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Opponents and international observers are crying foul over President Hamid Karzai's deicision on Saturday to move Afghanistan's presidential election up to April from its original date in August. Karzai's opponent Ashraf Ghani Ahmadzai says he will not participate in "sham elections" that will lead to a "Zimbabwe-type arrangement."

NATO has warned of greatly increased security risks for the earlier poll and the U.S. says it still prefers the original timetable.

Karzai's presidential term ends on May 21, so the president is on solid ground constitutionally, but none of the other candidates are remotely ready to campaign by April and the move is widely seen as a bid to hold onto power.

Middle East

Only a third of the U.S.'s pledged $900 million Palestinian aid will go to Gaza.

Iran is "not close" to a nuclear weapon, says Secretary of Defense Robert Gates. Adm. Mike Mullen feels differently.

Abu Dhabi may be thinking twice about its investment in Citibank.

Africa

The president of Guinea-Bissau has been assassinated. It is suspected that soldiers blamed him for the killing of the country's army chief on Sunday night.

The U.N. says Hutu rebels are retaking positions abandoned by retreating Rwandan troops in eastern Congo.

Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe threw a party to celebrate his 85th birthday. His nemesis, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, did not attend.

Americas

Struggling U.S. insurance giant AIG has broken records with a $61.7 billion fourth-quarter loss. More government money is on the way.

Barack Obama will announce Kansas Governor Kathleen Sebelius as his pick for secretary of health and human services today.

Two thousand Mexican troops entered Ciudad Juarez to help contain out-of-control drug violence in the city near the U.S. border.

Asia

North Korea and the U.N. command held talks in the demilitarized zone as nuclear tensions on the peninsula continued to build.

A suspected U.S. drone attack killed 8 in Pakistan's Waziristan region.

Europe

The EU rejected a plan for a coordinated financial aid package for Central Europe.

Russian President Dmitry Medevedev wants specifics from Obama on missile defense.

The New York Times reports that Ukraine's government is teetering under the pressure of the financial crisis.

Paula Bronstein/Getty Images

EXPLORE:MORNING BRIEF
 

JGARZIK

10:15 AM ET

March 2, 2009

AIG break-up

I think it is relevant to note that AIG is being broken up, not just bailed out again.

As I just blogged, bailouts that leading to the break up of corporate conglomerates is a new wrinkle, with potential anti-trust implications: should other "too big to fail" companies be broken up, also?

Jeff @ Armchair FP

 

SAULPAULUS

11:27 AM ET

March 2, 2009

It seems you were suggesting

It seems you were suggesting a disagreement between Secretary Gates and Admiral Mullen on Iran. They simply placed their emphasis differently. The Admiral emphasized that Iran had enough fissile material for bomb making. Secretary Gates did not disagree. He simply said that Iran was still a long way from actually making bombs. In that, they both seem to disagree with Intel Chief Blair who questioned whether Iran has enough fissile material for bomb making.

 

GARVAGH

8:49 PM ET

March 2, 2009

Admiral Fallon told Israel to "give a rest" to anti-Iran rants

Admiral Fallon told the Jerusalem Post that Israeli claims Iran was developming nuclear weapons needed to be given a rest, for the reason Fallon believed the claims were not true. Why would Iran want nuclear weapons? It would only invite an Israeli attack, to attempt to develop them (meaning kick out the IAEA).

 

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