Saudi prince warns against any attack on Iran

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WASHINGTON | Tue Nov 15, 2011 5:51pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A military attack on Iran aimed at halting its nuclear program could have catastrophic consequences and only strengthen Tehran's determination to make an atomic weapon, the former head of Saudi Arabia's intelligence services said on Tuesday.

"Such an act I think would be foolish and to undertake it I think would be tragic," Prince Turki al-Faisal said at a Washington, D.C., appearance.

"If anything it will only make the Iranians more determined to produce an atomic bomb. It will rally support for the government among the population, and it will not end the program. It will merely delay it if anything."

Tensions over Iran's nuclear ambitions have increased this month since the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) reported that Tehran appeared to have worked on designing a bomb and may still be conducting secret research to that end.

The United States has advocated increasing pressure on Tehran through additional sanctions.

But there has been speculation in the Israeli media that Israel might strike Iran's nuclear sites, and U.S. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney declared in a debate on Saturday that he would be willing to go to war to stop Tehran from getting nuclear weapons.

Prince Turki, who retired in 2006 but remains an influential voice in Saudi Arabia's ruling family, said prior military campaigns such as in Iraq had shown how unpredictable that route can be.

"An attack on Iran I think will have catastrophic consequences," the prince said, citing both human costs and the fact that "the retaliation by Iran will be worldwide."

"It will include a lot of U.S. and other interests throughout the world ...they can do harm in a lot of places," he said.

Saudi Arabia remained concerned over Iran's nuclear ambitions and its "meddling" in other countries including an alleged Iran-backed assassination plot against the Saudi ambassador in Washington and a separate alleged plot to stage attacks in Bahrain.

Iran has rejected both accusations, saying they are aimed at stoking fears in the region.

The prince said that while Saudi Arabia did not favor a military option, it would continue to press Iran publicly, including possibly at the United Nations, in hopes of heading off future threats.

"We fully support tightening of the sanctions, assertive diplomacy and concerted action via the United Nations," he said.

(Reporting by Andrew Quinn; editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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WRAPUP 1-CFTC commissioner views MF Global darkly

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* CFTC commissioner suspects nefarious MF Global activity

* Trustee proposes quick claims process for customers

* Customers seek representation on creditors' committee

By Nick Brown and Alexandra Alper

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON, Nov 15 (Reuters) - A U.S. regulator said he thinks "something nefarious" occurred at MF Global, deepening the criticism facing the fallen futures brokerage.

As customers worried about whether they will recoup the full value of their accounts, a trustee winding down MF Global's broker-dealer unit said separately on Tuesday that clients may be able to submit claims for losses within weeks.

Bart Chilton, a Democratic commissioner at the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, told Reuters Insider that U.S. regulators are closer to finding out what happened to roughly $600 million in missing customer money.

"The money is not where it should be. I think something nefarious has happened, potentially something illegal," he said.

MF Global , which lost on big bets on European debt, filed for bankruptcy on Oct. 31 after a deal to sell itself to Interactive Brokers Group fell apart.

A huge shortfall was discovered in the customer accounts of the company's brokerage, and the CFTC is among the authorities investigating whether MF Global may have improperly mixed that money with its own funds.

An MF Global representative was not immediately available for comment. Neither MF Global nor its former chief executive, Jon Corzine, has been charged with wrongdoing.

PAYING OUT WHAT'S THERE

There are growing concerns that regulators may be unable to find the missing customer funds, or that the money may be tied up in other assets.

Dealing with those concerns is primarily the job of James Giddens, the trustee.

Giddens on Tuesday took a step toward getting customers some of their money back, asking MF Global's bankruptcy judge, Martin Glenn, to approve an expedited process whereby commodities customers would submit all claims by Jan. 27.

In a court filing, Giddens described a proposed process for mailing claims forms, reviewing claims and making payouts "as promptly as possible," likely in increments.

The process is set to be discussed at a hearing before the judge in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan on Wednesday.

If Giddens and federal regulators are unable to find the missing customer cash, customers with commodities trading accounts could be forced to take significant losses.

While it charts its course through bankruptcy, MF Global is surviving on $8 million in cash that had been collateral for JPMorgan Chase & Co , the agent for a $1.2 billion syndicated credit line.

MF said in a Monday court filing that it has extended through Nov. 21 its window for spending that cash, giving it five extra days to seek longer-term funding.

Whether it can find such funding will impact the nature and speed of its restructuring or liquidation.

ANGRY CUSTOMERS

Customers have clamored for resolution of the missing money issue. Several customers have asked Glenn to appoint a customer representative to the official committee of unsecured MF Global creditors.

Typhon Capital Management CEO James Koutoulas, who has separately asked Glenn to invalidate a lien putting JPMorgan ahead of customers for payback, told Reuters on Tuesday he may seek formal permission to join the committee.

Two current members of the committee, meanwhile, want permission to keep trading MF Global securities during bankruptcy.

Bank of America and Elliott Management Corp each filed court papers asking Glenn to allow them to trade stock, debt and other MF Global securities as long as they impose systems to separate their trading from their role on the committee.

Judges in a few major bankruptcies, including Lehman Brothers , WorldCom and Enron, have allowed such trading by creditors' committee members, Bank of America said in its court papers seeking permission for the trades.

MF's bankruptcy case is In re MF Global Holdings Ltd, U.S. Bankruptcy Court, Southern District of New York, No. 11-15059.

The brokerage liquidation is In re MF Global Inc, in the same court, No. 11-2790.

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France draws fire after "alarm bells" warning

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France's President Nicolas Sarkozy arrives to deliver a speech on benefits fraud during his visit in Bordeaux, southwestern France, November 15, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Regis Duvignau

By Daniel Flynn and James Mackenzie


PARIS/ROME | Tue Nov 15, 2011 6:52pm EST


PARIS/ROME (Reuters) - France came under heavy fire on global markets Tuesday, reflecting fears that the euro zone's second biggest economy is being sucked into a spiraling debt crisis.


Global stocks and the euro fell as Italian bond yields climbed back to unsustainable levels on doubts that Italy's Mario Monti and new Greek leader Lucas Papademos, unelected technocrats without a domestic political base, can impose tough austerity measures and economic reform.


European Central Bank President Mario Draghi has predicted the 17-nation currency bloc will be in a mild recession by the end of the year, a view underlined by data showing the economy barely grew in the third quarter and faces a sharp downturn.


"The risks of a technical recession have increased and we expect the economy in Germany to shrink at least in one quarter," said Michael Schroeder of the German economic research institute ZEW.


On the markets, Italy's 10-year bond yield rocketed back above 7 percent, pushing its borrowing costs to a level that helped to trigger the fall of Silvio Berlusconi's government last week and is widely seen as unsustainable in the long term.


Spain's Treasury paid yields not seen since 1997 to sell 12- and 18-month treasury bills.


French 10-year bond yields have risen around 50 basis points in the last week, pushing the spread over safe haven German bonds to a euro-era high of 173 basis points.


French banks are among the biggest holders of Italy's 1.8 trillion euro public debt pile.


The urgency of resolving the debt crisis was underscored by a think-tank report saying that triple-A rated France should also be "ringing euro zone alarm bells" as it could not make rapid adjustments to its economy.


"THREAT TO THE WORLD"


Fears are growing in the United States that Europe's debt crisis is mushrooming into a wider systemic problem.


Alan Krueger, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, said the European debt crisis was the leading risk to the U.S. recovery.


And U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner said Europe had a difficult task in boosting the creditworthiness of some of its economies while also boosting growth.


"That's a difficult balance and you can see they're struggling with it but I think they're gradually making progress," he told a conference sponsored by the Wall Street Journal. "This is absolutely within Europe's capacity to solve and it's within their ability.


"We are helping both directly and indirectly through a range of things you know about, financially, and we have a lot of useful lessons from our experience."


But Greek conservatives set themselves on a collision course with the European Commission, refusing its demand to sign a pledge to meet the terms of a bailout designed to save Greece from bankruptcy and safeguard the euro zone.


New premier Papademos looks certain to sail through a confidence vote Wednesday, but members of the New Democracy party, a key player in his crisis coalition, said they would not bow to "dictates from Brussels" to give written guarantees. New Democracy leader Antonis Samaras says he is opposed to measures that fail to help Greece grow its way out of trouble.


With the survival of the 17-state currency zone in its current form now at risk, EU governments have until a summit on December 9 to come up with a bolder and more convincing strategy, involving some form of massive, visible financial backing.


Geithner restated the U.S. view that the European Central Bank should play a bigger role, while acknowledging the objections of Germany, the EU's main paymaster, to any step that limits ECB independence or its mandate to fight inflation:


"There are lots of ways for the central bank to play a more effective supportive role in resolving this without violating the obvious constraints we respected here ... for (the central bank's) independence and making sure the central bank is not providing a direct source of financing for governments."


Peter Bofinger, a member of the group of economists who advise the German government, said that if the bloc's debt troubles threatened to rip apart the financial system, the ECB should in fact become the euro zone's lender of last resort.


