- News of British hostage emerged during brutal execution of Steven Sotloff
- Foreign Secretary said UK will explore 'every possible option' to rescue him
- Home Secretary added we must protect against 'murderous psychopaths'
- In a video titled 'Second Message to America', Sotloff describes himself as 'paying the price' for Obama's decision to attack ISIS with airstrikes
- Jihadist then says 'I'm back, Obama', before using a knife to cut off his head
- Executioner believed to be same man who killed James Foley two weeks ago
- Barack Obama today called Foley and Sotloff''s executions 'terrible crimes'
The government could make a fresh attempt to rescue a British hostage threatened with execution by ISIS militants who have already filmed themselves brutally beheading two American journalists.
Foreign secretary Phillip Hammond said the UK is looking 'at every possible option to protect' the 44-year-old British citizen after a previous U.S-led rescue attempt failed to secure his release.
Details of his capture emerged in a chilling propaganda video titled 'A Second Message to America', in which U.S. journalist Steven Sotloff is savagely murdered by an ISIS executioner who speaks with a British accent - believed to be the same man who beheaded James Foley two weeks ago.
Barack Obama today described the video as 'barbaric' adding that the U.S. will not be intimidated by the radical Islamists and vowing to build a coalition to 'degrade and destroy' the group.
Today Lord West, the former head of the British navy, described the executioner as a 'dead man walking' and said U.S. special forces will hunt him down in the same way they tracked and killed Osama Bin Laden.
The British hostage shown in the video is a 44-year-old man from central Scotland who was captured by Islamists close to the Syrian border with Turkey last year while working for an aid company.
Although his name is known, the man's family have requested that it not be made public.
Threat: David Cameron chaired a meeting of the government's Cobra emergency response committee today where is understood fresh attempts to rescue the British hostage were discussed
Barack Obama today described the video of Steven Sotloff's execution as 'barbaric', adding that the U.S. will not be intimidated by radical Islamists and vowing to build a coalition to 'degrade and destroy' ISIS
Tough talk: Home Secretary Theresa May (right) branded ISIS 'murderous psychopaths'. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond (left) suggested the government could make a fresh attempt to rescue the threatened hostage
Threat: David Cameron is chairing a meeting of the government's Cobra emergency response committee today, where he will rule-out any 'knee-jerk reaction' after ISIS threatened to murder a British hostage (pictured)
The Foreign Secretary Phillip Hammond this afternoon said that a preliminary analysis of the video of Sotloff's beheading suggested it was genuine.
The brutal killing is thought to have been carried out by the same masked, British-accented killer who beheaded US reporter James Foley a fortnight ago.
This afternoon former security minister Lord West said: 'We probably know already who he is, we certainly will know soon.
'I would like to see him arraigned in the Hague for war crimes,' he said, but said it was more likely that the United States would deal with him in the same way as Osama Bin Laden.
'He is a dead man walking, and he wants to think about that,' he added.
Lord West also called for military action against ISIS, saying: 'A year and a week ago I was very, very firmly against an attack on Syria.
'And Assad had never started killing British citizens and had never said he wanted to destroy the British state...That is rather different from Isis and Isil. I refuse to call them the Islamic State because that gives them credibility.'
Murder: American journalist Steven Sotloff pictured in an ISIS video before he was executed. He was killed two weeks after James Foley died in the same way
Response: Speaking in Estonia today, Barack Obama said the U.S. will not be intimidated by ISIS after the beheading of Steven Sotloff and will build a coalition to 'degrade and destroy' the group
'They clearly are happy to kill British citizens and we know they have said they want to destroy the British state... That is a different thing - that is why we have military forces,' Lord West added.
'I'm not saying we should just go immediately and invade them, that would be stupid', he said, but added that military options should be part of the ' overall planning', along with diplomatic methods, interrupting money flows, and working with allies.
Lord West said he was 'sure' that the Government would be looking closely at possible military options to help 'destroy this abhorrent group of people'.
The disturbing threat leaves the Prime Minister with the chilling prospect of one British national murdering another in the name of ISIS' brutal interpretation of Islam.
At Prime Minister's questions this afternoon, David Cameron told MPs: 'This country will never give into terrorism. Our opposition to ISIS will continue at home and abroad.
'A country like ours will not be cowed by these barbaric killers. If they think we will weaken in the face of their threats they could not be more wrong.'
Labour leader Ed Miliband backed the stance, adding: 'Events like this must strengthen not weaken our resolve to defeat them.'
'Barbaric killers': At Prime Minister's questions this afternoon, David Cameron (pictured leaving Cobra meeting) told MPs: 'This country will never give into terrorism. Our opposition to ISIS will continue at home and abroad'
Speaking after this morning's meeting of the Government's emergency Cobra committee, Mr Hammond said: 'You're aware, of course, of the rescue attempt that took place some time ago – unfortunately unsuccessfully.'
