Morning Brief, Friday, June 2

Condi cobbles together a nice package of incentives (sanctions being the dirty word) for Iran, while Negroponte talks tough. And don't miss Michael Slackman on the satisfaction in Tehran. In interviews, the officials and Iranian analysts said the American proposal indicated that Iran's uncompromising approach in its handling of the nuclear crisis had successfully forced the ...

Condi cobbles together a nice package of incentives (sanctions being the dirty word) for Iran, while Negroponte talks tough. And don't miss Michael Slackman on the satisfaction in Tehran.

Condi cobbles together a nice package of incentives (sanctions being the dirty word) for Iran, while Negroponte talks tough. And don't miss Michael Slackman on the satisfaction in Tehran.

In interviews, the officials and Iranian analysts said the American proposal indicated that Iran's uncompromising approach in its handling of the nuclear crisis had successfully forced the United States to take it more seriously, even if no progress had been made on solving the conflict. Earning that measure of respect, many said, is its own reward.

So, will Rummy go because of Haditha? Unlikely. But Maliki lashes out all the same. A new Zarqawi tape urges Sunnis to rise up.

Putin sacks Russia's chief prosecutor. Remote Minutemen can patrol the Texas-Mexico border via the Web. Nepal's Maoists stage a huge rally in Kathmandu.

It's good to remember that people were planting figs in the West Bank 11,000 years ago.

No end in sight for Darfur. Two rebel groups refused to sign a peace deal yesterday.

The Economist surveys business in India. And expect an international incident when the Brits head to Germany for the World Cup.

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

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