Many analysts believe the only way to stem the contagion for now is for the ECB to buy up large quantities of bonds, effectively the sort of 'quantitative easing' undertaken by the U.S. and British central banks.


"If politics can't do it, then the ECB must do all it can to bring interest rates down to more reasonable levels," Bofinger said at Euro Finance Week.


LACK OF GROWTH


The debt crisis is likely to make matters worse in the next months with nations such as Italy, Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain forced to adopt unpopular spending cuts to stop the bond market driving them toward default.


Economists say there is no visible growth strategy in place to counter those austerity measures.


After a disastrous week for the euro zone's third biggest economy, Italy's Monti secured a breakthrough when Angelino Alfano, secretary of Berlusconi's People of Freedom (PDL) party, emerged from talks with Monti saying moves to form a government would succeed.


The prime minister-designate said he would present the results of his consultations to the president Wednesday, hinting he had cleared any obstacles to forming a government.


"I would like to confirm my absolute serenity and conviction in the capacity of our country to overcome this difficult phase," Monti said.


His technocrat-led cabinet have the job of speeding reform of pensions, labor markets and business regulation to put Italy's finances on a sustainable path. Italy must refinance 200 billion euros ($273 billion) of bonds by the end of April.


Germany and France posted solid growth in the third quarter, according to new data. But countries on the front line of the crisis fared much worse, for overall growth of just 0.2 percent. Analysts expected bleaker times in the core economies.


"Forward-looking indicators suggest that the euro zone economy is likely to drop back into recession in the fourth quarter and beyond," said Jonathan Loynes, chief European economist at Capital Economics.


(Additional reporting by Luke Baker in Brussels and Glenn Somerville and Lesley Wroughton in Washington; Writing by Peter Millership and Jon Boyle)

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Obama boosts U.S. military in Australia, reassures China

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President Barack Obama signs a guest book after participating in an arrival ceremony with Australia's Prime Minister Julia Gillard at Parliament House in Canberra, Australia, November 16, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Jason Reed

By Caren Bohan and James Grubel


CANBERRA | Wed Nov 16, 2011 8:01am EST


CANBERRA (Reuters) - President Barack Obama and Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard on Wednesday unveiled plans to deepen the U.S. military presence in the Asia-Pacific, with 2,500 U.S. marines operating out of a de facto base in northern Australia.


China, already worried the United States is caging it in, immediately questioned whether strengthening military alliances would help the region when economic woes put a premium on cooperation.


"With my visit to the region, I am making it clear that the United States is stepping up its commitment to the entire Asia-Pacific region," Obama told a joint news conference with Gillard in Canberra.


From next year, U.S. troops and aircraft will operate out of the tropical city of Darwin, only 820 kms (500 miles) from Indonesia, able to respond quickly to any humanitarian and security issues in Southeast Asia, where disputes over sovereignty of the South China Sea are causing rising tensions.


"It is appropriate for us to make sure...that the security architecture for the region is updated for the 21st century and this initiative is going to allow us to do that," Obama said.


He stressed that it was not an attempt to isolate China which is concerned that Washington is trying to encircle it with bases in Japan and South Korea and now troops in Australia.


"The notion that we fear China is mistaken. The notion that we are looking to exclude China is mistaken," he said, adding China was not being excluded from the planned Transpacific Partnership (TTP) on trade.


"We welcome a rising, peaceful China."


But China's rising power means it must take on greater responsibilities to ensure free trade and security in the region, he added.


"It's important for them to play by the rules of the road and, in fact, help underwrite the rules that have allowed so much remarkable economic progress," he said.


PEARL HARBOUR OF AUSTRALIA


The U.S. deployment to Australia, the largest since World War Two, will start next year with a company of 200-250 marines in Darwin, the "Pearl Harbour of Australia," Gillard said.


More bombs were dropped on Darwin during a surprise Japanese raid than on Pearl Harbour, Hawaii.


A total of 2,500 U.S. troops would eventually rotate through the port city. The United States will bring in ships, aircraft and vehicles, as well as increase military training.


Asked about the proposed deepening of U.S.-Australian military cooperation, Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Weimin said China stood for "peaceful development and cooperation."


"We also believe that the external policies of countries in the region should develop along these lines," Liu told a regular news briefing in Beijing.


Liu added that "whether strengthening and expanding a military alliance is in the common interests of the region's countries and the international community is worthy of discussion," especially amid a gloomy international economic situation and with each country seeking cooperation.


But some Asian nations are likely to welcome the U.S. move as a counterbalance to China's growing military power, especially its expanding maritime operations, and a reassurance that Washington will not scale back its engagement in the region due to a stretched U.S. military budget.


"The United States hopes to militarily strengthen alliance relations with Japan in the north and with Australia in the south, with the clear intention of counter-balancing China," Su Hao, the director of the Asia-Pacific Researcher Center at the Foreign Affairs University in Beijing, told the Global Times, a popular Chinese newspaper.


OBAMA TO RAISE SOUTH CHINA SEA


The winding down of wars in Afghanistan and Iraq has opened the door to greater U.S. attention to simmering tension over the South China Sea, a shipping lane for more than $5 trillion in annual trade that the United States wants to keep open.


Obama plans to raise maritime security in the South China Sea at a regional summit on Bali this week, defying China's desire to keep the sensitive topic off the agenda.


China claims the entire maritime region, a vital commercial shipping route rich in oil, minerals and fishery resources. It insists that any disputes be resolved through bilateral talks and says Washington has no business getting involved.


"The United States is also trying to get involved in a number of regional maritime disputes, some of which concern China's sovereignty and territorial integrity," a commentary from China's official Xinhua news agency said.


Vietnam, the Philippines, Taiwan, Malaysia and Brunei hold rivals claims to at least parts of the sea and tension occasionally flares up into maritime stand-offs.


Obama will make an "anchor speech" outlining the U.S. vision for the Asia-Pacific to the Australian parliament on Thursday before a whistle stop in Darwin. He then flies to the Indonesian island of Bali for the East Asia summit.


(Additional reporting by Michael Perry and Jim Regan in Sydney and Chris Buckley in Beijing; Editing by Lincoln Feast and Jonathan Thatcher)

READ MORE » Obama boosts U.S. military in Australia, reassures China

U.S. reserves right to meet cyber attack with force

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By David Alexander

WASHINGTON | Tue Nov 15, 2011 10:34pm EST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The United States reserves the right to retaliate with military force against a cyber attack and is working to sharpen its ability to track down the source of any breach, the Pentagon said in a report made public on Tuesday.

The 12-page report to Congress, mandated by the 2011 Defense Authorization Act, was one of the clearest statements to date of U.S. cybersecurity policy and the role of the military in the event of a computer-borne attack.

"When warranted, we will respond to hostile attacks in cyberspace as we would to any other threat to our country," the report said. "We reserve the right to use all necessary means - diplomatic, informational, military and economic - to defend our nation, our allies, our partners and our interests."

Hostile acts, it said, could include "significant cyber attacks directed against the U.S. economy, government or military" and the response could use electronic means or more conventional military options.

Cyberspace is a particularly challenging domain for the Pentagon.

Defense Department employees operate more than 15,000 computer networks with 7 million computers at hundreds of locations around the world. Their networks are probed millions of times a day and penetrations have caused the loss of thousands of files.

Private companies also face relentless cyber attacks, including an increasing number linked to countries like China and Russia, and they have grown increasingly frustrated about the U.S. government's lack of response.

"There is a massive amount of frustration on the part of the private sector," Dmitri Alperovitch, the former vice president of threat research at McAfee, told an event hosted by the George C. Marshall Institute.

U.S. companies are losing billions of dollars to cyber theft each year, he said.

"Nothing is being done," Alperovitch said. "Something has to be done from a policy perspective to address the threat ... The fact that it is China, the fact that it is Russia. What are we going to do to face those countries and get them to stop?"

The report said the Defense Department was attempting to deter aggression in cyberspace by developing effective defenses that prevent adversaries from achieving their objectives and by finding ways to make attackers pay a price for their actions.

"Should the 'deny objectives' element of deterrence not prove adequate," the report said, "DoD (Department of Defense) maintains, and is further developing, the ability to respond militarily in cyberspace and in other domains."

FINDING THE ATTACKERS

Key to a military response is being able to quickly identify the source of an attack, particularly challenging due to the anonymous nature of the Internet, the report said.

In an effort to crack that problem, the Pentagon is supporting research focusing on tracing the physical source of an attack and using behavior-based algorithms to assess the likely identity of an attacker, the report said.

U.S. security agencies also are grooming a cadre of highly skilled cyber forensics experts and are working with international partners to share information in a timely manner about cyber threats, including malicious code and the people behind it, it said.

Attacks on U.S. computer networks have become more frequent and more damaging in recent years, costing U.S. companies an estimated $1 trillion in lost intellectual property, competitiveness and damage. One defense company lost some 24,000 files in an intrusion in March.

