Two Japanese hostages, one demand from ISIS: Hand over $200 million, or
else.
The else being that the pair will meet the same gruesome fate as other
captives held by the terrorist group, others who were shown in ISIS videos
kneeling in orange jumpsuits in front of masked, black-clad men -- just like
the Japanese hostages identified as Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa --
shortly before being beheaded.
In the latest video, a masked man gives the Japanese government a choice
to pay $200 million -- the same amount of money Prime Minister Shinzo Abe recently pledged for those
"contending" with ISIS -- to free the Japanese men. That deal holds
for 72 hours, which would seem to mean sometime Friday, since the video
appeared on social media Tuesday.
Another move that theoretically could change things would be if Japan's
government halts its alliance with those fighting ISIS, which calls itself the Islamic State. Tokyo hasn't
participated in airstrikes aimed at the Islamist extremist group, though its
leaders have supported those who have, as well as the Iraqi government.
"Although you are more than 8,500 kilometers away from the Islamic
State, you willingly volunteered to take part in this crusade," the masked
man on the video posted Tuesday says, addressing his comments to Abe.
But Abe, who is currently visiting the Middle East, didn't seem about to
bargain Tuesday.
He stood by a pledge, made in a speech Sunday in Cairo, for funding to help build
"human capacities, infrastructure and so on" for those affected by
ISIS' armed campaign.
"The pledge aid is very important to the refugees in need and has
nothing to do with the Islamic communities or the radical militants," the
Prime Minister said. "... We will contribute to the (region's) peace and
stability, in cooperation with the global community."
As to the ISIS threat against two of his nation's citizens, Abe called
it "unacceptable."
"I feel angry about it," he said. "I strongly urge them
to immediately release the hostages without harming them."
Abe: 'Terrorists should not be forgiven'
ISIS has asked for ransoms before, and apparently has been paid them.
But rarely are such demands made publicly. Even rarer -- unprecedented, in fact
-- is when the militant group puts its captives on video and threatens them,
then lets them go.
Instead, ISIS has made a public show out of its threatening and killings
of Western hostages, starting with August's beheading of U.S. journalist James
Foley.
Others' killings were similarly recorded and posted online, including
American journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid worker David Haines, British
taxi driver Alan Henning and U.S. aid worker Peter Kassig.
While not participating in ground combat, both the United States and
Great Britain have taken an active role in the anti-ISIS fight with airstrikes
and training, arming and otherwise supporting groups -- like Iraq's military,
Kurdish fighters and moderate Syrian opposition -- taking on the militants
face-to-face.
That's not the case for Japan, whose post-World War II constitution allows it to use
its military only for self-defense. But Tokyo is a strong ally with Western
powers, like the United States, that have been singled out by ISIS.
In his remarks Tuesday in Jerusalem, Abe -- who dealt with another
hostage crisis involving Islamic militants in January 2013, when 10 Japanese
citizens were caught up in the terrorist seizure of a natural gas facility in Algeria --
said he had ordered Japanese officials to do the utmost to try to save the two
men.
At the same time, the Prime Minister added, "Terrorists should not
be forgiven, for any reason. I criticize (the taking of hostages)
emphatically."
A lost soul and a journalist
The aim is to safely bring home two men who were in the same war-torn
region for very different reasons.
Like Foley and Sotloff, Goto went there to help tell the story of what
was happening in Iraq and Syria. In recent months, ISIS militants have managed
to take over vast swaths of both countries, ruthlessly going after many in
their way who don't share their extremist interpretation of Islam.
The freelance journalist reported for various Japanese news
organizations about the situation in the northern Syrian battleground city of Kobani, which for
weeks has been under siege by ISIS, and other areas.
While it's not known when he was taken captive, Goto's last Twitter post was
on October 23.
The man purportedly shown along with him, Yukawa, is believed to have
been captured in Syria in August while traveling with rebel fighters, according
to the Japanese news agency Kyodo.
The 42-year-old claimed to have set up a company in Tokyo providing
armed security services and posted videos online of his activities in Iraq and
Syria.
But a report by the news agency Reuters in
August portrayed him as a lost soul, who went to the Middle East searching for
a purpose after losing his wife, his business and his home over the previous
decade.
