The U.S. called out the Muslim Brotherhood for apparently tweeting a different set of messages? -- a kind one in English, and a one in Arabic of a different tone -- as demonstrators and security forces were battling outside the embassy in Cairo.
The? Muslim Brotherhood's? English-language Twitter account? (@Ikwanweb) retweeted a message from deputy head, Khairat? El-Shater, saying he was "relieved none of @USembassycairo staff was harmed" and hoped U.S.-Egypt relations "will sustain the turbulence of Tuesday's events."
However, according to ahramonline.com,? the the Brotherhood's? Arabic-language Twitter account and its website were praising the protests staged against a U.S.-made film that some Muslims deem insulting to the Prophet Mohammad. The Brotherhood's messages? also called for a million-man march on Friday.
That prompted and interesting response from the U.S. Embassy in Cairo: ""Thanks. By the way, have you checked out your own Arabic feeds? I hope you know we read those too."
Later the Brotherhood responded, ""we understand you're under a lot of stress, but it will be more helpful if you point out exactly the Arabic feed of concern."
The exchange in cyberspace underscores the relationship between Egypt and the U.S.
President Obama said in an interview with Spanish-language network Telemundo that the U.S would not consider Egypt an ally, nor considers them an enemy.
Egypt is a "new government that is trying to find its way," Obama said to Telemundo. The president warned however, that if the Egyptian government takes actions showing they're not taking responsibility, then it would "be a real big problem.
Egypt's Islamist president Mohamed Mursi, Thursday said he backed peaceful protests but not attacks on embassies after Egyptians angry at a the film climbed into the U.S. embassy in Cairo and tore down the American flag.
The New York Times noted that Egypt, not Libya where U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens was killed, may be a bigger political issue for the U.S.
Martin S. Indyk, a former U.S. ambassador to Israel, told the Times. "On the one hand, you didn't have Americans getting killed, but this was the fourth time an embassy was assaulted in Cairo with the Egyptian police doing precious little."
"And where was President Morsi's condemnation of this?" Indyk asked.
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