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Islamic State conflict: Two Britons killed in RAF Syria strike | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Two British Islamic State fighters who died in Syria were killed by an RAF drone strike, David Cameron has said. | |
Cardiff-born Reyaad Khan and Ruhul Amin, from Aberdeen, died last month in Raqqa, alongside another fighter, the PM said - in the first targeted UK drone attack on British citizens. | Cardiff-born Reyaad Khan and Ruhul Amin, from Aberdeen, died last month in Raqqa, alongside another fighter, the PM said - in the first targeted UK drone attack on British citizens. |
Khan, 21, had been plotting "barbaric" attacks on British soil, he said. | Khan, 21, had been plotting "barbaric" attacks on British soil, he said. |
The "act of self defence" was lawful, Mr Cameron said, despite MPs previously ruling out UK military action in Syria. | The "act of self defence" was lawful, Mr Cameron said, despite MPs previously ruling out UK military action in Syria. |
Khan - the target of the attack - was killed in a precision strike by a remotely piloted aircraft, "after meticulous planning", while he was travelling in a vehicle, the prime minister said. | |
Another British national, Junaid Hussain, from Birmingham, was killed in a separate air strike by US forces in Raqqa on 24 August, Mr Cameron confirmed. | |
Both Khan and Hussain had been planning to attack "high-profile public commemorations" taking place in the UK this summer, he said. | |
The attorney general had been consulted and agreed there was a "clear legal basis" for the strike on Khan, Mr Cameron added. | |
Acting Labour leader Harriet Harman urged the government to publish the legal advice. | Acting Labour leader Harriet Harman urged the government to publish the legal advice. |
'Directing murder' | |
Two years ago MPs rejected possible UK military action in Syria, but last September approved British participation in air strikes against IS targets in Iraq only. | Two years ago MPs rejected possible UK military action in Syria, but last September approved British participation in air strikes against IS targets in Iraq only. |
However, officials said the UK would "act immediately [in Syria] and explain to Parliament afterwards" if there was "a critical British national interest at stake". | However, officials said the UK would "act immediately [in Syria] and explain to Parliament afterwards" if there was "a critical British national interest at stake". |
In his statement to the Commons, Mr Cameron said: "My first duty as prime minister is to keep the British people safe." | |
In reference to Khan, he added: "There was a terrorist directing murder on our streets and no other means to stop him. | |
"This government does not for one moment take these decisions lightly. | "This government does not for one moment take these decisions lightly. |
"But I am not prepared to stand here in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on our streets and have to explain to the House why I did not take the chance to prevent it when I could have done." | "But I am not prepared to stand here in the aftermath of a terrorist attack on our streets and have to explain to the House why I did not take the chance to prevent it when I could have done." |
Analysis | Analysis |
By BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Beale | By BBC defence correspondent Jonathan Beale |
Unmanned Reaper drones joined RAF Tornado jets in conducting surveillance and air strikes soon after Parliament authorised military action against the group calling itself Islamic State last September. | Unmanned Reaper drones joined RAF Tornado jets in conducting surveillance and air strikes soon after Parliament authorised military action against the group calling itself Islamic State last September. |
The vote confined that military action to Iraq, but at the time the prime minister told MPs he "reserved the right" to act elsewhere "if there were a critical British national interest at stake". | The vote confined that military action to Iraq, but at the time the prime minister told MPs he "reserved the right" to act elsewhere "if there were a critical British national interest at stake". |
The government will argue the air strike on Reyaad Khan was such a case. But carrying out an RAF air strike in Syria will still be controversial; even more so because a British citizen was targeted. | The government will argue the air strike on Reyaad Khan was such a case. But carrying out an RAF air strike in Syria will still be controversial; even more so because a British citizen was targeted. |
Though government officials insist that he posed a direct threat to the UK and was on a legitimate "target list", there'll be plenty of questions. What was the intelligence on which the decision was based? Whose target list was he on? | Though government officials insist that he posed a direct threat to the UK and was on a legitimate "target list", there'll be plenty of questions. What was the intelligence on which the decision was based? Whose target list was he on? |
There are reports the CIA has compiled a list of high-value targets. There will inevitably be some suspicion around the secrecy - the MoD has never publicly stated how many Reapers the RAF is operating or where they're based. | There are reports the CIA has compiled a list of high-value targets. There will inevitably be some suspicion around the secrecy - the MoD has never publicly stated how many Reapers the RAF is operating or where they're based. |
The fact that RAF Reapers have been flying over Syria is not in itself a surprise. Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told MPs last October they would be conducting surveillance missions. | The fact that RAF Reapers have been flying over Syria is not in itself a surprise. Defence Secretary Michael Fallon told MPs last October they would be conducting surveillance missions. |
But in a written statement he also stated: "Reapers are not authorised to use weapons in Syria; that would require further permission." | But in a written statement he also stated: "Reapers are not authorised to use weapons in Syria; that would require further permission." |
In his address to the Commons, the prime minister also said: | |
Following the statement, former attorney general Dominic Grieve said it was possible the decision taken by the government could be "legally reviewed or challenged". | |
Labour's Ms Harman called for "independent scrutiny" of the attack, asking: "Why didn't the Attorney General authorise this specific action rather than merely 'confirming there was a legal basis for it'?" | Labour's Ms Harman called for "independent scrutiny" of the attack, asking: "Why didn't the Attorney General authorise this specific action rather than merely 'confirming there was a legal basis for it'?" |
'Secret strikes' | |
A family friend of Khan's from Cardiff, Mohamed Islam, called for an investigation "to see the truth of this incident". | |
He said it was "very complicated, very sad and very hard" for Khan's family. | He said it was "very complicated, very sad and very hard" for Khan's family. |
Meanwhile, Kat Craig, from human rights group Reprieve, called the air strike "deeply worrying", and called for the legal advice to be published. | |
"Make no mistake - what we are seeing is the failed US model of secret strikes being copied wholesale by the British government," she said. | |
Downing Street said it was a "long-standing convention that we do not publish advice of the law officers". | |
The prime minister's official spokesman said any future decisions on whether to target IS militants believed to pose a threat to the UK would be taken on a case-by-case basis, and declined to say whether any other such strikes have been authorised. |