The Philippine Star

Military: US ‘reasonably certain’ Jihadi John is dead

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WASHINGTON – The US military is “reasonably certain” its drone strike in Syria killed the masked Islamic State militant known as “Jihadi John,” who appeared in several videos depicting the beheadings of Western hostages.

But families of the hostages brutally killed last year said his presumed death is little solace.

Army Col. Steve Warren, US military spokesman in Baghdad, told reporters Friday that officials had been following Mohammed Emwazi, a Kuwaiti- born British citizen, for some time.

“The intelligen­ce indicators that we had gave us great confidence that this individual was Jihadi John and when the opportunit­y presented itself — with the opportunit­y for minimal civilian casualties — we took the shot,” Warren said. “This guy was a human animal, and killing him is probably making the world a little bit better place.” Another US official told The Associated

Press that three drones — two US and one British — targeted the vehicle in which Emwazi was believed to be traveling in Raqqa, the Islamic State’s self-proclaimed capital in northern Syria. The official, who was not authorized to speak publicly and requested anonymity, said the US drone, armed with a Hellfire missile, struck the vehicle.

Warren said that Emwazi and one of his friends were apparently killed, and there were no civilian casualties. Officials are using a variety of human and signals intelligen­ce, social media reports and other methods to confirm Emwazi’s death.

A Turkish official says authoritie­s there have detained a man they suspect is linked to Emwazi. The man, who they strongly believe to be Aine Lesley Davis, was detained in Istanbul.

Warren said the operation was one in a string of targeted attacks on Islamic State leaders, adding that the US has killed one mid- to upper-level Islamic State leader every two days since May.

Among those beheaded by Islamic State militants in videos posted online since August 2014 were US journalist­s Steven Sotloff and James Foley, US aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, and Japanese journalist Kenji Goto.

Foley’s parents, John and Diane Foley, of New Hampshire, issued a statement calling the purported death “a very small solace.”

“His death does not bring Jim back. If only so much effort had been given to finding and rescuing Jim and the other hostages who were subsequent­ly murdered by ISIS, they might be alive today,” they said.

Likewise, Art and Shirley Sotloff said the developmen­t “doesn’t change anything for us; it’s too little too late. Our son is never coming back.”

British Prime Minister David Cameron said the strike had been a joint effort to hit the British-accented militant, whom Cameron called the group’s “lead executione­r.“

Cameron also said the strike had been “an act of self-defense ... a strike at the heart” of the Islamic State group.

US Secretary of State John Kerry, appearing at a news conference in Tunis, Tunisia, declared that extremists “need to know this: Your days are numbered, and you will be defeated.” –

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