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ISIS Claims Beheading Of American Aid Worker

Kassig, who changed his first name when he converted to Islam, is shown with a truck filled with aid supplies for Syrian refugees.
Courtesy of Kassig family
Kassig, who changed his first name when he converted to Islam, is shown with a truck filled with aid supplies for Syrian refugees.

The so-called Islamic State has released a new video purporting to show the beheading of Peter Kassig, an American aid worker in Syria who was kidnapped in 2013

The radical jihadist group posted the video on social media early Sunday. The video and the identity of the victim has not been confirmed by U.S. authorities.

The 16-minute video "bears the Islamic State's hallmarks of slick footage and horrible violence," reports NPR's Alice Fordham.

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"It differs from previous filmed deaths of American hostages," Fordham says. "It also features gruesome beheadings of Syrian soldiers, a history of the group and the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and a meditation on the nature of Baghdad as a Sunni city."

At the end of the video, masked man with a British accent and a knife is shown standing over what a bloody head, which he claims is Kassig's, Fordham says.

The U.S. is working to confirm the video's authenticity, said Bernadette Meehan, a National Security Council spokeswoman, in a release.

"If confirmed, we are appalled by the brutal murder of an innocent American aid worker and we express our deepest condolences to his family and friends," Meehan said.

His family said he converted to Islam and changed his first name to Abdul-Rahman after his capture.

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He served as an Army Ranger and was deployed once to Iraq, according to the Pentagon. Kassig told CNN in 2012 that he went to the Middle East because there's a sense that there's no hope in that area of the world.

"We each get one life and that's it. We get one shot at this and we don't get any do-overs, and for me, it was time to put up or shut up," he told CNN. "The way I saw it, I didn't have a choice. This is what I was put here to do. I guess I am just a hopeless romantic, and I am an idealist, and I believe in hopeless causes."

Kassig's capture had been under a media blackout until last month, when he appeared in a video in October showing the beheading of British aid worker Alan Henning.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.