Morning Brief, Wednesday, December 27

Iraq and Middle East Saddam Hussein will hang within 30 days, says an Iraqi appeals court. The U.S. is jubilant, but Europeans don’t like the death penalty, not even for Saddam. Amid beefed-up security, Muslims have begun gathering in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, for the annual Hajj pilgrimage. The showdown between Tehran and Washington over four ...

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605250_saddam_dock5.jpg

Iraq and Middle East

Iraq and Middle East

Saddam Hussein will hang within 30 days, says an Iraqi appeals court. The U.S. is jubilant, but Europeans don’t like the death penalty, not even for Saddam.

Amid beefed-up security, Muslims have begun gathering in Mecca, Saudi Arabia, for the annual Hajj pilgrimage.

The showdown between Tehran and Washington over four Iranians being held by the U.S. military continues, with the U.S. now saying the four are complicit in attacks against American troops. 

Iran is becoming a “bigger player” in Afghanistan.

North America

Former U.S. President Gerald Ford dies at the age of 93.

Democrat Joseph Biden, incoming chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, will oppose troop increases in Iraq. 

Canada deports a Russian spy. 

The Bush administration wants to put polar bears on the endangered species list. Does that mean global warming is real? 

Europe

French Interior Minister Nicolas Sarkozy files a defamation suit against a man who he says put his name on a list of those taking kickbacks from a weapons deal. 

Burger King has been banned from advertising to children in the U.K., and the fast food chain ain’t happy.

Belarus threatens to cut off gas supplies to Europe unless Russia’s Gazprom eases off its price hike. 

Asia

Japan reportedly has begun investigating the building of a nuclear warhead. The estimated cost? Not much more than Google paid for YouTube.  

China projects it will become the world’s third-largest car producer after the U.S. and Japan, overtaking Germany. 

Twin earthquakes in Taiwan knock out undersea telecom cables, disconnecting millions of Asians from the rest of the world.  

Elsewhere 

Troops aligned with the Somali government are advancing on Mogadishu

Sudan might perhaps let U.N. peacekeeping troops into Darfur, maybe, under certain conditions.

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