'You wouldn't expect me to discuss the various options that we will be considering, but I can assure that we will look at every possible option to protect this person.'
The Foreign Secretary said the hostage situation would not alter the Government's overall strategy on dealing with Islamic State militants.
'It can't allow us to change our overall strategy. We've been aware of this hostage, of course, for some time, but we have to deal with IS on the basis of the wider threat that they pose to the British public, as well as to this individual.'
Mr Hammond He said the situation would not affect the likelihood of British airstrikes against the militants.
'It doesn't make any difference at all to our strategic planning. As the Prime Minister said, we will look very carefully at the options available to us to support the legitimate government of Iraq and Kurdistan in defending themselves from the threat of Isil.'
'And if we judge that airstrikes could be beneficial, could be the best way to do that then we will certainly consider them, but we've made no decision to do so at the moment.'
Last week: Sotloff's mother Shirley (right) appealed directly for the return of her son last week. Last night, ISIS released a video that purported to show the beheading of her son online
At Prime Minister's Questions this afternoon, Mr Cameron strongly condemned the 'sickening and brutal' killing of Sotloff and said he felt 'shock and anger that it again appears to have been carried out by a British citizen.'
'All our thoughts are with the British hostage and his family. Their ordeal is unimaginable,' he said.
'It is important that we are clear about the nature of the threat we are facing. It makes no distinction between cultures, countries and religions. There is no way to appease it.
'The only way to defeat it is to stand firm and to send a very straightforward message - a country like ours will not be cowed by these barbaric killers.
'If they think that we will weaken in the face of their threats, they are wrong. It will have the opposite effect.'
We will be more forthright in the defence of the values - liberty under the rule of law, freedom, democracy - that we hold dear, and I'm sure a united message to that effect will go forward from this House today.'
Barack Obama landed in Estonia this morning, ahead of talks with leaders of the Baltic states over the ongoing crisis in Ukraine and concerns over the threat posed by Russia for other former Soviet states
Under pressure: U.S. President Barack Obama (left) and Estonia's President Toomas Hendrik (right) listen to U.S. national anthem in Tallinn this morning
Challenge to Obama: The ISIS executioner taunts the President before he kills US journalist Steven Sotloff. He is thought to be the same militant who killed James Foley and tells the President 'I'm back'
The threatened British hostage, who UK media are not naming at the request of the family but who has been named and pictured around the world, is believed to be an aid worker that was based on the Turkish border of Syria working with victims of war.
Members of the hostage's family, including his brother, were on their way to his parents home last night to comfort them it is understood, according to the Telegraph. The newspaper quoted an unidentified relation as saying: 'We not allowed to say anything.'
The 44-year-old aid worker from central Scotland is believed to have been taken hostage in a refugee camp near the north Syrian village of Atmeh in March last year, shortly after arriving in the country on a short-term contract.
He is understood to have previously worked in South Sudan in 2012, where a former colleague found him to be 'a very solid, stand-up guy. The sort of person you can rely on,' according to The Times.
During his year in captivity, the man has seen at least six of his fellow hostages freed - one Italian, one Dane and four French - after their governments paid an estimated £5 million ransom per person.
It remains unclear whether the British man's captors have tired to negotiate a ransom for his release.
Following the release of Sotloff's execution footage, another video emerged showing ISIS militants personally threatening to kill Russian president Vladimir Putin if he doesn't declare Chechnya an independent state
The ISIS militants sit in the cockpit of a captured Russian-made fighter aircraft to make threats against Putin
After this morning's Cobra meeting Home Secretary Theresa May said: 'We are looking at the video that was produced yesterday.
'Yet again we see a barbaric act being undertaken by Isil, who are group of murderous psychopaths. Their brutality is clear.
'Our thoughts today must, of course, be with Steven Sotloff's family and friends at this very difficult time.
'As far as the Government is concerned, we recognise the threat that is posed by Isil and we are taking steps, and will continue to take steps, to make sure we have the powers that are right to protect our national security.
'Our determination to deal with this remains and, as the Prime Minister made clear in the House of Commons on Monday, we are looking at a number of areas of potential legislation where increased powers could help to fill some gaps that there might be in our current ability to deal with these issues.'
This morning Barack Obama said that the U.S. will not be intimidated by ISIS and will build a coalition to 'degrade and destroy' the group.
Obama still did not give a timeline for deciding on a strategy to go after the extremist group's operations in Syria, saying: 'It'll take time to roll them back.'
He vowed the U.S. would not forget the 'terrible crime against these two fine young men,' meaning Sotloff and Foley.
'Our reach is long and justice will be served,' Obama said adding that he will continue to fight the militant threat and the 'barbaric and ultimately empty vision' it represents.
