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Terrorism & Security

Jordan makes arrests for failed attack on Israel diplomats

Jordan has arrested a cab driver and several others in the Thursday roadside bomb attack against Israel diplomats.

By Arthur Bright / January 15, 2010



Jordanian authorities have made a number of arrests in connection with Thursday's failed roadside bombing attack on an Israeli diplomatic convoy. Although the attack caused no injuries, the kind of bomb and the intelligence required to make such an attack are raising concerns about security breaches among Jordanian and Israeli authorities.

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The Jerusalem Post writes that according to Arabic media reports, Jordanian security officials have arrested a cab driver believed to have planted the bomb along the road between Amman and the Jordanian-Israeli border. The Post also cites a report that officials have also made several other arrests in connection with the bombing.

The attack took place around 6 p.m. Thursday, near the village of Naour (see map here), which lies about 12 miles from the Jordanian-Israeli border. The convoy was carrying three Israeli diplomats, though Daniel Nevo, Israel's ambassador to Jordan, was not among them. But while no one was hurt in the attack, the tactic is new in Jordan, writes Haaretz.

Thursday's bombing was the first time a roadside explosive device was used in an attack in Jordan, where suicide bombings and shootings have targeted foreigners in recent years. The method is widespread in neighboring Iraq.
The sundown attack also exposed a security breach for Israeli diplomats, who are usually escorted by security personnel from both countries and use different routes and departure times during their occasional travels in Jordan.
The explosion ripped through the right side of a curvy road cutting through hilly villages on the western outskirts of the capital, Amman. The blast left a large hole about 3 feet deep and damaged a highway guardrail.

YnetNews reports that one Jordanian official called the attack "a message" to Jordanian authorities and a sign that Jordan's security establishment could be infiltrated. An analysis by Haaretz says that at the very least, the perpetrators had "very good intelligence."

They knew that many Israeli diplomats, who normally live in Amman without their families, usually depart for Israel for the weekend on Thursday afternoon, and they knew how to identify the two-car convoy
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