Morning brief, Tuesday, May 2

Iraq Some newly minted Iraqi soldiers are giving orders: don't deploy us outside our home provinces. The graduation day demonstration gets prominent media coverage around the world. U.S. officials claim the fracas was "over as soon as it started."   An audit reveals that insurgents are hampering reconstruction (!) and that Iraqi oil production remains below pre-war levels. ...

By , a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies.

Iraq

Iraq

Some newly minted Iraqi soldiers are giving orders: don't deploy us outside our home provinces. The graduation day demonstration gets prominent media coverage around the world. U.S. officials claim the fracas was "over as soon as it started."  

An audit reveals that insurgents are hampering reconstruction (!) and that Iraqi oil production remains below pre-war levels. More cheerily, it finds that 90 percent of education projects were completed. 

Iran

A top Iranian diplomat predicts that China and Russia will protect it from sanctions.

"[Russia and China] have officially and in diplomatic talks told us they are against sanctions and military attacks…There is a very wrong assumption held by some that the West can do anything it wants through the Security Council."

Meanwhile, tens of thousands in Tehran march for better jobs. Will China and Russia protect the regime from them?

Elsewhere

May Day! May Day! Support for el gran paro in Mexico City. Bolivia's Evo Morales celebrates his own way: by dramatically nationalizing oil and natural gas production.

"The time has come, the awaited day, a historic day in which Bolivia retakes absolute control of our natural resources…The looting by foreign companies has ended."

Industry execs are waiting for the fine print, but the move is already straining relations with Brazil, which relies heavily on Bolivian energy.

Zen's Moment: Hong Kong Cardinal Joseph Zen takes on Beijing for meddling in the appointment of bishops.

The BBC reports on FP's new Failed State Index, noting that eleven of the twenty least stable countries are in Africa…The Darfur talks are in trouble and U.S. point man Bob Zoellick is on a rescue mission…Desmond Tutu thinks South African whites are ungrateful. Now, De Klerk fires back…Amnesty blasts Ethiopia for its "genocide" trial of dissidents…Berlusconi finally says basta.

David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist

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