support to coalition forces (with a few minor
hiccups). Jordan has frozen the assets of the Iraqi
government in Jordan (ref h). It has also expelled several
Iraqi intelligence officers operating under diplomatic and
non-official cover, although there is now some question about
who and how many Iraqis have been kicked out. The GOJ has
also been helped by the lack of an economic crisis associated
with the war in Iraq. There has been no capital flight,
there are adequate stocks of food and fuel, the Amman stock
exchange has remained stable, and three European air carriers
have resumed earlier suspended flights into Amman.

--------------
COMMENT
--------------


8. (S) The King has told the Ambassador and senior USG
officials several times that he believed the "tipping point"
for the Jordanian public's reaction to war in Iraq would be
scenes on al-Jazeera TV of jubilant Iraqis celebrating their
liberation from Saddam Hussein. The King expected this in
the early days of the war, and the lack of such scenes has
made him feel exposed. Iraqi VP Taha Yassin Ramadan's
ranting March 25 press conference attack on Jordan's support
for the coalition has heightened anxiety.


9. (S) Given his political exposure, the King has moved to
distance himself personally and the GOJ in general from
military action, and has considered launching a series of
phone calls to P-5 leaders and UN Secretary General Annan
(although he rethought his planned March 25 call to the
President). He wants to be able to tell his people that he
is actively engaged in finding an end to the war, even if he
is powerless to stop it. The Foreign Minister has stressed,
however, that the King is determined to do nothing that
undercuts the President's decision to topple Saddam Hussein.
GNEHM