ISIS says it executed a captured Jordanian pilot by burning him alive
Public opinion in the kingdom is already split over Jordan's participation in the anti-ISIS coalition. As David Schenker of the Washington Institute for Near East policy wrote on Dec 5, only 62% of Jordanians considered ISIS a terrorist group, while many question whether there's a real national interest in getting involved in the wars in Syria and Iraq.
Jordan had already halted airstrikes against the group after Kasasbe's capture, and this latest development could potentially jeopardize Jordanian involvement in the fight against the jihadist group.
Kasabe's death comes just days after ISIS's released a video showing the beheading of Kenji Goto, a Japanese journalist. As the New York Times reported after his death, ISIS now has as few as four international hostages left, down from a high of 23, and failed to secure either a $200 million ransom or the release of prisoners held in Jordan - their stated objectives in ransoming Kasasbe and Goto.
While Kasasbe's gruesome death keeps the group in the global spotlight and could galvanize opinion within an Arab member state of the anti-ISIS coalition, it could also be read as a sign that ISIS is increasingly impulsive and non-strategic. The group has also experienced a series of recent battlefield setbacks, most notably the breaking of its siege on the border town of Kobane.