Thursday,  June 20, 2013 • Vol. 14--No. 335 • 29 of 34

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Analysis: The limits of foreign policy: As Obama prods, he gets his share of pushback

• WASHINGTON (AP) -- Over the past two weeks, President Barack Obama has argued with Chinese President Xi Jinping over cybersecurity, consulted with world leaders over Syria and trade, declared his desire to reduce U.S. and Russian nuclear weapons, and embraced the uncertain steps toward reconciliation in Afghanistan.
• In each case, the president is aligning himself with a process that has a distant goal and is fraught with possible failure.
• And as he prodded foreign allies and U.S. competitors, he's gotten a good dose of pushback for his troubles.
• In Berlin on Wednesday, Obama warned that the European Union could "lose a generation" if it doesn't adjust its economic policies to tackle high youth unemployment. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, who has argued for debt-ridden eurozone countries to first deal with their fiscal problems, insisted her government was committed to helping its European partners in the crisis-hit nations. "If we were conducting policies that would harm other countries," she argued, "we would harm ourselves."
• She countered with her own words of caution over the Obama administration's secret collection of phone records and surveillance of foreign Internet traffic. "People have concerns, precisely concerns that there may be some kind of blanket, across-the-board gathering of information," she said. "There needs to be proportionality" between security and freedom, she added, and made clear that her private talks about it with Obama were not the end of the subject.
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Spreading shakedowns and distrust of authorities embolden al-Qaida in Iraq's restive Mosul

• BAGHDAD (AP) -- Al-Qaida's Iraq arm is gathering strength in the restive northern city of Mosul, ramping up its fundraising through gangland-style shakedowns and feeding off anti-government anger as it increasingly carries out attacks with impunity, according to residents and officials.
• It is a disturbing development for Iraq's third-largest city, one of the country's main gateways to Syria, as al-Qaida in Iraq makes a push to establish itself as a dominant force among the rebels fighting to topple the Syrian regime.

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