Morning Brief, Tuesday, March 27
AFP Middle East British Prime Minister Tony Blair warned Iran that the showdown over 15 captured British sailors would enter a “different phase” unless diplomacy secured their release. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy is beginning a series of military maneuvers in the Persian Gulf. Israeli PM Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas like each other ...
AFP
Middle East
British Prime Minister Tony Blair warned Iran that the showdown over 15 captured British sailors would enter a “different phase” unless diplomacy secured their release. Meanwhile, the U.S. Navy is beginning a series of military maneuvers in the Persian Gulf.
Israeli PM Ehud Olmert and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas like each other so much, they’ve agreed to meet every two weeks.
In the end, Egypt’s dubious constitutional amendments didn’t provoke much of a response at all from an apathetic Egyptian public.
The U.S. military has long believed that Iran is supplying Shiite militias in Iraq, but only recently made its concerns public, the New York Times reports.
United States
The first military court conviction from Guantánamo? A “former kangaroo skinner” from Australia named David Hicks, who pleaded guilty to helping al Qaeda.
Europe
VAT fraud costs European governments as much as €100 billion each year, says a new study.
No surprises in Russia as “state controlled” gas company Rosneft gobbled up the few remaining assets of Yukos, the bankrupt oil giant.
Declining oil reserves are pushing companies like France’s Total toward unsavory deals in the Middle East and Africa.
Asia
Protests continue in Pakistan over President Musharraf’s decision to suspend a top judge.
Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez announced a $6 billion oil partnership with China.
Burma’s ruling generals have a strange new capital city.
Elsewhere
A top U.N. envoy left “frustrated and angry” after a visit to Darfur, where the situation is deteriorating, aid workers say.
Robert Mugabe will attend talks with fellow African leaders in Tanzania tomorrow to discuss the situation in Zimbabwe.
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