FPI Overnight Brief: July 7, 2010
FPI Overnight Brief
July 7, 2010
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Iran
The
United Arab Emirates ambassador to the United States said
Tuesday that the benefits of bombing Iran's nuclear program
outweigh the short-term costs such an attack would impose.
– Washington Times
A Canadian man has been found guilty of attempting to export nuclear-related materials to Iran in violation of sanctions. - Telegraph
China denounced the United States on Tuesday for imposing its own sanctions on Iran, saying Washington should not unilaterally take such steps outside of U.N. resolutions. - Reuters
The European Union on Tuesday banned most of Iran Air’s jets from European airports, saying that the decision was based on safety concerns, and not because of the sanctions against Iran approved last month by the United Nations Security Council over its nuclear program. – Associated Press
Protests by merchants
in Tehran's main bazaar forced authorities to back off of
plans to increase taxes on their businesses, Iranian media
reported Wednesday, in a sign of the government's
difficulties in implementing economic reforms. – Associated
Press
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Afghanistan
Britain
is to announce that it will withdraw its 1,000 troops based
in the Sangin area of Afghanistan, where the UK has lost
about a third of the 311 of its soldiers killed in the war.
In a major re-organisation of the Nato deployment in Helmand
province, where Sangin lies, Liam Fox, defence secretary,
will announce on Wednesday that UK troops are to be replaced
by US forces. – Financial Times
Restrictive rules on firing upon the Taliban are putting soldiers' lives in danger, troops serving on the front line in Afghanistan have said. - Telegraph
U.S. Senator John McCain has identified Kandahar as key to the West's efforts to win the war in Afghanistan and predicted an upsurge in casualties as NATO and Taliban forces intensify their struggle for control there. – Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
A U.N.-backed elections watchdog has blocked some candidates from standing for Afghanistan's upcoming parliamentary elections over links to armed groups, an election official said on Wednesday. - Reuters
U.S. Vice President Joe Biden urged Afghan leaders to "get in the game" on July 5 as he issued a robust defense of America's under-fire war strategy - AFP
Lt. Gen. David Barno USA (Ret.)
writes: Intelligence analysts sometimes argue that we have
already won the war in Afghanistan twice: the first time in
driving out al-Qaeda and the Taliban at the end of 2001, the
second in enabling the first-ever successful Afghan
presidential election in late 2004. Yet we now fight to win
a third time – a reality that demands serious reflection
on the costs of inattention. The price of failure – for
Nato, for the region, for the Afghan people – remains
unacceptable when so many of the greatest dangers to our
security emanate from the rugged edges of the Hindu Kush.
Today Gen Petraeus is at the epicentre of the most dangerous
conflict we face – it will now be his task to lead us over
the summit to achieve a success that has been paid for many
times over. – Financial
Times
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Middle
East
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu told President Barack Obama his government was
prepared to take "concrete steps" to bring about direct
Middle East peace talks, as the two leaders sought to heal
ties that have frayed during the past year over the issue of
Palestinian statehood and Israel's blockade of Gaza. – Wall Street Journal
The Israeli military said Tuesday that it had indicted “a number of” officers and soldiers for their actions during Israel’s three-week offensive in Gaza in the winter of 2008-9, including a staff sergeant accused of deliberately shooting at least one Palestinian civilian who was walking with a group of people waving a white flag – New York Times
Khaled al Fadala, 33, the secretary general of the National Democratic Alliance (NDA), was sentenced to three months in prison on June 30 for insulting the prime minister. Many Kuwaitis believe the consecutive detentions are a sign that the government is clamping down on freedom of expression in a country known for a lively media and outspoken MPs – The National
Turkey's military and civilian leaders signaled growing frustration with the United States and Iraq Tuesday over their role in the fight against Kurdish rebels after a new attack on a Turkish base killed 15 - Reuters
Three decades of wars,
massacres and sectarian killings have left Iraq with as many
as a million widows, by Iraqi government count – Associated
Press
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New
START
Sen. John Kerry (D-MA) writes: I have
nothing against Massachusetts politicians running for
president. But the world's most important elected office
carries responsibilities, including the duty to check your
facts even if you're in a footrace to the right against
Sarah Palin. More than that, you need to understand that
when it comes to nuclear danger, the nation's security is
more important than scoring cheap political points. – Washington
Post
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Russia
Less than two weeks after arresting 10 people suspected of being secret Russian agents, the federal government is in talks with lawyers for the defendants about a broad and rapid resolution to the case, according to people who have been briefed on the discussions – New York Times
