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Iran Begins War Games To Protect Nuclear Sites

NPR - Sun Nov 22, 5:44 PM ET

Iran on Sunday began large-scale air defense war games aimed at protecting its nuclear facilities from attack, state TV reported, as an air force commander boasted that the country could deter any military strike by Israel.

  • 400-Pound Car Bomb Found In Belfast NPR - Sun Nov 22, 11:17 AM ET

    Irish Republican Army dissidents left a 400-pound car bomb outside police reform headquarters in Belfast but the homemade device failed to detonate, Northern Ireland's police commander said Sunday.

  • China Coal Mine Blast Death Toll Jumps To 87 NPR - Sun Nov 22, 8:06 AM ET

    Rescuers worked in frigid cold to reach 21 miners trapped underground Sunday as the death toll from a huge gas explosion in a northern Chinese mine jumped to 87 — the deadliest blast to hit the beleaguered industry in nearly two years.

  • A Child's Doctor Turns To Iraq War's Youngest Victims NPR - Sun Nov 22, 8:00 AM ET

    Dr. Chris Coppola was a pediatrician in the U.S. before he shipped off to Iraq. As a military surgeon, he expected to treat soldiers, but he found himself helping war-ravaged Iraqi children as well. Host Liane Hansen speaks with Dr. Coppola about his memoir, Coppola: A Pediatric Surgeon in Iraq.

  • Reality TV, Iraqi Style: Giving Leaders An Earful NPR - Sun Nov 22, 7:07 AM ET

    One of the most popular programs on Iraqi TV these days is Hotline, a call-in show that allows viewers to take their problems directly to the highest government officials. It offers an unprecedented chance for ordinary Iraqis to confront their government.

  • Outrage Over Death Sentences For Iran's Dissenters NPR - Sat Nov 21, 8:00 AM ET

    Iranian media reported this week that five people arrested in the protests following Iran's presidential election have been sentenced to death. Tehran says the prisoners had connections to "counter-revolutionary groups," but activists say Iran is going too far in persecuting dissenters. Host Scott Simon talks to Hadi Ghaemi, director of the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran.

  • Week In Review With Daniel Schorr NPR - Sat Nov 21, 8:00 AM ET

    This week, the Senate faced a crucial vote on health care. The Obama administration fended off criticism over Sept. 11 trials in New York, and Hamid Karzai was sworn in for another term as president of Afghanistan. Host Scott Simon reviews the week in the news with NPR Senior News Analyst Dan Schorr.

  • Afghanistan-Bound, Americans Pretend To Be There NPR - Sat Nov 21, 8:00 AM ET

    While President Obama weighs his options on Afghanistan, one thing is clear: The U.S. is beefing up its civilian presence there. The aid effort has been hobbled from the start, and many experts consider it a weak link in the struggle to build a stable society in the conflicted country. Deputy Secretary of State Jack Lew insists that the U.S. is now recruiting the right kind of people, but before those people head to Afghanistan, they get trained to work with the military at a base in Indiana.

  • Setbacks Stall Finish Of China's Massive Dam Project NPR - Sat Nov 21, 12:01 AM ET

    The massive reservoir behind China's Three Gorges Dam was supposed to be filled to capacity this month. But landslides on the reservoir and water shortages downstream have delayed the process. Questions have been raised about the dam, which is the world's largest hydropower project, and what it might mean for the Yangtze River.

  • Museum: Galileo's Fingers, Tooth Found NPR - Fri Nov 20, 5:06 PM ET

    Two fingers and a tooth removed from Galileo Galilei's corpse in a Florentine basilica in the 18th century and given up for lost have been found again, a Florence museum said Friday.

  • Socialite's School Brings Hope To Brazilian Slum NPR - Fri Nov 20, 5:01 PM ET

    Brazil's ghettos are poverty stricken and violent. But there are people fighting against the odds to turn things around for the poor children of Rio de Janeiro. Among them is an unusual apostle: a Rio socialite who founded a school for slum-dwelling children and views education as an equalizer.

  • Marines Reflect On Duty, Death In Afghanistan NPR - Fri Nov 20, 4:16 PM ET

    When the Marines of "America's Battalion" first arrived in Afghanistan, they were eager to get into the fight against the Taliban. Now, as they wrap up their seven-month deployment — and after the loss of a dozen comrades — they see warfare in a different light.

  • Obscured By War, Water Crisis Looms In Yemen NPR - Fri Nov 20, 3:56 PM ET

    News from Yemen has been dominated recently by an escalating rebellion along the border with Saudi Arabia. But the country has been making news for decades because of its severe overuse of a rapidly disappearing water supply, the result of natural and political causes.

