Morning brief, Friday April 21
"You would have thought it was impossible to make our intelligence problems even worse, but the Bush administration has accomplished that." Hu Jintao Visit The symbolism — and not all of it good — seems to be the main take-away from Hu's visit. Not only did a protester disrupt Hu's speech, but — as we ...
"You would have thought it was impossible to make our intelligence problems even worse, but the Bush administration has accomplished that."
"You would have thought it was impossible to make our intelligence problems even worse, but the Bush administration has accomplished that."
Hu Jintao Visit
The symbolism — and not all of it good — seems to be the main take-away from Hu's visit. Not only did a protester disrupt Hu's speech, but — as we noted yesterday — we called China by Taiwan's name at the formal ceremony. (White House photos)
Today's chief must read is David Sanger's analysis of the Hu Jintao visit:
Some members of his administration concede when promised anonymity, Mr. Bush needs a breakthrough in the relationship — on North Korea, where China has the most influence, or Iran, where it is a major oil customer, or on the trade deficit that has grown so large, with no end in sight. He appears increasingly unlikely to get that breakthrough.
Jefferson Morley does a nice round up of how Chinese media stayed on message… I wish I could do the pound-to-dollar conversions in my head, but this rundown of recent deals Beijing has signed is worth a look.
Iraq
Finally. Jaafari has dropped out of the running for prime minister. The NYT does a breakdown of the guys (yes, all guys) that could take his place. The Shia alliance will apparently pick a prime minister by Saturday afternoon Baghdad time. The NYT editorial sees a glimmer of hope for Iraq now.
Peter Beinart nominates Brent Scowcroft for SecDef:
I'm not a big fan of his rather amoral brand of realism. But, in Iraq today, it hardly matters. Even if Scowcroft wanted to put a pliant dictator in charge of Iraq, at this point, he couldn't.
Iran
It might be just me, but the WaPo's look at disaffected youth in Iran makes reminds me of what Larry Diamond told James Forysth this week: “Ahmadinejad is less effective and less politically potent internally than he may appear and the key to our strategy, in part, has to be to give him enough rope to hang himself.”
Elsewhere
Michael Kinsley: "How on earth did Kristof know about my bedbugs-and-jackals-and-diarrhea fantasy? Bob Woodward promised me he wouldn't tell anyone else."
More fodder for the stereotype. I love it: "After Job Law Fiasco, France Retreats on Other Fronts."
Olmert says that Iran and Syria ordered the suicide attack… The Palestinian Authority has a new internal security force — headed by a most-wanted guerrilla appointed by Hamas… The sectarian violence in Alexandria is really serious… Pakistan seems to think India is responsible for its problems in Baluchistan.
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