Top story:  U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates arrived in Saudi Arabia where he will discuss plans to confront Iran's nuclear program. Gates' Saudi visit follows three days in Afghanistan, where he accused Iran of playing a "double game" by trying to undermine the progress made by U.S. forces.

As Gates was leaving Afghanistan on Wednesday, Iranian President Mahmoud Amhadinejad arrived for meetings with many of the same officials that met with the secretary, and directly responded to his remarks:  "Why is it that those who say they want to fight terrorism are never successful? I think it is because they are the ones who are playing a double game," Ahmadinejad said. They are the ones who set the terrorists on their course and now they say: 'Now we want to fight them'. Well they cannot, it is impossible."

Speaking at a news conference in President Hamid Karzai in Afghanistan Gates said that the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan could begin before the July 2011 deadline set by President Obama if conditions were right, though aides said this was unlikely. In Riyadh, Gates will meet with King Abdullah and Crown Prince bin Abd al-Aziz Al Saud to discuss cooperation on air and missile defense. 

Science: Scientists say the technically-plagued Large Hadron Collider will have to be shut down for a year at the end of 2011. 


Middle East

  • The U.S. condemned Israel's decision to build 1,600 new housing units in East Jerusalem, which was announced during Vice President Joe Biden's visit. 
  • Iraq has delayed the release of the first election results until Thursday. 
  • Egypt's most prominent Muslim cleric, Sheikh Mohammed Sayed Tantawi, died at the age of 81. 

Asia

  • India's parliament passed a law to reserve one third of seats in national and state legislatures for women. 
  • The Dalai Lama voiced support for China's Uighur minority. 
  • Burma has barred democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi from participating in upcoming elections. 

Europe

  • Nationwide strikes will shut down all public services in Greece on Thursday. 
  • Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky won a libel case against a broadcaster that alleged he was behind the killing of Alexander Litvinenko. 
  • British Prime Minister Gordon Brown will release a budget on March 24, likely paving the way for elections in may. 

African

  • More than half of international food aid to Somalia is diverted to other purposes, according to a new U.N. report.  
  • Nigerian soldiers opened fire on a group of youths in Jos, killing two. 
  • The two European aid workers kidnapped in Mauritania last year have been set free. 

Americas

  • Venezuela's government took control of two sugar mills. 
  • Authorities say a U.S.-born hitman is fighting for control of Mexico's Beltran -Leyva drug cartel. 
  • Haitian President Rene Preval will meet with President Obama at the White House today. 



EXPLORE:MORNING BRIEF
 
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B. ELLI COSE

9:31 AM ET

March 10, 2010

Slight inaccuracies

India's parliament passed a law to reserve one third of seats in national and state legislatures for women.

No. Only the upper house (one half of India's parliament, and in fact the weaker house from a constitutional perspective) has passed the bill.

Nor is the bill a "law" until both houses approve it and the President signs off on it. In fact, at that point it will be a constitutional amendment.

 

SURESH SHETH

2:04 PM ET

March 10, 2010

Gates and Ahmadinejad trade barbs

There is truth in what Ahmadinejad is saying even if US does not like it.

Reagan embraced Islamic fundamentalists to fight Soviet Union in Afghanistan which came back to haunt US in the form of 9/11 terrorist attacks and US has been fighting the same terrorists ever since.

Furthermore Bush embraced Pakistan's Musharraf to fight the terrorists that Pakistan itself created. Musharraf played the game of 'running with the hare while hunting with the hounds with US, milking Uncle Sam in the process.

Bush also allowed Musharraf to spirit away hundreds if not thousands of Taliban cadre by airlifting them from Kunduz in November 2001 where they were trapped by advancing Northern Alliance forces. Pakistan relocated those Taliban cadres led by Mullah Mohammed Omar and Haqqani to Quetta and North Waziristan from where those Taliban cadres are controlling the insurgency in Afghanistan as confirmed by General McChrystal in his assessment to President Obama in August, 2001.

Thus US itself is largely responsible for its continuing Afghan debacle and deaths of US/NATO soldiers.

 

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