BAGHDAD/EDGARTOWN Mass. (Reuters) - The
U.S. military earlier this summer carried out an attempt to rescue
journalist James Foley and other American hostages held in Syria, a U.S.
official said on Wednesday, in an operation that the Pentagon said
ultimately failed to find the captives.
Foley, 40, was beheaded by an Islamic State militant in a video
that surfaced on the Internet on Tuesday. President Barack Obama
expressed revulsion on Wednesday at the execution and vowed the
United States would do what it must to protect its citizens.
The unsuccessful rescue operation "involved air and ground
components and was focused on a particular captor network within
ISIL," the Pentagon said in a statement, using a different name for
the militant group. "Unfortunately, the mission was not successful
because the hostages were not present at the targeted location."
Officials would not say exactly when the operation took place but
said it was not in the last couple of weeks.
Obama authorized the mission "earlier this summer," Lisa Monaco,
Obama's top counterterrorism aide, said in a separate statement.
"The President authorized action at this time because it was the
national security team’s assessment that these hostages were in
danger with each passing day in ISIL custody," she said.
Islamic State said Foley's execution, which prompted widespread
horror that could push Western powers into further action against
the group, was in revenge for U.S. airstrikes in Iraq.
The Pentagon said U.S. aircraft conducted 14 airstrikes in the
vicinity of Iraq's Mosul Dam, destroying or damaging militants'
Humvees, trucks and explosives.
Britain's prime minister cut short his vacation as UK intelligence
tried to identify Foley's killer, while France called for
international coordination against the Islamist militants fighting
in Syria and Iraq.
U.S. officials said on Wednesday that intelligence analysts had
concluded that the Islamic State video, titled "A Message to
America," was authentic. It also showed images of another U.S.
journalist, Steven Sotloff, whose fate the group said depends on how
the United States acts in Iraq.
The gruesome video presented Obama with bleak options that could
define American involvement in Iraq and the public reaction to it,
potentially dragging him further into a conflict he built much of
his presidency on ending.
Obama called the beheading of Foley "an act of violence that shocked
the conscience of the entire world" and said the militants had
killed innocent civilians, subjected women and children to torture,
rape and slavery and targeted Muslims, Christians and religious
minorities.
"So ISIL speaks for no religion. Their victims are overwhelmingly
Muslim, and no faith teaches people to massacre innocents. No just
God would stand for what they did yesterday and what they do every
single day," Obama said in brief comments to reporters in Edgartown,
Massachusetts, where he has been vacationing. He said he had spoken
with Foley's family.
"ISIL has no ideology of any value to human beings. Their ideology
is bankrupt."
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said the United States would
"never back down in the face of such evil.
"ISIL and the wickedness it represents must be destroyed, and those
responsible for this heinous, vicious atrocity will be held
accountable," Kerry said in a statement.
INTELLIGENCE SERVICES
British anti-terrorist police began an investigation of the video,
in which Foley's killer spoke with a London accent.
Possibly a British national, the killer is just one of hundreds of
European Muslims drawn to join Islamic State, who authorities say
pose a security threat to U.S. and European interests if they return
home from the Middle East.
The video showed a high level of technical proficiency and the use
of a British voice may have been intended to make its contents clear
to audiences in the United States, Islamic State's declared enemy.
Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said he was not surprised to hear
the British accent and that large numbers of British nationals were
fighting in Iraq and Syria.
"Our intelligence services will be looking very carefully on both
sides of the Atlantic at this video to establish its authenticity,
to try to identify the individual concerned and then we will work
together to try to locate him," Hammond told Sky news.
France said it wanted the permanent members of the U.N. Security
Council and regional countries, including Arab states and Iran, to
coordinate action against Islamic State. President Francois Hollande
called for an international conference to discuss how to tackle the
group.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon condemned "the horrific murder of
journalist James Foley, an abominable crime that underscores the
campaign of terror the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
continues to wage against the people of Iraq and Syria," U.N.
spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.
Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshiyar Zebari urged the world to back his
country against Islamic State, which he described as a threat to the
world, not just to the minority ethnic groups whose members it has
killed in Iraq.
Germany and Italy said they were ready to send arms to bolster the
military capabilities of Iraqi Kurds fighting Islamic State in
northern Iraq.
Sending arms into conflict zones is a major departure for Germany,
which has often shied away from direct involvement in military
conflicts since World War Two due to its Nazi past.
The video's message was unambiguous, warning of greater retaliation
to come against Americans following nearly two weeks of U.S.
airstrikes that have pounded militant positions and halted the
advance of Islamic State, which until this month had captured a
third of Iraq with little resistance.
Foley was kidnapped on Nov. 22, 2012, in northern Syria, according
to GlobalPost. He had earlier been kidnapped and released in Libya.
Sotloff, who appeared at the end of the video, went missing in
northern Syria while reporting in July 2013. He has written for TIME
among other news organizations.
On Facebook, Foley's mother, Diane Foley, said: "We have never been
prouder of our son Jim. He gave his life trying to expose the world
to the suffering of the Syrian people.
"We implore the kidnappers to spare the lives of the remaining
hostages. Like Jim, they are innocents. They have no control over
American government policy in Iraq, Syria or anywhere in the world."
The video was posted after the United States resumed airstrikes in
Iraq this month for the first time since the end of the U.S.
occupation in 2011.
U.S. Senator John McCain, a Republican, said Foley's death should
serve as a turning point for Obama in his deliberations over how to
deal with Islamic State. "First of all, you've got to dramatically
increase the airstrikes. And those air strikes have to be devoted to
Syria as well," McCain said in a telephone interview.
ISLAMIC STATE
Islamic State, which has declared a caliphate in the parts of Iraq
and Syria it controls, opened the video with a clip of Obama saying
he had authorized strikes in Iraq.
The words "Obama authorizes military operations against the Islamic
State effectively placing America upon a slippery slope towards a
new war front against Muslims" appeared in English and Arabic on the
screen.
It showed black and white aerial footage of airstrikes with text
saying: "American aggression against the Islamic State."
A man identified as Foley, head shaven and dressed in an orange
outfit similar to uniforms worn by prisoners at the U.S. detention
camp in Guantanamo Bay, is seen kneeling in the desert next to a man
holding a knife and clad head to toe in black.
"I call on my friends, family and loved ones to rise up against my
real killers, the U.S. government, for what will happen to me is
only a result of their complacency and criminality," the kneeling
man says.
The man next to him, in a black mask, speaks with a British accent
and says, "This is James Wright Foley, an American citizen, of your
country. As a government, you have been at the forefront of the
aggression towards the Islamic State."
"Today your military air force is attacking us daily in Iraq. Your
strikes have caused casualties amongst Muslims. You are no longer
fighting an insurgency. We are an Islamic army, and a state that has
been accepted by a large number of Muslims worldwide."
Following his statement, he beheads the kneeling man. At the end of
the video, words on the side of the screen say, "Steven Joel
Sotloff," as another prisoner in an orange jumpsuit is shown on
screen. "The life of this American citizen, Obama, depends on your
next decision," the masked man says.
University of Virginia political scholar Larry Sabato said the
killing was like the beheading of American journalist Daniel Pearl
in Pakistan in 2002. He said it could help bolster a perception
among Americans that the United States will have to be more
aggressive in dealing with Islamic State militants.
Syria has been the most dangerous country for journalists for more
than two years. At least 69 other journalists have been killed
covering the conflict there and more than 80 journalists have been
kidnapped in Syria.
The U.S.-based Committee to Protect Journalists estimates that about
20 journalists are currently missing in Syria. Many of them are
believed to be held by Islamic State.
(Additional reporting by Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva, Oliver Holmes
and Tom Perry in Beirut, Sabine Siebold in Berlin, Costas Pitas and
William James in London, Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations and
John Irish in Paris; Writing by Giles Elgood, Jim Loney and Eric
Beech; Editing by David Stamp, Dan Grebler and Eric Walsh)