Jordan says it beefs up army presence along borders with Israel
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Jordanian Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh warned against any Israeli attempt to forcibly push Palestinians into his country.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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AMMAN - Jordan said on Nov 21 the army has beefed up its presence along its borders with Israel.
Amman warned that any Israeli attempt to forcibly push Palestinians across the Jordan River would represent a breach of its peace accord with its neighbour.
Jordanian Prime Minister Bisher Khasawneh said his country would resort to “all the means in its power” to prevent Israel from implementing any transfer policy to expel Palestinians en masse from the West Bank.
The war in Gaza has stirred longstanding fears in Jordan, home to a large population of Palestinian refugees and their descendants.
Right-wing, ultra-nationalist hardliners now in the Israeli government have long espoused a Jordan-is-Palestine solution to the Israeli-Palestinian issue.
Israel has launched a massive bombardment of the Gaza Strip since the Oct 7 Hamas attack on southern Israel
Israel’s military action has killed some 14,000 people and left about 1.7 million of Gaza’s 2.3 million people internally displaced.
“Any displacements or creating the conditions that would lead to it, Jordan will consider it a declaration of war and constitutes a material breach of the peace treaty,” state media quoted Mr Khasawneh as saying, referring to the 1994 peace treaty with Israel.
“This would lead to the liquidation of the Palestinian cause and to harming the national security of Jordan,” Mr Khasawneh added.
Jordan, the second Arab country after Egypt to sign a peace accord with Israel, has had strong security ties with its neighbour.
But relations have plummeted since the advent of one of the most right-wing governments in Israel’s history.
“The peace treaty would be a piece of paper on a shelf covered with dust if Israel did not respect its obligations and violated it,” Mr Khasawneh said.
Any threat to Jordan’s national security would “put all options on the table”, Mr Khasawneh said, adding that recent deployments of troops along the borders with Israel are part of measures to protect the country’s security.
Residents and witnesses have seen large columns of armoured vehicles and tanks moving along the main highway leading to the Jordan Valley opposite the West Bank in the last few days.
Officials say the army is already in a heightened alert for any eventualities.
Mr Khasawneh said Israeli actions in the West Bank could trigger wider violence, citing growing Israeli settler attacks on Palestinian civilians since the Oct 7 attacks.
Washington has also urged Israel to curb settler violence, fearing wider conflict.
“Israel should steer away from any escalation in the West Bank... This is a red line Jordan won’t accept,” Mr Khasawneh added. REUTERS

