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Leading Indicators: Off The Radar News Roundup

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  • Leading Indicators: Off The Radar News Roundup

    LEADING INDICATORS: OFF THE RADAR NEWS ROUNDUP
    Judah Grunstein

    World Politics Review (blog)
    28 Jan 2010

    - Following up on their $20 billion nuclear reactor deal, the UAE and
    South Korea reopened talks for the UAE's $1.4 billion purchase of South
    Korean supersonic trainer jets. The deal would be accompanied by closer
    defense cooperation, with South Korea promising to technology transfers
    for UAVs, ballistic missiles and electromagnetic pulse bombs. That's
    one bilateral relationship I'd have had trouble imagining.

    - Armenia's president said the country's army "is an iron guarantee
    that ensures our survival and is a cold, sobering shower for any
    hot-headed adventurers." The remarks were construed as a warning
    to Azerbaijan, but I read them more as an evocative, if ultimately
    confusing mixed metaphor. "Cold, sobering shower" is an odd choice of
    imagery for the army, but having gone with it, steel would have been a
    more appropriate metal to serve as a complement. I would welcome more
    of this kind of rhetoric in American foreign policy discourse, though.

    - Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt offered an insightfully nuanced
    take on Turkey's role in the Caucasus, the Middle East and the Balkans,
    and how Turkey as an EU member would benefit the union.

    - France and Germany officially denied reports that the EU was
    exploring ways to bail out the troubled Greek government, although
    such talks are widely believed to be ongoing.

    - The head of Russia's state-run arms exporter stated that it was
    "planning to supply" Russian arms to NATO countries, without offering
    any further details. He also declared that Russia has no reason to
    not sell weapons to Iran, a veiled reference to the tensely watched
    S300 missile defense system, for which a contract has been signed
    but delivery repeatedly delayed. Finally, he put the figure for
    Russia's 2009 arms sales at $7.4 billion, and forecasted similar
    numbers for 2010.

    - An opposition leader was sworn in as Guinea's interim civilian
    prime minister, with elections scheduled for six months from now.

    Researched by Kari Lipschutz.
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