Kyodo reported previously that Japanese officials in Jordan had being
trying to secure his release, including talking to various groups with possible
connections to his captors.
So what happens next?
Abe spoke firmly Tuesday against the terrorists and their $200 million
ransom demand.
What he did not do, however, is rule out the Japanese government paying
ransom or negotiating with its two citizens' captors.
Like most countries, Japan has never advertised that it or Japanese
companies have paid ransom for hostages. In fact, Japanese government officials
have at times denied such a practice, and Japan is a signatory to a 2013 G8
communique that stated, "We unequivocally reject the payment of ransoms to
terrorists, and we call on countries and companies around the world to follow
our lead to stamp this out."
One reason for this policy is that ISIS and groups like it can use
ransoms to fund their bloody campaigns. Paying ransoms also may give them
incentive to take more hostages, thus putting more people at risk. And ransoms
might not always work, since ISIS and other hostage takers aren't usually seen
as trustworthy.
Still, ruling out ransoms also rules out one peaceful way to free Goto
and Yukawa. It's possible someone else may intervene to negotiate their
release, whether out of goodwill or in exchange for something else. Or troops
from a Japanese ally could launch a raid to get to them, like the unsuccessful
one this summer to free Foley.
Either way, others could play a role in this story before it's done --
hence Abe's comment Tuesday that the international community "needs to
deal with terrorists without giving in to them."
Two Japanese hostages, one demand from ISIS: Hand over $200 million, or
else.
The else being that the pair will meet the same gruesome fate as other
captives held by the terrorist group, others who were shown in ISIS videos
kneeling in orange jumpsuits in front of masked, black-clad men -- just like
the Japanese hostages identified as Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa --
shortly before being beheaded.
In the latest video, a masked man gives the Japanese government a choice
to pay $200 million -- the same amount of money Prime Minister Shinzo Abe recently pledged for those
"contending" with ISIS -- to free the Japanese men. That deal holds
for 72 hours, which would seem to mean sometime Friday, since the video
appeared on social media Tuesday.
Another move that theoretically could change things would be if Japan's
government halts its alliance with those fighting ISIS, which calls itself the Islamic State. Tokyo hasn't
participated in airstrikes aimed at the Islamist extremist group, though its
leaders have supported those who have, as well as the Iraqi government.
"Although you are more than 8,500 kilometers away from the Islamic
State, you willingly volunteered to take part in this crusade," the masked
man on the video posted Tuesday says, addressing his comments to Abe.
But Abe, who is currently visiting the Middle East, didn't seem about to
bargain Tuesday.
He stood by a pledge, made in a speech Sunday in Cairo, for funding to help build
"human capacities, infrastructure and so on" for those affected by
ISIS' armed campaign.
"The pledge aid is very important to the refugees in need and has
nothing to do with the Islamic communities or the radical militants," the
Prime Minister said. "... We will contribute to the (region's) peace and
stability, in cooperation with the global community."
As to the ISIS threat against two of his nation's citizens, Abe called
it "unacceptable."
"I feel angry about it," he said. "I strongly urge them
to immediately release the hostages without harming them."
Abe: 'Terrorists should not be forgiven'
ISIS has asked for ransoms before, and apparently has been paid them.
But rarely are such demands made publicly. Even rarer -- unprecedented, in fact
-- is when the militant group puts its captives on video and threatens them,
then lets them go.
Instead, ISIS has made a public show out of its threatening and killings
of Western hostages, starting with August's beheading of U.S. journalist James
Foley.
Others' killings were similarly recorded and posted online, including
American journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid worker David Haines, British
taxi driver Alan Henning and U.S. aid worker Peter Kassig.
While not participating in ground combat, both the United States and
Great Britain have taken an active role in the anti-ISIS fight with airstrikes
and training, arming and otherwise supporting groups -- like Iraq's military,
Kurdish fighters and moderate Syrian opposition -- taking on the militants
face-to-face.
That's not the case for Japan, whose post-World War II constitution allows it to use
its military only for self-defense. But Tokyo is a strong ally with Western
powers, like the United States, that have been singled out by ISIS.
