Morning Brief, Tuesday, May 9

On Slate, Fred Kaplan explains how there’s nothing weird or illegal about a general at the head of the CIA: rather, we might want to acknowledge that John Negroponte and the NSA are trying to tighten their grip of the intelligence community. His (Rep. Peter Hoekstra)  real concern, I suspect, is not so much that ...

On Slate, Fred Kaplan explains how there’s nothing weird or illegal about a general at the head of the CIA: rather, we might want to acknowledge that John Negroponte and the NSA are trying to tighten their grip of the intelligence community. His (Rep. Peter Hoekstra)  real concern, I suspect, is not so much that "a general," but rather that this particular general, is being put in charge—and that the move strengthens not so much Rumsfeld but, rather, Negroponte.

On Slate, Fred Kaplan explains how there’s nothing weird or illegal about a general at the head of the CIA: rather, we might want to acknowledge that John Negroponte and the NSA are trying to tighten their grip of the intelligence community.

His (Rep. Peter Hoekstra)  real concern, I suspect, is not so much that "a general," but rather that this particular general, is being put in charge—and that the move strengthens not so much Rumsfeld but, rather, Negroponte.

After writing a 16-page letter to “find a way out of the problems facing humanity”, Iran finds ways to laud Russia and China for their realism.

In Iraq, a tale of corruption, unsolved murders, and $125,035

On the Egyptian Al-Ahram weekly, Carnegie scholar Amr Hamzawi has an interesting analysis of the Western framing of the Arab world into the secular/good, Islamist/bad categories:

It is harmful, both for Arab societies and civil society organizations, to portray all religious currents as radical and anti-democratic. This approach is unhelpful, except to those civil society organizations that depend on US and European aid for their existence — and there are too many of those unfortunately.

Zuma: alright, Forsyth, not using a condom was a mistake.

A Chinese man wants his money back for the Russian fighter jet he bought on Ebay.

A bad day for Eastern Europe: China takes on Albania, and the EU 'humiliates' Bulgaria.  Also, rioting and lynching in Darfur, and the Australian miners are free

Davide Berretta is a researcher at Foreign Policy.

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