A visibly angry President Barack Obama said Wednesday that the
"entire world is appalled" by the beheading of
an American journalist by the extremist group the Islamic State of
Iraq and Syria (ISIS or ISIL), casting the group as a relic that "has no
place in the 21st century."
"No just God would stand for what they did yesterday and what they
do every single day," Obama, who said he was "heartbroken" by
Foley's death, said during a statement from Martha's Vineyard.
The White House's National Security Council said Wednesday that the video
released by the group, which has since been removed from YouTube, was
authentic. The video showed a member of the group executing American journalist
James Foley, who was kidnapped in Syria in 2012. Continue...
Obama spoke out harshly against ISIS. He compared the group to a
"cancer" whose spread must be contained, saying it has and will
continue to torture and kill civilians, massacre religious minorities, and rape
women.
He contrasted the group with the life of Foley. People like Foley, he
said, "shape the world."
"People like [ISIS] ultimately fail. Because the future is won by
those who build and not destroy," Obama said.
In the video, ISIS also threatened to kill another American journalist
it said it was holding captive — Steven Sotloff, who was kidnapped near
the Syrian-Turkish border in August 2013. He had been freelancing for Time and
other publications.
The group said it killed Foley as an act of revenge for U.S.
intervention in Iraq. Obama authorized the U.S. military to conduct airstrikes
in Iraq nearly two weeks ago in an attempt to aid Iraqi forces against the
extremist militants.
Since then, according to the Pentagon, the U.S. has conducted more than
70 such strikes on targets including security checkpoints, vehicles, and
weapons caches. The U.S. has not specified if any militants were killed in the
strikes. It has said the vast majority of the strikes had been
"successful."
Obama did not specify on Wednesday if there would be any policy or
strategy changes toward how the U.S. will approach and contain ISIS. He did
say, however, that the U.S. would continue to remain "vigilant" and
"relentless" in the face of threats by the group.
"The United State of America will continue to do what we must do to
protect our people. We will be vigilant and we will be relentless," Obama
said.
During a news conference from the White House on Monday, Obama hailed the U.S.' role in helping Iraqi and Kurdish
forces retake the key strategic point of the Mosul Dam in northern Iraq. He
said retaking the dam, which supplies electricity and water to much of Iraq,
represented a "major step forward" in a battle against the militants.
The White House said Tuesday night that Obama had been briefed on the
video while traveling on Air Force One. Obama returned to Martha's Vineyard on
Tuesday, where he has been vacationing for parts of the past two weeks. He
returned to Washington briefly over the weekend for two days of meetings.
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