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Karzai decries WikiLeaks dump
President Hamid Karzai said Thursday that the disclosure of the names of Afghan informants in the trove of classified U.S. military documents posted online by the WikiLeaks Web site was “extremely irresponsible and shocking.”
Karzai, in a Kabul news conference, said that the informants, “whether those individuals acted legitimately or illegitimately in providing information to the NATO forces, they are lives, and those lives will be in danger now.”
Karzai has ordered the Afghan foreign ministry and national security council to study the WikiLeaks documents to determine whether the incidents described in the military reports are true, and whether there is new information that the Afghan government can use in its fight against terrorism.

Second missing sailor found dead

– The second U.S. sailor who went missing in eastern Afghanistan last week has been found dead and his body recovered.

The discovery Wednesday ended the urgent manhunt that began Friday when two Navy service members drove away from Camp Julien on the outskirts of Kabul and ended up in an apparent Taliban ambush in Logar province.

The two men, Petty Officer 2nd Class Justin McNeley, 30, of Wheat Ridge, Colo., and Petty Officer 3rd Class Jarod Newlove, 25, from the Seattle area, worked at NATO’s counterinsurgency academy, where soldiers learn the latest fighting techniques, NATO officials said.

U.S. troops recovered McNeley’s body Sunday morning, but they held out hope that Newlove might be alive and could be found in the Charkh district area of Logar, where he was believed captured. But Wednesday evening, Newlove’s body was found in Charkh in a village called Yousef, said Din Mohammad Darwish, a spokesman for the Logar governor.

Darwish said Newlove had been shot three times and might have been wounded in an initial attack Friday as the sailors drove their armored SUV through the area. NATO officials said he appeared to have been beaten to death.

Darwish said early in the search the Taliban had been demanding the release of four insurgent commanders in return for Newlove, but no prisoner exchange was made.

It remains unclear how the two U.S. sailors drove into Logar province, a dangerous area south of Kabul where the Taliban controls swaths of territory. Some NATO officials said they might have taken a wrong turn intending to head back to Kabul.