FPI Overnight Brief: July 9, 2010
FPI Overnight Brief
July 9, 2010
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Russian
Spies
In a rapidly arranged spy swap reminiscent of Cold War intrigues, the U.S. government on Thursday agreed to expel 10 agents who had burrowed into American society and in return won the release of four Russians jailed for illegal contacts with the West. – Washington Post
Ten Russian spies convicted in the US were on their way back to Moscow on Friday after being deported in a swap for four people convicted of espionage in Russia. Television crews in Moscow converged on Sheremetyevo airport awaiting the arrival of the spies, who reportedly left the US last night on a flight to Moscow. – Financial Times
Mikhail Semenko, one
of 11 Russian "illegals" accused of spying for Moscow
against the United States, targeted leading Washington think
tanks in an apparent effort to get close to policy makers in
the American government. - Telegraph
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Obama
Administration
A four-star Marine general
known equally for blunt speech, combat prowess and
understanding counterinsurgency warfare will be nominated to
command American forces across the Middle East, officials
said Thursday. – New York
Times
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Koreas
The
United Nations Security Council is expected Friday to
formally condemn the sinking of a South Korean warship, with
a carefully worded statement that avoids directly blaming
North Korea or imposing penalties on it. – Wall Street Journal
China warned the
U.S. and South Korea on July 8 against holding joint war
games near its waters and urged the two nations to guard
against exacerbating festering tensions with North Korea.
– AFP
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Afghanistan/Pakistan
A suicide bomber targeted a group of tribal elders gathered near the headquarters of the civilian government in Mohmand on Friday, killing more than 50 people and wounding about 100, a senior Pakistani security official said. – New York Times
British troops could end their combat role in Afghanistan even sooner than the five years the government has suggested, the UK's top diplomat in the country said today. - Guardian
Pakistani and Afghan officials have met in Islamabad to discuss a possible agreement to facilitate Afghan trade with India, RFE/RL's Radio Mashaal reports. – Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Bill Roggio reports: Al Qaeda has replaced its emir, or leader, for Afghanistan, according to a report in the Asia Times. While al Qaeda hasn't officially announced the appointment, the author of the article has been adept at identifying top terror leaders in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and he has extensive contacts with al Qaeda, Taliban, and Pakistani jihadists. – The Weekly Standard Blog
Raphael Cohen
writes: [I]n this case especially, analysis should not stop
simply with the conclusion that corruption in Afghanistan is
rampant and bad. Instead, the data should prompt us to
reconsider some of our basic assumptions about our efforts
in Afghanistan—be it the effects of population-centric
counterinsurgency strategy, or the challenge of combating
perceived versus actual corruption. Polls may not provide
us with all the answers, but at least they force us to ask
the important questions. – AEI’s Center for Defense
Studies
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Iran
Even
as the United States imposes new sanctions on Iran, one of
the biggest gaps in the American strategy is on full display
here in Iraq, where hundreds of millions of dollars in crude
oil and refined products are smuggled over the scenic
mountains of Iraqi Kurdistan every year. – New York Times
Twelve Iranian women and three men are on death row awaiting execution by stoning despite an apparent last-minute reprieve for a mother of two who had been facing the horrific sentence after being convicted of adultery. - Guardian
Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad's current visit to Nigeria and Mali is yet another attempt to forge new alliances with African states in the hope that this can offset his country's growing isolation. Attending the July 4-8 Developing Eight (D8) summit in Abuja, Ahmadinejad is trying to rally support for his show of resistance against growing U.S.-led international pressure. – Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
Charles Robb and Charles Wald write: We cannot afford to wait indefinitely to determine the effectiveness of diplomacy and sanctions. Sanctions can be effective only if coupled with open preparation for the military option as a last resort. Indeed, publicly playing down potential military options has weakened our leverage with Tehran, making a peaceful resolution less likely. – Washington Post
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China
Wu
Yuren, an artist who helped lead an unusually bold public
protest last winter over a land dispute, has been
languishing in a Beijing jail for almost six weeks after
having been beaten by police officers, his wife said on
Thursday. – New York Times
The US declined to name China as a currency manipulator in a politically sensitive report on Thursday, citing Beijing’s loosening of the renminbi peg in June as “a significant development”. The report had been delayed from April as part of a process of quiet diplomacy to encourage China to allow some flexibility in the exchange rate. – Financial Times
Alarm bells would have sounded in Beijing June 28 when the Tomahawk-laden 560-foot USS Ohio popped up in the Philippines' Subic Bay. More alarms likely were sounded when the USS Michigan arrived in Pusan, South Korea, the same day. And the klaxons would have maxed out as the USS Florida surfaced the same day at the joint U.S.-British naval base at Diego Garcia, a flyspeck of an island in the Indian Ocean. The Chinese military awoke to find as many as 462 additional Tomahawks deployed by the U.S. in its neighborhood. - Time
Chinese authorities seized 64
tonnes of milk powder and products laced with the same
deadly toxic additive that sparked an uproar in 2008,
officials and state media said, underscoring the persistence
of food safety breaches. - Reuters
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Middle
East
Turkey’s foreign minister on Thursday dismissed concerns that his country was moving away from the west as “nonsense,” insisting that Ankara’s main strategic objective was to join the European Union. – Financial Times
Declaring that he intended to “confound the critics and the skeptics,” an upbeat Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel told an audience of foreign policy experts in New York on Thursday that he was ready to begin direct peace talks with the Palestinians “next week” or even sooner. “Just get on with it,” he said. – New York Times
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signaled on Thursday he would not extend beyond September a 10-month moratorium on new housing starts in Jewish settlements in the occupied West Bank. - Reuters
Britain's ambassador to Lebanon has been condemned by victims of Middle East terror groups for writing an appreciation of the spiritual leader of Hizbollah who masterminded the 1980s Lebanese hostage crisis. - Telegraph
Hizbollah instigated several
confrontations with French peacekeepers over the past 10
days after the group decided the UN-led force was engaging
in espionage-style activities, according to Hizbollah and
Lebanese military officials. – The
National
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The
War
Three men who were arrested in Norway and Germany on Thursday on suspicion of terrorism were “one node” in the global terror network that plotted the foiled attack against the New York subway and planned to blow up a shopping center in Manchester, England, European and American counterterrorism officials said. – New York Times
The European Parliament approved a deal Thursday that allows the sharing of sensitive financial data with U.S. counterterrorism officials that the Obama administration had been urgently seeking since the previous system went dark at the start of the year. – Wall Street Journal
Six months after President Obama halted all transfers of Guantánamo Bay detainees to Yemen, the moratorium is coming under escalating pressure from federal judges — raising doubts about its sustainability. – New York Times
The longest and
costliest terrorism prosecution in British history came to
an end on Thursday when three men were found guilty in a
London court of plotting to commit murder in a case that
centered on a 2006 conspiracy, with links to Al Qaeda, to
attack seven trans-Atlantic airliners bound for the United
States and Canada with “liquid bombs.” – New York
Times
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Defense
U.S.
