Despite
failures, U.S. likely to continue raids to free hostages
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[December 08, 2014]
By Warren Strobel and Phil Stewart
WASHINGTON/KUWAIT CITY (Reuters) - Despite
three failed raids to free U.S. hostages held by militants, the United
States will continue to conduct such operations, officials indicated on
Sunday, as President Barack Obama grapples with a spate of kidnappings
and killings of American citizens.
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The latest setback came in a remote area of Yemen early on
Saturday, when al Qaeda militants shot American photo journalist
Luke Somers and South African teacher Pierre Korkie during a rescue
attempt led by U.S. Special Forces.
Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel defended the operation and the
intelligence that lay behind it, and suggested there would be no
wholesale review of U.S. policy.
"I don't think it's a matter of going back and having a review of
our process. Our process is about as thorough as there can be. Is it
imperfect? Yes. Is there risk? Yes," Hagel said on a visit to
Tactical Base Gamberi in eastern Afghanistan.
"But we start with the fact that we have an American that's being
held hostage and that American's life is in danger and that's where
we start. And then we proceed from there," he said.
An earlier raid in mid-November to free Somers also was unsuccessful
- he wasn't present when U.S. and Yemeni forces arrived - as was a
July attempt to rescue American journalist James Foley, held by
Islamic State in Syria. Foley was later beheaded.
Yet however high-risk, the increasingly frequent rescue attempts
seem unlikely to stop now, particularly as Obama holds fast to a
policy of refusing to pay ransom for captives.
A review of hostage policy that Obama ordered this summer will not
include the issue of ransom, the White House has said.
That review was begun "in light of the increasing number of U.S.
citizens taken hostage by terrorist groups overseas and the
extraordinary nature of recent hostage cases," National Security
Council spokesman Alistair Baskey said.
"Barack Obama's discovering what a nightmare dealing with hostage
problems is - a discovery previously made by Jimmy Carter and Ronald
Reagan," said Bruce Riedel, a former senior CIA and White House
counter-terrorism official.
"I don't see a lot of room for change in American policy," said
Riedel, now at the Brookings Institution think tank.
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The Foley raid and the first attempt to free Somers failed because
they apparently had been moved before U.S. troops arrived,
illustrating the limits of intelligence on captives' whereabouts.
Somers and Korkie were shot by their captors when they detected the
presence of the approaching Special Forces rescue team, officials
said on Saturday.
The stepped-up rescue operations are a direct result of more than a
decade of nearly non-stop raids against militants by elite U.S.
forces in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere.
"We're more capable now, borne out of 13 years of
counter-terrorism," a senior U.S. defense official said. "But I
wouldn’t describe it as a more aggressive policy. ... the threat (to
hostages), I think, is a little bit more pervasive too."
Sometimes the raids succeed. In January 2012, U.S. Navy SEALS
parachuted into Somalia and rescued an American and a Danish aid
worker, killing nine of their kidnappers.
"I think you have to try" to mount rescues, Riedel said. The message
it sends, he said, is "one, we're not going to pay and two, the
hostage-takers are at great risk."
(Additional reporting by David Rohde; Editing by Eric Walsh)
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