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Obama may pick Lute for European command

Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 21:52

The Obama administration is considering nominating retired Lt. Gen. Douglas Lute as the next commander of the U.S. European Command, a move that could stir controversy among some senior military officials who have clashed with Lute over war policy.

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In birthplace of Syria’s uprising, a fragile military control

Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 20:52

DARAA, Syria — Nearly 11 months ago, protests against local authorities began in this small southern town and spread to become an uprising against the government of Bashar al-Assad that engulfed Syria.

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Expats lured by Brazil’s booming economy

Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 20:38

SAO PAULO, Brazil — It just made sense to be in South America’s economic heart, Jonathan Rosenthal reasoned, no matter that he had been working on Wall Street with some of the investment world’s most heady firms.

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U.S. to elevate Special Operations forces’ role in Afghanistan

Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 18:10

The U.S. military is planning to elevate the role of Special Operations forces in Afghanistan as it shifts away from a combat focus to a mission that places greater emphasis on advising Afghan forces and raids to kill top insurgent leaders, senior U.S. officials said.

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Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 18:10
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Egypt to prosecute Americans, including Sam LaHood, in NGO probe

Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 14:00

CAIRO — Nineteen Americans will face criminal charges as part of a probe of the funding of pro-democracy groups, Egyptian officials announced Sunday, a provocative move that could deprive Egypt of crucial aid from the United States and upend one of Washington’s most important bilateral relationships.

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Car bomb in Kandahar, Afghanistan, kills seven outside police headquarters

Washington Post News - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 06:09

KABUL — At least five Afghan police officers and two civilians were killed Sunday when a car bomb was detonated outside the main police headquarters in Kandahar, officials said.

An additional 19 people, six of them police officers, were wounded in the blast, provincial officials said. Children also were among the victims.

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In Afghanistan, a new approach to teaching history: Leave out the wars

Washington Post News - Sat, 02/04/2012 - 21:05

KABUL — In a country where the recent past has unfolded like a war epic, officials think they have found a way to teach Afghan history without widening the fractures between long-quarreling ethnic and political groups: leave out the past four decades. 

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Their vigor unflagging, Russians protest

Washington Post News - Sat, 02/04/2012 - 13:24

MOSCOW — Tens of thousands of Russians embraced the numbing cold and marched to a frozen riverbank near the Kremlin on Saturday, demonstrating their determination to keep up the pressure on Vladimir Putin for fair elections and honest government.

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Privacy concerns grow in India

Washington Post News - Sat, 02/04/2012 - 06:45

NEW DELHI — The Indian government’s recent announcement that it taps nearly 300 new phones every day has sparked a debate about privacy in a country that traditionally views such concerns as an ugly offshoot of Western individualism.

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Malaria kills twice as many people as we thought — are data-gathering and taxes to blame?

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 16:53

A study released Friday has shaken up much of what we thought we knew about malaria.

The number of people who die annually of the tropical disease is roughly double the current estimate, according to the report, published in the science journal Lancet. Additionally, many of malaria’s victims are now believed to be adults, overturning the previous belief that adults almost never die of the disease.

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Anonymous says it will leak giant cache of Iraq war e-mails

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 15:30

Anonymous has struck — and struck again.

Early Friday, the FBI said that hackers from the well-known collective had intercepted and released a confidential conference call between the FBI and Scotland Yard.

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Petraeus, with plenty of practice, sticks to message

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 15:05

In his first extended public appearance as CIA director, David H. Petraeus this week did more than display his well-known discipline for staying on message. He did his best to bring other government voices back on message as well.

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Hackers release call between FBI, Scotland Yard

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 14:09

As the FBI and Scotland Yard conducted a conference call last month on their investigation of an international group of hackers, the discussions were being secretly monitored -- by the hackers themselves.

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Iran says it may ban Samsung for commercial depicting attack on nuclear plant

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 13:40

As Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei delivered an impassioned anti-Israel speech Friday, a smaller fight played out between the two countries over a tablet commercial.

In the teaser, a bored agent for Mossad, Israel’s national intelligence agency, is shown watching TV on his Samsung tablet while in Isfahan, south of Tehran. After the agent begins conversing about the features of the tablet with several Iranian “women” (actually men from an Israeli TV show), one of them presses on the tablet and accidentially blows up a nearby uranium enrichment plant.

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Photo of the day: What in the world?

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 11:39

Following our Friday tradition, we give you this photo. It should not be too hard to guess where it is from.

You can tweet your responses to @PostWorldNews with a hashtag #whatintheworld.

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Gunmen kidnap two American tourists in Egypt’s Sinai peninsula

Washington Post News - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 09:16

Update, 11:51 p.m.: The two American tourists have been released The women were not immediatebly identified, but Egyptian officials said they were age 60 and 65.

Two female tourists and their Egyptian tour guide Friday were intercepted by gunmen and kidnapped in the southern part of the Sinai peninsula, The Post’s Ernesto Londono reports.

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Feinstein offers peek at U.S.-Israeli talks on Iran

Washington Post News - Wed, 02/01/2012 - 12:52

Open intelligence hearings on Capitol Hill are never completely open. Lawmakers and witnesses try to stick to what’s safe to say in public, without disclosing details on espionage operations or what’s happening behind the scenes in Washington.

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Army officer who sparked controversy with remarks on Islam pulls out of West Point address

Washington Post News - Tue, 01/31/2012 - 11:32

A retired U.S. Army general with a history of making inflammatory remarks about  Islam has canceled his plans to be the featured guest at an event at the U.S.  Military Academy at West Point, the academy said.

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