In his remarks Tuesday in Jerusalem, Abe -- who dealt with another
hostage crisis involving Islamic militants in January 2013, when 10 Japanese
citizens were caught up in the terrorist seizure of a natural gas facility in Algeria --
said he had ordered Japanese officials to do the utmost to try to save the two
men.
At the same time, the Prime Minister added, "Terrorists should not
be forgiven, for any reason. I criticize (the taking of hostages)
emphatically."
A lost soul and a journalist
The aim is to safely bring home two men who were in the same war-torn
region for very different reasons.
Like Foley and Sotloff, Goto went there to help tell the story of what
was happening in Iraq and Syria. In recent months, ISIS militants have managed
to take over vast swaths of both countries, ruthlessly going after many in
their way who don't share their extremist interpretation of Islam.
The freelance journalist reported for various Japanese news
organizations about the situation in the northern Syrian battleground city of Kobani, which for
weeks has been under siege by ISIS, and other areas.
While it's not known when he was taken captive, Goto's last Twitter post was
on October 23.
The man purportedly shown along with him, Yukawa, is believed to have
been captured in Syria in August while traveling with rebel fighters, according
to the Japanese news agency Kyodo.
The 42-year-old claimed to have set up a company in Tokyo providing
armed security services and posted videos online of his activities in Iraq and
Syria.
But a report by the news agency Reuters in
August portrayed him as a lost soul, who went to the Middle East searching for
a purpose after losing his wife, his business and his home over the previous
decade.
Kyodo reported previously that Japanese officials in Jordan had being
trying to secure his release, including talking to various groups with possible
connections to his captors.
So what happens next?
Abe spoke firmly Tuesday against the terrorists and their $200 million
ransom demand.
What he did not do, however, is rule out the Japanese government paying
ransom or negotiating with its two citizens' captors.
Like most countries, Japan has never advertised that it or Japanese
companies have paid ransom for hostages. In fact, Japanese government officials
have at times denied such a practice, and Japan is a signatory to a 2013 G8
communique that stated, "We unequivocally reject the payment of ransoms to
terrorists, and we call on countries and companies around the world to follow
our lead to stamp this out."
One reason for this policy is that ISIS and groups like it can use
ransoms to fund their bloody campaigns. Paying ransoms also may give them
incentive to take more hostages, thus putting more people at risk. And ransoms
might not always work, since ISIS and other hostage takers aren't usually seen
as trustworthy.
Still, ruling out ransoms also rules out one peaceful way to free Goto
and Yukawa. It's possible someone else may intervene to negotiate their
release, whether out of goodwill or in exchange for something else. Or troops
from a Japanese ally could launch a raid to get to them, like the unsuccessful
one this summer to free Foley.
Either way, others could play a role in this story before it's done --
hence Abe's comment Tuesday that the international community "needs to
deal with terrorists without giving in to them."
Two Japanese hostages, one demand from ISIS: Hand over $200 million, or
else.
The else being that the pair will meet the same gruesome fate as other
captives held by the terrorist group, others who were shown in ISIS videos
kneeling in orange jumpsuits in front of masked, black-clad men -- just like
the Japanese hostages identified as Kenji Goto Jogo and Haruna Yukawa --
shortly before being beheaded.
In the latest video, a masked man gives the Japanese government a choice
to pay $200 million -- the same amount of money Prime Minister Shinzo Abe recently pledged for those
"contending" with ISIS -- to free the Japanese men. That deal holds
for 72 hours, which would seem to mean sometime Friday, since the video
appeared on social media Tuesday.
Another move that theoretically could change things would be if Japan's
government halts its alliance with those fighting ISIS, which calls itself the Islamic State. Tokyo hasn't
participated in airstrikes aimed at the Islamist extremist group, though its
leaders have supported those who have, as well as the Iraqi government.
"Although you are more than 8,500 kilometers away from the Islamic
State, you willingly volunteered to take part in this crusade," the masked
man on the video posted Tuesday says, addressing his comments to Abe.
But Abe, who is currently visiting the Middle East, didn't seem about to
bargain Tuesday.
He stood by a pledge, made in a speech Sunday in Cairo, for funding to help build
"human capacities, infrastructure and so on" for those affected by
ISIS' armed campaign.
