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7 US troops wounded in Afghanistan, as protests against Koran burnings cont

Zarvan

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Demonstrators protesting against the burnings of Korans at a U.S. base in Afghanistan tossed grenades at an American base Sunday in a sixth consecutive day of violence that left seven US troops wounded and two Afghans dead.
Afghan authorities also identified and launched a manhunt for a suspect in the killing of two U.S military advisers -- a lieutenant colonel and a major -- inside an Afghan ministry on Saturday.
The attacks were the latest in six days of violence across the country by Afghans furious at the way some Korans at an American base outside of Kabul were disposed of in a burn pit.

The Koran burning incident has swiftly spiraled out of control leaving dozens of people dead, including four U.S. troops killed by their Afghan counterparts, in a sign of the tenuous nature of the relationship between Afghanistan and the U.S.
In Kunduz province, thousands of demonstrators started out protesting peacefully but then the group turned violent as they tried to enter the district's largest city, said Amanuddin Quriashi, district administrator. People in the crowd fired on police and threw grenades at a U.S. base on the city outskirts, he said.
Seven NATO troops were wounded and one of the protesters was killed when troops fired out from the U.S. base, Quriashi said. Another demonstrator was killed by Afghan police, he added. Provincial police spokesman Sarwar Hussaini confirmed the casualties.
A NATO spokesman said that an explosion occurred outside the base, but that the grenades did not breach its defenses.
"Initial reports indicate that there were no ISAF service member fatalities," said Navy Lt. Cmdr. Brian Badura, referring to NATO's International Security Assistance Force. He declined to comment on whether there were any wounded.
More than 30 people have been killed in clashes since it emerged Tuesday that copies of the Muslim holy book and other religious materials had been thrown into a fire pit used to burn garbage at Bagram Air Field, a large U.S. base north of Kabul.
The death toll from days of unrest includes four U.S. soldiers — two killed last week by an Afghan soldier, and two military advisers shot Saturday at the Interior Ministry.
NATO and the British government recalled their international advisers from Afghan ministries in the capital late Saturday after the two advisers — a lieutenant colonel and a major — were found dead in their office, shot in the back of the head. The names of the victims have not been released.
The main suspect in the shooting is an Afghan man who worked as a driver for an office on the same floor as the advisers' office, Interior Ministry spokesman Sediq Sediqi. He did not provide further details about the man or his possible motive.
"There is a suspect who is an employee of the Interior Ministry. He has been identified. Right now the police are trying to arrest him. He is on the run," the Afghan Interior Ministry said in a statement Sunday, citing initial findings by investigators.
The Taliban claimed that the shooter was one of their sympathizers and that an accomplice had helped him get into the compound to kill the Americans in retaliation for the Koran burnings.
Afghan President Hamid Karzai renewed his calls for calm in a televised address to the nation Sunday.
"Now is the time to return to calm and not let our enemies use this situation," he said. Asked about the unprecedented recall of NATO staff, Karzai said it was understandable.
"It is a temporary step at a time when the people of Afghanistan are angry over the burning of the holy Koran," Karzai said.
Members of the international military coalition described the removal of advisers as a temporary security measure, stressing that they did not expect it to affect partnerships with the Afghans that are key to preparing the country's security forces to take on more responsibility as international troops draw down.
"We continue to move forward and stand by our Afghan partners in this campaign. We will not let this divide the coalition," said Lt. Col. Jimmie Cummings, a spokesman for the international force. The NATO recall affects advisers numbered "in the low hundreds," Cummings said.
Catherine Arnold, a spokeswoman for the British Embassy, said Britain that "as a temporary measure" the embassy has "withdrawn civilian mentors and advisers from institutions within Kabul and that we're keeping the situation under review." She declined to say how many people were affected by the decision.
The U.S. government had already ordered its government advisers to stay inside the secure embassy compound earlier in the week out of fear of retribution, said Gavin Sundwall, a U.S. Embassy spokesman.
President Barack Obama and other U.S. officials have apologized for what they said was a mistake, but their regrets did not quell the anger of Afghans, who viewed the Koran burnings as an illustration of what they perceive as foreign disrespect for their culture and religion.
The shootings of U.S. service members were the latest in a rising number of incidents where Afghan soldiers or policemen, or gunmen wearing their uniforms, have killed NATO forces. Last month, France suspended its training program and threatened to withdraw its forces from Afghanistan a year ahead of schedule after an Afghan soldier shot and killed four French soldiers on a base in the east.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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Read more: 7 US Troops Wounded In Afghanistan, As Protests Against Koran Burnings Continue | Fox News

