(Reuters) -
Britain resisted pressure on Sunday to join the United States in
announcing air strikes against Islamic State after the militant group
beheaded David Haines, a British hostage, and threatened to kill another
Briton. Speaking after
chairing a meeting of the government's COBR emergency-response committee
in London, Prime Minister David Cameron said his government was
battling IS on numerous fronts but made clear it was not, for now,
launching air strikes. "As
this strategy intensifies, we are ready to take whatever steps are
necessary to deal with this threat and keep our country safe," he said,
describing an approach that blended diplomatic pressure, supporting U.S.
action and helping Iraqi and local Kurdish authorities. "Step
by step, we must drive back, dismantle, and ultimately destroy ISIL
(IS) and what it stands for. We will do so in a calm, deliberate way,
but with an iron determination," he said in a TV statement from his
offices. Britain was quick to join U.S. military action in Afghanistan and Iraq. But a war-weary public and parliament's rejection last year of air strikes on Syria
have made Cameron cautious. Complicating his decision are the
sensitivities surrounding Scotland's independence referendum on
Thursday. U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry is expected to discuss the aid worker's
beheading with British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond at a meeting in
Paris on Monday, one senior U.S. State Department official said in Paris
on condition of anonymity. Foreign leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama,
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Italian President Giorgio Napolitano,
and the office of French President Francois Hollande condemned the
killing of Haines and expressed their condolences. "The
United States stands shoulder to shoulder tonight with our close friend
and ally in grief and resolve," Obama said in a statement. During
his own statement, Cameron outlined no plans to recall parliament,
which is in recess, to seek its authorization for air strikes against
IS. People familiar with his thinking say he has no immediate plans to
do so. His last attempt to get the British parliament to back such air strikes, against Syria last year, failed to win the support of lawmakers, an embarrassing setback. Video footage of the murder of Haines by IS militants fighting in Iraq
and Syria means Cameron is under pressure to get tougher with IS. At
the same time, he trying to persuade Scotland to reject independence in
Thursday's referendum. He
has said he is not ruling out any options to degrade IS, except
deploying troops on the ground, and he is facing increasingly loud calls
from some of his own Conservative lawmakers and from former military
chiefs to join the United States in launching air strikes. But
Scotland is his domestic priority, and he is aware that Scots have
often been more skeptical of British military action overseas. Proposing
air strikes now could risk alienating them before the independence
vote. Cameron called the murder of Haines, a 44-year-old Scottish aid worker, callous and brutal, hailing him as a "British hero". "We
will hunt down those responsible and bring them to justice no matter
how long it takes," he said, calling IS "the embodiment of evil". "They
are not Muslims, they are monsters." Britain's
Foreign Office said the Haines video showed "all signs" of being
genuine. Reuters could not immediately verify the footage, but the
images were consistent with those of the filmed executions of two
American journalists, James Foley and Steven Sotloff, in the past month. Haines's
murderer appears to be the same man who featured in videos with Foley
and Sotloff. The man, nicknamed "Jihadi John" by Western media, seems to
have a British accent. At
the end of the video, another hostage, identified as Alan Henning, was
shown. The masked man said he too would be killed if Cameron continued
to support the fight against IS. A
British security source speaking on condition of anonymity said an
investigation was underway into the killings and that senior
intelligence officials had attended the meeting of the emergency
committee that Cameron chaired. The source declined to go into detail about what, if any, progress the investigation had made. AIR STRIKES Faced
with the rise of IS, Britain has so far confined itself to delivering
humanitarian aid, carrying out surveillance, arming Kurdish forces who
are fighting IS militants, and promising training in Iraq. On military action, London supports U.S. air strikes while keeping its own options open. Sir
Richard Dannatt, the former head of the British army, said on Sunday IS
executions should not deter the government from taking military action
against the militants. "If
we don't confront and destroy these Islamic State Jihadi fighters then
their influence will grow, their confidence will grow and the problem
will get bigger," he told Sky News. Mike
Haines, brother of the slain aid worker, said on Sunday that David had
chosen humanitarian work in Syria only to be murdered in cold blood. "He
was and is loved by all his family and will be missed terribly," Mike
Haines said in a statement. His brother left behind two daughters from
two marriages, he said. ACTED,
Haines's employer, said he had been working on a humanitarian response
for civilian Syrian populations in the Atmeh camp close to the Turkish
border. His "horrible" murder would not stop it helping people in need,
the organization said. Alex Salmond, Scotland's First Minister, told BBC TV Haines's murder was an "unspeakable act of barbarism." Asked
in a BBC interview if an independent Scotland would be prepared to take
military action against IS, he said any response must be under United
Nations auspices, underlining Scottish anxiety about unilateral military
action. "There's an urgent requirement to get back to collective (action) under the United Nations," said Salmond. Salmond has called the 2003 Iraq invasion illegal because it was not launched with U.N. approval. Haines
was remembered in prayers at the morning service in Edinburgh's St.
Mary's Cathedral, where provost Graham Forbes praised him for his
dedication to humanitarian work.
UK's Cameron resists calls for air strikes despite hostage killing

Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.