‘Russia both arsonist, firefighter in Syria’

WASHINGTON / Reuters A senior US general accused Russia of playing a destabilising role in Syria and acting as “both arsonist and firefighter,” as a brief truce unilaterally declared by Moscow in the eastern Ghouta region collapsed. The United States and Russia have been on different sides of the seven-year-old war, with Moscow heavily backing Syrian President Bashar al-Assad whose ...

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Manafort joined Trump as Ukraine work dried up, cash woes rose

Bloomberg Among the enduring curiosities of Donald Trump’s presidential run was his announcement that campaign chairman Paul Manafort was an unpaid volunteer. Why would a longtime political fixer do that? That question has grown more persistent thanks to successive indictments of Manafort by US Special Counsel Robert Mueller, each documenting in finer detail Manafort’s allegedly fraudulent scramble for cash just ...

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Afghanistan offers Taliban political recognition

Bloomberg Afghan President Ashraf Ghani presented his most comprehensive peace plan to the Taliban in a bid to bring them to the negotiating table and end the nation’s near 17-year war. Ghani said he would recognize the Taliban as a political group and would initiate talks if they agreed to a cease-fire, he told delegates at a peace conference in ...

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Congo hits back as Botswana blames president for crisis

Bloomberg The Democratic Republic of Congo reacted angrily to Botswana’s claim that President Joseph Kabila’s decision to remain in power is stoking instability in the vast central African nation. Congo’s communications minister dismissed as “nonsense” the comments from Botswana, which represented the most strident criticism yet of Kabila by an African government. It comes as militia violence flares in Congo’s ...

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Construction is holding back American economy

The question of whether to prioritize jobs or economic efficiency is always difficult. Nowhere is this more of a dilemma than in the construction industry. In a world of rapid technological disruption, construction is a rock of solidity to which many blue-collar workers can cling. The industry still employs about 7 million workers in the US. The job doesn’t change ...

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Markets face new key-person risk

Riots, drought, social instability: Emerging markets are never easy. Now investors face a potentially bigger test—they must decide whether President Xi Jinping’s determination to remain in power in China is a risk-on or risk-off moment for the whole asset class. The Communist Party is set to repeal presidential term limits this month in a step that would allow the 64-year-old ...

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Election season spurs the change at Bank Indonesia

Indonesian President Joko Widodo’s choice of a new central bank governor is a clear signal that the campaign for next year’s election has begun in earnest. It’s hard to find another way to explain the promotion of Bank Indonesia Deputy Governor Perry Warjiyo to the top job. With campaigning for municipal elections in June under way and a tough presidential ...

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Brexit is getting more attention than it deserves

Something was missing on a trip to East Asia a few weeks ago. And on separate visits to Mideast and India toward the end of last year. Took me a while to figure what it was. You know that feeling where you get that you left something behind, but you just can’t quite remember what? Ah, yes! Brexit! Britain’s decision ...

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Globalism is after all worthy social cause for business

“There is one and only one social responsibility of business — to use its resources and engage in activities designed to increase its profits.” So wrote Milton Friedman, the great economist and Nobel laureate. Someone should tell today’s corporate leaders, who are responding to the age of Trump in part by spending energy on activities other than directly increasing profits. ...

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Yen finds its sweet spot after 50 years of trying

For most of the past half century, the yen has either been severely undervalued or severely overvalued against the dollar, resulting in a highly destructive boom-bust supercycle in Japan’s economy. But now, the currency is finally showing signs of stabilizing at somewhere close to fair value as defined by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s measure of purchasing power ...

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