| Xi's Wider Fight With U.S. Only Just Beginning After Trade Deal In a letter read out during Wednesday's trade deal signing at the White House, Chinese leader Xi Jinping asked Trump to take steps to "enhance mutual trust and cooperation between us." But as Bloomberg News reports, that won't be easy.
With Iowa Looming, Bernie Sanders Is Poised for an Upset The cantankerous senator's campaign appears to have taken off at just the right time, Joshua Green reports. But it will take more than just his hardcore supporters for Bernie Sanders to win the Democratic nomination.
The Tokyo Job: Inside Carlos Ghosn's Escape to Beirut Despite being under intense surveillance, with a camera trained on his front door and undercover agents tailing him when he left his house, Ghosn somehow made it to Lebanon. Matthew Campbell reports on the elite extraction team that spirited the former CEO out of Japan. Ghosn may have dramatically broken with Japan, but he's now reunited with Lebanon, where he grew up. Read more on how he still enjoys the backing of elite circles all the way up to the president. Photographer: Woshibai for Bloomberg Businessweek
Fury at Air Crash Cover-Up Puts Iran's Leaders Back on Defensive The admission by authorities in Tehran that they accidentally shot down a passenger jet packed with Iranian students last week shattered a brief moment of unity, Marc Champion, Arsalan Shahla and Golnar Motevalli write.
Strength in Weakness: Why Iran Fights the Way It Does The pinpoint accuracy of Iran's response to the killing of commander Qassem Soleimani, striking two U.S. bases in Iraq while avoiding causing casualties, has signaled Tehran's capacity to harm American assets. As Marc Champion reports, it's also shown the limitations on Iran's freedom to openly do so.
Trump Bailout Means Farmers Emerge Optimistic From Trade War Donald Trump is boasting that he's made farmers "really happy." He's not wrong, Mike Dorning reports, but it's not just the trade deal that's left farmers optimistic for 2020.
The European Union Is Going to Miss the U.K. When It's Gone With one foot inside and one foot out, the U.K. was never sure which way to turn — and the European Union never seemed to know how to make it more comfortable. Now, the overriding feeling among the EU's political elite remains one of regret, Ian Wishart writes.
How Putin Was Thrown Off Course by a Furious Libyan General Khalifa Haftar was expecting the Kremlin red carpet. Instead he was cooped up in the Russian Foreign Ministry hoping for an audience with President Vladimir Putin, Samer Al-Atrush, Ilya Arkhipov and Selcan Hacaoglu write. In the end, the Libyan commander stormed out. The lightning series of actions that saw Dmitry Medvedev removed as premier and replaced by Mikhail Mishustin shows Putin retains the ability to upend Russian politics even after 20 years in power. Read more here.
No Soul Searching for Xi After Taiwan Rebuffs China in Election In a democracy, two resounding election defeats in a matter of months might prompt some soul searching in the losing camp. But as Samson Ellis and Peter Martin report, in China a snub at the polls in places it claims is more a minor setback rather than a sign of a flawed strategy.
Bloody Mutiny in Sudan Casts Shadow Over Drive for Democracy When disgruntled Sudanese spies took up arms and gunfire rang out across Khartoum, even members of the most powerful pro-government militia were startled, Mohammed Alamin and Samuel Gebre report.
Drones Target Polluters in One of Europe's Smoggiest Places Krakow was one of the most choked-up urban areas on the continent, James M Gomez and Dorota Bartyzel write. Then the Polish city became ruthless in its fight for clean air.
And finally ... Whenever somebody on Twitter takes issue with the network's policies, they almost always resort to the same strategy: They send a tweet to @jack. But while Dorsey is the company's public face, the taxing job of creating and enforcing Twitter's rules don't actually land on the CEO's shoulders. Instead, that falls to Twitter's top lawyer, Vijaya Gadde, Kurt Wagner writes. "No matter what we do we've been accused of bias," Gadde said. "Leaving content up, taking content down — that's become pretty much background noise." Photographer: Martina Albertazzi/Bloomberg |
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