On 22 July, Jordanian authorities announced the interception of a drone loaded with drugs coming from Syria. It was the third such instance in recent weeks and part of a troubling pattern.
Smuggling networks in southern Syria have discovered that drone technology is incredibly helpful when it comes to distribution. Add a 375km Syria-Jordan desert border and the promise of lucrative returns and it is not hard to see the problem.
For years, Jordan has struggled to stem the flow of narcotics from Syria, where the drug trade has had a shot in the arm since the chaos of civil war and loss of state control in several areas.
The Syrian manufacturers’ use of drones was first noticed last year. Recent interceptions suggest that this may be an expanding method. For Jordan, drones present a new and unprecedented challenge.
In part, that is because drones can more easily evade detection and interception far than traditional ground-based smuggling methods. It is a new security challenge that Jordan cannot afford to ignore.
Notching up interceptions
Not much is known about the Jordanian military’s drone interception on 22 July, other than it flew from Syria. The quantity and type of drugs it carried were not disclosed.
Just two days earlier, a “flying object” loaded with around 4,000 Captagon pills was intercepted, while on 19 June, the Jordanians downed a Jordan-bound drone carrying crystal meth, a particularly addictive substance.
Earlier this year, the Syrian regime reported intercepting a drone at the Jordanian border, marking the first and only instance of such an announcement from their side.