Now the focus in America and abroad has become what will President Barack Obama and other leaders do about it?
Here are key questions on the matter:
1) Who killed James Foley?
Britain's ambassador to
the United States, Peter Westmacott, told CNN on Sunday that British
officials were close to identifying the ISIS militant who beheaded
Foley, an American journalist captured in Syria in 2012.
He couldn't elaborate on the identity of the killer, who is seen decapitating Foley in a video posted last week on YouTube.
"We're putting a great
deal into the search," he said, referring to the use of sophisticated
technology to analyze the man's voice.
In the video, Foley, 40,
is seen kneeling next to a man dressed in black, who speaks with what
experts say is a distinctly English accent.
Linguists said that based
on his voice, the man sounds to be younger than 30. He also appears to
have been educated in England from a young age and to be from southern
England or London.
2) Will the United States expand air strikes to ISIS targets in Syria?
Pressure is increasing
on Obama to go after ISIS in both Iraq and Syria, ignoring an
essentially non-existent border between them.
Last week, Defense
Secretary Chuck Hagel and Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen. Martin Dempsey said
that taking on ISIS in Syria was the only way to defeat the Sunni
jihadists.
For Obama, the step
would reverse his refusal for three years to get involved militarily in
Syria despite pressure from his own advisers, including former Secretary
of State Hillary Clinton.
Obama "has not made any
decision to order military action in Syria," White House spokesman Josh
Earnest said Monday, but the speculation and insistence continued.
"The White House is
trying to minimize the threat we face in order to justify not changing a
failed strategy," conservative GOP Sen. Lindsey Graham of South
Carolina said Monday.
CNN National Security
Analyst Peter Bergen said it will be difficult to defeat ISIS without
ground forces, something Obama clearly opposes. Intervening in Syria
also could result in some strange geopolitical bedfellows, he noted.
"Two of the most
effective fighting forces in Syria are al Qaeda or al Qaeda splinter
groups, or groups like Hezbollah, backed by Iran," Bergen said. "So if
you intervene, you may be helping Iran and Hezbollah and (Syrian
President Bashar al-Assad's) regime."
Obama already sent
military advisers to Iraq and launched air strikes to protect them and
minority groups from ISIS fighters rampaging through the country's
north.
A White House spokesman
said last week that Obama would consult with Congress before taking such
a step in Syria. The President also would seek to forge a coalition
including regional allies as well as U.N. and European Union support,
officials have made clear.
3) Will the Syrian regime that Obama opposes help fight ISIS?
Obama wants al-Assad out
of power, but now the Syrian leader engaged in a civil war against a
U.S.-backed opposition is offering to help him take on ISIS.
Foreign Minister Walid
Moallem said Monday his government would accept support from the United
States and others working under the U.N. umbrella to fight "terrorists"
-- a code word for the group that calls itself the Islamic State and
seeks to establish a caliphate across a Sunni-dominated swath of the the
Middle East.
Moallem, however, warned
against any unilateral action or strikes in Syrian territory without
its permission, saying "any effort to fight terrorism should be done in
coordination" with the "Syrian government."
Last week, Atlantic
Council senior fellow and Syria expert Frederic Hof said a U.S. rescue
mission for Foley earlier this year that went into Syria but failed to
find him established the precedent for military action across the Iraq
border, superseding any legal considerations such as being asked by the
host government to enter.
"The sort of legal barrier that prohibited doing something inside Syria now seems to have evaporated," Hof said.
The Syrian offer to help
fight ISIS comes after al-Assad's government enabled the group to
expand amid the Syrian civil war. ISIS fighters have attacked the Syrian
opposition fighting government forces, but also have seized some
government territory.
Al-Assad's military
recently launched its own air strikes on ISIS positions, amounting to
what Hof described as a dispute between crime gangs over money -- in
this case, from oil fields occupied by ISIS.
4) Will ISIS attack the West?
To some in the United
States, especially critics of Obama, an ISIS attack on U.S. interests
and even the homeland is a question of when, not if.
"ISIS is a very powerful
local organization, and probably a reasonably powerful regional
terrorist organization," former CIA chief Michael Hayden told CNN on
Sunday. "But it's one that has global ambitions -- and it has the
tools."
There's no clear
consensus inside the intelligence community as to whether ISIS, which
calls itself the Islamic State, is currently capable of striking the
West.
"It's expressed the intent," Hayden said. "There's no more powerful way to express their street credentials among the jihadist community than a successful attack against the West."
Graham, a consistent
advocate for increased U.S. military might, told CNN on Sunday that
"it's about time now to assume the worst about these guys, rather than
to be underestimating them."
5) Can the ISIS money flow be stopped?
Bank robbery,
kidnapping, smuggling, selling oil on the black market -- ISIS gets
money to fund and expand its organization in all kinds of ways.
Officials say the group
can get about $3 million a day by selling discounted oil from fields it
has seized in Iraq. It also has grabbed millions robbing banks including
an Iraqi central bank in Mosul.
Western allies can
reduce the group's income by refusing to pay ransom for abducted
citizens and pressuring regional governments to crack down on wealthy
citizens sending money to it.
The United States is
working with governments in the region, including Kuwait, Qatar and
Saudi Arabia, to stop such private donations, State Department
spokeswoman Marie Harf said last week.
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