February 9, 2015 | Quote

Doubts About ISIS Claim That Airstrike Killed Kayla Mueller


The Islamist militants released no video to back up its claim Friday, only photos showing a flattened building. U.S. officials were trying to verify the claim that 26-year-old aid worker and Arizona native Kayla Mueller was killed in the Jordanian bombing.

ISIS said she was purportedly killed in the Syrian city of Raqqa, but the U.S. military noted that no American or Jordanian airstrikes happened anywhere near there.

“Of course we should be skeptical, it's far too pat,” said Daveed Gartenstein-Ross, a senior fellow with the national security think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies. He said ISIS is known for making robust claims that simply can't be verified.

The immolation of the Jordanian fighter pilot outraged his fellow countrymen, and emboldened the Arab kingdom's leaders to act aggressively against ISIS. Jordanian state media, however, reported that the pilot had actually been killed a month earlier — and ISIS was simply stringing the Jordanians along.

“The Jordanians pressed them for a proof of life, but of course (ISIS wasn't) able to give it,” said Steven David, professor of political science at Johns Hopkins University. “Now, we don't know what happened with this young woman. It's possible that she was killed a long time ago, and they simply didn't reveal it,” he added.

Gartenstein-Ross said this latest airstrike led by the Jordanians, who are vowing revenge, appears to be a “convenient” excuse for ISIS to say that Mueller was killed. She was taken hostage in Syria in August 2013, but her name has not previously been publicly reported at the request of her family.

Unless Mueller's body has been irretrievable under the rubble, showing the American would play into ISIS' harsh propaganda tactics of showcasing their Western hostages on social media — both alive and dead, observers say.

“They've been masters of propaganda, so if this has really happened, they would certainly think about the best way to package it in a propaganda piece,” Gartenstein-Ross said.

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Issues:

Jordan