The case of 11 people accused of infiltrating the U.S. as deep-cover spies for Russia has made a news splash in America and Britain since they were arrested over a week ago. But in Russia's largely state-controlled media, the story is mostly relegated to the back pages—when it appears at all. – Wall Street Journal (subscription required)
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin unveiled ambitious development goals for the volatile North Caucasus on Tuesday, promising 400,000 new jobs, an oil center in Chechnya and ski resorts stretching from the Black to the Caspian seas. But he said little about how the government would fight against the pervasive corruption and nepotism that choke business development and undermine stability in the region. – Moscow Times
Moscow police on Tuesday charged the head of the Memorial rights group, Oleg Orlov, with defamation for linking Chechen President Ramzan Kadyrov to kidnappings and killings in Chechnya — even though Kadyrov publicly dropped his claims against the activist in February. – Moscow Times
A proposal to let the
Federal Security Service summon people it believes are about
to commit a crime and punish those who disobey was dropped
from a controversial bill Tuesday after protests by rights
groups - Reuters
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China
A
best-selling Chinese author and democracy advocate detained
by security agents on Monday said Tuesday that the agents
threatened to imprison him if he proceeded with plans to
publish a book criticizing Wen Jiabao, China’s prime
minister – New York
Times
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South
Asia
A U.S. commitment to provide India with top-of-the-line technology as India modernizes its armed forces and builds its own defense industry is likely to cause unease in Pakistan, which also wants U.S. equipment to prosecute its war against terrorists. – Washington Times
No Pakistani minority is as victimized as the country's 4 million Ahmadis, who believe in Islam but are viewed by the rest of the country as heretics. Because they revere another prophet as well asthe prophet Muhammad, the Pakistani government has declared Ahmadis "non-Muslims," made it a crime for members to refer to their places of worship as mosques and even barred them from extending the common Muslim greeting, salaam aleykum. – Los Angeles Times
Nitin Gokhale
writes: This kind of urgency [found in this year’s report
from India’s Defense Ministry]…is a refreshing
indication that Indian policymakers are taking the need to
prepare for potential conflict with China seriously. China
cannot—and should never be—taken lightly. And India
should always be mindful of the fact that military
preparedness and trying to improve diplomatic relations are
not necessarily mutually exclusive. – The
Diplomat
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Europe
President Nicolas Sarkozy, who promised French voters a "republic beyond reproach," came under mounting pressure Tuesday from allies as well as opponents over allegations that he and his campaign organization took illegal cash donations from France's richest woman. – Washington Post
French President Nicolas Sarkozy on Tuesday vehemently denied published allegations that he received illegal campaign contributions from the nation's richest woman, Liliane Bettencourt, just before his election in 2007. – Los Angeles Times
Ethnic tensions ran high in northern Kosovo on Tuesday after a series of violent incidents that threaten to destablize the Balkans ahead of the International Court of Justice's decision on Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia. – Washington Times
The UN Security Council held an emergency session to discuss the security situation in Kosovo, after a blast last week in the ethnically divided town of Mitrovica left one person dead. Serbian President Boris Tadic told the UN Security Council that the July 2 explosion was "unprovoked violence" and a "flagrant act of terror." – Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Pressure from the US and suggestions that it could no longer share secret intelligence with Britain – the heart of the special relationship – led the government to move to block any prospect of the courts revealing any information about CIA activities again - Guardian
Bulgaria “is no longer interested” in a project to build an oil pipeline from the Black Sea to the Aegean following the environmental damage caused by the oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, according to Boyko Borissov, prime minister. Mr Borissov made clear in an interview with the Financial Times that Bulgaria intended to pull out of a three-way partnership with Russia and Greece after an environmental impact study for the project is completed early next year. – Financial Times
Prime Minister Donald
Tusk promised on Tuesday to work closely with Bronislaw
Komorowski to reform Poland after Komorowski officially
becomes president next month. - Reuters
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Defense
The
long-running fight over the Pentagon’s $35 billion tanker
contract enters a new stage on Friday when Boeing and EADS
North America submit bids to build a midair refueling
tanker. – The
Hill
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Missile
Defense
Russia said on Tuesday the United States is ignoring its concerns about U.S. plans to build a missile shield with elements near Russia's borders. - Reuters
Russia is still welcome to
join a trans-Atlantic missile defense shield even as the
U.S. pushes to make the system operational earlier than
originally planned, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said.
