U.S.
backed talks with ISIS over American hostage: newspaper
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[December 19, 2014]
LONDON (Reuters) - U.S.
counter-terrorism officials backed negotiations with two prominent
jihadi clerics in a failed attempt to save the life of an American
hostage who was later beheaded by Islamic State militants, the Guardian
newspaper reported on Friday.
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Citing emails, the Guardian said talks with the spiritual leaders
of Islamic State, also known as ISIS, aimed at releasing hostage
Peter Kassig began in mid-October and ran for several weeks with the
knowledge of the FBI.
U.S. officials were not immediately available to comment on the
newspaper report.
Islamic State militants beheaded Kassig, 26, in November. U.S.
President Barack Obama said at the time that the killing was "an act
of pure evil by a terrorist group that the world rightly associates
with inhumanity".
The Guardian said the unsuccessful initiative to save Kassig, an aid
worker, was the work of a New York lawyer, Stanley Cohen, who has
represented Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law and members of Hamas in
U.S. courts.
Cohen persuaded senior clerics aligned with al Qaeda to intervene
with ISIS on behalf of Kassig, the newspaper said. FBI staff
confirmed that senior officials at its headquarters were kept
abreast of Cohen’s actions, the Guardian said.
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The bureau confirmed it would pay $24,000 of expenses incurred by
Cohen, the newspaper said. An FBI spokesman cited by the newspaper
said the bureau's top priority was the safe return of U.S. citizens
and that it rarely discussed the details of its efforts in public.
The Guardian said it had provided the Kassig family with the details
of the negotiation effort before publication but that the family had
declined to respond.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge; Editing by Gareth Jones)
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