Two members of an infamous ISIS cell dubbed “The Beatles” were interviewed just a week before being taken into US custody — grudgingly offering weak apologies for their roles in the notorious execution squad.

Alexanda Kotey, 35, and El Shafee Elsheikh, 31, this week were moved from a Kurdish jail into US military custody to avoid any chance of their escape during Turkey’s military incursion into Syria.

They are likely to be transferred to be tried in Virginia, a state that has the death penalty, according to the Times of London.

Just a week before they were detained by US forces, a camera crew from Britain’s ITV News tracked them down to where they were being held in Syria for amazing interviews.

Both men tried to deny direct involvement with the beheadings — with Kotey even bristling when repeatedly pressed to apologize to loved ones of those who were butchered.

“I find your line of questioning irritating,” he snapped at ITV’s Rohit Kachroo, who had traveled to Syria with the daughter of one of the cell’s beheaded victims, British aid worker David Haines.

He finally spoke of “regret” over the “fate” of Haines, saying he was “sad” for his daughter’s loss.

“That’s not something that I would have wished for,” Kotey told ITV.

“It’s not something that I’m in agreement with and if there was anything that I had done which may have led or caused some kind of distress to her or her father while he was in detention, then I apologize for that.”

However, he insisted he was “the wrong person to ask” where Haines’ body was left, saying he had nothing to do with his execution.

“If I had information about that, then we wouldn’t be sitting here having this discussion,” he told ITV. “You can believe it or not, it’s not going to change anything.”

Elsheikh also insisted he had no direct knowledge, saying he only dealt with “emails, logistics, moving people around” for the group, named after the Fab Four because of their British accents.

He also got angry at the suggestion he was responsible for the “detention and captivity” of hostages — before conceding a role in moving “a bunch of prisoners” around.

“I had an involvement, an interaction with David Haines and others during their detention and captivity, yes,” he told the ITV crew.

“Yes. I have no problem apologizing about that.”

Haines’ daughter Bethany, 22, told ITV it was “empowering” to have the men pushed into finally apologizing for her father’s death.

“They know that I’m not going to give up, regardless if they’re in Syria or some US prison,” she told the station.

“I will keep fighting and pushing and pushing them and make their lives hell until they give us the answers we want.”