In my Hindu piece, I mention that IS killed a Syrian journalist named Bassam Raies (pic). It was greeted with silence pic.twitter.com/YjM5YpEQ4a
Second American journalist
beheaded by ISIS terrorists'
RT,
2
September, 2014
The
Associated Press and the SITE Intel Group, an organization that
tracks the online activity of terrorist groups, both reported on
Tuesday that the Islamic State has posted a video of the execution
barely two weeks after the group formerly known as ISIS published a
similar clip of American photojournalist James Foley suffering the
same fate.
“I’m
back, Obama, and I’m back because of your arrogant foreign policy
towards the Islamic State,” a
masked militant believed to be the same who executed Foley addresses
the president in the latest video.
Kneeling
in an orange jump suit, Sotloff is seen in the clip reading a
statement to the president as Foley did before him.
“Obama,
your foreign policy of intervention in Iraq was supposed to be for
preservation of American lives and interests, so why is it that I am
paying the price of your interference with my life?” Sotloff
asks.
"As
your missiles continue to strike our people, our knife will continue
to strike necks of your people,"
the masked man says before killing Sotloff. Another captured civilian
— David Cawthorne Haines of the UK — will be the next murdered
unless "this
evil alliance of America against the Islamic State" ends,
militants warn in the video.
The killer, nicknamed 'Jihadi John'
(An image grab taken from YouTube video 'ISIS Beheading of
Journalist James Foley Captures World's Attention')
The
White House could not immediately confirm the authenticity of the
latest video, “A Second Message to America,” but press secretary
Joshua Earnest said during a briefing on Tuesday that the
administration’s “thoughts
and prayers” are
with Sotloff’s family. Jen Psaki, a spokesperson for the US
Department of State, said she was “sickened”
by the news, and British Prime Minister David Cameron called it
an "absolutely
disgusting, despicable act."
The
alleged beheading also triggered a response from UN Secretary General
Ban Ki-moon, who said on Wednesday that the world was “outraged” by
the execution.
"We
are all outraged at reports from Iraq about the brutal killing of
civilians by ISIL (IS), including yesterday's reported brutal
beheading of another journalist," he
said during a trip to New Zealand.
He
also described the beheading as “brutal,” insisting
that "those
perpetrators must be brought to justice.”
A
31-year-old freelance journalist who has written for Time magazine
and the Christian Science Monitor, among others, Sotloff was
kidnapped near Aleppo, Syria in August 2013. According to a profile
published in the New York Times last month, Sotloff’s family tried
desperately during the last year to keep his abduction quiet due to
fears that the publicity would endanger him further, but changed
course recently after the Islamic State warned that he’d be among
the next executed lest the United State end its campaign against the
militants.
Upon
release of the Foley video last month, the Islamic State demanded
that US President Barack Obama cease attacks on the group or else
risk Sotloff becoming the next casualty of the group’s violent
campaign in Iraq and Syria.
Sotloff’s
fate, a militant warned Pres. Obama last month, “depends
on your next decision.” In
response, Sotloff’s mother posted a minute-and-a-half-long video
plea asking Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to release her
son.
“You,
the caliph, can grant amnesty. I ask you please to release my child.
I ask you to use your authority to spare his life,” Shirley
Sotloff pleaded.
An image grab taken on August 27, 2014
off the pan-Arab al-Arabiya satellite television shows Shirley
Sotloff, the mother of US hostage Steven Sotloff, who has been
threatened with death by jihadist militants, pleading for her son's
life amid mounting fears for Americans captured in Syria. (AFP
Photo)
The
US has since ramped up its attacks on the Islamic State, and
international efforts are expected to be discussed by NATO member
state’s during this week’s summit in Wales. During Tuesday’s
State Dept. briefing, Psaki said that Pres. Obama has so far
authorized at least 100 air strikes in Iraq against the Islamic
State.
'We don't have a strategy, yet'
Western
leaders are raising the alarm over possible jihadist attacks on
European and American soil. This has prompted a wider debate over the
West taking on the Islamic State. The head of the Muslim Public
Affairs Committee in the UK, Asghar Bukhari, believes British foreign
policies have led to such radicalization.
CrossTalk:
Islamic State Threat?
Here
we go again! We are told that the Islamic State terrorist group is
the worst of the worst and has global ambitions. The public is being
taught, slowly but surely, to fear the Islamic State. Washington
continues to attempt to shape and re-shape the Middle East.
CrossTalking with Jabbar Hasan, Joseph Willits and Ray Locker
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