Jordan threatens to expel Syrian envoy

Jordan FM says ambassador given final warning; Envoy attacked kingdom's deployment of US patriots.

Jordanian FM Nasser Judeh_311 (photo credit: Reuters/Susan Baaghil)
Jordanian FM Nasser Judeh_311
(photo credit: Reuters/Susan Baaghil)
AMMAN - US ally Jordan threatened on Thursday to expel Syria's ambassador, after he warned the kingdom Syrian missiles could be used against Patriot batteries due to be deployed soon along their border.
Foreign Minister Nasser Joudeh told state news agency Petra ambassador Bahjat Suleiman had violated diplomatic protocol.
"The Syrian ambassador has breached all norms and diplomatic practices by his behavior ... This is considered as a final warning to abide by the rules of diplomatic practice and to stop any meetings or statements that are deemed harmful to Jordan,' Joudeh said.
Jordan maintains an embassy in Damascus and has avoided publicly supporting Syrian rebels fighting to overthrow Syria's President Bashar Assad, calling instead for a political solution to a war that has cost over 100,000 lives.
Jordanian officials told Reuters they took special offense to posts on social media networks by Suleiman warning that advanced Soviet-designed Alexander missiles could target the kingdom when the US military deploys at least two Patriot missile batteries later this month.
"This was almost like a war threat. This is totally unacceptable," said one senior official.
Jordan and Syria's other neighbors are increasingly nervous the Syrian civil war will spill over its borders and ignite a regional conflict.
CLASHES CLOSE TO BORDER
Patriots are interceptor weapons designed to shoot down hostile missiles. Jordan wants to guard against any missile attack from Syria and has asked for Washington's help to bolster security. Fierce clashes have erupted in Syria close to the border.
On Thursday Jordan's army said it had foiled an attempt to smuggle a large quantity of arms from Syria into Jordan, without giving details.

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Washington said it would be making Patriot batteries and advanced F-16 fighter jets available for annual war games scheduled later this month in the kingdom.
The United States announced last April it was dispatching over 200 army planners to Jordan.
Suleiman accused Jordan of hosting thousands of radical Islamist "terrorists" who were sent to fight Assad's forces and of providing a haven for hundreds of Syrian army defectors, training them to go back and join the rebels.
Jordan has long denied hosting US-led training of Syrian rebels and security sources say they are always on the alert against Islamist radicals seeking to cross the border.
"Any future behavior in this regard by the ambassador will result in taking immediate diplomatic measures according to practiced norms and practices, including considering him 'persona non grata' on Jordanian soil," Joudeh said.
Suleiman drew parallels between Jordan's deployment of Patriots and their deployment in Turkey earlier this year.
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"The arrival of the Patriots in Turkey and stationing them on the border was a bad omen for the government of (Turkish Prime Minister) Tayyip Erdogan and we don't wish the same fate for those counting on the Patriots, " Suleiman said, referring to anti-government protests in Turkey.
This was viewed as a threat coming from an accredited ambassador whose post required he did not meddle in the internal affairs of his host country, Jordanian officials said.