Lani Kass, who recently retired as a senior policy adviser to the chairman of the U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff, said enemies of the United States were becoming more savvy every day.

"You have got to assume that what we do in cyberspace can be done to us quicker, cheaper and with fewer restrictions," she told Reuters after the Marshall Institute event.

Before moving to offensive action, the United States would exhaust all other options, weigh the risk of action against the cost of inaction and "act in a way that reflects our values and strengthens our legitimacy, seeking broad international support wherever possible," the report said.

"If directed by the president, DoD will conduct offensive cyber operations in a manner consistent with the policy principles and legal regimes that the department follows for kinetic capabilities, including the law of armed conflict," the report said.

The report followed the release in mid-July of the Pentagon's cybersecurity policy, which designated cyberspace as an "operational domain" like land, sea and air where U.S. forces would be trained to conduct offensive and defensive operations.

(Additional reporting by Andrea Shalal-Esa; Editing by Cynthia Osterman)

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Outcry after China road accident kills 18 children

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BEIJING | Wed Nov 16, 2011 8:00am EST

BEIJING Nov 16 (Reuters) - Eighteen nursery school children were killed when a coal truck slammed into their "drastically" overcrowded school van in northwest China on Thursday, local media reported, prompting an outcry about the country's deadly roads.

The collision on a rural road in Zhengning County, Gansu province, also killed the driver of the van and a teacher onboard, the Xinhua news agency said.

Another 44 people were hurt -- 10 of them seriously -- in the accident, one of the worst on China's roads for some time.

An initial investigation showed the van was "drastically overloaded", carrying 64 people instead of the nine passengers permitted, said Chinese state radio news.

Pictures on Chinese news websites showed the crumpled wreckage of the yellow van that was struck by the much larger coal truck on the way to the nursery.

Investigators were examining the cause, said news reports which left unclear whether the truck or van driver might be to blame.

Officials hurried to the scene to offer support and promised a crackdown on road hazards. But a flood of messages on Chinese web sites echoed with outrage about lax safety enforcement.

"The nursery school can't shirk responsibility for such serious overcrowding," said one comment on Sina's "Weibo" microblogging site.

Another said: "Why don't we protect children in the same way we protect our leaders?"

Chinese authorities have tried to crack down on dangerous driving but breakneck economic growth, and rapid expansion in the number of roads and drivers, creates many menaces, especially on poorly policed rural roads.

In 2010, Chinese police officially recorded 219,521 traffic accidents that led to deaths or injuries, including 65,225 fatalities, a fall of 3.7 percent on the previous year.

In a study published by the World Health Organisation in 2010, however, experts found that such official data seriously undercounted the number of road deaths in China, which they estimated to be almost twice the number reported by police. (Reporting by Chris Buckley; Editing by Paul Tait)

READ MORE » Outcry after China road accident kills 18 children

France recalls Syria envoy, security HQ attacked

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1 of 2. Demonstrators protest against Syria's President Bashar al-Assad gather in Hula, near Homs November 13, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Handout (

By Khaled Yacoub Oweis


AMMAN | Wed Nov 16, 2011 11:17am EST


AMMAN (Reuters) - France recalled its ambassador to Damascus and Syria's suspension from the Arab League took effect on Wednesday, intensifying diplomatic pressure on President Bashar al-Assad to halt a violent eight-month-old crackdown on protests.


Syrian army defectors attacked an intelligence complex on the edge of Damascus in a high-profile assault that showed how close the popular uprising is to sliding into armed conflict.


Hours after the Arab League suspension took effect, Assad supporters threw stones and debris at the embassy of the United Arab Emirates and smeared its walls with graffiti, witnesses said. The embassy is in one of the most secure districts of the capital, near Assad's home and offices.


Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said France was working with the Arab League on a draft resolution at the United Nations.


Last month Russia and China vetoed a Security Council resolution that would have condemned Damascus, but since then the normally cautious Arab League has suspended Syria for failing to implement an Arab peace plan.


"New violence is taking place and that has led to the closure of the missions in Aleppo and Latakia and to recall our ambassador to Paris," Juppe said, referring to weekend attacks by pro-Assad demonstrators on French diplomatic premises, as well as Turkish and Saudi missions, in Syria.


Arab foreign ministers met in Rabat for an Arab-Turkish forum, where a Syrian flag was placed by an empty chair.


Turkey, now a fierce critic of its former ally, said Syria had failed to honor an Arab peace plan to halt the unrest.


Speaking through a translator, Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu compared Syria with Libya, where rebels captured, humiliated and killed Muammar Gaddafi last month.


"The regime should meet the demands of its people," he said. "The collective massacres in Syria and ... the bloodshed cannot continue like this."


IRAN DEFENDS SYRIA


In Tehran, Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi criticized the Arab League for "acting in a way that will hurt the security of the region." He told the official news agency IRNA that Syria, an ally of Iran since 1980, had repeatedly pledged to meet legitimate popular demands and enact reforms.


"Unfortunately, some countries believe that they are outside the crisis ... but they are mistaken because if a crisis happens they will be entangled by its consequences."


Saudi Arabia, which is eager to loosen the ties between its regional rival Iran and Syria, said the Arab League was acting in Syria's interest, not interfering in its affairs.


"What's important is not about suspending or not suspending (Syria from the League), it's stopping the bloodshed, starting the dialogue, and withdrawing troops from Syrian cities," Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal told Al Arabiya channel.


Western countries have tightened sanctions on Syria and on Monday Jordan's King Abdullah became the first Arab head of state to urge Assad to quit after ensuring a smooth handover.


In the early months of the uprising, attempts by security forces to crush mainly peaceful protests accounted for most of the violence. But since August there has been an growing number of reports of army defectors and armed civilians fighting back.


Activists said Free Syrian Army fighters fired machineguns and rockets at a large Air Force Intelligence complex on the northern edge of the capital at about 2:30 a.m. (0030 GMT).


A gunfight ensued and helicopters circled over the complex, on the Damascus-Aleppo highway. There were no immediate reports of casualties. Syrian state media did not mention the attack.


"HUGELY SYMBOLIC"


A Western diplomat in Damascus described the assault as "hugely symbolic and tactically new," saying that if the reported details were true it would be "much much more coordinated than anything we have seen before."


"To actually attack a base like this is something else, and so close to Damascus as well," said the diplomat, adding that fighting in recent weeks involving army deserters in the town of Rastan and the city of Homs resembled a localized civil war.


"It's not a nationwide civil war, but in very specific locations, it is looking like that," said the diplomat.


The Free Syrian Army was set up by deserters and is led by Colonel Riad al-Asaad, who is based in southern Turkey.


It announced this week that it had formed a "temporary military council" of nine defecting officers, led by Asaad.


The statement said the Syrian Free Army aimed to "bring down the regime and protect citizens from the repression ... and prevent chaos as soon as the regime falls," adding that it would form a military court to try "members of the regime who are proven to have been involved in killing operations."


Syrian television showed thousands of Assad's supporters rallying in Damascus and Latakia to mark the day his father Hafez al-Assad seized power in 1970. It said the crowds were also voicing their rejection of the Arab League's decision.


"God, Syria, Bashar, that's all!" shouted demonstrators in central Damascus, who turned out in heavy rain to wave flags and posters of the president. Two large posters of Assad and his father hung from a building. "Neither rain nor sanctions will stop us expressing our nationalism," the television said.


The Arab League has stopped short of calling for Assad's departure or proposing any Libya-style military intervention, but its ostracism of Syria is a blow to a country whose ruling Baath party puts Arab nationalism at the center of its credo.


Syrian authorities have banned most independent media. They blame the unrest on "armed terrorist gangs" and foreign-backed militants who they say have killed 1,100 soldiers and police.


Hundreds of people have been killed this month, one of the bloodiest periods of the revolt.


Syria says it remains committed to the Arab peace plan, which calls for the withdrawal of troops from urban areas, the release of prisoners and a dialogue with the opposition.


State media said more than 1,000 prisoners, including prominent dissident Kamal Labwani, were freed on Tuesday. But human rights campaigners say tens of thousands have been detained since anti-Assad protests began.


(Additional reporting Souhail Karam in Rabat, Dominic Evans in Beirut, John Irish in Paris, Mahmoud Habboush in Dubai and Ramin Mostafavi in Tehran; Writing by Alistair Lyon; Editing by Tim Pearce)

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Stocks, euro slide on fears of wider debt crisis

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A man is reflected on an electronic board displaying stock prices outside a brokerage in Tokyo November 10, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Toru Hanai

By Herbert Lash


NEW YORK | Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:53am EST


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Global equity markets and the euro slid on Wednesday after the European Central Bank's buying of regional sovereign debt failed to stem a bond sell-off in the euro zone or to calm fears the debt crisis was spreading.


Wall Street stocks lost almost 1 percent and the euro fell for a third straight session against the dollar to hit a five-week low as investors doubted the ability of governments in the euro zone to contain the crisis,


The ECB's buying of Italian and Spanish bonds brought only temporarily relief in the markets and yields resumed climbing once the intervention stopped.


