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The United States targeted British Islamic State leader “Jihadi John” in an air attack in northern Syria which Britain said would “strike at the heart of Islamic State” if the militant’s death is confirmed.
British Prime Minister David Cameron said the death of Mohammed Emwazi – who was known as Jihadi John after appearing in videos showing the killings of US and British hostages – could not yet be confirmed and the Pentagon said it was still assessing the effectiveness of the strike.
But a US official said Thursday’s attack in the town of Raqqa, Islamic State’s de facto capital, probably killed Emwazi and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, quoted sources in Raqqa saying he had been blown to pieces.
He initially quoted sources in Raqqa saying the body of “an important British Jihadi” was in the town’s hospital but later quoted them saying Emwazi’s body, and those of his three militant comrades, had been left charred.
Emwazi took part in videos showing the murders of US journalists Steven Sotloff and James Foley, US aid worker Abdul-Rahman Kassig, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, Japanese journalist Kenji Goto, and other hostages.
Shown in the videos dressed entirely in black, a balaclava covering all but his eyes and the bridge of his nose, Jihadi John became a menacing symbol of Islamic State brutality, and one of the world’s most wanted men. He was born in Kuwait but brought up in Britain.
The British government said it had “been working hand in glove with the Americans” to defeat Islamic State “and to hunt down those murdering Western hostages.”
Speaking outside his Downing Street residence, Cameron described Emwazi as “a barbaric murderer” who “posed an ongoing and serious threat to innocent civilians, not only in Syria but around the world and in the United Kingdom too”.
Cameron said the US air strike resulted from a combined effort between Britain and the United States and was an act of self-defence: “It was the right thing to do”.
US President Barack Obama has promised justice after the deaths of American hostages and the United States is seeking to increase pressure on Islamic State fighters, who have seized parts of Syria and Iraq, and who Obama has vowed to defeat.
The pressure includes US plans to deploy dozens of special operations forces to Syria, deliver more weaponry to US-backed Syrian fighters and to thicken US air strikes against the militant group.
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