  • Record Rainfall Wreaks Havoc In Britain, Ireland NPR - Fri Nov 20, 3:35 PM ET

    Raging floods engulfed northern England's Lake District on Friday, killing a police officer and trapping dozens in their swamped homes. In Ireland, more than 3 feet of water shut down the center of the country's second-largest city, Cork, and more than a dozen other towns and villages.

  • Peruvian Police Say Gang Killed People For Their Fat NPR - Fri Nov 20, 3:08 PM ET

    Police arrested three members of a gang in the Peruvian jungle that allegedly has been killing people and draining fat from the corpses to sell on the black market for use in cosmetics. Medical experts expressed doubt about an international black market for human fat, though it does have cosmetic applications.

  • Suicide Motorcycle Bomber Kills 16 In Afghanistan NPR - Fri Nov 20, 7:33 AM ET

    Two children and a policeman were among those killed in the blast, which wounded at least 23 others when the motorcyclist detonated the explosives in a busy city square in western Afghanistan, officials said.

  • Another Minn. Man Indicted In Missing Somalis Case NPR - Thu Nov 19, 6:28 PM ET

    Another man has been indicted on terrorism charges in a federal investigation into the recruitment of Minnesota Somalis to fight in Somalia.

  • European Union Selects Belgian, Briton For Top Posts NPR - Thu Nov 19, 6:09 PM ET

    Trade commissioner Catherine Ashton of Britain was selected as the EU's new foreign policy chief and Belgian Prime Minister Herman Van Rompuy was picked for president. Their appointments suggested the need for compromise outweighed the desire for big names like former British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

  • Police, Courthouse Targeted In Pakistan Attacks NPR - Thu Nov 19, 5:13 PM ET

    Two police officers were killed by a suicide bomber a day after 19 people were killed outside a courthouse in Peshawar. The bombings brought to eight the number of militant attacks in less than two weeks in the city on the Afghan border.

  • Karzai Sees Afghan Security Control Within 5 Years NPR - Thu Nov 19, 4:16 PM ET

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai pledged Thursday to prosecute corrupt officials, and said the country would control it own security within five years. Karzai's comments came in an inauguration speech that kicked off his second term of office amid a growing Taliban insurgency and a cloud of corruption allegations.

  • New Term For Karzai Brings Same Old Problems NPR - Thu Nov 19, 9:32 AM ET

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai was inaugurated in Kabul on Thursday for a new term amid tight security and ceremonial flourishes. But his second term is already beset by severe doubts that he will be any more effective at tackling the country's rampant corruption.

  • Recovery In Developed Economies Gathering Pace NPR - Thu Nov 19, 9:05 AM ET

    Recovery will accelerate next year due to "substantial improvements" in financial markets and fast-growing Asian countries, but is likely to remain fragile, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said. The OECD more than doubled its estimate for 2010 growth in its 30 member countries to 1.9 percent, from the 0.7 percent forecast in June.

  • Cars Are A Hurdle To U.S., Korea Free-Trade Deal NPR - Thu Nov 19, 6:00 AM ET

    More than two years ago, U.S. and South Korea signed a bilateral free trade agreement but lawmakers of both countries have yet to ratify the deal. Officials from both countries hope the deal will create new jobs and open up markets. However, auto trade is a major hurdle.

  • Obama Ready To Keep Pressure On Pyongyang NPR - Thu Nov 19, 6:00 AM ET

    President Obama wraps up his trip to Asia with a stop in South Korea, where leader Lee Myung-bak joked that Obama had saved the best for last. The two men discussed a range of issues, including free trade and the ever-present nuclear threat from North Korea.

  • Afghan President Pledges To Clean Up Corruption NPR - Thu Nov 19, 6:00 AM ET

    Afghan President Hamid Karzai was sworn in for another five-year term Thursday. Watching with a critical eye were foreign dignitaries who are pressing Karzai to make his second term in office far better than his first. Karzai promised to prosecute corrupt officials.

  • Newly-Inaugurated Karzai Vows To Fight Corruption NPR - Thu Nov 19, 3:55 AM ET

    Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai promised Thursday to prosecute corrupt government officials and end a culture of impunity, speaking during an inauguration closely watched by the international community for signs that his administration is moving beyond the cronyism and graft of the past five years.

  • Cuba Was A Canvas For Artist Belkis Ayon NPR - Thu Nov 19, 12:00 AM ET

    When Ayon committed suicide in 1999, she was just 32 years old — and already a star in the Cuban art world. A major exhibit of her work now under way in Havana has revived an enduring mystery in Cuba — about art, African myths and the shadowy, all-male secret society known as Abakua.

