. Al-Kasasbeh's killing provoked outrage in Jordan; even some of those who had been opposed to the country's participation in airstrikes against ISIL started demanding revenge. King
Abdullah II cut short a visit to the United States, and the Jordanian government announced that all prisoners in its custody who had been convicted of association with ISIL would be executed "within hours" in retaliation for al-Kasasbeh's killing. In further response, Mamdouh al-Ameri, a
Jordanian military spokesman, said: "While the military forces mourn the martyr, they emphasize his blood will not be shed in vain. The revenge will be as big as the calamity that has hit Jordan." On 4 February 2015, al-Rishawi and another Iraqi jihadist who was also on death row, Ziad Khalaf al-Karbouly, were executed by
hanging in Swaqa Prison, expedited in response to al-Kasasbeh's death. The coalition HQ let the Jordanian Air Forces perform most of the air strike sorties planned for that day. Later, on 4 February, Jordan launched its first military response to al-Kasasbeh's killing. Jordanian warplanes bombed ISIL positions in
Mosul, killing 55 ISIL fighters, including a senior commander. The following day, Jordan launched airstrikes against ISIL weapons and ammunition warehouses and training camps. According to U.S. officials, the attacks took place near
Raqqa and involved 20 Jordanian F-16s, with American refueling and
radio jamming aircraft assisting. After the jets completed their mission, they overflew al-Kasasbeh's hometown of Karak while returning to base. The
Jordan Radio and Television Corporation aired footage shot prior to those attacks of pilots scribbling messages onto bombs slated to be used in the strikes. "For you, the enemies of Islam," read one message. Others bore verses from the
Quran. In 3 days of bombardment, Jordanian fighter jets destroyed 56 ISIL targets and killed dozens of ISIL fighters. Several clerics, leading figures of the Islamic world, and news outlets roundly condemned the killing as murder. However, ISIL said it could be justified through
Islamic law, despite cremation being illegal per Islamic law. The Jordanian branch of the
Muslim Brotherhood, the
Islamic Action Front, condemned the killing of al-Kasasbeh. Their statement described it as a "crime", without mentioning ISIL. The IAF's leader, Sheikh Hammam Saïd, in a 5 February interview with
Radio Sawa, asked Jordan to withdraw from the anti-ISIL coalition, saying, "Jordan should not be part of a coalition run by the United States." Sheikh Salam Salameh, a
Hamas member of the
Palestinian Legislative Council (PLC), said "IS members are, in one way or another, considered Muslims and we must not stand with the enemies of
Allah against the people of Allah (the IS)." He added, "Jordan is the reason for al-Kasasbeh having been burned. The Jordanian government decided to send its army into
Syria to assist the [Syrian] government against the rebels in their war, in which it [Jordan] has no interest. It should have adopted a similar position to
Turkey." ==References==