Must Reads from Around the World: Jan. 30, 2012

Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin speaks while chairing a meeting with activists of the All-Russian People's Front in Moscow on October 26, 2011.  (Alexander Zemlianichenko / AFP / Getty Images)
Russia's Prime Minister Vladimir Putin speaks while chairing a meeting with activists of the All-Russian People's Front in Moscow on October 26, 2011. (Alexander Zemlianichenko / AFP / Getty Images)

Russian Around — The New York Times explores the uneasy alliance fraying between Russian liberals and nationalists opposed to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin. The Washington Post reports on the other side: “The authorities are watching, and preparing to head them off.”

Grand Alliance — Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center, argues in favor of a “grand Eurasian alliance” between Russia and China in Global Times – the nationalist-slanted Chinese establishment tabloid. “While the idea of a new Sino-Russian alliance appears unworkable, one should not throw the baby away with the bathwater,” he writes.

Most Accommodating Foreign Affairs details how Iran is accommodating – predominantly under house arrest – some of Al-Qaeda’s most senior leaders. Meanwhile, the New York Times takes (another) long look at the likelihood of an Israeli attack on Iran.

Election 2012 – The U.S. presidential election isn’t the only closely watched political race in the hemisphere; 2012 also marks an important election year in Venezuela, Mexico and the Dominican Republic, America Economia reports.

Rejected – Royal Bank of Scotland CEO Stephen Hester succumbed to mounting pressures and rejected his planed bonus of nearly £1 million ($1.6 million).  Following the announcement late Sunday night, reaction has poured in from financial and political leaders around Europe.

Igloo Diplomacy?The Atlantic’s Steve Clemons takes a different view of the World Economic Forum by comparing the igloo encampment of OccupyWEF protestors with a music festival “Igloofest” in Montreal. Could combining economic protest with late-night partying lead to a breakthrough?

Related Topics: Carnegie Moscow Center, Dmitri Trenin, foreign affairs, global times, Nationalists, New York Times, Russian liberals, Vladimir Putin, Washington Post, Al-Qaeda, Asia, China, Conflict, Daily Briefing, Democracy, Geo-political tensions, iran, israel, Middle East, Russia, Terrorism, World
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    Action Press / ZUMAPRESS

    After Chicago, How Long Can NATO Stay Relevant?

    An essay I wrote in the international magazine last week sets out NATO’s existential quandary. The organization wrapped up its biggest summit ever in Chicago on Monday, but it was drowned out in part by the din both of protesters massed on the Windy City’s streets and the incessant hubbub of the U.S. presidential election cycle.

    Mohammed Salem / Reuters

    Egypt’s Presidential Elections: Free and a Free-for-All

    The country takes on its next big democratic test with a presidential vote starring 13 candidates spanning the political spectrum.

    zuma

    South Africa: Over-Exposing the President

    Let’s get one thing clear. Is ‘The Spear,’ a picture by the South African artist Brett Murray representing South African President Jacob Zuma in heroic revolutionary pose — with his penis hanging out — good art? No. The pose is striking. But the black, red and yellow coloring is derivative, borrowed not only from the Soviets but also a thousand other, better current works — not least a 2008 TIME cover by Shepard Fairey of President Barack Obama. And the organ is incongruous: exposed in inept fashion and gratuitously painted.

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