Jordan’s Military Kills 27 Suspected Drug Smugglers in Border Shootout

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BEIRUT — Jordanian troops killed 27 suspected armed drug smugglers and wounded a number of others attempting to enter the country from Syria, the Jordanian military said Thursday — the deadliest encounter so far in a rising wave of confrontations on Jordan’s northern border.

The deaths come almost two weeks after a Jordanian army captain was killed and three other military personnel were wounded when smugglers shot at an army outpost as they tried to cross. That attack prompted a change in the rules of engagement governing smuggling operations, a Jordanian army official said in a statement Thursday.

The army “will strike with an iron fist and deal with absolute force and firmness any infiltration or smuggling attempts to protect the border,” said the official, whose name was not given.

The surviving smugglers, who the statement said were “supported by other armed groups,” fled back into Syrian territory, leaving behind a cache of drugs. Search operations were ongoing to ensure the area was clear of people as well as narcotics.

The smugglers hoped to take advantage of a severe snowstorm affecting the region, said a Jordanian officer who spoke on condition of anonymity in order to discuss the matter with a journalist.

Over the last year, Jordan has complained of a large uptick in smuggling attempts along its 225-mile border with Syria, which experts say has turned into a regional center for the manufacture and export of narcotics such as Captagon. The drug, an amphetamine that is popular in the Middle East, was often used during Syria’s civil war by combatants both to stay awake and to embolden themselves.

Jordan and Lebanon function as transit countries for Captagon shipments to Saudi Arabia and North Africa. Recent months have witnessed drug busts with Captagon stuffed into pomegranates, oranges, milk cartons and other items.



During Syria’s decade-long and still-ongoing civil war, Jordan upped security on its northern border as hundreds of thousands of Syrians fled the violence; more than 650,000 Syrian refugees remain in Jordan, official estimates say. Since then, the Jordanian army has deployed drones, night-vision and infrared scopes, and patrols.

Thursday’s inclement weather meant no drones could fly and visibility was low, presenting an opportunity for smugglers who crossed the border from a sparsely populated village on the border a few dozen miles east of the Jordanian city of Mafraq and south of Syria’s Sweida city, said the Jordanian officer.

The change in the army’s rules of engagement, he added, was due both to an increase in incidents on the border and the smugglers’ use of arms.

Jordanian authorities said over the last two days that they seized more than 5 million Captagon pills and 6,123 bags of cannabis near the northeastern part of the border.

Jordanian officials blame the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah and other Iran-backed militias allied to Syrian President Bashar Assad for the rise in smuggling from southern Syria. Hezbollah denies the allegation.

Syria says it is combating drug smuggling. Syrian security officials have met with their Jordanian counterparts to discuss border violations. Discussions, however, have led only to a temporary reduction of smuggling activities that soon gets reversed, the Jordanian official said.