Word: angered
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...month of Ramadan, Pakistan remains a dangerous prospect for U.S. military operations. Local authorities have warned the U.S. to keep a low profile in military operations from their territory. While Musharraf has thus far contained anti-American protests from Islamic radicals, Ramadan is likely to see an uptick in anger as far more Muslims visit mosques on a daily rather than weekly basis...
Enough hand wringing over angry Muslims [THE TALIBAN, Oct. 15]! Americans are angrier, and we're ready to fight too. These people are the enemy, and I'm sick of seeing them on my TV screen. Remember Sept. 11, America, and let your anger rage until we've made the world a better place for everyone. WES REEVES Amarillo, Texas...
...have had it with the notion that we Americans had better be careful or we might make "them" more angry than they already are, and then we'll be in real trouble. There is a grain of truth to it, but I am tired of it. What about my anger? What about my fury? Five thousand Americans were slaughtered without provocation. American foreign policy is not perfect, but it did not cause this hideous display of evil. MICHELLE JACKSON Sacramento, Calif...
...Predictably, this has led to both anger and disappointment in India. When U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell visited New Delhi recently, Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari Vajpayee warned him that Indians were so hurt by what we perceived as the unfairness of Washington's approach that any politician who enthusiastically supported the U.S. war effort endangered his own popularity. For instance, India's External Affairs Minister Jaswant Singh, who offered operational assistance to the U.S. right after the World Trade Center attacks, has been criticized by his own colleagues...
...Such is the public anger that when Vajpayee declared that he would not meet Musharraf in New York City as originally scheduled, he was applauded. And India's Defense Minister George Fernandes marked his re-induction to office with so-called punitive firing on Pakistani border posts despite U.S. calls for restraint. From an Indian perspective, the U.S. strikes on Afghanistan may have moral legitimacy, but the U.S. errs by not extending that legitimacy to others who face identical predicaments...