Thursday, September 11, 2008

FP roundup

Top Story

With the Taliban and al Qaeda gaining strength in Afghanistan, U.S. President George W. Bush secretly gave permission in July for American Special Operations forces to conduct raids inside Pakistani territory, the New York Times reports. One U.S. official told the paper that Pakistan's government had "privately assented" to the general concept, though it might reject specific missions.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai is
pleased with the new strategy, but Pakistan's Army chief of staff sharply criticized one such raid by U.S. troops, who reportedly crossed the Afghan border and entered South Waziristan last week. "No external force is allowed to conduct operations inside Pakistan," he said Wednesday.

"I'm not convinced we're winning in Afghanistan," the Pentagon's top general
testified Wednesday before the House Armed Services Committee. "We can hunt down and kill extremists as they cross over the border from Pakistan," he added, "but until we work more closely with the Pakistani government to eliminate the safe havens from which they operate, the enemy will only keep coming."

In a special Web feature for FP, five top Pakistani commentators offer
advice for catching Osama bin Laden.

Decision '08
As the U.S. national conversation descends into farce, Democrats are increasingly worried that Barack Obama will lose. "I'm so depressed. It's happening again. It's a nightmare," one Democratic fundraiser told Politico.

Joe Biden suggested at a campaign appearance that Hillary Clinton
would have made a better running mate.
American voters are
less concerned with terrorism than at any point since the attacks, according to a new CNN/Opinion Research poll.

Americas
Hurricane Ike is heading for Texas.

U.S. Department of the Interior officials are in big trouble for
allegedly taking gifts from and having sex with oil company representatives.

Two Russian bombers have landed in Venezuela for a training mission. "
The Yankee hegemony is finished," said Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez.

Bolivia's president moved to expel the U.S. ambassador from La Paz for allegedly "
conspiring against democracy" and trying to break up the country.

Middle East and Africa
The United States announced sanctions against an Iranian shipping company, accusing it of providing support for Tehran's nuclear program.

Iraq
canceled six widely criticized contracts with major Western oil companies.
The World Bank has
ended its unorthodox cooperation with Chad.

Asia
Kim Jong Il has recovered from a stroke suffered in August "enough to walk and talk," South Korean officials say. Yesterday, FP asked analyst Ken E. Gause to explain what is going on in Pyongyang.

He's back: chef-politician Samak Sundaravej
accepted his party's nomination for prime minister of Thailand.

Parts of Asia were
rocked by major earthquakes Wednesday.

Europe
The sinking euro has hit a new one-year low against the dollar.

Russia is trying to
show its "softer side" in Moldova.

Moscow may use its sovereign wealth fund to
prop up its sagging domestic market.

Global Economy
Saudi Arabia plans to ignore OPEC and pump as much oil as it wants. "At $100 the price of oil remains very high," said a spokesman for the International Energy Agency, criticizing OPEC for trying to cut production.

The buzzards are circling for Washington Mutual, the troubled regional bank.

Surging exports have
fueled a boom in obscure parts of the United States.

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