(Reuters) -
Islamic State has posted online what it says are the names, U.S.
addresses and photos of 100 American military service members, and
called upon its "brothers residing in America" to kill them. The Pentagon said
after the information was posted on the Internet that it was
investigating the matter. "I can't confirm the validity of the
information, but we are looking into it," a U.S. defense official,
speaking on condition of anonymity, said on Saturday. "We
always encourage our personnel to exercise appropriate OPSEC
(operations security) and force protection procedures," the official
added. In the posting, a
group referring to itself as the "Islamic State Hacking Division" wrote
in English that it had hacked several military servers, databases and
emails and made public the information on 100 members of the U.S.
military so that "lone wolf" attackers can kill them. The
New York Times reported that it did not look like the information had
been hacked from U.S. government servers and quoted an unnamed Defense
Department official as saying most of the information could be found in
public records, residential address search sites and social media. The
Times quoted officials as saying the list appeared to have been drawn
from personnel mentioned in news articles about air strikes on Islamic
State. The group's forces control parts of Syria and Iraq and have been targeted in U.S.-led air strikes. The
posting, addressed to disbelievers, Christians and "crusaders" in
America, included what the group said were the names, military service
branch, photos and street addresses of the individuals. The posting
includes the military rank of some but not all of those named.
Islamic State calls on backers to kill 100 U.S. military personnel
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