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Iraq-Jordan
Aqaba rockets were homemade variety
2005-08-20
Militants fired at least three homemade rockets from a warehouse hide-out in the Jordanian port of Aqaba on Friday, narrowly missing two U.S. Navy ships and killing a Jordanian soldier.

As Jordanian forces cordoned off the port and scoured the desert and surrounding hills for suspects, a group loyal to al-Qaida issued an Internet statement claiming responsibility for the attack.

"A group of our holy warriors targeted a gathering of military ships docking in Aqaba port and also in Eilat port" in neighboring Israel, said the statement from the Abdullah Azzam Brigades. "The warriors returned safe to their headquarters." The authenticity of the statement could not be verified; previously the group has claimed responsibility for terrorist attacks in Egypt's Sharm el Sheik resort that killed at least 64.

About 2,000 members of the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit were aboard the two ships, the Kearsarge and the Ashland. They are part of the Kearsarge Expeditionary Strike Group, which was sent to the Middle East in March. Navy officials said group members were performing a naval exercise in cooperation with Jordanian troops at the time of the attack. The group left the port soon after the rocket strikes to avoid any further attacks.

Jordanian sources said four non-Jordanian Arabs, including Iraqis and at least one Egyptian, had rented a commercial warehouse in an isolated industrial zone in Aqaba earlier this week. Local news reports indicated that a Syrian also was involved. The men are suspected of making Katyusha rockets in the warehouse and launching the weapons from the building.

If they meant to hit the two U.S. vessels, the rockets veered off their mark. One slammed into a warehouse used to store goods for the Jordanian military, leaving an 8-foot hole in its roof. A soldier who was standing guard was killed, and another Jordanian was wounded. Another rocket landed near a Jordanian hospital.

A third rocket struck near the airport in the resort city of Eilat, where it smashed into the roof of a taxi without exploding. Eilat, a popular Israeli beach resort, is about nine miles from Aqaba.

The rockets were "intended to hit the Israeli side and the Jordanian side as well," Israeli Defense Minister Shaul Mofaz told reporters.

Friday's attack revived memories of the bombing of the Navy destroyer Cole in October 2000 off the coast of Yemen that killed 17 U.S. sailors.

The Cole attack alarmed Navy officials and led to sweeping security changes. Since then the Naval Criminal Investigative Service has hired at least 200 additional special agents, a senior NCIS official at the Pentagon said, on condition of anonymity.

Criminal investigators must now deliver threat assessment reports to ship commanders about two weeks ahead of any port visit, and are present at all ports deemed "high threat" zones, including all of those in the Middle East, the official said. The additional manpower and closer cooperation with allies such as Jordan has helped thwart attacks, he said.

Navy officials declined to address the specific protections taken by the ships at Aqaba, or the general security of that port, but it is routinely used to supply the U.S. war effort in neighboring Iraq.

President Bush, vacationing at his ranch in Crawford, Texas, was told about the attack as part of his regular briefings Friday, White House spokesman Trent Duffy said.

"We strongly condemn all attacks like these and are investigating in cooperation with Jordanian officials," Duffy said.

"An attack on Jordanian territory or from Jordanian territory was always a matter of time, despite the fact that Jordanian security agents are omnipotent and have a pervasive presence in society," said Joost Hiltermann, an analyst with the International Crisis Group who is based in Amman, Jordan's capital. "Sooner or later, somebody will get through as they did today."
Posted by:Dan Darling

#5  If they were Qassams, or similar, they did well to get one across the bow of the Ashland.
Posted by: Colt   2005-08-20 14:20  

#4  If you can't hit either of those two ships, then the Suadis have wasted their scholarship money. There aren't too many targets larger and more slow moving.
Posted by: Super Hose   2005-08-20 13:58  

#3  Do we know what sort of distances they were fired from? They might be Qassams.
Posted by: Colt   2005-08-20 13:31  

#2  Tripoli.org gonna be pretty unhappy.
Posted by: Shipman   2005-08-20 11:44  

#1  About 2,000 members of the 26th Marine Expeditionary Unit were aboard the two ships, the Kearsarge and the Ashland.

I bet the Marines went nuts when the ship's CO's decided to leave port. The Marine's specialty is amphibious assault after all. If the Navy has to run away with their tails between their legs retreat, could they have at least "mistakenly" left the Marines on the pier? They could then have been sent on "liberty" in town. A "mistakenly" fully armed liberty at that. Remember the old sailor's adage: If you're not cheating, you're not trying.
Posted by: Zpaz   2005-08-20 11:42  

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