Morning Brief, Wednesday, June 21
Bush traveled to Vienna today to discuss energy, trade, and terrorism with EU leaders, but his visit is overshadowed by European pressure to close Gitmo, a move Bush says he backs, and by Iran's announcement that they plan to sit on the nuclear incentives offer until mid-August. Bush is no doubt exasperated by Iran's stalling, ...
Bush traveled to Vienna today to discuss energy, trade, and terrorism with EU leaders, but his visit is overshadowed by European pressure to close Gitmo, a move Bush says he backs, and by Iran's announcement that they plan to sit on the nuclear incentives offer until mid-August.
Bush traveled to Vienna today to discuss energy, trade, and terrorism with EU leaders, but his visit is overshadowed by European pressure to close Gitmo, a move Bush says he backs, and by Iran's announcement that they plan to sit on the nuclear incentives offer until mid-August.
Bush is no doubt exasperated by Iran's stalling, calling the new timetable "an awfully long time" to wait. But perhaps this WaPo article on the behind-the-scenes wrangling between Iranian clerics over whether Islam allows the possession of weapons of mass destruction will give his team some ideas on how to identify Iranian divisions:
A Turkish diplomat, describing a visit in May by the chief Iranian nuclear negotiator, Ali Larijani, said that Larijani made the religious roots of the proscription clear. "I was in the meeting," said the diplomat, who spoke on condition of anonymity. "He said there is even a fatwa , a religious ruling, since the time of Khomeini, that Iran will not produce any nuclear weapons."
Yet interviews with a range of clerics and other students of Islamic teachings indicate that while Grand Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini indeed barred Iranian forces from unconventional weapons during the 1980-88 war with Iraq, the religious underpinning for such a ban is regarded as less than absolute, with ample justification available in scriptures for almost any course except first use.
One of Saddam's lead defense attorneys was abducted from his home and murdered yesterday. The US military says that the two US GIs abducted last week and killed by insurgents were tortured.
A groundbreaking power-sharing deal between the Nepalese government and Maoist rebels negotiated last week is in danger of collapsing after the Maoists refuse to disarm until new elections are held.
North Korea's really trying to play hardball with this threat of a missile launch. Now Kim Jong Il wants direct talks with the US. File that under "unlikely."
East Timor's president tells the prime minister to resign, and former Liberian President Charles Taylor arrived at the Hague yesterday for his war crimes trial.
The "don't miss" of the day: Nap salons are all the rage in Japan.
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