Family in Arizona, October 2016. Mueller's parents reportedly implored ISIS to contact them, as they hoped their daughter might still be alive. “We have sent you a private message and ask that you respond to us privately,” Carl and Marsha Mueller said in a statement. They said they had not talked to the media, as ISIS warned them not to. Later, in an interview on
The Today Show, Carl Mueller expressed his frustration with the
Obama administration over the way it conducted negotiations with their daughter's captors, and their policy of not paying ransom money for hostages. "We understand the policy about not paying
ransom, but on the other hand, any parents out there would understand that you would want anything and everything done to bring your child home," Mueller said. "And we tried, and we asked. But they put policy in front of American citizens' lives. And it didn't get it changed." On February 6, 2020, Kayla Mueller's parents were publicly recognized by President
Donald Trump during the
2020 State of the Union Address.
Church Kayla Mueller was a member of an
ecumenical Christian campus ministry, United Christian Ministries, which held ties to the
Presbyterian Church. The denomination stated: "Each of us is called in our own way to make the world a better place and manifest the love of Christ to those around us. Kayla did that in a very profound and tangible way, and my hope is that she inspires others to alleviate suffering in the world and in their own communities." He further tweeted: "An old and sick trick used by terrorists and despots for decades: claiming that hostages human shields held captive are killed by air raids." Later upon confirmation of Mueller's death, he tweeted: "Saddened & angered to hear news confirming killing of #US hostage #kaylaMueller. Yet another ugly example of these terrorists' brutality." After many Western news outlets cast doubt on the claim of the hostage death and the extremists' ability to identify Jordanian and U.S.-made
F-16 Fighting Falcons flying at high altitudes, Jordan dismissed the claim of a killed hostage as an ISIS
publicity stunt and a lie, as the group is known for its propaganda techniques. After Mueller's family confirmed her death, President
Barack Obama said "[Mueller] represents what is best about America, and expressed her deep pride in the freedoms that we Americans enjoy, and that so many others strive for around the world."
United States Secretary of State John Kerry issued a statement saying "ISIS, and ISIS alone, is the reason Kayla is gone." The Pentagon declined to investigate whether Mueller was killed by the coalition airstrike. Policy dictates that the US only investigates reports of civilian casualties when they come from a "credible source", which ISIS is not.
Recognition In October 2015, Mueller became the first person to be posthumously inducted into
Northern Arizona University's college of
Social and Behavioral Sciences Hall of Fame. She was recognized as an outstanding alumna for her humanitarian aid work. The
military operation that killed ISIS leader
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi on October 27, 2019, was code-named after Kayla Mueller, according to several sources. On February 4, 2020, during the
2020 State of the Union Address, President
Donald Trump personally recognized Mueller as part of his discussion of tackling ISIS insurgent forces and the military operations directed at taking down prominent members under his administration, directly referencing the Barisha raid in which ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was killed. During this recognition, he also directly referenced Mueller's parents, Carl and Marsha Mueller, who were in attendance at the address. Several aspects of Mueller's life were mentioned, including her college career, her devotion to humanitarian aid and personal faith, as well as her capture, torture and eventual death at the hands of ISIS terrorists. Carl and Marsha Mueller spoke at the
2020 Republican National Convention, where they described their daughter's ordeal and praised the Trump administration's coordination of the raid that led to the killing of al-Baghdadi. == See also ==