Taliban vows retaliation

Outrage continues over civilian killing; US won't rush in troops pullout


Attack on Afghan officials killed at least one yesterday while Taliban wowed revenge over the killing of 16 villagers by a rogue US soldier underlining anger at the massacre.
The attack in southern Kandahar province came hours after hundreds of students chanting "Death to America" took to the streets of Jalalabad, in Afghanistan's first protest against the US army sergeant's killing spree.
Two of Afghan President Hamid Karzai's brothers were in the delegation which came under sustained gunfire, a local reporter at the scene in Panjwayi district told AFP.
Taliban insurgents have vowed revenge for the killings, and the US embassy in Kabul has warned its citizens to be on their guard, mindful of a wave of deadly protests last month over the burning of Qurans at an American military base.
The Taliban, leading a 10-year insurgency against the foreign troops and Karzai's government, threatened to take revenge against "sick-minded American savages".
The United States and its Nato allies are looking to withdraw their 130,000-odd combat troops from Afghanistan by 2014, although Sunday's massacre in Kandahar risks exacerbating a mood of war-weariness in the West.
In Washington, Obama warned the US public against a hasty drawdown from Afghanistan, after a weekend poll said most Americans believe the war is not worth the cost and want an early withdrawal.
Though he warned against a precipitous pullout, Obama said in a separate interview with Denver CBS affiliate KCNC that it was "important for us just to make sure that we are not... in Afghanistan longer than we need to be".
The Jalalabad students, echoing a call by the Afghan parliament on Monday, also demanded that the US soldier be tried in public in Afghanistan.
But the United States made clear that the soldier would be subject to US military law -- and that he could face execution if convicted.
Briefing reporters en route to a visit to Kyrgyzstan, Defense Secretary Leon Panetta was asked if the death penalty could apply. "My understanding is in these instances that could be a consideration," he said.
The US army sergeant was on his first tour of duty in Afghanistan after serving three tours in Iraq, according to US officials.
He left his forward operating base in Kandahar province in the pre-dawn darkness Sunday and went on a murderous rampage before turning himself in back at the base, Afghan and American officials say.
He is accused of breaking into village homes and opening fire, killing 16 people including women and children, in an incident that has further imperiled Afghan-US relations as the countries try to craft a post-2014 partnership deal.
Karzai has described the shootings as "unforgivable", and the parliament declared that "people are running out of patience" over the behaviour of foreign troops deployed in the country.
The massacre is the latest in a series of actions by troops that have provoked outrage in Afghanistan, and comes weeks after the burning of the Korans sparked riots that killed 40 people.

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