Maj. Mariam Al Mansouri may be ISIS' worst nightmare.
The first female fighter pilot in the United
Arab Emirates, she led a strike mission this week against the terror group,
that country's ambassador to the United States said Thursday.
"She is (a) fully qualified, highly
trained, combat ready pilot, and she led the mission," Yousef Al Otaiba
told MSNBC's "Morning Joe."
The UAE has joined the United States and a handful
of other Arab nations in conducting airstrikes against ISIS in Syria.
This summer, the group declared the
establishment of a "caliphate," an Islamic state stretching across
the territory it has conquered. It maintains strict rules for women, who are
lashed for infractions such as not being fully covered.
Al Otaiba said the campaign against ISIS
basically boils down to the question of what type of society one wants.
"It's important for us -- moderate
Arabs, moderate Muslims -- to step up and say this is a threat against us. This
is more of a threat against us than it is against you. This is not just a
threat to our countries. This is a threat to our way of life," the ambassador
told MSNBC.
CNN spoke to Al Mansouri earlier this year
about her work. She had wanted to be a fighter pilot since she finished high
school, but had to wait until women were allowed.
"At that time, the doors were not open
for females to be pilots. So I had to wait almost 10 years for the decision to
be taken," Al Mansouri said.
She stressed there's no difference between
men and women when it comes to defending their country.
"We are in a hot area so that we have to
prepare every citizen," Al Mansouri said. "Of course, everybody is
responsible of defending their country -- male or female. When the time will
come, everybody will jump in."
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