Morning Brief, Tuesday, May 30
BREAKING: Josh Bolten, a former Goldman Sachs exec, works more magic and convinces Goldman Sachs chief exec Henry Paulson Jr. to take over Treasury from John Snow. The European Court of Justice rules that the EU can no longer hand over airline passenger data to US authorities – a deal that had been brokered in ...
BREAKING: Josh Bolten, a former Goldman Sachs exec, works more magic and convinces Goldman Sachs chief exec Henry Paulson Jr. to take over Treasury from John Snow.
BREAKING: Josh Bolten, a former Goldman Sachs exec, works more magic and convinces Goldman Sachs chief exec Henry Paulson Jr. to take over Treasury from John Snow.
The European Court of Justice rules that the EU can no longer hand over airline passenger data to US authorities – a deal that had been brokered in 2004 to improve security and fight terrorism. The Court found that there weren't adequate privacy protections and no guarantees that the 34 items of information provided for each passenger wouldn't be misused.
Ellen Knickmeyer at WaPo breaks the story that 3500 additional US reserve troops will be deployed to the embattled western Iraqi province of Anbar, parts of which, Khalilzad recently admitted, are under insurgent control.
In Ramadi, "Zarqawi is the one who is in control," [a Sunni] sheik said, speaking to a Washington Post special correspondent in Ramadi. "He kills anyone who goes in and out of the U.S. base. We have stopped meetings with the Americans, because, frankly speaking, we have lost confidence in the U.S. side, as they can't protect us."
Another sheik, Bashir Abdul Qadir al-Kubaisi of the Kubaisat tribe in Ramadi, expressed similar views. "Today, there is no tribal sheik or a citizen who dares to go to the city hall or the U.S. base, because Zarqawi issued a statement ordering his men to kill anyone seen leaving the base or city hall," he said.
More journalists have died in Iraq than in Vietnam or World War II.
Indonesian President Yudhoyono thinks it could be months before provisions reach tens of thousands of homeless quake survivors. The death toll from Saturday's quake surpasses 5,400.
Fierce anti-American riots in Kabul yesterday leave more than a dozen dead. Bush likens the war on terror to the Cold War.
Peru asks Chavez to butt out ahead of the country's elections on June 4. Colombia's Uribe easily wins a second term. Brazilian police continue to face criticism for their handling of deadly gang riots across the country earlier this month.
Kristof on the devastating African AIDS epidemic. Mallaby believes the Bush administration deserves credit for its program to fight global AIDS.
In case you missed it yesterday: Joschka Fischer on why the clock is running out on a diplomatic settlement with Iran, and why the time to talk is now.
It's a start: The first Saudi feature film is actually made in Dubai.
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