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  • les americains activent le plan de sauvetage des pilotes dans le nord Irak

    U.S. moves pilot rescue aircraft to northern Iraq


    U.S. moves pilot rescue aircraft to northern Iraq

    By Staff writer | Al Arabiya News
    Thursday, 5 February 2015


    The U.S. military has deployed aircraft and troops to northern Iraq to boost its ability to rescue downed coalition pilots, after a Jordanian airman was captured and killed by militants in Syria, a defense official said Thursday.
    “We are repositioning some assets into northern Iraq,” a U.S. defense official told Agence France-Presse.
    The move is designed to shorten the response time needed to reach pilots who end up in territory held by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group, officials said.
    Search-and-rescue crews had been based in Kuwait, but officials said on Wednesday the military was reviewing where its hardware and specialists were located following the loss of the Jordanian pilot.
    Officials said the move of some search-and-rescue teams and aircraft to northern Iraq did not necessarily include a redeployment of the Ospreys, an aircraft that takes off like a helicopter but flies like a plane.
    ISIS militants posted a grisly video Tuesday showing the Jordanian airman, Moaz al-Kassasbeh, being burned alive.
    Al-Kassasbeh was captured in Syria after his plane went down while flying as part of the U.S..-led coalition against ISIS.
    In remarks after the video’s release, U.S. President Barack Obama said the killing of al-Kassasbeh has made the coalition more determined to degrade and defeat ISIS.
    Aides to the U.S. president said that Obama will ask Congress for new authority to use force against ISIS next week.
    A House Democratic aide quoted by Reuters on Thursday said lawmakers had been told they would receive the White House request next week.
    And an aide to Senator Bob Corker told Reuters the Republican chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee expected Obama to send text of an authorization as soon as next week.
    Earlier on Thursday, U.S. House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner said he expected Obama to seek congressional authorization for using military force against ISIS soon and also called for speeding up assistance to Jordan.
    The United States plays a dominant role in the air war against ISIS, carrying out at least 80 percent of the raids, according to officials.

  • #2
    CBS NewsFebruary 4, 2015, 8:31 PM
    U.S. deploys search and rescue helicopters to Iraq in ISIS fight


    The Pentagon is placing search and rescue helicopters in northern Iraq in an effort to reduce the time and distance needed to reached downed pilots, CBS News national security correspondent David Martin has learned.
    The move comes after the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) released a video Tuesday purporting to show a Jordanian fighter pilot being burned alive.

    CBS Evening News ISIS video shows Jordanian pilot being burned to death

    A 22-minute ISIS video purports to show the burning of a Jordanian pilot locked in a cage. Holly Williams reports on the how the terror group jus...

    Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh was captured by ISIS in December after his F-16 crashed in Syria. The video also threatened other purported Jordanian pilots by name.
    Two U.S. officials said Wednesday that the United Arab Emirates, an important part of the U.S.-led coalition fighting ISIS, stopped flying combat missions over Syria late last year after al-Kaseasbeh was captured.


    CBS News Homeland Security Correspondent Bob Orr and CBS News Senior National Security Analyst Juan Zarate weigh Jordan's options after the Islam...

    According to the New York Times, which first reported the decision, the UAE chose to suspend its participation in the airstrikes out of concern for its pilots' safety.
    U.S. officials have said that every effort was made to recover the Jordanian pilot, in coordination with the Jordanian military. They have said that as soon as al-Kaseasbeh's plane went down, an intensive airborne search was initiated, but it was not possible to locate the pilot before he was picked up by ISIS fighters.
    On Wednesday morning, Jordan's air force carried out more bombing raids against ISIS, CBS News correspondent CharlieD'Agata reported. Jordanian officials will also decide whether Jordan may send in ground troops in the fight against the terror group.

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