French borrowing costs rose, with the yield premium of the French 10-year government bond over German Bunds rising to a new euro-era high near 2 percent.


France has become the latest target of investor unease as a solution to the region's two-year debt crisis remains elusive. Contagion from the crisis has spread to other top-rated sovereign issuers such as the Netherlands and Austria.


The euro was down 0.3 percent at $1.3496.


"The outlook for the euro is worsening gradually because clearly there's been contagion in the euro zone debt markets," said Samarjit Shankar, managing director of global FX strategy at BNY Mellon in Boston.


The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index .FTEU3 of top European shares was down 0.2 percent at 968.04.


The Dow Jones industrial average .DJI was down 72.73 points, or 0.60 percent, at 12,023.43. The Standard & Poor's 500 Index .SPX fell 6.79 points, or 0.54 percent, to 1,251.02. The Nasdaq Composite Index .IXIC was down 11.23 points, or 0.42 percent, at 2,674.97.


Analysts called a 0.1 percent drop in the U.S.Consumer Price Index in October a nonevent for markets.


U.S. consumer prices fell last month for the first time in four months as Americans paid less for new cars and gasoline. But prices outside of food and energy posted a slight increase, the Labor Department said.


The dollar extended gains versus the euro after the inflation data.


The U.S. Dollar Index .DXY, a basket of major trading-partner currencies, was up 0.3 percent at 78.089.


"Obviously the debt crisis is front and center but the data here is improving, which should provide a bit more tail wind for the dollar," said Omer Esiner, senior market strategist at Commonwealth Foreign Exchange in Washington.


U.S. Treasuries prices gained as Europe's government debt market was again hit with a sell-off.


The benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury note was up 8/32 in price to yield 2.02 percent.


Brent crude fell on worries the debt crisis will slow economic growth.


"There's a focus on sovereign debt yields; they are still a concern and they are driving prices," said Olivier Jakob at Petromatrix in Zug, Switzerland.


But U.S. crude futures rose above $101 a barrel on news that owners of the Seaway pipeline plan in 2012 to reverse the flow of oil, a move that would relieve an oil glut in Cushing, Oklahoma, the delivery point for New York futures contracts.


Brent crude fell 24 cents to $111.94 a barrel, while U.S. oil rose $2.42 to $101.79.


(Reporting by Wanfeng Zhou in New York; Brian Gorman, Emelia Sithole-Matarise, Amanda Cooper and Simon Falush in London; Writing by Herbert Lash; Editing by Theodore d'Afflisio and Dan Grebler)

READ MORE » Stocks, euro slide on fears of wider debt crisis

France, Germany clash over ECB role to stem crisis

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1 of 2. France's President Nicolas Sarkozy (L) and Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel leave a joint press conference after crisis talks with Greece's Prime Minister on the eve of a G20 summit of major world economies in Cannes, November 2, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Toby Melville

By Nicholas Vinocur and James Mackenzie


PARIS/ROME | Wed Nov 16, 2011 10:48am EST


PARIS/ROME (Reuters) - France and Germany, Europe's two central powers, clashed on Wednesday over whether the European Central Bank should intervene more forcefully to halt the euro zone's accelerating debt crisis after modest bond purchases failed to stop the rout.


Facing rising borrowing costs as its 'AAA' credit rating comes under threat, France appeared to plead for stronger ECB action, adding to mounting global pressure spelled out by U.S. President Barack Obama.


Bond market contagion is spreading across Europe. Italian 10-year bond yields have risen above 7 percent, unaffordable in the long term. Yields on bonds issued by France, the Netherlands and Austria -- which along with Germany form the core of the euro zone -- have also climbed.


"The ECB's role is to ensure the stability of the euro, but also the financial stability of Europe. We trust that the ECB will take the necessary measures to ensure financial stability in Europe," government spokeswoman Valerie Pecresse said after a cabinet meeting in Paris.


Pecresse said Paris believed the risk premium investors charge to hold French debt rather than safe haven 10-year German Bunds "is not justified". That "spread" hit a euro era peak of 195 basis points on Wednesday.


But German Chancellor Angela Merkel made clear Berlin would resist pressure for the central bank to take a bigger role in resolving the debt crisis, saying European Union rules prohibited such action.


"The way we see the treaties, the ECB doesn't have the possibility of solving these problems," she said after talks with visiting Irish Prime Minister Enda Kenny.


The only way to recover markets' confidence was to implement agreed economic reforms and build a closer European political union by changing the EU treaty, Merkel said.


ECB policymakers continue to reject international calls to intervene decisively as Europe's lender of last resort, stressing it is up to governments to resolve the debt crisis through austerity measures and reforms.


SHORT-LIVED RESPITE


Traders said the central bank bought Spanish and Italian bonds on Wednesday, but the respite was short-lived and there was no sign of a change in its policy of limited, stop-go purchases to calm markets temporarily while maintaining pressure on governments.


Wall Street opened lower and European shares slipped as investors doubted the ability of governments in the euro zone to contain the crisis.


Obama, on a visit to Australia, turned up the heat on Europe to act more boldly to extinguish the spreading bushfire.


"Until we put in place a concrete plan and structure that sends a clear signal to the markets that Europe is standing behind the euro and will do what it takes, we are going to continue to see the kinds of market turmoil we saw," he said.


Obama said that whilst there had been progress in putting together unity governments in Italy and Greece, Europe still faced a "problem of political will".


In Rome, Prime Minister-designate Mario Monti unveiled a government of technocrats, taking the key economy portfolio for himself in a drive to implement long delayed structural economic reforms and austerity measures.


Monti, a former European Commissioner, said he hoped markets would be reassured by his team, which features several academics and Intesa bank Chief Executive Corrado Passera, but no politicians. He will present his austerity program to the Senate on Thursday.


Officials said the new 16-member government, including three women and announced by Monti at the presidential palace in Rome, would be sworn in at 5 p.m. (1600 GMT).


Federico Ghizzoni, chief of Unicredit, said he would ask the ECB to increase access to central bank funds for Italian banks, which have faced growing funding problems since Italy was sucked into the debt crisis in July.


SYSTEMIC CRISIS


European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso told the European Parliament the euro zone faced a systemic crisis and fragmenting the European Union was no solution.


In Greece, technocrat Prime Minister Lucas Papademos, a former ECB vice-president, was set to win a big confidence vote in parliament for his interim government despite the refusal of the main conservative leader to sign up to more austerity.


New Democracy party chief Antonis Samaras gave Papademos only arms-length backing, refusing to bow to EU demands for a written commitment to the bailout program and calling for elections in three months to restore social peace.


With Papademos' national unity coalition already split, rebuilding Greece's shattered finances to avert default will be a daunting task as Europe battles to prevent its debt woes from dragging down the world economy.


Financial markets are skeptical that unelected technocrats will have the political clout to impose unpopular reforms, the two-year-old debt crisis risks engulfing the entire currency bloc and hurting global growth.


And there are growing signs of strain in the money market, the plumbing of the international financial system.


Banks in the euro zone face increasing difficulties in obtaining dollar funding, and while the stresses are nowhere near as acute as they were in the 2008 financial crisis, they have continued to mount despite ECB moves to provide unlimited liquidity to banks.


"Markets are clearly expecting a circuit breaker to alleviate pressure on periphery bond yields," said David Scutt, a trader at Arab Bank Australia in Sydney. "If no announcement is forthcoming in the days ahead, one suspects that the situation could unravel fairly quickly.


With a Brussels-based think-tank warning that France's economy should be "ringing alarm bells", Finance Minister Francois Baroin sought to calm fears about public finances.


"We are expecting a slowdown, but not a recession," Baroin told LCI news channel. "We are doing everything to maintain our credit rating, to borrow more cheaply."


Data on Tuesday showed the economy of the 17-nation euro zone barely grew in the third quarter. ECB President Mario Draghi has predicted the currency bloc will be in a mild recession by the end of the year.


Many analysts believe the only way to stem the contagion for now is for the ECB to buy large amounts of bonds -- effectively the sort of quantitative easing undertaken by the U.S. and British central banks.


The ECB has bought 187 billion euros in government bonds since May 2010 but it has so far "sterilized" all purchases by taking the equivalent amount in from the market in deposits. One option would be to stop fully sterilizing bond purchases.


This has been anathema in Germany, which fears that printing money could stoke inflation.


But on Tuesday Peter Bofinger, a member of the group of economists that advises the German government, said the ECB should indeed become the euro zone's lender of last resort if the bloc's debt woes risked tearing apart the financial system.


"If politics can't do it, then the ECB must do all it can to bring interest rates down to more reasonable levels," Bofinger said at Euro Finance Week.


(Additional reporting by Emelia Sithole-Matarise in London, Gareth Jones and Dina Kyriakidou in Athens, Deepa Babington in Rome; writing by Paul Taylor; editing by Janet McBride/Mike Peacock)

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More Americans than not want health law repeal: poll

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Opponents of the proposed health care bill are pictured during a rally outside the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington, March 21, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Jason Reed


WASHINGTON | Wed Nov 16, 2011 11:35am EST


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As the U.S. Supreme Court prepares to review President Barack Obama's healthcare reforms, more Americans want to it repealed than want to keep it, a poll released on Wednesday shows.


