Obama vows to 'stand fast' as anti-US fury erupts

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President Barack Obama vowed to 'stand fast' against spreading anti-US violence raging in the Arab world. (AAP)

President Barack Obama vowed to 'stand fast' against spreading anti-US violence raging in the Arab world. (AAP)

President Barack Obama vowed to 'stand fast' against spreading anti-US violence raging in the Arab world, as he mourned four Americans slain in Libya after their remains were flown home.

President Barack Obama vowed to "stand fast" against spreading anti-US violence raging in the Arab world, as he mourned four Americans slain in Libya after their remains were flown home.
  
Four transfer caskets draped in American flags were slowly borne from the belly of a giant C-17 transport plane by slow-walking Marines in dress uniforms, and set down in a hangar for a heart-rending homecoming.
  
US ambassador Chris Stevens and the three other Americans died on Tuesday when a mob furious over an anti-Muslim film made on US soil torched the American consulate in Benghazi, part of a region-wide eruption of violence.
  
"Greater love hath no man than this, that he lay down his life for his friends," Obama said, quoting the Bible as he honored four "American patriots" who he said embodied national qualities of courage, hope and idealism.
  
"Their sacrifice will never be forgotten, we will bring to justice those who took them from us. We will stand fast against the violence on our diplomatic missions," Obama said at Andrews Air Force base outside Washington.
  
A furious wave of anti-American violence ripped across the Middle East and North Africa Friday with a crowd invading the US embassy compound in Tunis, and guards at the US embassy in Khartoum firing warning shots at protestors.
  
Fresh violence erupted in Yemen and Cairo and protests took place in Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, Kashmir, Pakistan, Iraq, Israel and the Gaza Strip, Morocco, Syria, Kuwait, Nigeria and Kenya.
  
Five people were killed and dozens injured in Friday's violence alone.
  
Obama said that the "awful" loss and terrible images may cause some to question the dangerous work of US diplomats abroad, but argued that America must not abandon its global mission to spread dignity and freedom.
  
"Even as voices of suspicion and mistrust seek to divide countries and cultures from one another, the United States of America will never retreat from the world," he vowed.
  
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton told grieving relatives of Stevens, information officer Sean Smith and former navy seals Tyrone Woods and Glen Doherty that the killings dishonored the spirit of the Arab Spring.
  
"The people of Egypt, Libya, Yemen, and Tunisia did not trade the tyranny of a dictator for the tyranny of a mob," she said.
  
US military and intelligence agencies have already launched a manhunt in Libya for the militants who staged the assault on the consulate in Benghazi.
  
"There's an intense focus" on finding the attackers, a US defense official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told AFP.
  
The State Department was meanwhile working with nations in the Middle East and North Africa to boost security at its missions.
  
In Yemen and Libya, teams of US Marines flew into to boost security.
  
The violence erupted in response to excerpts of a movie, "Innocence of Muslims" which mocks the Islamic faith, which went viral on YouTube.
  
National Security Council spokesman Tommy Vietor told AFP the White House "reached out to YouTube to call the video to their attention and ask them to review whether it violates their terms of use."
  
On Wednesday, the Google-owned site said the film, was within the firm's guidelines and would not be taken down, though access to it was temporarily restricted in Egypt and Libya.
  
Officials said Obama is being repeatedly briefed on the worsening security situation around US posts in the Middle East and elsewhere, and was mounting a strong diplomatic push with key regional leaders to restore calm.
  
He has spoken personally to the leaders of Yemen, Libya and Egypt and the White House said he sent a personal message to Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, asking him to speak out against the violence.
  
The White House also denied a report in Britain's Independent newspaper that had advance warning of the attack in Benghazi, which officials in Libya are now have blaming on Al-Qaeda.

Your Comments

Shades of 1979 Iran

Mona - from Australia, 8 months ago

"The violence erupted in response to excerpts of a movie, " That statement doesn't bear witnesss to the underlying fact that Americans appear to be deeply hated in the Middle East & perchance they have now extended that to as far away as Afghanistan, unequivocally undeserved, of course. Regardless of Hillary's sojourn around the world, the, we are never ever accountable, no blame on us, thinking, has never changed. What with their rendition programmes USA foreign policy & CIA is often opposite.

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