congressional investigators have upped the ante in their
confrontation with two top Pentagon contractors who have
received billions of dollars supplying fuel to troops in
Afghanistan but have refused to reveal their owners. – Wall Street Journal
The Pentagon wants to shift nearly $4 billion in previously allocated funding, much of it within the Army's budget to buy arms and gear needed in Afghanistan, according to a July 2 omnibus reprogramming request. – Defense News
The Joint Cargo Aircraft
C-27J program was restructured more than a year ago, but
Congress is still raising questions about the Pentagon's
plans to reduce the number of aircraft and transfer the
joint program and the mission it supports solely to the Air
Force. – Defense
News
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Wikileaks
The
soldier accused of downloading a huge trove of secret data
from military computers in Iraq appears to have exploited a
loophole in Defense Department security to copy thousands of
files onto compact discs over a six-month period. In at
least one instance, according to those familiar with the
inquiry, the soldier smuggled highly classified data out of
his intelligence unit on a disc disguised as a music CD by
Lady Gaga. – New York
Times
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Cybersecurity
Hundreds of computers that helped cause a wave of outages on U.S. and South Korean government websites last July launched new attacks on the same sites, but no major interference was reported, police said Thursday. – Associated Press
Singapore will host
the first Regional Collaboration in Cyber Security
conference from July 13-14 at the Shangri-La Hotel. The
conference will cover cyber terrorism, information
operations, cyber warfare, wireless hacking and cyber crime.
– Defense
News
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Russia
Two prominent intellectuals, facing a verdict of up to three years’ imprisonment over a museum exhibition in 2007, issued dire warnings on Thursday that Russia was starting to resemble Nazi Germany, contemporary Iran and the Soviet Union in the harshness of its growing nationalism, dominance of the Russian Orthodox church and fear of modern art. – New York Times
Romanov is one of
hundreds of Russian business owners who face prison each
year for alleged financial misconduct. And like him, most
accuse corrupt police and investigators of trumping up
charges to extort money from them or take over their
businesses. Not all, of course, are innocent. But the number
of criminal cases against businesspeople has grown so
sharply in recent years that entrepreneurs are now taking
action to combat what they say is a vast campaign of
racketeering by law enforcement officials. – Radio Free Europe/Radio
Liberty
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France
The
former accountant of France’s richest woman denied to the
police that she had told a French Web site that President
Nicolas Sarkozy had taken envelopes of cash from her boss,
Liliane Bettencourt, according to a report in the newspaper
Le Monde on Thursday. – New York
Times
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Japan
Japanese
Prime Minister Noato Kan's Democratic Party looked
increasingly likely to suffer a sharp setback in a weekend
election, surveys showed on Friday, putting his job at risk
and hampering efforts to curb a huge public debt. - Reuters
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Kyrgyzstan
Kyrgyzstan
asked for up to $500 million in aid Thursday to restore two
southern cities where hundreds of people are living in the
ruins of homes destroyed during the worst violence in the
country's modern history. - Reuters
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Sri
Lanka
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
retaliated on Thursday for protests led by a Sri Lankan
minister outside U.N. premises in Colombo by closing the
office and recalling the top U.N. official in the Asian
country. - Reuters
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Americas
As in all major government takeovers of private companies in Venezuela, President Hugo Chávez declared that seizing beer-and-food giant Polar's facilities here would mark another victory for the poor in the country's march toward socialism…Except this time, the president's plans went badly awry, exposing mounting national opposition to a policy under which oil companies, supermarkets and factories have been taken over by the state, only to founder under the control of government functionaries. – Washington Post
Cuban dissident Guillermo Farinas has called off his four-month hunger strike after the island's government promised to free 52 political prisoners. – Associated Press
Mexico's richest
city, once a poster child for development with its high-rise
office blocks and flourishing industries, is being gripped
by drug war terror with rising violence forcing dozens of
its factories to freeze investment. - Reuters
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Postscript
Women won more seats in the Czech parliament than ever before during national elections in late May. To tout its new stars, one upstart party decided to give them special billing—as pin-up girls – Wall Street Journal
ENDS