The story appears on

Page A3

September 15, 2014

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

UK backing US action but keeping options open

BRITAIN yesterday resisted pressure to join the United States in announcing air strikes against Islamic State after the militant group beheaded British hostage David Haines.

Speaking after chairing a meeting of the government’s emergency response committee in London, Prime Minister David Cameron said his government was battling IS on numerous fronts but was not, for now, launching air strikes.

“As this strategy intensifies we are ready to take whatever steps are necessary to deal with this threat and keep our country safe,” he said in a TV statement from his office.

“Step by step, we must drive back, dismantle, and ultimately destroy ISIL (IS) and what it stands for. We will do so in a calm deliberate way, but with an iron determination.”

Britain has in the past often been the first country to join US military action overseas, but war-weary public opinion, parliament’s rejection last year of air strikes on Syria, and sensitivities surrounding Scotland’s independence referendum on Thursday mean Cameron is reticent this time round.

US Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to discuss the aid worker’s beheading with British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond at a meeting in Paris today.

Cameron outlined no plans to recall parliament, which is in recess, in order to seek its authorization for air strikes against IS, and inside sources say he has no immediate plans to do so.

His last attempt to get parliament to back air strikes, against Syria last year, failed to win the support of lawmakers.

Cameron, who returned to London ahead of schedule on Saturday night to chair the emergency COBRA meeting, called the murder of Haines, a 44-year-old aid worker who was born in England but had been brought up in Scotland, callous and brutal, hailing the murdered man as a “British hero.”

“We will hunt down those responsible and bring them to justice no matter how long it takes,” he said, calling IS “the embodiment of evil.” “They are not Muslims, they are monsters,” he said.

Britain’s Foreign Office said that the Haines video showed “all signs” of being genuine.

The images were consistent with those of the filmed executions of two American journalists, James Foley and Steven Sotloff, in the past month.

Haines’ executioner appears to be the same man who featured in videos with Foley and Sotloff. The man, nicknamed “Jihadi John” by Western media, seems to have a British accent. At the end of the same video, another hostage is shown and threatened.

Security services in Britain have been trying to identify the executioner.

A British security source said an investigation was underway into the killings and that senior intelligence officials had attended the meeting of the emergency committee that Cameron chaired.

Faced with the rise of IS, Britain has so far confined itself to delivering humanitarian aid, carrying out surveillance, arming Kurdish forces who are fighting IS militants and promising training in Iraq.

On military action, London supports US airstrikes while keeping its own options open.

Sir Richard Dannatt, former head of the British army, said yesterday that IS executions should not deter the government from taking military action against the militants.

“If we don’t confront and destroy these Islamic State jihadi fighters then their influence will grow, their confidence will grow and the problem will get bigger,” he told Sky News.

Alex Salmond, Scotland’s First Minister, told BBC TV that Haines’ murder was an “unspeakable act of barbarism.”

Asked in a BBC interview if an independent Scotland would be prepared to take military action against IS, he said any response must be under United Nations auspices, underlining Scottish anxiety about any unilateral military action.

“You can’t have a strategy where you bow to terrorism. There’s an urgent requirement to get back to collective (action) under the United Nations,” he said.

Salmond has called the 2003 Iraq invasion illegal because it was not launched with UN approval.

Haines was remembered in prayers at the morning service in Edinburgh’s St Mary’s Cathedral, where provost Graham Forbes praised him for his dedication to humanitarian work.




 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend