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Obama Said to Seek $3.2 Billion to Fight Islamic State
President Barack Obama will ask Congress this week to approve $3.2 billion in added Pentagon and intelligence spending to continue fighting Islamic State and possibly to retrain Iraq’s military forces, according to U.S. officials. The amendment to the pending $58.6 billion war operations budget for the fiscal year that began Oct. 1 will include funds to replace munitions used in operations against Islamic State extremists in Iraq and Syria, according to the one of the officials. It also may provide at least $500 million to train and equip Iraqi and Kurdish forces fighting the Sunni militants, although another official said a final decision hasn’t been reached on that issue. The officials asked not to be identified before the request is made.
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More Than 600 Reported Chemical Exposure in Iraq, Pentagon Acknowledges
More than 600 American service members since 2003 have reported to military medical staff members that they believe they were exposed to chemical warfare agents in Iraq, but the Pentagon failed to recognize the scope of the reported cases or offer adequate tracking and treatment to those who may have been injured, defense officials say.
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Libya faces chaos as top court rejects elected assembly
Libya's Supreme Court declared the internationally recognized parliament on Thursday as unconstitutional, in a ruling likely to fuel further chaos in the north African oil producing nation.
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Thirty-Five Years After Hostage Crisis, Tehran Faces Another Choice Between Revolution and Realpolitik
Iran's annual commemoration of the Embassy seizure offers some insight into state of the current debate between these alternatives. Officially, the event is still celebrated as a national holiday — a epic victory over the oppressor, a powerful strike against America’s nefarious influence over Iran — accompanied by the requisite burning of the American flag and chants of ‘marg bar amrika’ or 'death to America.' Unofficially, many Iranians — including a number of those who were involved in the Embassy takeover — take a decidedly different view, one that is informed by the memory of all that followed in the wake of the initial euphoria.
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Population control steps: No consensus in Shoura
Shoura Council members were divided on the issue of birth control on Tuesday during a vote on a draft law on population development issued by the Ministry of Economy and Planning. The council’s committee on economic affairs and energy had called for the deletion of the phrase “reduce the total fertility rate by encouraging spacing between deliveries,” and replacing the term “reproductive health” with “mother and child” throughout the document. The council voted on the recommendations by the committee, with 58 members in favor of the amendments and 64 in opposition.
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Jerusalem car attack injures 14, driver shot dead
A vehicle hit several Israeli settlers near occupied East Jerusalem Wednesday, Israeli media said, a day after a Palestinian was run over by an Israeli settler in the West Bank. According to Israel’s Haaretz the man driving the vehicle was shot and killed. The incident comes two weeks after Palestinian Abdul-Rahman Shaludi rammed his car into Israeli settlers, injuring six and killing one. Shaludi was also shot dead. Meanwhile, an Israeli settler driving through the occupied West Bank city of Beit Jala hit a Palestinian with his car on Tuesday, witnesses told Ma'an.
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Guantánamo review board releases one Saudi but another must stay inside
A Saudi inmate with links to al-Qaida will remain at the Guantánamo Bay prison and a second Saudi man has been cleared for transfer home, a US national security panel said on Monday.
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BHP to sell Texas oil overseas without formal U.S. approval
A major energy company will soon sell U.S. oil abroad without explicit permission from the U.S. government, another sign that the decades-old federal ban on crude exports is crumbling. BHP Billiton’s BHP, -1.68% BHP, -0.10% BLT, +0.00% deal to sell about $50 million of ultralight oil from Texas to foreign buyers without formal government approval is likely to be only the first of many such moves as energy companies seek new markets and higher prices for the surge of crude now pumped in the U.S.
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U.S. officials consider striking another militant group in Syria, Jabhat al-Nusra
U.S. officials are weighing whether to broaden the air campaign in Syria to strike a militant group that is a rival to the Islamic State and that is poised to take over a strategically vital corridor from Turkey. Extremists from the al-Qaeda-linked Jabhat al-Nusra group were said Monday to be within a few miles of the Bab al-Hawa crossing in northwestern Syria on the Turkish border, one of only two openings through which the moderate Free Syrian Army receives military and humanitarian supplies provided by the United States and other backers.
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The Israeli-Saudi date war
Annual date production in Saudi Arabia is estimated in excess of 1 million tons, and the number of date palms in the country is thought to be about 23 million. Saudi exports to Europe have expanded over the past few years, largely due to dates from the “Medina” variety. According to Saudi sources, the exporters of these dates are mostly target Muslim communities across the continent. The average price for these Saudi dates in the European markets comes to approximately $1,650 per ton, whereas Israeli dates sell for $4,000 on average.
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