The Jordanian government denied on Thursday that King Abdullah II would personally take part in airstrikes against Daesh [ISIS] militant group.
"Information disseminated over news and social media outlets about the king's participation in airstrikes against [Daesh] is false," government spokesman Mohamed al-Momni has said.
The statements come after reports by some local news outlets – which have spread through social media – that King Abdullah, a trained pilot, would personally take part in anti-Daesh airstrikes on Thursday following the execution of abducted Jordanian pilot Muath al-Kasasbeh by the militant group in Syria.
On Wednesday, King Abdullah promised a "devastating response" by the Jordanian army against the Daesh following al-Kasasbeh's execution, which was broadcast the night before in an online video purportedly showing the abducted pilot being burnt alive by his Daesh captors.
The gruesome video sent shockwaves across Jordan, which is a member of an ongoing U.S.-led air campaign against the militant group, as well as a fresh wave of global outrage against the Daesh.
Al-Kasasbeh was captured by Daesh militants after his fighter plane crashed in the Syrian city of Raqqa last December.
Shortly after the appearance of Tuesday's video, Jordanian authorities executed two Iraqi nationals – Sajida al-Rishawi and Ziyad al-Karbouli – who had been on a death row since 2006 after being convicted of terrorism by a Jordanian court.
Last summer, the Daesh captured large swathes of land in Iraq and Syria, killing thousands of people in the process. It later declared the captured territories to be part of a self-styled "Islamic caliphate."
Since the group captured the northern Iraqi city of Mosul in June of last year, a U.S.-led coalition – which includes Jordan – has carried out numerous airstrikes against Daesh targets in both Iraq and Syria.