A Gallup survey of more than 1,000 U.S. adults found that 47 percent favor the repeal of healthcare reform, versus 42 percent who want the law kept in place. Eleven percent had no opinion.


But the survey also showed that 50 percent of Americans believe the federal government has a responsibility to make sure everyone has health coverage, compared with 46 percent who do not.


The results, which have a 4 percentage point margin of error, suggest a sharply divided U.S. public as the Supreme Court prepares to begin hearing legal arguments next March from 26 states and an independent business group that want the law struck down as unconstitutional.


The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act would extend health coverage to more than 30 million uninsured Americans by expanding Medicaid and establishing special state-run insurance markets called exchanges.


The law is Obama's signature domestic policy achievement, and a high court decision to overturn the reforms could deal a severe blow to his re-election prospects in the middle of the 2012 presidential campaign. A ruling to retain it could help his campaign.


The Supreme Court would be expected to rule by July.


Obama, a Democrat, is opposed by a field of Republican candidates who want the healthcare reform law repealed as a symbol of an intrusive government seeking to raise taxes and burden businesses with new regulation.


Public opposition to the law, particularly among the elderly, helped Republicans wrest control of the House of Representatives from Democrats in the 2010 midterm elections.


But advocates of the reforms say the law will reduce the soaring growth of healthcare costs over time and provide medical care to millions of families who currently have no protection.


The November 3-6 Gallup poll also showed a small reduction in public support for private insurance as the basis for gaining medical services in the $2.6 trillion U.S. healthcare system.


The findings said 56 percent of adults continue to prefer private insurance versus 39 percent who would favor a government-run system. That compares with a 61 percent to 34 percent margin a year ago.


(Reporting by David Morgan; editing by Philip Barbara)

READ MORE » More Americans than not want health law repeal: poll

Military option to deal with Iran is nearer: Israel's Peres

Israel's President Shimon Peres speaks at the ''Sixty Years of British-Israeli Diplomatic Relations'' conference held at Chatham House in London March 30, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Suzanne Plunkett


JERUSALEM | Fri Nov 4, 2011 5:47pm EDT


JERUSALEM (Reuters) - President Shimon Peres added to a debate raging in Israel over whether to attack Iran, when he said on Friday that a military option to stop the Islamic republic from obtaining nuclear weapons was nearer.


Asked by Channel Two News if "something was bringing us closer to a military option rather than a diplomatic one," Peres said: "I believe so, I estimate that intelligence services of all these countries are looking at the ticking clock, warning leaders that there is not much time left.


"Iran is nearing atomic weapons and in the time left we must turn to the world's nations and demand (they) fulfill their promise ... which is not merely passing sanctions. What needs to be done must be done and there is a long list of options."


Israeli media has been rife with speculation this week that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is working to secure cabinet consensus for an attack on Iranian nuclear installations.


Western powers, including Israel, suspect Tehran of developing nuclear weapons -- something Iran denies -- and have imposed sanctions in an attempt to curb its program.


Iran, which opposes Israel's existence, says it is enriching uranium only to power reactors for electricity generation.


Though no direct threats of military action on Iran have been made by Netanyahu, both Israel and the United States have repeatedly hinted at possible use of force, saying all options were on the table.


(Writing by Maayan Lubell; Editing by Louise Ireland)

READ MORE » Military option to deal with Iran is nearer: Israel's Peres

5.6 magnitude Oklahoma quake causes some damage


OKLAHOMA CITY | Sun Nov 6, 2011 1:25am EST


OKLAHOMA CITY (Reuters) - A 5.6 magnitude earthquake struck in Oklahoma late on Saturday evening, the U.S. Geological Survey said, toppling a chimney, damaging buildings and sending a boulder the size of an SUV onto a rural road.


The quake was the strongest in Oklahoma history, topping a tremor of 5.5 magnitude in 1952, according to the USGS.


It was the second quake recorded in the state within 24 hours after a tremor of 4.7 magnitude early on Saturday. Both quakes were centered east of Oklahoma City in Lincoln County.


There were no reports of serious injuries or deaths.


J.L. Gilbert, owner of the Sparks Vineyard and Winery, about four miles from the epicenter of the quake, said it lasted "a good 30 seconds."


"It was a pretty good jolt. We're not used to this. We're used to being sucked up into the wind," he said, referring to Oklahoma's reputation as a tornado alley.


One of Gilbert's employees went to the hospital after tripping and hitting his head on a doorway while scrambling to get out of his home, Gilbert said.


In Prague, Oklahoma, where the earlier quake was centered, City Manager Jim Greff said the latest tremblor caused a chimney to topple over and crash through the roof of a home.


Part of the ceiling grid in the Prague library collapsed during the quake, but the walls remained intact, Greff said.


The earthquake caused state Highway 62 to buckle in three places west of Prague and sent a boulder "about the size of an SUV" tumbling onto a rural road in southeast Lincoln County, said Aaron Bennett, dispatch supervisor for the county's emergency management division.


Four aftershocks from the initial quake were felt by 1 a.m. Sunday, Bennett said.


The quake was felt more than 300 miles away in Kansas City, where it rattled windows and shook houses for half a minute, a Reuters witness said.


The second quake was a shallow 3.1 miles (5 km ) deep and was centered 4 miles east of Sparks, which is east of Oklahoma City.


Earthquakes of a 4.0 magnitude east of the Rocky Mountains can typically be felt from up to 60 miles away, according to the USGS. A 5.5 magnitude quake can be felt up to 300 miles from its epicenter.


(Editing by Greg McCune and Vicki Allen)

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Goldman's new money machine: warehouses

1 of 2. A warehouse contracted out by Goldman Sachs warehouse subsidiary Metro International Trade Services to hold metals is seen in Detroit in this photo taken July 12, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Clare Baldwin

By Pratima Desai, Clare Baldwin, Susan Thomas and Melanie Burton


LONDON/DETROIT | Fri Jul 29, 2011 11:28am EDT


LONDON/DETROIT (Reuters) - In a rundown patch of Detroit, enclosed by a cyclone fence and barbed wire, stands an unremarkable warehouse that investment bank Goldman Sachs has transformed into a money-making machine.


The derelict neighborhood off Michigan Avenue is a sharp contrast to Goldman's bustling skyscraper headquarters near Wall Street, but the two operations share one important element: management by the bank's savvy financial professionals.


A string of warehouses in Detroit, most of them operated by Goldman, has stockpiled more than a million tonnes of the industrial metal aluminum, about a quarter of global reported inventories.


Simply storing all that metal generates tens of millions of dollars in rental revenues for Goldman every year.


There's just one problem: much less aluminum is leaving the depots than arriving, creating a supply pinch for manufacturers of everything from soft drink cans to aircraft.


The resulting spike in prices has sparked a clash between companies forced to pay more for their aluminum and wait months for it to be delivered, Goldman, which is keen to keep its cash machines humming and the London Metal Exchange (LME), the world's benchmark industrial metals market, which critics accuse of lax oversight.


Analysts question why London's metals market allows big financial players like Goldman to own the warehouses which store huge quantities of metal even as they trade the commodity. Robin Bhar, a veteran metals analyst at Credit Agricole in London says the conflict of interest is so acute he wants U.S. and European anti-trust regulators to weigh in.


"I think it makes a mockery of the market. It's a shame," Bhar said. "This is an anti-competitive situation. It puts (some) companies at an advantage, and clearly the rest of the market at a disadvantage. It's a real, genuine concern. And I think the regulators have to look at it."


Goldman said its warehouse subsidiary Metro International Trade Services has done nothing illegal, and abides by the LME's warehousing rules. "Producers have chosen to store metal in Detroit with Metro," a Goldman spokeswoman said. "We follow the LME requirements in terms of storing and releasing metals from our warehouses."


The London Metal Exchange defends its rules. "There is a perception that consumers have not been able to get to their metal when the reality is that it is big banks, financing companies and warehouses that are not able to get to their huge tonnages of metal fast enough," said LME business development manager Chris Evans.


BUSINESS MODEL


Goldman's warehouse business relies on a lucrative opportunity enabled by the LME regulations. Those rules allow warehouses to release only a fraction of their inventories per day, much less than the metal that is regularly taken in for storage.


In the year to June 30 Metro warehouses in Detroit took in 364,175 tonnes of aluminum and delivered out 171,350 tonnes. That represented 42 percent of inventory arrivals globally and 26 percent of the metal delivered out, according to the London Metal Exchange said.


The metal that sits in the warehouse generates lucrative rental income.


Little wonder that so many want in. Metro was acquired by Goldman in February 2010, while commodities trading firm Trafigura nabbed UK-based NEMS in March 2010, and Swiss-based group Glencore International acquired the metals warehousing unit of Italy's Pacorini last September.


