The mother of James Foley, an American journalist who was abducted in 2012 by the Islamic State terrorist group and later brutally murdered, said Monday that she hopes the death of the terror group's leader this weekend will lead to its demise but warned the U.S. to remain vigilant in its fight against terrorism.
"I'm hopeful that his demise will be a huge blow to the regrouping of [IS]. However, we need to continue to be very vigilant because they certainly want to regroup and bring back their reign of terror, but I'm very, very grateful," Diane Foley told CNN's Alisyn Camerota on "New Day."
On Sunday, President Donald Trump announced that IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was dead after a U.S. military raid in northern Syria. Al-Baghdadi had been at the helm of the organization that would later become IS since 2010, two years before James Foley was abducted by the group. For nearly two years after 2012, Foley's captors demanded millions in ransom payments and moved the freelance journalist between prisons before he was beheaded in a video that was widely publicized online.
Diane Foley, who serves as the president and founder of the James W. Foley Legacy Foundation, said on Monday that news of al-Baghdadi's death "came as such a welcome surprise" and that she was grateful to U.S. troops involved in in the raid.
Foley also said she hopes the U.S. military can locate American hostages held abroad and bring them back home.
"Many of these nations and terrorist groups want to use our citizens as political pawns and leverage ... but I'm so hopeful that we can now find them and bring them home," Foley said.
First Published: October 29, 2019, 2:12 a.m.