'Our objective is to make sure that ISIL is not an ongoing threat to the region,' he said, using an alternative acronym for the militant group.
'And we can accomplish that. It's going to take some time and it's going to take some effort.'
Former Labour Foreign Secretary Jack Straw backed the government's stance. 'This idea of a knee-jerk reaction should be pushed aside,' he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
'We need people to look seriously and soberly at the situation.'
He warned against being 'paralysed by the past' in the wake of the 2003 Iraq invasion.
In the video, Mr Sotloff - a freelancer for Time magazine among other publications - is pictured in a Guantanamo Bay-style orange jump suit against a desert backdrop.
He addresses U.S. President Barack Obama directly, saying: 'You've spent billions of pounds US taxpayers' dollars and we have lost thousands of our troops in our previous fighting against the Islamic State, so where is the people's interest in reigniting this war?'
The jihadist, believed to be a Briton nicknamed 'John' by captives,says: 'I am back, Obama, and I am back because of your arrogant foreign policy towards the Islamic State, because of your insistence on continuing your bombings and ... on Mosul Dam, despite our serious warnings.
'Just as your missiles continue to strike our people, our knife will continue to strike the necks of your people.'
Dressed in black and wielding a short knife, the extremist also warns other governments against entering 'this evil alliance of America against the Islamic State'.
The video, which ends with a threat to the British hostage, has surfaced in the week that world leaders are due to gather in Wales for a NATO summit.
Mr Obama boarded Air Force One last night without giving a response to the video, and landed in Estonia a short time ago, ahead of talks with leaders of the Baltic states over the ongoing crisis in Ukraine and concerns over the threat posed by Russia for other former Soviet states.
In a statement last night, Mr Cameron said: 'If verified, this is a despicable and barbaric murder. My thoughts and prayers are with Mr Sotloff's family and friends as they deal with this appalling and tragic situation.'
'As I have said consistently over the last few weeks, [ISIS] terrorists speak for no religion...They threaten Syrians, Iraqis, Americans and British people alike and make no distinction between Muslims, Christians or any other faith.
'We have already been working hard to keep British people safe and we will continue to do all we can to protect our country and our people from these barbaric terrorists.
In a brief statement, a spokesman for Mr Sotloff's family said they 'know of this horrific tragedy and are grieving privately'.
The journalist was seized in Syria in August 2013 and had not been seen until he appeared in the video of Mr Foley's killing released by IS on August 20.
Last week Mr Sotloff's mother Shirley made an emotional video plea for the extremists to be 'merciful' and spare her son.
'Absolutely disgusting': David Cameron has hit out at the killers that have beheaded a second US journalist and threatened to kill a British hostage. He chaired a Cobra meeting to establish Britain's response this morning
In the video released last night, Sotloff, 31, appears in a orange jumpsuit before he is beheaded by an Islamic State fighter.
The executioner tells the camera: 'I'm back, Obama, and I'm back because of your arrogant foreign policy towards the Islamic State.'
Sotloff, 31, from Miami, who freelanced for Time and Foreign Policy magazines, vanished in Syria in August 2013 and was not seen again until he appeared in a video released online last month that showed Foley's beheading.
In the new video that shows the killing of Sotloff, the executioner points his knife menacingly at the camera as he speaks.
Clad in the same black garb he wore during Foley's execution, the killer has a pistol strapped under his arm in a shoulder holster.
The black flag of the Islamic State can be seen waving in the background.
Sotloff calmly read a statement moments before his murder. 'I'm sure you know exactly who I am by now and why I am appearing,' he says.
He adds to the camera: 'Obama, your foreign policy of intervention in Iraq was supposed to be for preservation of American lives and interests, so why is it that I am paying the price of your interference with my life?'
While he speaks, a militant calmly holds a knife at his side and stands next to Sotloff.
The man then taunts Obama on camera.
Sotloff's mother had pleaded for his release last week in a video directed at the Islamic State group
Sotloff's death was extensively covered by Israeli media, which identified the 31-year-old reporter as Jewish
Sotloff's mother had pleaded for his release last week in a video directed at the Islamic State group.
Addressing the leader of the Islamic State group by name, Shirley Sotloff said in a video her son was 'an innocent journalist' who shouldn't pay for U.S. government actions in the Middle East over which he has no control.
White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest offered his sympathies to the Sotloff family. He said of the video: 'This is something that the administration has obviously been watching carefully since this threat against Mr. Sotloff's life was originally made a few weeks ago,' he added.
'I'm not in a position to confirm the authenticity of that video, or reports, obviously,' he cautioned, 'since I just walked out here.'
'But if there is a video that has been released, it is something that will be analyzed very carefully by the U.S. government and our intelligence officials to determine its authenticity.'
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