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Tuesday, July 29, 2014

Cheat Sheet - Inside the Kerry-Israel Meltdown

Read This, Skip That ....

July 29, 2014
#FAIL

Hours after the Secretary of State announced Israel and Hamas were negotiating a ceasefire extension, a new round of violence broke out. Eli Lake and Josh Rogin report that John Kerry's whirlwind diplomatic efforts have completely disconnected from the two sides he's trying—and failing—to pacify.

MISSTEP AFTER MISSTEP

The U.S. leveled its most serious allegation of a treaty violation against Russia on Monday, accusing it of breaking a 1987 arms treaty by testing a ground-launched cruise missile. President Obama apparently wrote Putin a letter conveying the charge, which will be made public in an upcoming State Department report. Meanwhile, though sanctions haven't deterred Russia from supporting separatists in Ukraine so far, the United States and European Union are hoping a fresh batch will do the trick. The U.S. is joining the EU in hitting Russia with new economic sanctions this week. According to Tony Blinken, a White House national security adviser, Putin may be preparing to send rocket launchers to the east to help rebels.

SPECIAL DELIVERY

FedEx heads to court today to face charges of conspiring to traffic $1.6 billion worth of illegal meds across the country. Abby Haglage reports that the DEA and the FDA have accused FedEx of not only allowing but helping Internet pharmacies distribute. A former courier is hardly shocked, claiming FedEx is "the number one drug shipper in the world."

TRAPPED

Israel has effectively shrunken Gaza's territory by 44 percent, according to the United Nations. There are more than 160,000 displaced people, Jesse Rosenfeld reports from the ground. Swaths of Gaza have become a no man's land as rubble fills the streets.

CRACKING DOWN

President Xi Jinping has made his strongest move to date targeting elite party corruption in China. On Tuesday, the Communist Party announced that former security chief Zhou Yongkang will be investigated on formal corruption charges. Zhou retired in 2012 from the Politburo Standing Committee. He is the first standing or retired party member to face an official graft prove. Xinhua, the state-run news source, announced the party "decided to establish an investigation of Zhou Yongkang for grave violations of discipline." It did not release details regarding the exact charges. Although this is the first official acknowledgement, party insiders had known Zhou was being detained and investigated. Zhou had tight political control over the lucrative oil and gas sector. His son, sister-in-law, and son's mother-in-law held about $1 billion in assets, much it from these industries.


LONELY HEARTS
OkCupid Admits to Experimenting on Users
"That's how websites work."
SNEAK ATTACK
Karzai Cousin Killed by Disguised Bomber
Hashmat Karzai was a campaign manager.
BYE, DON
Judge OKs Sterling's Sale of Clippers
To ex-Microsoft CEO.
BRUTAL ATTACK
23 Filipinos Killed in Ramadan Assault
Including a 3-year-old boy.
NOT SO FUNNY
FBI Nabs Man on White Powder Letter Hoax
Sent hundreds to embassies, daycare centers.

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