New York Times | - |
The United States-led coalition that mounted airstrikes against the Islamic State on Syrian territory this week includes the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Jordan.
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When
fighter jets from the United Arab Emirates took part in airstrikes
against the Islamic State in Syria on Monday night, the mission was led
by a woman, the country’s ambassador to the United States said Thursday morning.
The
pilot, Maj. Mariam Al Mansouri, was among the first women to graduate
from the Emirates’ air force academy after it began to admit women, and
became the nation’s first female fighter pilot.
“She
is a fully qualified, highly trained, combat-ready pilot, and she led
the mission,” the ambassador, Yousef Al Otaiba, said on the MSNBC
program “Morning Joe.”
When
American tanker-jet pilots contacted the flight to arrange for midair
refueling, Mr. Otaiba said, they paused for about 20 seconds after
hearing a woman’s voice in reply.
While
women do face barriers in the conservative Islamic society of the
United Arab Emirates, Mr. Otaiba said the debate over the role of women
in society showed a crucial difference in the divergent visions of
moderates and extremists in the Muslim world.
“I
think it’s important for us moderate Arabs, moderate Muslims, to step
up and say this is a threat against us,” Mr. Otaiba said of the Islamic
State, also known as ISIS or ISIL.
The
United States-led coalition that mounted airstrikes against the Islamic
State on Syrian territory this week includes the United Arab Emirates,
Bahrain, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and Jordan. On Thursday, coalition aircraft
struck 12 small oil refineries controlled by the Islamic State, Pentagon officials said.
Major Mansouri, 35, was profiled in The National,
an Abu Dhabi newspaper, in June. She said she had wanted to become a
pilot since high school, but had to wait until women were permitted. She
earned an undergraduate degree in English literature and worked for the
armed forces in other capacities.
She
graduated from Khalifa bin Zayed Air College in 2007, the newspaper
reported. She now flies the Block 60 model of the American-built F-16
fighter jet.
In
the newspaper profile, the major offered some advice for women who
wanted to follow in her footsteps: “Be prepared, as it is a time- and
effort-consuming field that requires a great deal of passion.”
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