Henry Bath, a warehousing firm and founding member of the London Metal Exchange in 1877, has been owned for about 40 years by traders or banks including Metallgesellschaft in the 1980s and failed U.S. energy trader Enron at the turn of the century. It now comes under the umbrella of JP Morgan, which bought the metals trading business of RBS Sempra Commodities in July last year.


Despite its rental income, Goldman's warehouse strategy apparently hasn't been enough to snap a slumping performance in commodity trading, with the company reporting a "significant" drop in revenues from a year ago in its latest quarter, the sixth time in the past 10 quarters that it has failed to expand.


CONSUMERS FUME


The long delays in metal delivery have buyers fuming. Some consumers are waiting up to a year to receive the aluminum they need and that has resulted in the perverse situation of higher prices at a time when the world is awash in the metal.


"It's driving up costs for the consumers in North America and it's not being driven up because there is a true shortage in the market. It's because of an issue of accessing metal ... in Detroit warehouses," said Nick Madden, chief procurement officer for Atlanta-based Novelis, which is owned by India's Hindalco Industries Ltd and is the world's biggest maker of rolled aluminum products. Novelis buys aluminum directly from producers but is still hit by the higher prices.


Madden estimates that the U.S. benchmark physical aluminum price is $20 to $40 a tonne higher because of the backlog at the Detroit warehouses. The physical price is currently around $2,800 per tonne. That premium is forcing U.S. businesses to fork out millions of dollars more for the 6 million tonnes of aluminum they use annually.


It has also had a knock-on impact on the global market, which is forecast to consume about 45 million tonnes of the lightweight, durable metal this year.


Also pushing aluminum costs higher are bank financing deals, which are estimated to have locked up about 70 percent of the 4.4 million tonnes of the metal sitting in LME-registered warehouses around the world. ME inventories hit an all-time record above 4.7 million tonnes in May.


In a typical deal, a bank buys aluminum from a producer, agrees to sell it at some future point at a profit, and strikes a warehouse deal to store it cheaply for an extended time period.


The combination of the financing deals and the metal trapped in Detroit depots, means only a fraction of the inventories are available to the market. Premiums for physical aluminum -- the amount paid above the LME's cash contract currently trading at $2,620 a tonne -- in the U.S. Midwest hit a record high of $210 a tonne in May, up about 50 percent from late last year. In Europe, the premium is at records above $200 a tonne, double the levels seen in January 2010.


The ripple effect into Asia has seen the premium paid in Japan increase 6 percent to $120 a tonne in the third quarter from the previous quarter, the first rise in nearly six quarters.


COLLECTING THE RENT


You won't hear banks like Goldman complaining. Rental income continues to pour in at the 19 Detroit area warehouses run by Metro as of June.


From the outside one recent afternoon, a depot in the Detroit suburb of Mt Clemens appeared to be deserted. But neighbors say the place is a whirl of activity in the early hours of the morning when metal is usually delivered for storage.


The LME says the current maximum rent, set by warehouse operators, is 41 U.S. cents per day per tonne. At that rate, Goldman's warehouse operation in Detroit -- said to be holding more than 1.1 million tonnes -- could be generating as much as $451,000 per day or about $165 million a year in revenue.


An exact figure cannot be calculated because many clients negotiate lower rental rates and Goldman declined to detail its income from its warehouse business. But when Swiss-based trading company Glencore listed earlier this year it revealed that its metals warehousing unit generated $31 million in profit on $220 million in gross revenue in 2010.


LONG HISTORY Caught between consumers and warehouse operators is the 134-year old LME, one of the world's last exchanges with open-outcry trading. Sessions take place in a trading ring with red padded seats while visitors can watch from a gallery. Traders juggle multiple telephones and use archaic hand signals to fill orders from consumers, producers and hedge funds.


The ring is a perhaps more civilized version of the tumultuous trading pits made famous in Chicago. Each of six major industrial metals including copper and nickel are traded for five minute bursts in the morning and afternoon. Only 12 firms have access to the ring, arranged in fixed positions in a circle, with many others involved via the ring dealers and on the LME's electronic trading system.


Longer sessions in the late morning and afternoon allow trading of all metals simultaneously and are known as "the kerb" from the days when dealers continued to trade on the kerb, or sidewalk, after leaving the exchange.


The LME certifies and regulates the Detroit sheds as part of a global network of more than 640 warehouses. The network is meant to even out swings in volatile metals markets. During recessions, surplus metal can be stored until economies recover and demand picks up, when the metal can be released.


But that function is now being undermined by the backlog in Detroit.


LME rules stipulate that warehouses must deliver a certain amount of metal each day. However the rules apply not to each warehouse but to each city that a company has warehouses in. At the moment, a warehouse operator needs to deliver just 1,500 tonnes a day per city, whether it owns one warehouse there or dozens. That means each of Metro's Detroit warehouses need to release only 79 tonnes of aluminum a day. At that rate, it would take two years to clear the stocks held by Goldman's Detroit warehouses.


The backlog sparked outrage last year, prompting the LME to task London-based consultancy Europe Economics to look into its rules. Europe Economics recommended the exchange raise its minimum delivery rates and earlier this month the exchange announced a new regime for operators with stocks of over 900,000 tonnes in one city.


From April 2012 the minimum delivery rate will double to 3,000 tonnes a day.


Critics dismiss the move as too small to have any real effect, especially because of the delay until it comes in.


"The move is too little and too late to have a material effect in the near-term on an already very tight physical market, particularly in the U.S.," Morgan Stanley analysts said in a July note.


A senior executive at a metals brokerage told Reuters "the recommendations won't change anything. The problem will still be there six, nine months down the line." "If Detroit has 1.1 million tonnes at the moment, what's to say it won't have 2 million tonnes next year," he said.


MOVING MORE METAL


One obvious solution would be to impose minimum delivery requirements per warehouse or per square meter of warehouse space rather than per city. It's not as if the warehouses can't cope with delivering more stock: large operations can shift much more than 3,000 tonnes a day, warehousing sources say. An experienced forklift driver takes about 20 minutes to load one 20-tonne truck with aluminum in the United States. That means one warehouse in Detroit with two doors, two forklifts and an eight-hour working day could move out as much as 1,920 tonnes of metal every day.


"If you take Detroit in particular, those warehouses historically extracted metal at a faster rate ... the infrastructure is there," a senior analyst in the metals industry told Reuters.


Madden at Novelis said: "I don't know the specific details of every warehouse but our view is that they seem to be able to absorb metal coming in at almost an infinite rate and so we feel there's a lot more they can do on the output side to push up the (load out) rates."


The LME could also crack down in the same way it did in 1998 when it banned Metro from taking any more copper into its Long Beach and Los Angeles warehouses. Then the complaints were said to have come from copper consumers worried that 80 percent of total copper stocks in LME-approved warehouses were held in California. The exchange argues that any change right now might disrupt the market.


"Changes to the delivery out rate have required careful consideration because it will impact the cost structure for those holding metal, and were those costs to rise sharply it could affect the way that metal is stored and traded," said the LME's Evans.


The exchange could also rule that a warehouse cannot charge rent once aluminum has been purchased, no matter how long it takes to ship it. But a change like that would hit the LME itself as it receives about 1 percent of the rental income earned by the warehouses it approves.


LEGAL FEARS


Nobody at the LME will say whether the Europe Economics study -- industry sources said it talked to more than 40 companies -- advised more radical measures, arguing that such information is "proprietary." In any case, say metal markets sources, LME officials may be hesitant to make bigger changes because they fear legal action from the likes of Goldman, which could argue that Metro's business model has been based on existing LME warehouse rules.


The LME declined to comment on possible legal challenges, but its Chief Executive Martin Abbott said at a recent briefing that the warehouse delays were not causing market and price distortions.


"No, I don't believe it is," Abbott said, when asked if the situation was causing distortions in the market. Abbott said the exchange had received no official complaints from consumers about bottlenecks at warehouses. The LME also dismisses concerns about banks trading metal and owning the warehouses where it is stored.


While a British parliamentary committee raised the issue in May, Britain's Office of Fair Trading declined to open a probe. The U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, which regulates the futures and options markets, said it would not comment. Britain's Financial Services Authority, which regulates exchanges where commodity futures are traded but not warehouses that store physical material, declined to comment.


WHAT NEXT?


The lack of real change has some in the industry questioning the very structure of the LME, which, unlike its publicly owned U.S.-based rival commodities exchanges, is owned by many of the financial institutions that trade there.


"The belief is that they are focused on serving their shareholders; most of them being the banks ... We see our clients and contacts trying to avoid the LME as much as possible now," said Jorge Vazquez, Managing Director of the Aluminum Intelligence Unit at HARBOR Commodity Research.


That concern is growing. Critics of the exchange point to a potential problem with zinc supply though New Orleans, where inventories now account for 61 percent of total LME-registered stocks. Most of the warehouses in New Orleans are owned by Goldman and Glencore.


Metal industry sources believe regulators should take a closer look at the possible conflict of interest that arises when trading houses also own the warehouses.


