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U.S. airstrike targets ‘Jihadi John,’ British militant in Islamic State beheading videos

A frame from a video released by Islamic State shows the masked militant "Jihadi John" before beheading U.S. hostage Steven Sotloff.

A frame from a video released by Islamic State shows the masked militant “Jihadi John” before beheading U.S. hostage Steven Sotloff.

(AFP/Getty Images)
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Associated Press

A U.S. drone strike targeted a vehicle in Syria believed to be transporting the masked Islamic State militant known as “Jihadi John” on Thursday, American officials said.

Whether the strike killed the British man, whose real name is Mohammed Emwazi, was not known, the officials said. Emwazi appears in several videos depicting the beheadings of Western hostages.

The U.S. official who described the drone strike was not authorized to speak publicly and requested anonymity. Pentagon press secretary Peter Cook released a statement that said Emwazi was the target of an airstrike in Raqqa.

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Emwazi has been described by a former hostage as a bloodthirsty psychopath who enjoyed threatening Western hostages. Spanish journalist Javier Espinosa, who had been held in Syria for more than six months after his abduction in September 2013, said Emwazi would explain precisely how the militants would carry out a beheading.

Among those beheaded by Islamic State militants in videos posted online since August 2014 were U.S. journalists Steven Sotloff and James Foley, U.S. aid worker Abdul Rahman Kassig, British aid workers David Haines and Alan Henning, and Japanese journalist Kenji Goto.

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