I have been reading several articles about Germany basically volunteering to be the Kurdish supplier of weapons. Do the Kurdish not have stockpiles of weapons/accessibility to American weapons from the Iraqi government itself?
A brother of slain American journalist James Foley said Friday the U.S. government could have done more to help him escape the militant group Islamic State, also known as ISIS, which had demanded a $132-million ransom before beheading him in a grisly video released this week. “You could accomplish both things. The United States could have done more on behalf of the Western and American hostages over there and still dealt with broader worldwide issues, and other nations have done that,” he said, adding that the militants had also demanded the release of several prisoners held by U.S. authorities.
"We are sitting on prisoners, for example, in Guantanamo. It doesn't even have to be financial," Foley said. "I just feel strongly that more can be done moving forward."
What if they held captive someone you know and care about? It is not giving, it's exchanging.
What if they held captive someone you know and care about? It is not giving, it's exchanging.
The International Business Times reported last month that activists on the ground near Al Bab, Syria, said that the Dawood Brigade, which now consists of about 1,000 people, defected from the Free Syrian Army and moved on to Raqqa to join ISIS. The group arrived in Raqqa, an ISIS stronghold, in a convoy of more than 100 vehicles.
The Dawood Brigade, which used to be called Jaysh al-Mujahedin (Mujahedin Army), but changed its name in late 2012, was originally under the direction of Abu Mohammed al-Shami al-Absi. The group was rumored to have been responsible for the kidnapping of John Cantlie and Jeroen Oerlemans, who went missing in Syria in 2012, according to the Syrian sources. The two journalists were rescued by another rebel faction, and escaped.
That's a fairly weak argument, if someone brutally tortured and killed a family member Id want them brutally killed, does that mean that should become societal policy?
Rep. Ed Royce, chairman of the House Committee on Foreign Affairs and a Republican from California, told CNN that he'd support the use of armed drones on ISIS in Syria.
"I think strikes at this point, against the Syrian ISIS, which has bled into Iraq, those steps should be taken," Royce said. "Had they been taken some time ago, I think ISIS would not have as much influence on the ground as it has now."
The US is obviously doing the right thing, the EU got it wrong. You can't fund these groups. It will only get worse.Kidnapping brings up a moral dilemma: do you pay the ransom, liberate the victim, and make it much more likely that another person will be kidnapped and a higher ransom demanded; or do you bluntly refuse to pay the ransom, lose the victim, but make it much less likely another person will be kidnapped?
Same thing with protection rackets. Same thing with armed conflict generally (though it's less obviously so).
It does. Say you learn he was someone from your hood. And you know him, his family and problems in the hood. You will get a better understanding what breeds terrorism on British soil, and what MI5, MI6 and GCHQ can do to close on guys like him before they even fly to places like Syria.
Because arresting people who might be radicalized is always a good idea.
Peter Theo Curtis was freed from the "clutches" of Jabhat Al-Nusrah, Kerry said. National Security Advisor Susan E. Rice said Curtis was "outside of Syria" and "safe."
Curtis was reportedly abducted in Antakya, Turkey, where he planned to enter Syria in October 2012, according to Al Jazeera, which also reported he was released to United Nations officials with the help of Qatari mediators.