---------- Post added at 08:42 AM ---------- Previous post was at 08:40 AM ----------

By Jim Miklaszewski, NBC News
U.S. military officials say eight American soldiers were wounded Sunday during a violent protest outside a U.S. forward operating base in Afghanistan's Kunduz province. The Americans were wounded when one of the protesters apparently hurled a grenade into the compound. The extent of the injuries was unclear.
The attack occurred as 400 demonstrators stormed the American outpost to protest the inadvertent burning of Qurans at the U.S. Bagram airbase north of Kabul. More than two dozen people, including four U.S. troops, have been killed since Tuesday, after the Qurans and religious materials had been thrown into a fire pit used to burn garbage. President Barack Obama and U.S. officials have apologized and said it was a mistake, but the incident has sent thousands of protesters into the streets.
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One senior U.S. military official said the results of the U.S.-Afghan investigation into the incident are still "days away."
Meanwhile an intensive manhunt continues for the lone gunman who shot and kiled two American officers as they sat at their desks in the Afghan Interior Ministry in Kabul Sunday. U.S. military officials describe the primary suspect as a "low-level" Afghan servicemember or government employee who fled the scene. But Afghan sources tell the NBC Kabul bureau the suspect may be a high-ranking Afghan intelligence official who has been reported missing ever since the shooting.


President Obama's apology to Afghanistan for the burning of Qurans at a U.S. base may become a campaign issue. NBC's Andrea Mitchell reports.
Read: Afghan intelligence officer sought in connection with US slayings
The order by General John Allen, the top U.S. militiary commander in Afghanistan, to withdraw all American and NATO forces from Afghan ministries remains in effect. A senior U.S. military official tells NBC News, "we're still working with the Afghan goverment" by telephone and emails, but until the circumstances surrounding Sunday's shooting are more clear U.S. and NATO personnel will continue to work from the ISAF base in Kabul.
 
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This will keep on hapening until American soldiers learn to respect religions, although I wish Afghans didn't do the killing... It's not worth it.


And please can you give me a source other than FOX news. A foreign country's news source would be great.
 
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finaly the afghan was is heating up again amarican hve been carring out drone attacks in pakistan for so long time some to pay back
 
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Whole country can't be blamed for some individuals deeds and even president of America have apologized for it what else they want??

Its some outside forces that are fueling fire and hate towards USA. Those have interest in Afghanistan's instability.

USA should be aware and must not forgive.
 
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Whole country can't be blamed for some individuals deeds and even president of America have apologized for it what else they want??

Its some outside forces that are fueling fire and hate towards USA. Those have interest in Afghanistan's instability.

USA should be aware and must not forgive.

So you really thought that US ever had Afghanistan best interests at heart ? :rofl:

The hate was created from within , never from outside ... After spending 10 years in Afghanistan , the US army should know what Quran means to his followers ...

You have indirectly helped Taliban , now even the most hating critic of Taliban will sympathize with them over this ... Believe what you want to believe , but if the Americans think they can get out of this mess just by issuing an apology , I am afraid to say that they never have been more wrong !

Sure , the US must not forgive , this time they should kill some Afghan women and do some acts of necrophilia ( urinating on dead bodies has been tried and tested before to excellent results ) , I know what sort of freaks these trigger happy motherfuckers are ... And the next thing , US will be fighting ANA ... Blessing in disguise for Taliban , ai'nt it ? :azn:
 
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Tell you what, I'll mail out a case of Bibles, they can burn those, and then we'll be even.

I cannot begin to describe the enormous gulf in sentiments between this whole Quran burning = death and mayhem thing. In the West, a human life is worth infinitely more than a book. A book can be replaced (by the millions, if necessary), whereas a human cannot.

The book was probably in Arabic. At a minimum, it was not in English. How did the soldiers even know they were handling Qurans?

How about digital copies of the Qur'an? What if I upload a Qur'an onto my iPad? Must I now treat it as a real Qur'an? Am I allowed to delete the copy? If so, by what means? Should I be beaten or killed if I handle my iPad with disrespect?

What if a poor Muslim farmer accidentally drops a Qur'an into a mud puddle, or it gets burned? Should he be punished for it, despite his abject, groveling apology?
 
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Tell you what, I'll mail out a case of Bibles, they can burn those, and then we'll be even.

Sorry Chogy , the best you can do is to hand those US personnels to the Afghan Govt so they can be treated as per Islamic law ... There isn't any need for us to burn the Holy Bible not even for revenge or as you say making it even , Jesus and Mary are held in high regard by followers of Muhammad and it would be against his teachings to burn the scripture belonging to them ... Have you ever seen Muslims burning your book ?
 
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Sorry Chogy , the best you can do is to hand those US personnels to the Afghan Govt so they can be treated as per Islamic law ... There isn't any need for us to burn the Holy Bible not even for revenge or as you say making it even , Jesus and Mary are held in high regard by followers of Muhammad and it would be against his teachings to burn the scripture belonging to them ... Have you ever seen Muslims burning your book ?

A quick internet search will produce a wealth of hits linking to reports that Muslims have done just that over many years and in the case of Saudi Arabia, that it is a regular event.

Example:

Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian

"The main perpetrator (a Year 7 student) urinated on the Holy Bible, tore some pages from the Holy Book and burnt them then finally spat on the Holy Book," the report says.

Let me be clear here: I do not agree with burning the Quran (or Bible for that matter), but to claim that “Muslims never burn the Bible” either in return or otherwise is just not true.
 
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Why don't they protest when the Buddist statues were destroyed? Respect a religion hahahahahaahahaahahaahahaahaha.......................
 
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Why don't they protest when the Buddist statues were destroyed? Respect a religion hahahahahaahahaahahaahahaahaha.......................
Am still waiting for Buddhists to riot over that. How long has it been? Did the Buddhists worldwide forgot?
 
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Past two comments reflected American Ignorance at it's best.

---------- Post added at 12:10 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:08 AM ----------

A quick internet search will produce a wealth of hits linking to reports that Muslims have done just that over many years and in the case of Saudi Arabia, that it is a regular event.

Example:

Cookies must be enabled. | The Australian

"The main perpetrator (a Year 7 student) urinated on the Holy Bible, tore some pages from the Holy Book and burnt them then finally spat on the Holy Book," the report says.

Let me be clear here: I do not agree with burning the Quran (or Bible for that matter), but to claim that “Muslims never burn the Bible” either in return or otherwise is just not true.

Those kids have not received proper Islamic education as the Torah and Bible are both holy books to Muslims.

---------- Post added at 12:12 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:10 AM ----------

Tell you what, I'll mail out a case of Bibles, they can burn those, and then we'll be even.

I cannot begin to describe the enormous gulf in sentiments between this whole Quran burning = death and mayhem thing. In the West, a human life is worth infinitely more than a book. A book can be replaced (by the millions, if necessary), whereas a human cannot.

The book was probably in Arabic. At a minimum, it was not in English. How did the soldiers even know they were handling Qurans?

How about digital copies of the Qur'an? What if I upload a Qur'an onto my iPad? Must I now treat it as a real Qur'an? Am I allowed to delete the copy? If so, by what means? Should I be beaten or killed if I handle my iPad with disrespect?

What if a poor Muslim farmer accidentally drops a Qur'an into a mud puddle, or it gets burned? Should he be punished for it, despite his abject, groveling apology?

Chogy you are more intelligent than me, so it is funny that I even have to explain it to you.

Is it the physical act of burning the Quaran that enraged Afghans, or the symbolic act?

You know the answer yourself.
 
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Am still waiting for Buddhists to riot over that. How long has it been? Did the Buddhists worldwide forgot?

You can't expect Buddhist community to rise against Taliban, they just don't believe in striking back.
 
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Why don't they protest when the Buddist statues were destroyed? Respect a religion hahahahahaahahaahahaahahaahaha.......................

No muslim can answer that.

coz its a fair question.

They will just say coz "buddists are of not faithful as muslims"
 
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