U.S. Army to Test "Global Strike" Technology This Week Martin Matishak | Global Security Newswire The U.S. Army on Wednesday will test missile technology that could eventually be incorporated into the development a conventional "prompt global strike" weapon, according to Defense Department officials.
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Roula Khalaf | Financial Times
In January this year, Hillary Clinton sounded an unusually relaxed note about Iran's nuclear programme. "The sanctions are working," the US secretary of state declared, adding that the US authorities' best estimate was that the programme had been "slowed down." Even in Israel there were hints of satisfaction at what was considered a surprisingly effective sabotage campaign. Full Article
Yonhap News Agency
South Korea's top nuclear envoy Lim Sung-nam held talks in Vienna with the new U.S. envoy on North Korea and discussed efforts to reopen the stalled six-nation talks on the North's nuclear weapons programs, a Seoul official said Tuesday. Lim met with Glyn Davies on Monday during his two-day trip to Vienna and exchanged views on the outcome of a Pyongyang-Washington meeting held in Geneva last month. Full Article
Khaleej Times
OPEC kingpin Saudi Arabia has signed an agreement with South Korea on developing nuclear power generation to help meet the kingdom's rising demand, an official statement said on Tuesday. The announcement came amid mounting concern in the Sunni-ruled kingdom about the nuclear programme of Iran, which Riyadh, in common with Western governments, fears may conceal a drive for a nuclear weapons capability. Full Article
MSNBC
The United States took renewed aim at Syria during an International Atomic Energy Agency meeting on Monday, expressing "strong reservations" about a technical cooperation project between the U.N. body and Damascus. Even though the move was not related to the crackdown on dissent in the Arab state, it was another sign that Damascus was facing growing international pressure and scrutiny. Full Article
RIA Novosti
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev announced that he would deliver a complete assessment on the U.S.-backed European missile defense system in the near future. "It is unclear to us what our partners are offering, and I think we will in the near future determine what we should do with the European missile defensive system," Medvedev said at a press conference after the Asian-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in Hawaii. Full Article
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