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Abe vows Japan won't bow to terrorism

Aepsilons

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Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has vowed to stand firm after the Islamic State group threatened to kill two Japanese nationals, saying he would not freeze a multi-million dollar aid package.

His remarks on Tuesday were made several hours after the jihadist group released a video threatening to kill the hostages if Tokyo did not pay a $US200 million ($A216 million) ransom within 72 hours.

An IS militant said in the video that the ransom demand was to compensate for non-military aid that Abe pledged on Saturday to countries affected by the militant group's bloody expansion in Iraq and Syria.

'Making threats by taking people hostage is an unforgivable terrorist act about which I feel strong anger,' Abe told reporters at a news conference in Jerusalem, his words relayed through a translator.

'I strongly demand that they not be harmed and that they be immediately released,' he said.

'The international community will not give in to any form of terrorism and we have to make sure that we work together.'

He said Japan's pledge of aid would not be affected.

'This $US200 million package for refugees and displaced persons is absolutely necessary (for them)... in order to survive,' he said.

'This position is unshakable, it is not to be changed,' he said, stressing that the money was to help those made homeless by the conflict in Iraq and Syria.

The Japanese leader said two teams had been set up to handle the hostage crisis - one within the cabinet and one within the foreign ministry.

He said he was sending State Minister for Foreign Affairs Yasuhide Nakayama, Japan's deputy foreign minister, to Jordan to speak with the government there and to gather more information.

'I will take the leadership to solve this problem,' Abe said.

Abe was to fly back to Japan later in the day, several hours earlier than scheduled.

Abe vows Japan won't bow to terrorism
 
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Somebody has to take the lead. Japan's as good a choice as any. They can probably drum up a lot of support because of their standing in the international community. I've always believed this is a war of necessity rather than choice. Who better to lead than a nation that shied away from conflict for 70 years?
I don't know if Japan will chose to intervene militarily. But if they do, good luck and Godspeed to them.
 
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Somebody has to take the lead. Japan's as good a choice as any. They can probably drum up a lot of support because of their standing in the international community. I've always believed this is a war of necessity rather than choice. Who better to lead than a nation that shied away from conflict for 70 years?
I don't know if Japan will chose to intervene militarily. But if they do, good luck and Godspeed to them.

As someone pointed out in another thread, if Japan didn't militarily respond to North Korea kidnapping scores of their citizens, it's doubtful that there will be a Japanese military response to a wannabe jihadi and a journalist caught up in a war zone. Sad fact of life is that no one nation wants to take the lead on ISIS because after all that has happened, ISIS isn't an existential threat to any non-middle eastern country and ultimately, every nation only really looks out for themself.
 
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This is why we need "Willie-Pete" and defoliant weapons if we were to deal with out local insurgencies and terrorists here in the Philippines.

Maybe Japan should test-run their special forces in this situation to see if they are ready to deal with terrorists.
 
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This is why we need "Willie-Pete" and defoliant weapons if we were to deal with out local insurgencies and terrorists here in the Philippines.

Maybe Japan should test-run their special forces in this situation to see if they are ready to deal with terrorists.

I hope that Japan should now send their ground troops to Iraq and Syria to fight against ISIS.
 
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