"If the whole thrust of regulation and regulatory reform is increased transparency and open and above board operations, letting banks own warehouses seems to run entirely counter to that," said Frances Hudson, global thematic strategist at Standard Life Investments said.


The LME says it enforces a strong separation between warehouses and the trading arms of their owners. Just this week it proposed that companies which own warehouses should engage an independent third-party to verify the robustness of Chinese walls.


"We enforce it through regular audits of warehouses," said the LME's Evans. "If people say Chinese walls are leaking then they should bring us evidence and we'll investigate."


(This story was updated to add details about how much aluminium was taken in and delivered by Metro warehouses in Detroit in the past year (paragraph 13) and to correct who sets the maximum rent for metal storage—it’s the warehouse owners, not the LME (paragraph 30). In paragraph 5 “a trickle” of aluminium leaving the warehouses was changed to “much less is leaving the depots than arriving…”)


(Pratima Desai, Susan Thomas and Melanie Burton reported from London; Clare Baldwin reported from Detroit; with additional reporting by Chris Kelly in New York and Karen Norton in London; Graphics by Vincent Flasseur; Editing by Eric Onstad, Richard Mably and Simon Robinson)


(Created by Simon Robinson)

READ MORE » Goldman's new money machine: warehouses

Huge asteroid headed for close encounter with Earth

This radar image of asteroid 2005 YU55 was generated from data taken in April of 2010 by the Arecibo Radar Telescope in Puerto Rico.

Credit: Reuters/NASA/Cornell/Arecibo/Handout

By Irene Klotz


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla | Fri Nov 4, 2011 6:56pm EDT


CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla (Reuters) - A huge asteroid will pass closer to Earth than the moon Tuesday, giving scientists a rare chance for study without having to go through the time and expense of launching a probe, officials said.


Earth's close encounter with Asteroid 2005 YU 55 will occur at 6:28 p.m. EST (2328 GMT) Tuesday, as the space rock sails about 201,000 miles from the planet.


"It is the first time since 1976 that an object of this size has passed this closely to the Earth. It gives us a great -- and rare -- chance to study a near-Earth object like this," astronomer Scott Fisher, a program director with the National Science Foundation, said Thursday during a Web chat with reporters.


The orbit and position of the asteroid, which is about 1,312 feet in diameter, is well known, added senior research scientist Don Yeomans, with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California.


"There is no chance that this object will collide with the Earth or moon," Yeomans said.


Thousands of amateur and professional astronomers are expected to track YU 55's approach, which will be visible from the planet's northern hemisphere. It will be too dim to be seen with the naked eye, however, and it will be moving too fast for viewing by the Hubble Space Telescope.


"The best time to observe it would be in the early evening on November 8 from the East Coast of the United States," Yeomans said. "It is going to be very faint, even at its closest approach. You will need a decent-sized telescope to be able to actually see the object as it flies by."


Scientists suspect YU 55 has been visiting Earth for thousands of years, but because gravitational tugs from the planets occasionally tweak its path, they cannot tell for sure how long the asteroid has been in its present orbit.


"These sorts of events have been happening for most of the lifetime of the Earth, about 4.5 billion years," Fisher said.


Computer models showing the asteroid's path for the next 100 years show there is no chance it will hit Earth during that time, added Yeomans.


"We do not think that it will ever impact the Earth or moon (but) we only have its orbit calculated for the next 100 years," he said.


Previous studies show the asteroid, which is blacker than charcoal, is what is called a C-type asteroid that is likely made of carbon-based materials and some silicate rock.


More information about its composition and structure are expected from radar images and chemical studies of its light as the asteroid passes by the planet.


"I've read that we will be able to see details down to a size of about 15 feet across on the surface of the asteroid," Fisher said.


NASA is working on a mission to return soil samples from an asteroid known as 1999 RQ36 in 2020, followed by a human mission to another asteroid in the mid-2020s.


Japan also plans to launch an asteroid sample return mission in 2018.


(Corrects time element in paragraph 3)


(Editing by Tom Brown and Philip Barbara)

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Cain's favorability drops after accusations: poll

 Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain raises his hands as he speaks at a Northern Virginia Technology Council meeting in McLean, Virginia, November 2, 2011. Credit: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst

By Steve Holland


WASHINGTON | Sun Nov 6, 2011 6:31am EST


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Allegations that Republican presidential candidate Herman Cain sexually harassed women in the 1990s have begun to damage his bid for the White House, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found.


The poll showed the percentage of Republicans who view Cain favorably dropped 9 percentage points, to 57 percent from 66 percent a week ago.


Among all registered voters, Cain's favorability declined 5 percentage points, to 32 percent from 37 percent.


The survey represents the first evidence that sexual harassment claims dating from Cain's time as head of the National Restaurant Association have taken a toll on his presidential campaign.


A majority of respondents, 53 percent, believe sexual harassment allegations against Cain are true despite his denials. Republicans were less likely to believe they are true, with 39 percent thinking they are accurate.


"The most striking thing is that Herman Cain is actually seeing a fairly substantial decline in favorability ratings toward him particularly among Republicans," said Ipsos pollster Chris Jackson.


The 65-year-old Cain, a former pizza company executive with no experience in political office, has been running neck and neck with former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney for the lead in polls of Republicans considering who will be the nominee to face Democratic President Barack Obama next year.


At least three women have accused Cain of sexual harassment from his time as the restaurant industry's top lobbyist. Cain has given conflicting accounts of the cases since the news broke a week ago by news website Politico. He insists the claims were baseless and that he was wrongfully accused.


But a woman who received a cash settlement from the restaurant association in response to her harassment claim rejected Cain's denials on Friday. She said through her lawyer that she was the victim of a "series of inappropriate behaviors and unwanted advances" by Cain in 1999.


The allegations have received wide attention. The Reuters/Ipsos poll found more than 80 percent of respondents have heard of them. Republicans are the most aware, at 88 percent, while independents the least aware, at 64 percent.


Four in 10 respondents said this issue had made them less favorable toward Cain. About one in three Republicans, or 35 percent, said the controversy had made them less favorable toward Cain.


Jackson said it may well be that the wave of support that carried the conservative Cain to the top of the Republican field was now cresting.


"I think he is probably cresting now. I think this week, last week, were sort of the high-water mark," he said.


The poll found that Romney, who is more a candidate of the Republican establishment, has a favorability among Republican voters of 63 percent, while rival Rick Perry, the Texas governor, is viewed favorably by 47 percent.


Ipsos conducted the poll of 1,007 adults on Friday and Saturday by interviewing individuals via a U.S. online household panel.


Since it was an online poll, typical margins of error do not apply. Despite that, various recognized methods were used to select as representative a sample as possible and weigh the results.


If it were a traditional random survey, it would have a margin of error of between plus 4.4 percent and plus 5.1 percentage points. That figure varies because some participants dropped out of the video portion of the survey. (Editing by Alistair Bell, Philip Barbara and Greg McCune)

READ MORE » Cain's favorability drops after accusations: poll

Ron Paul declared winner of Illinois Republican straw poll

Republican presidential candidate and Congressman Ron Paul speaks at the annual Republican Party of Iowa Ronald Reagan Dinner in Des Moines, Iowa, November 4, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Jim Young


CHICAGO | Sat Nov 5, 2011 11:42pm EDT


CHICAGO (Reuters) - Ron Paul was declared the winner on Saturday of a weeklong Republican presidential straw poll in Democratic President Barack Obama's home state of Illinois.


Texas Congressman Paul won 52 percent of the combined 3,649 online and in-person votes cast between October 29 and Saturday evening. He won 66.5 percent of the votes cast over the Internet and 8 percent of those cast in person.


Former Massachusetts Governor Mitt Romney earned 7 percent of the online votes cast and 35 percent of the in-person votes, winning the most in-person votes cast at 22 locations, the party said.


Businessman Herman Cain won 15 percent of the online vote and 29 percent of the in-person vote.


Romney's and Cain's combined totals were not immediately announced.


Each voter was required to make a $5 contribution to the Illinois Republican Party to cover costs of the straw poll and to support state and local Republican candidates.


"Today's straw poll was an excellent opportunity to showcase our party's strength one year out of the election," said Illinois Republican Party chairman Pat Brady. "I am pleased with today's turnout and look forward to building on our successes from 2010."


Republicans hope to make Illinois a contested state in the 2012 general election, after Obama won his home state easily in the 2008 election.


Illinois Republicans captured four additional seats in the House of Representatives in the 2010 mid-term elections, giving them an 11 to eight majority.


(Reporting by Andrew Stern; Editing by Vicki Allen)

READ MORE » Ron Paul declared winner of Illinois Republican straw poll

China says Europe will overcome debt crisis

China's Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi speaks during a discussion regarding megacities at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York, September 20, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Allison Joyce


BEIJING | Sat Nov 5, 2011 10:46pm EDT


BEIJING (Reuters) - China is confident that Europe will be able to overcome its debt crisis, Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said, adding stability in the eurozone was crucial for the global economic recovery.