"The pledge aid is very important to the refugees in need and has
nothing to do with the Islamic communities or the radical militants," the
Prime Minister said. "... We will contribute to the (region's) peace and
stability, in cooperation with the global community."
As to the ISIS threat against two of his nation's citizens, Abe called
it "unacceptable."
"I feel angry about it," he said. "I strongly urge them
to immediately release the hostages without harming them."
Abe: 'Terrorists should not be forgiven'
ISIS has asked for ransoms before, and apparently has been paid them.
But rarely are such demands made publicly. Even rarer -- unprecedented, in fact
-- is when the militant group puts its captives on video and threatens them,
then lets them go.
Instead, ISIS has made a public show out of its threatening and killings
of Western hostages, starting with August's beheading of U.S. journalist James
Foley.
Others' killings were similarly recorded and posted online, including
American journalist Steven Sotloff, British aid worker David Haines, British
taxi driver Alan Henning and U.S. aid worker Peter Kassig.
While not participating in ground combat, both the United States and
Great Britain have taken an active role in the anti-ISIS fight with airstrikes
and training, arming and otherwise supporting groups -- like Iraq's military,
Kurdish fighters and moderate Syrian opposition -- taking on the militants
face-to-face.
That's not the case for Japan, whose post-World War II constitution allows it to use
its military only for self-defense. But Tokyo is a strong ally with Western
powers, like the United States, that have been singled out by ISIS.
In his remarks Tuesday in Jerusalem, Abe -- who dealt with another
hostage crisis involving Islamic militants in January 2013, when 10 Japanese
citizens were caught up in the terrorist seizure of a natural gas facility in Algeria --
said he had ordered Japanese officials to do the utmost to try to save the two
men.
At the same time, the Prime Minister added, "Terrorists should not
be forgiven, for any reason. I criticize (the taking of hostages)
emphatically."
A lost soul and a journalist
The aim is to safely bring home two men who were in the same war-torn
region for very different reasons.
Like Foley and Sotloff, Goto went there to help tell the story of what
was happening in Iraq and Syria. In recent months, ISIS militants have managed
to take over vast swaths of both countries, ruthlessly going after many in
their way who don't share their extremist interpretation of Islam.
The freelance journalist reported for various Japanese news
organizations about the situation in the northern Syrian battleground city of Kobani, which for
weeks has been under siege by ISIS, and other areas.
While it's not known when he was taken captive, Goto's last Twitter post was
on October 23.
The man purportedly shown along with him, Yukawa, is believed to have
been captured in Syria in August while traveling with rebel fighters, according
to the Japanese news agency Kyodo.
The 42-year-old claimed to have set up a company in Tokyo providing
armed security services and posted videos online of his activities in Iraq and
Syria.
But a report by the news agency Reuters in
August portrayed him as a lost soul, who went to the Middle East searching for
a purpose after losing his wife, his business and his home over the previous
decade.
Kyodo reported previously that Japanese officials in Jordan had being
trying to secure his release, including talking to various groups with possible
connections to his captors.
So what happens next?
Abe spoke firmly Tuesday against the terrorists and their $200 million
ransom demand.
What he did not do, however, is rule out the Japanese government paying
ransom or negotiating with its two citizens' captors.
Like most countries, Japan has never advertised that it or Japanese
companies have paid ransom for hostages. In fact, Japanese government officials
have at times denied such a practice, and Japan is a signatory to a 2013 G8
communique that stated, "We unequivocally reject the payment of ransoms to
terrorists, and we call on countries and companies around the world to follow
our lead to stamp this out."
One reason for this policy is that ISIS and groups like it can use
ransoms to fund their bloody campaigns. Paying ransoms also may give them
incentive to take more hostages, thus putting more people at risk. And ransoms
might not always work, since ISIS and other hostage takers aren't usually seen
as trustworthy.
Still, ruling out ransoms also rules out one peaceful way to free Goto
and Yukawa. It's possible someone else may intervene to negotiate their
release, whether out of goodwill or in exchange for something else. Or troops
from a Japanese ally could launch a raid to get to them, like the unsuccessful
one this summer to free Foley.
Either way, others could play a role in this story before it's done --
hence Abe's comment Tuesday that the international community "needs to
deal with terrorists without giving in to them."
Culled from CNN
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