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Hassan Rouhani

Iran: the Danger of Rouhani

By appeasing the West, Iran's new president may well divide it. And that would secure Tehran's nuclear program from dismantlement or attack.

The Scan - June 18, 2013

Bilderberg

The World's Most Powerful People Descend on England for a Secret Meeting. You're Probably Not Invited.

Tonight, Henry Kissinger, Timothy Geithner, Jeff Bezos, and David Cameron will meet at a luxury hotel with a total of 140 delegates from 21 countries. This is the Bilderberg Group. It is likely far less ominous and far more boring than it sounds.
obama cameron

Obama's Outrage Focused on Republicans More Than IRS

At press briefing with British Prime Minister David Cameron, Obama slams Benghazi investigation as partisan.
Park Geun-hye

What Makes a Lady 'Iron'?

Six things to know about Park Geun-hye, South Korea's tough first female president.
Mike Froman

What You Need to Know About Obama's Trade Pick Mike Froman

President Obama nominated one of his top national security advisers, Mike Froman, as the next U.S. trade representative on Thursday. Froman would replace Ron Kirk, who stepped down last month.
Levittown, PA

Why We’re Still in Love With the American Dream

Even if middle-class ambitions are illusory, it sure helps to believe in them.
Boston bomber search

Boston Lockdown Reflected WMD Response Plans

The Friday lockdown of Boston and surrounding communities was a highly rare response in the United States to a terrorism threat, reminiscent of security plans typically contemplated in response to attacks involving weapons of mass destruction.
Barack Obama_Ron Kirk_Michael Froman

U.S. and E.U. Will Gnaw on Trade Agreement

Late last month, the White House notified Congress that it planned to begin negotiating a comprehensive trade and investment agreement with the European Union. Talks on the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership are expected to begin in June—and that’s when the House Energy and Commerce Committee will step up its involvement.
Cars at GM Assembly Plant

Manufacturers, Ag Interests Will Lobby for Trade Deal

The Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership won’t be focused on already-low tariffs between the U.S. and European Union. It will be focused on so-called “behind the border” measures, like regulation—and that means there will be plenty of stakeholders with strong opinions.
capitol

How Can Congress Help Manufacturers?

The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Commerce, Manufacturing, and Trade kicked off 2013 with a focus on its middle name. It’s fitting. After all, Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., who chairs the committee, changed the subcommittee name when he took over in 2011 to include an explicit reference to manufacturing.
Shush

When Corporations Are Hacked, Who Should Know?

Companies hurt themselves—but help the rest of us—when they disclose cyberattacks. 
European Central Bank—Euro Currency Symbol

Why the Euro is Doomed

It's the gold standard minus the shiny rocks.
Cyprus

How Cyprus, A Two-Bit Country, Could Change the World

Tiny Cyprus poses an existential threat to the eurozone, proof that little countries can occasionally have big consequences.
Cyprus

What Could Happen If Cyprus Fails

Things are looking increasingly dicey for the Mediterranean nation. Here's what could happen if the country fails.
Irish Deputy PM Eamon Gilmore in 2012

Ireland's Deputy PM: 'You Cannot Get an Economy to Recover Just by Doing Austerity Measures or Budget Discipline.'

A Q&A with Ireland’s Deputy Prime Minister Eamon Gilmore.
A Woman Walks Past the Bank of Ireland in 2012

Are There Lessons For the United States in Ireland's Post-Crash Economy?

When Ireland’s Prime Minister Enda Kenny meets with President Obama in Washington next week, they should find plenty to talk about.
Mark Toohey

The Math Behind the Automatic Budget Cuts

Under a deal to raise the legal limit on the government's borrowing in August 2011, lawmakers agreed to roughly $1 trillion in spending cuts over the next decade and set up a process to find at least $1.2 trillion in further savings. Under that deal, known as the Budget Control Act, a "supercommittee" was established to try to hammer out an agreement on long-term budget savings. The committee folded in 2011 without an agreement on deficit reduction, setting the stage for automatic cuts to mostly discretionary programs totaling $1.2 trillion to kick in starting in 2013. The cuts, known as sequestration, apply to both domestic programs and defense spending.
Tobacco Workers

Opinion: Immigrants Did Not Take Your Job

Writes Alex Nowrasteh of the Cato Institute: It's time  conservatives embrace a reform measure, for political and economic reasons.
US cyber planning

Is the United States Hacking China Back?

Experts warn that Chinese digital spies have managed to thoroughly infiltrate U.S. computer networks. But that doesn’t necessarily mean Washington isn’t snooping back.
Romney and Obama Debate

Free Trade: Obama Takes Up Romney's Banner

How the president could tally more political victories than the experts think.

Full Text: President Obama's 2013 State of the Union Speech

Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, Members of Congress, fellow citizens:
David Cameron

David Cameron Gambles on European Union Membership

British Prime Minister David Cameron’s promise to hold a referendum on his country’s membership in the European Union was immediately hit with ridicule. As pundits were quick to note, Cameron seems to be angling not to leave the union (a poll showed that most Britons don’t want to, anyway) but to win the UK new freedoms in a changing Europe.
Payroll Tax

What Did Congress Do for You This Year? 10 Bills the 112th Passed

You wouldn’t know it from the rhetoric in Washington, but Congress actually passed a few bills this year.
Tokyo-scene

Challenges Ahead for Obama in Japan

Much of Japan cheered last week’s reelection of President Obama—especially one small city in this island nation that shares his name. But his reelection doesn’t come without a number of challenges in the region and with its longtime ally.
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