James Foley |
British Prime Minister David Cameron has said that the person
involved in the beheading of US journalist James Foley looked
“increasingly likely” to be a British citizen, though the man has not
been identified.
“We have not identified the individual responsible on the
video but from what we've seen it looks increasingly likely that
it is a British citizen. Now this is deeply shocking,”
Cameron told reporters on Wednesday.
James Foley was kidnapped in Syria at Thanksgiving in 2012 while
working for the GlobalPost agency. In the video entitled 'A
message to the US', the 40-year-old journalist denounces his
country of birth with a knife to his neck through a speech
presumably written by his captors – the Islamic State (IS,
formerly known as ISIS) militants, who posted the video on
YouTube.
At the end of the film, another US journalist who disappeared in
August last year, Steven Joel Sotloff is paraded on camera as
Foley’s killer states: “The life of this American citizen,
Obama, depends on your next decision.”
The authenticity of the video was confirmed by the White House on
Wednesday morning.
“We have reached the judgment that this video is
authentic,” National Security Council spokeswoman Caitlin
Hayden said.
Before Cameron made his statements, British media widely
identified the speaker in the Islamic State video as speaking
with a British accent.
The Daily Mail, Telegraph and Guardian all recognized the masked
militant’s accent to be southern English, and intelligence
agencies are reportedly attempting to ascertain the identity of
the man.
UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond recognized the possibility
and the potential danger in the situation on Wednesday.
“We're absolutely aware that there are significant numbers of
British nationals involved in terrible crimes, probably in the
commission of atrocities, making jihad with IS and other
extremists organizations,” Hammond told the BBC.
“This is something we have been tracking and dealing with for
many, many months and I don't think this video changes
anything…it just heightens awareness of a situation which is very
grave.”
On August 17, Cameron penned a strongly-worded article published
in The Sunday Telegraph, stating that if the Islamic State grows
stronger and creates a caliphate in the Middle East, the group
would pose a threat to Europe.
Shiraz Maher, a senior research fellow at the International
Centre for the Study of Radicalisation (ICSR) at King's College
London, said in an interview with BBC Radio 4's Today program on
Wednesday that British fighters had been operating as suicide
bombers and executioners.
Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron |
"Foreign fighters going out to Syria are not going out there
to be backseat riders. They are going out to be full participants
in the war, to be at the forefront of the conflict," he
said.
(RT)
On the other hand, in his Wednesday remarks PM Cameron ruled out
the possibility of immediate UK intervention in Iraq.
“I’ve been very clear this country is not going to get
involved in another Iraq war,” he said. “We’re not going
to put combat troops, combat boots on the ground.”
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