Morning brief, Monday April 24
Finally, a must read, courtesy the NYT's Jad Mouawad on how and why yesterday's oil minnows are today's sharks: Once Marginal, Now Kings of the Oil World. Osama bin Laden is either too vulnerable or too chicken to record a video, but he did release, via Al Jazeera, an audio tape over the weekend. Iran ...
Finally, a must read, courtesy the NYT's Jad Mouawad on how and why yesterday's oil minnows are today's sharks: Once Marginal, Now Kings of the Oil World.
Finally, a must read, courtesy the NYT's Jad Mouawad on how and why yesterday's oil minnows are today's sharks: Once Marginal, Now Kings of the Oil World.
Osama bin Laden is either too vulnerable or too chicken to record a video, but he did release, via Al Jazeera, an audio tape over the weekend.
Iran
Still no definitive word on a possible uranium enrichment deal between Russia and Iran. More defiance from Tehran on the Security Council deadline.
Iraq
Meet Jawad al-Maliki. He's the new pick for prime minister and he's promised to form a government within a month. He's 55 and he's a longtime member of the Dawa Party, a Shia party that was underground during the Saddam Hussein era. He spent time in exile, a close ally of Jaafari, returned in 2003 and led de-Baathification efforts. Iraqis seem to be giving him the benefit of the doubt right now, as they cling to the hope he represents.
Great quote: "If you had a health problem, you'd want somebody to give you a second opinion. What the United States needs on Iraq is some fresh ideas from people able to speak out, and no one is more qualified to do that than Jim Baker."
Elsewhere
The Washington Post ran a fantastic Sunday Outlook special on tyranny. Robert Kaplan writes the lead piece on the dictators we tend to overlook.
In a rundown of lesser-known dictators, John McCain cites Equatorial Guinea's Obiang, which makes me wonder if he said anything to the president or Condi after Obiang's visit two weeks ago.
Definitely read this great interview with Amos Hochstein, a lobbyist for Obiang's government who actually departs from PR-speak:
It sounds corny, perhaps, but I first went to work on the Hill to try to help people. The person who most shaped my thinking [Rep. Gejdenson] was the son of two Holocaust survivors and was born in a DP camp; we dedicated a lot of time to fighting tyrants like Lukashenko in Belarus. And I still believe in the same things now.
Today, Max Kampelman, argues that its time to get global nuclear disarmament back on the agenda. This echoes Selig Harrison who wrote Sunday: "Having implicitly recognized India as a nuclear weapons state, the administration should now give Pakistan and Israel the same recognition by working with all three to map a scenario for progressive global nuclear arms reductions."
Be sure to check out Emily Wax's 5 Truths about Darfur.
Rare treat. Sebastian Mallaby in a Sunday/Monday back-to-back. Sunday: "Like Wolfowitz's hatred of Hussein, his intolerance of corruption combines idealism with a disregard for details." Today: "[I]nternational institutions are in disarray. Anti-globalization may have lost its voice, but so has globalization."
FYI, Zimbabwe is heading toward collapse. And DR Congo is taking forever to set a solid election date.
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