Using the pattern match !("file1") does not work within a bash script but will work on the command line. 
For example:
ls  !("file1"|"file2")
This will list all files in directory except file1 and file2. 
When that line is executed in a script this error is displayed:
./script.sh: line 1: syntax error near unexpected token `('
./script.sh: line 1: ` ls  !("file1"|"file2") ' 
Regardless what is used rm -v !("file1"). The same error takes place. What is going on here why does this not work in a script?
The extended glob syntax you are trying to use is turned off by default; you have to enable it separately in each script where you want to use it.
shopt -s extglob
Scripts should not use ls though I imagine you were using it merely as a placeholder here.
Globbing doesn't work that way unless you enable extglob shell opt. Instead, I recommend using find:
find . -maxdepth 1 -not -name '<NAME>' -or -name '<NAME>' -delete
before running this command with -delete ensure the output is correct
Method with default settings and no external procs:
for f in *; do [[ $f =~ ^file[12]$ ]] || echo "$f"; done
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