Morning Brief, Tuesday, March 6

Middle East Nine U.S. soldiers died yesterday in Iraq.   So much for Palestinian unity, eh? Did “Western intelligence services” kidnap a former deputy defense minister of Iran?  It was probably Israel, which seeks to arrest five Iranians deemed responsible for a 1994 bombing of a Jewish cultural center in Argentina. The United Nations plans ...

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603528_070306_merkel_05.jpg

Middle East

Middle East

Nine U.S. soldiers died yesterday in Iraq.  

So much for Palestinian unity, eh?

Did “Western intelligence services” kidnap a former deputy defense minister of Iran?  It was probably Israel, which seeks to arrest five Iranians deemed responsible for a 1994 bombing of a Jewish cultural center in Argentina.

The United Nations plans to set up shop in Jordan to deal with growing numbers of Iraqi refugees.

Europe

BERTRAND GUAY/AFP

The United States is playing nice with Russia. A Russian reporter who “fell” from his apartment window on Friday had been investigating his country’s weapons sales to Syria and Iran, his newspaper reported.

Ségolène Royal meets Angela Merkel. Both are women, but that’s about where the similarities end.

Germany may charge extra landing fees for airplanes that pollute more than others. 

Asia

The Taliban claim to have seized a British journalist and his two Afghan coworkers in Helmand province. But the journalist’s identity is a mystery. Meanwhile, NATO troops began a spring offensive against the Taliban.

In Tokyo, U.S. Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson said the global economy is strong. And Asian stocks are back up.

A deadly earthquake struck Indonesia, killing 70.

Thailand’s military rulers seized the country’s last independent television station.

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte has “no doubt that North Korea has had a highly enriched uranium program” despite recent reports to the contrary.

No new Internet cafés allowed in China, at least for now. 

Elsewhere 

U.S. President Bush is on a tour of Latin America, where he is expected to launch a new ethanol initiative with Brazilian President Lula da Silva.

Does coffee really wake you up in the morning?

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