Morning Brief, Wednesday, May 31

Is General Motors the most dangerous company in America? Tom Friedman thinks so. Today, GM's "fuel price protection program" earns his ire. GM SUVs come with cheaper gas for the next year. If you live in Florida or California and buy certain G.M. vehicles by July 5, the company will guarantee you gasoline at a ...

Is General Motors the most dangerous company in America? Tom Friedman thinks so. Today, GM's "fuel price protection program" earns his ire. GM SUVs come with cheaper gas for the next year.

Is General Motors the most dangerous company in America? Tom Friedman thinks so. Today, GM's "fuel price protection program" earns his ire. GM SUVs come with cheaper gas for the next year.

If you live in Florida or California and buy certain G.M. vehicles by July 5, the company will guarantee you gasoline at a cap price of $1.99 a gallon for one year — with no limit on mileage. Guzzle away….

Our military is in a war on terrorism in Iraq and Afghanistan with an enemy who is fueled by our gasoline purchases. So we are financing both sides in the war on terror. And what are we doing about that? Not only is GM subsidizing its gas-guzzlers, but not a single member of Congress, liberal or conservative, will stand up and demand what most of them know: that we must have some kind of gasoline tax to compel Americans to buy more fuel-efficient vehicles and to compel Detroit to make them.

This month was the worst for "multiple-fatality" bombings since the war in Iraq began, according to Brookings. Fifty Iraqis were killed yesterday in bombings and attacks, and Maliki promised to crush insurgents in Basra with an "iron fist." But Maliki needs to realize, writes Fareed Zakaria, that it isn't military strength but political bargaining that will win the peace in Iraq.

N. Gregory Mankiw in the WSJ says Hank Paulson will have some daunting tasks at Treasury, not least an unsustainable government budget to negotiate. It could be worse. Inflation could be so bad that a $100,000 note is needed.

Hoping to get Russian support on an Iran resolution, the US forgoes language about using immediate military force. More calls for direct talks.

More than a dozen dead in Mogadishu fighting as an Islamist faction gains ground. Good thing the Bush administration isn't punishing State Dept officials who oppose its backing of Somali warlords. Oh, wait

Disease and hunger kill more in Darfur than violence now, as rebel groups continue to fight amongst one another and harm the civilians they joined forces to protect. Max Boot: Send in the mercenaries.

Fresh rioting in the Paris suburbs. Soldiers open fire on demonstrators in Indian-administered Kashmir, killing two. Chaos in East Timor. Bush watches United 93, and Al Gore calls the current administration a "renegade band of rightwing extremists."

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

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