  • In Japan, MRIs Cost Less NPR - Wed Nov 18, 4:00 PM ET

    Prices for MRIs are much cheaper in Japan than in the U.S. The difference in prices provides some insight into why health care costs are so high in the U.S. There's something else at work, too. MRIs are very popular in Japan: Some people get them every year even if they aren't sick.

  • Assessing Obama's China Trip NPR - Wed Nov 18, 4:00 PM ET

    President Obama, in his first trip to China as president, met Wednesday with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao. Harry Harding, dean of the University of Virginia's Frank Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, discusses what the China visit say about U.S.-China relations.

  • Iran Rejects U.N. Proposal To Export Uranium NPR - Wed Nov 18, 3:27 PM ET

    Under the deal, Iran would send low-enriched uranium to Russia for further enriching and then to France to be converted into fuel rods, which would be returned to Iran. This would reduce the stockpile of material that Iran could enrich to a higher level and possibly use to make nuclear weapons.

  • New Perils In Mexico For U.S.-Bound Migrants NPR - Wed Nov 18, 2:32 PM ET

    The U.S. economic downturn and tighter border security has not deterred migrants from Central America seeking to enter the United States. But they are being abused in new and alarming ways. Tens of thousands of them are robbed, kidnapped and even killed attempting to cross Mexico.

  • Iraqi Election Plans In Limbo After Veto Of Key Law NPR - Wed Nov 18, 1:32 PM ET

    A top Iraqi official vetoed the country's election law Wednesday, throwing plans to hold parliamentary elections in January into disarray. The move could unravel hard-won compromises, and it could complicate U.S. efforts to withdraw U.S. combat troops next year.

  • Election-Law Veto Is Likely To Delay Iraq Vote NPR - Wed Nov 18, 12:34 PM ET

    Iraq's Sunni Arab vice president vetoed part of a key election law, a move that could delay national polls slated for January even as the top U.S. commander in Iraq said the timetable for American troop drawdown is on track.

  • Clinton In Afghanistan For Karzai Inauguration NPR - Wed Nov 18, 8:33 AM ET

    The secretary of state will attend Thursday's ceremony for Afghan leader Hamid Karzai in Kabul and meet with top U.S. commander Gen. Stanley McChystal. Security is being tightened in the capital for the inauguration, which could be a target for militants.

  • Guards Repel Pirate Attack On Maersk Alabama NPR - Wed Nov 18, 7:29 AM ET

    The attempt marked the second time in seven months that Somali pirates have targeted the U.S.-flagged cargo ship. In April, pirates took the ship's captain hostage, holding him at gunpoint in a lifeboat for five days before he was freed by Navy SEAL sharpshooters.

  • South Africa's War On Crime Claims Innocent Victims NPR - Wed Nov 18, 6:22 AM ET

    South Africa has one of the highest crime rates in the world. But what is widely being called the government's "shoot-to-kill" policy is being blamed for the recent murders of innocent bystanders, including the shooting death of a 3-year-old boy.

  • U.S. Prepared To Work Around Karzai If Necessary NPR - Wed Nov 18, 6:00 AM ET

    U.S. officials need to engage Afghan President Hamid Karzai as they craft a new strategy for Afghanistan. Alex Thier, director for Afghanistan and Pakistan at the U.S. Institute of Peace, tells Steve Inskeep that U.S. officials are considering options that work with Karzai, and options that work around him.

  • Empowering Leaders Key To Countries Advancing NPR - Wed Nov 18, 6:00 AM ET

    The Obama administration is planning to send more diplomats and civilian aid workers to Afghanistan, and it is working out a strategy to spend billions of dollars for development projects across the border in Pakistan. In both countries, U.S. officials will have challenges working with the local leaders while trying to strengthen their countries.

  • Obama's Trip Draws Mixed Reaction In China NPR - Wed Nov 18, 6:00 AM ET

    President Obama's talks in China were cordial, but it was not a breakthrough visit. The modest results have raised questions about how well the two countries can cooperate on important issues. In China, everyone's expectations of Obama's first trip there were different. Some expected him to try to connect more with ordinary Chinese.

  • Argentine Fans Cheer Change In Soccer TV Rights NPR - Wed Nov 18, 6:00 AM ET

    Argentina's government has nationalized the television contract that the country's soccer league had with cable television. The president's decision delighted millions of Argentine fans, who previously were excluded from the TV audience because they couldn't afford the cable fees. Now they're watching games for free.

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