- Businessweek
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Koreas
At
a time when the Koreas have traded threats of military
confrontation and cut most economic and diplomatic ties, the
Kaesong complex has remained a conspicuous exception. The
complex, the largest economic link created during a
relaxation of inter-Korean tensions almost a decade ago, has
continued to operate even after the sinking in March of the
warship, the Cheonan, and the recent closing of other joint
projects. – New York Times
Ten North Korean workers were killed in a rare traffic accident at a South Korean industrial complex in the North, Seoul's Yonhap news agency reported on Wednesday, citing a police source in the South. - Reuters
North Korea sent nearly three dozen relatives of former economic officials to a prison camp over the country's botched currency reform, a South Korean aid group said Tuesday. – Associated Press
Analysis: There are
two divergent schools of thought on Pyongyang’s sudden
return to the brutal tactics of the cold war. Either theory,
if it proves correct, bodes ill for regional stability. One
school says Kim Jong-il is losing his grip and, perhaps, his
mind. This has triggered a power struggle, with rogue
commanders and officials exceeding their authority or vying
for influence by engineering a crisis. The disappearing
officials reflect Kim Jong-il’s attempts to restore order.
The second school sees the dynasty as secure but reckon it
will resort to an escalation of conflict to distract from or
justify economic failure. This brinkmanship will be used to
push for talks with the US, and the resumption of aid, which
has dried up from everywhere except China. A new politburo
must bloody South Korea and give the Young General early
victories. – Financial
Times
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Japan
Japan's
Democratic Party could fall far short of Prime Minister
Naoto Kan's target in this weekend's upper house poll, media
said on Wednesday, putting his job at risk and foiling
efforts to curb a huge public debt. - Reuters
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The
War
Four years after the U.S. government
accused Lyglenson Lemorin of plotting terrorist acts, and
two and a half years after a jury found him not guilty, the
35-year-old Haitian remains in jail, with no idea how long
he will be held. Despite Mr. Lemorin's 2007 acquittal,
Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials still consider
him a national-security risk, essentially because he knew
the co-defendants in his own case. After Mr. Lemorin's
trial, an immigration judge agreed, ruling that he had
provided "material support" to terrorists by having worked
at the construction business of a co-defendant who was
convicted of conspiracy and imprisoned. – Wall Street
Journal
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Southeast
Asia
Declaring that many parts of Thailand
remain unstable, the government on Tuesday extended by three
months a state of emergency that gives authorities broad
powers to restrict political meetings and detain suspects
without charge – New York Times
The radical jihadi movement in Indonesia has been left moribund after a series of police crackdowns and a failed attempt to start a domestic holy war, according to a report by the International Crisis Group. – New York Times
A 2006 peace agreement and a surprising Maoist victory in 2008 elections earned the rebels' political party a central role in governing the country. But the Maoists and the Nepalese military and political establishment have been unable to agree on a deal to allow the Maoists to govern. The resulting deadlock has disrupted life in this nation of nearly 30 million people, and caused jitters from Kathmandu to Nepal's two giant neighbors, India and China. – Washington Post
Hundreds of supporters
of a nationalist group led by a firebrand government
minister marched to the United Nations headquarters in
Colombo yesterday protesting at the appointment of a UN
panel to review Sri Lanka’s human rights record. – The
National
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Wikileaks
An
American soldier in Iraq who was arrested on charges of
leaking a video of a deadly American helicopter attack here
in 2007 has also been charged with downloading more than
150,000 highly classified diplomatic cables that could, if
made public, reveal the inner workings of American embassies
around the world, the military here announced Tuesday – New York
Times
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Africa
Sudan
closed a newspaper campaigning for the separation of the
country's north and south, state media reported on Tuesday,
signaling a new crackdown before a vote on southern
independence - Reuters
ENDS