UAE pulled out of ISIL fight after pilot capture: report

UAE pulled out of ISIL fight after pilot capture: report

WASHINGTON - Agence France-Presse
UAE pulled out of ISIL fight after pilot capture: report

A grab from a video shows smoke billowing behind buildings following a US-led coalition air strike against positions of ISIL. AFP Photo

The United Arab Emirates pulled out of the air campaign fighting Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) militants after the capture of a Jordanian pilot who has since been killed by the extremists, the New York Times reported Wednesday.
      
The pilot was captured in December and ISIL militants released a video Tuesday showing the man in a cage being burned alive.
      
The key US ally in the campaign suspended air strikes in December after the capture, fearing for the fate of its pilots, the Times said, quoting US officials.
      
The United Arab Emirates want the US to improve its search-and-rescue efforts, including the use of V-22 Osprey tilt-rotor aircraft, in northern Iraq, closer to the battleground.
      
As it stands, the US-led mission is based in Kuwait, administration officials said, according to the Times.
      
It said UAE pilots will not rejoin the fight until the Ospreys -- which take off and land like helicopters but fly like planes -- are deployed in northern Iraq.
      
The Jordanian pilot was captured by ISIL within minutes of his plane crashing in December near Raqqa, Syria, the Times said, quoting a senior US military official.
      
But UAE officials questioned if American military rescue teams would have been able to reach the pilot even if there had been more time for a rescue effort, administration officials said.
      
The UAE foreign minister, Sheikh Abdullah bin Zayed bin Sultan Al Nahyan, asked Barbara Leaf, the new US ambassador, why the United States had not put proper resources in northern Iraq for rescuing downed pilots, a senior administration official said, according to the Times.
      
The UAE declined comment.
      
"We cannot comment on issues discussed in private meetings," an official source said in Abu Dhabi after the publication of the Times article.