DEVELOPING: At least nine killed in a series of attacks in Jordan

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AMMAN, Jordan – Four policemen, two Jordanian civilians and one Canadian tourist were killed Sunday when gunmen staged a series of attacks on police patrols and a historic castle in the heart of the southern city of Karak.

According to Jordanian police, at least 20 others were injured, and security sources confirmed that as many as 14 people, mainly foreign tourists, were being held hostage by the gunmen.

Local media reports claim that Jordanian special forces had freed the hostages late in the evening.

During the attacks, as many as 10 gunmen holed themselves up in the Karak Crusader castle, a major tourist attraction and one of the most complete Crusader castles in the world.

Mosques’ loudspeakers across the city called on residents to flee as security operations intensified. Eyewitnesses reported chaos as thousands fled businesses and homes to the surrounding countryside.

The injured include a second Canadian tourist and 20 Jordanians, police said.

The identity and number of the assailants remain unknown, and no group has yet claimed responsibility. A person close to Jordan’s security agencies said authorities believe the assailants were extremists with ties to al-Qaeda or the Islamic State.

The U.S. Embassy in Amman issued a statement to citizens warning of an “active shooter” in Karak, 80 miles south of the capital, and urged citizens to “avoid that area for the time being.”

Jordan has long been hailed as an oasis of stability and security in the violence-plagued Middle East, with wars and terrorist havens near its borders with Syria to the north and Iraq to the east.

However, the image of stability is being eroded. Sunday’s attack marked the fourth deadly targeting of Jordanian security and army personnel this year.

In March, a cell of Islamist militants linked with the Islamic State engaged in a shootout with police in the northern city of Irbid, leaving one policeman and seven gunmen dead. A gunman killed five General Intelligence Department officers in Baqaa refugee camp, a few miles north of the capital, in June. Later in June, Islamic State militants executed a truck-bombing, killing seven Jordanian soldiers stationed near a makeshift refugee camp along the Jordanian-Syrian border.

In November, a Jordanian officer opened fire and killed three U.S. military trainers at an air base near Jafr used for training Syrian rebels – although the motives behind the shooting are still unclear.

While the Islamic State has not announced a branch in Jordan, the group has a force of 1,400 known as the Khalid ibn al-Walid Army a few miles away from the Jordanian-Syrian border near the city of Deraa. Security officials privately say the Islamic State likely has at least a “sleeper cell” in the country.

Although Jordan is a major ally in the war on the Islamic State, 3,000 Jordanians fight under its banner, experts say, making up one of the largest foreign contingents in the extremist group.

Jordanian officials have repeatedly expressed their concerns of the threats to the kingdom should these fighters return home.3

Special To The Washington Post ยท Taylor Luck

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