Morning brief, Monday, May 15

President Bush's primetime speech tonight will outline his plan to deploy an overstretched National Guard to seal the border with Mexico, a move that has Vicente Fox worried: [W]ith presidential elections less than two months away, feelings that Mr. Fox has subordinated Mexico's sovereignty to American interests threaten to affect the chances of the candidate ...

President Bush's primetime speech tonight will outline his plan to deploy an overstretched National Guard to seal the border with Mexico, a move that has Vicente Fox worried:

President Bush's primetime speech tonight will outline his plan to deploy an overstretched National Guard to seal the border with Mexico, a move that has Vicente Fox worried:

[W]ith presidential elections less than two months away, feelings that Mr. Fox has subordinated Mexico's sovereignty to American interests threaten to affect the chances of the candidate he hopes to succeed him, Felipe Calderón.

Baghdad had its deadliest day in weeks yesterday. The government is embarking on the uneviable task of reining in 145,000 armed guards who are suspected of being behind the country's death squads. More evidence of disarray in the Iraqi army with Kurdish and Shiite forces unable to communicate and opening fire on one another as a result. Saddam refuses to enter a plea.

Hugo Chavez gets a chummy reception from London mayor Ken Livingstone (who rolls out the welcome wagon here) and warns the U.S. to steer clear of Iran.

Huh? Michael Clough argues in the LAT that while violence in Darfur may be horrific, it isn't genocide. Atrocities continue.

Robert Malley and Aaron David Miller argue in WaPo that while Israel and Hamas have differing long-term goals, their immediate agendas have more in common than you may think. Mahmoud Abbas is in Russia hoping Putin will open his pocketbook for the Palestinians.

Dozens dead in prison riots and attacks on police stations in Brazil. Chad's president gets a third term. Northern Ireland's power-sharing Assembly reconvenes. Outsourcing tutoring. The downside to soft power

Carolyn O'Hara is a senior editor at Foreign Policy.

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