Jordan: IS claim of female US hostage killed in strike is ‘criminal propaganda’

Amman says unverified report Kayla Jean Mueller died in Jordan air raid is ‘illogical’; US officials investigating

In this May 30, 2013, photo, Kayla Mueller is shown after speaking to a group in Prescott, Ariz. (Photo credit: AP/The Daily Courier, Matt Hinshaw)
In this May 30, 2013, photo, Kayla Mueller is shown after speaking to a group in Prescott, Ariz. (Photo credit: AP/The Daily Courier, Matt Hinshaw)

The Jordanian government said it was highly skeptical of a claim by the Islamic State alleging that a female American hostage was killed Friday in a Jordanian air strike, describing it as a likely propaganda stunt.

Jordanian government spokesman Mohammed al-Momani said Jordan was looking into the claim.

“But as a first reaction, we think it’s illogical and we are highly skeptical about it,” he said. “How could they identify a Jordanian warplane … in the sky? What was the American lady doing in a weapons warehouse?”

“It’s part of their criminal propaganda. They have lied that our pilot is alive and tried to negotiate, claiming he is alive while they had killed him weeks before,” al-Momani added.

American officials said they were looking into the report.

The woman was identified as Kayla Jean Mueller, an American who went to Syria to do aid work. There was no independent verification of the claim and the United States said it had no evidence of her death.

The 26-year-old Mueller, of Prescott, Arizona, is the only known remaining US hostage held by the Islamic State group. Journalist Austin Tice, of Houston, Texas, disappeared in August 2012 while covering Syria’s civil war. It’s not clear what entity is holding him, but it is not believed to be the Islamic State group or the Syrian government, his family has said.

If Mueller’s death is confirmed, she would be the fourth American to die while in the captivity of the Islamic State militants. Three other Americans, journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff and aid worker Peter Kassig were beheaded by the group.

The announcement also marked the second time this week the IS group announces the death of one of the hostages it holds.

IS released a video earlier this week, showing a captive Jordanian pilot being burned to death in a cage in gruesome images that sparked outrage in Jordan and across the region.

Friday’s statement, which appeared on a militant website commonly used by IS and was also distributed by IS-affiliated Twitter users, said Mueller was killed during Muslim prayers — which usually take place around midday on Fridays — in airstrikes that targeted “the same location for more than an hour.”

It published photos allegedly of the bombed site, showing a severely damaged brown colored three-story building — but offered no proof or images of Mueller.

No Islamic State militants were killed in the airstrikes, the statement further claimed, raising questions of whether Mueller was alone in the building and whether she was indeed killed in the strikes.

Bernadette Meehan, the spokeswoman for President Barack Obama’s National Security Council, said the White House has “not at this time seen any evidence that corroborates” the claim.

“We are obviously deeply concerned by these reports,” she added.

White House spokesman Eric Schultz told reporters traveling with the president to Indiana Friday that the U.S. does coordinate with the Jordanian air force as they fly airstrikes. He wouldn’t say whether the US was aware of the hostage’s location.

The IS statement could not be independently verified but it appeared on a militant website commonly used by IS and was also distributed by IS-affiliated Twitter users.

Mueller had been working in Turkey assisting Syrian refugees, according to a 2013 article in The Daily Courier, her hometown newspaper. She told the paper that she was drawn to help with the situation in Syria.

“For as long as I live, I will not let this suffering be normal,” she said. “It’s important to stop and realize what we have, why we have it and how privileged we are. And from that place, start caring and get a lot done.”

According to the local paper, Mueller had been working with the humanitarian aid agency Support to Life, as well as a local NGO that helped female Syrian refugees develop skills.

A 2007 article about Mueller from the same local newspaper said she was a student at Northern Arizona University and was active in the Save Darfur Coalition.

On Sunday, Obama said the US was “deploying all the assets that we can” to find Mueller.

“We are in very close contact with the family trying to keep them updated,” he said in an interview with NBC’s Today Show. “Obviously this is something that is heart-breaking for the family and we want to make sure we do anything we can to make sure that any American citizen is rescued from this situation.”

Mueller’s identity had not been disclosed until now out of fears for her safety.

Jordan, which is part of a US-led coalition bombing Islamic State group targets in Syria, stepped up its attacks after IS announced it had killed the Jordanian pilot, Lt. Mu’ath al-Kasaesbeh.

The Syrian government said Thursday that dozens of Jordanian fighter jets had bombed Islamic State training centers and weapons storage sites. It did not say where the attacks occurred.

The Jordanian military said that Jordanian jetfighters carried out “a series of attacks today and destroyed the targets and returned safely.” It did not elaborate or give a location for the airstrikes.

But activists who monitor the Syrian conflict from inside the country said US-led coalition planes hit several targets on the edges and outskirts of Raqqa, in quick succession on Friday.

A Raqqa-based collective of anti-IS activists known as “Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently” said the planes targeted multiple IS positions and headquarters in the western and eastern countryside of Raqqa, sending columns of smoke into the sky. Explosions could be heard in the city. The collective said there were no recorded civilian casualties, and did not mention IS casualties.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said dozens of IS members were killed in coalition airstrikes that targeted a tanks-and-vehicles depot in the area of al-Madajen and at least six other IS positions, including a training camp and a prison.

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