Yang, however, made no mention about increasing investment in Europe in his statement late on Saturday on President Hu Jintao's trip to the G20 leaders' meeting in southern France.


"We believe that Europe has the complete wisdom and ability to solve the debt problem," Yang said in remarks published on the Foreign Ministry's website.


"China has always supported Europe's response to the international financial crisis and its economic recovery efforts," he said.


The euro zone has been looking to China play a role in supporting its rescue fund by investing some of its $3.2 trillion in foreign exchange reserves -- the world's largest.


But there are limits to what Beijing can actually deliver, Cheng Siwei, a former top Chinese lawmaker, said on Saturday, even though China is willing to help Europe, its largest export market, to deal with the debt crisis.


Leaders of the world's major economies, meeting on the French Riviera, told Europe to sort out its own problems and deferred until next year any move to provide more crisis-fighting resources to the International Monetary Fund.


Yang said that Hu emphasized during his trip "the development and the recovery of the European economy to achieve recovery" of the global economy.


(Reporting by Sui-Lee Wee; Editing by Sanjeev Miglani)

READ MORE » China says Europe will overcome debt crisis

Devil found in detail of Giotto fresco in Italy's Assisi

1 of 2. A detail of a fresco by Giotto in the Basilica of St Francis in Assisi is seen in this picture released on November 5, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Basilica of St Francis in Assisi/Handout


ROME | Sat Nov 5, 2011 9:20am EDT


ROME (Reuters) - Art restorers have discovered the figure of a devil hidden in the clouds of one of the most famous frescos by Giotto in the Basilica of St Francis in Assisi, church officials said on Saturday.


The devil was hidden in the details of clouds at the top of fresco number 20 in the cycle of the scenes in the life and death of St Francis painted by Giotto in the 13th century.


The discovery was made by Italian art historian Chiara Frugone. It shows a profile of a figure with a hooked nose, a sly smile, and dark horns hidden among the clouds in the panel of the scene depicting the death of St Francis.


The figure is difficult to see from the floor of the basilica but emerges clearly in close-up photography.


Sergio Fusetti, the chief restorer of the basilica, said Giotto probably never wanted the image of the devil to be a main part of the fresco and may have painted it in among the clouds "to have a bit of fun."


The master may have painted it to spite someone he knew by portraying him as a devil in the painting, Fusetti said on the convent's website.


The artwork in the basilica in the convent where St Francis is buried was last restored after it was severely damaged by an earthquake in 1997.


(Reporting By Philip Pullella; Editing by Sophie Hares)

READ MORE » Devil found in detail of Giotto fresco in Italy's Assisi

Secrecy surrounds new James Bond movie "Skyfall"

Daniel Craig poses while launching the start of production of the new James Bond film ''SkyFall'' at a restaurant in London, November 3, 2011. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

1 5. Daniel Craig is when you start the recording of the production of the new James Bond movie "SkyFall" in a restaurant in London, 3. November 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Luke MacGregor

By Mike Collett-white

LONDON | Wed, November 3, 2011 12: 49 pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Daniel Craig return balls to Dodge and James Bond franchise preempt film, but the stars and Director of "Skyfall" keep villains from China to Turkey in the 23rd edition of the who, what and how under closure for now.

As previously announced, Academy Award-winning director of Sam Mendes, directs his first Bond adventure, which celebrates its 50th consist in 2012, when Skyfall is released.

One of the few details of Mendes, which more than 100 journalists from around the world in the London Press launch film were revealed his occupation and begins the locations of the blockbuster movie, the production on Monday.

Bond regulars Craig and Judi Dench, as his strict Spy Chief M, back to their roles, Javier Bardem, Spanish actor plays the villain and French actress Berenice Marlohe and UK Naomie Harris are Bond girls.

All five were at the press conference, where they concluded that bond producer Barbara broccoli and Michael Wilson.

In addition to Mendes said of the latest installment in a cinema of the longest and most successful film franchise Ben Whishaw ", the a part that I can't you in scenes I nothing can tell play to say."

"And Albert Finney, who also play is a part of anything I on in scenes tell you can, that I can not really say about and Ralph Fiennes, I can similarly you very little information about."

Asked whether he had known as not all characters play the leaders would bond could recognize fans, the "American beauty" Director replied: "they could do." "On the other hand she could not be."

What producers have confirmed, that Skyfall is take bond of another action-packed mission to London, Shanghai, Istanbul, and Scotland.

A press release was a short story which say that the bond over m is being tested, "how her past comes back to haunt them."

"MI6 (British intelligence) comes attacked 007 to track down and destroy the threat, no matter how personal costs must."

NO "STRICT" BOND

Mendes and his producer wanted to assure fans that nothing less would spectacularly make difficult economic conditions in the real world-not the fictional exploits of suave Superspy.

"It, I believe, has all the elements of a classical Bond movie, including, suppress to all the rumors, lots of action," said Mendes.

Wilson added: "I think it is the last film of the order (cost) and we really have to change anything in the script." "We have not had to sacrifice everything."

22Nd Bond movie, "Quantum of Solace," an estimated 200 million dollar cost to more than the most recent issue and Craig's bond debut "Casino Royale", the reported 150 million cost.

Overhead in higher ticket sales, but with Casino Royale earn $594 million at the worldwide box office and quantum of solace 586 million, depending on the according website translate www.boxofficemojo.com.

Sony Pictures, part of Sony Corp., distributed the Skyfall, that is, that the British theatre on 26 October 2012 hit and U.S. received mixed reviews cinemas on 9 November after a bankruptcy to keep Studio production to months and the last film.

Next year is the 50th anniversary of the series, which began in 1962 with Sean Connery--life former intelligence officer and writer Ian Fleming-in character-on her Majesty's secret service in "Dr. No" breathe

Debt-laden Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc., known for its roaring lion logo, and behind some of the legendary films such as "The wizard of Oz," bankruptcy stored the Hollywood in November last year.

But two months later confirmed bond would take 23 Theater in November, 2012, and MGM and Sony announced in April they co-finance and distribute the next two Bond films.

Craig's first appearance as bond in 2006 was celebrated as a refreshing change in the direction of a harder, more serious 007 and reviews were mostly positive.

A quantum of solace fared less well with the critics, although still negative outweighs positive reviews and both films were commercially successful.

When Craig was asked whether he a few years one of the most well known roles of cinema would continue, broccoli tossed and said: "Yes, definitely."

READ MORE » Secrecy surrounds new James Bond movie "Skyfall"

IAEA report on Iran set to raise Middle East tension

A woman enters the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) headquarters at the UN premises in Vienna, December 2, 2010.

Credit: Reuters/Heinz-Peter Bader

By Fredrik Dahl


VIENNA | Sun Nov 6, 2011 8:18am EST


VIENNA (Reuters) - The U.N. nuclear watchdog is expected this week to issue its most detailed report yet on research in Iran seen as geared to developing atomic bombs, heightening international suspicions of Tehran's agenda and stoking Middle East tensions.


Western powers are likely to seize on the International Atomic Energy Agency document, which has been preceded by media speculation in Israel of military strikes against Iranian nuclear sites, to press for more sanctions on the oil producer.


But Russia and China fear the publication now of the IAEA's findings could hurt any chance of diplomacy resolving the long-running nuclear row and they have lobbied against it, signaling opposition to any new punitive U.N. measures against Iran.


Iran rejects allegations of atomic weapons ambitions, saying its nuclear program is aimed at producing electricity.


The report is tentatively scheduled to be submitted to IAEA member states on November 9 before a quarterly meeting the following week of the agency's 35-nation board of governors in Vienna.


It "will be followed by a U.S.-European Union push for harsher sanctions against Iran at the U.N. Security Council, where Western powers will meet stiff resistance from Russia and China," said Trita Parsi, an expert on U.S.-Iran relations.


The document is expected to give fresh evidence of research and other activities with little other application than atomic bomb-making, including studies linked to the development of an atom bomb trigger and computer modeling of a nuclear weapon.


Sources briefed on the report also say it will include information from both before and after 2003 -- the year in which U.S. spy services estimated, in a controversial 2007 assessment, that Iran had halted outright "weaponization" work.


Many conservative experts criticized the 2007 findings as inaccurate and naive, and U.S. intelligence agencies now believe Iranian leaders have resumed closed-door debates over the last four years about whether to build a nuclear bomb.


"The primary new information is likely to be any work that Iran has engaged in after 2003 ... Iran is understood to have continued or restarted some research and development since then," said Peter Crail of the Arms Control Association, a U.S.-based advocacy group.


The sources familiar with the document said that among other things it would support allegations that Iran built a large steel container for the purpose of carrying out tests with high explosives applicable to nuclear weapons.


"This is not a country that is sitting down just doing some theoretical stuff on a computer," a Western official said about the IAEA's body of evidence, which is based on Western intelligence as well as the agency's own investigations.


"Saber RATTLING"


The report will flesh out and expand on concerns voiced by the IAEA for several years over allegations that Iran had a linked program of projects to process uranium, test high explosives and modify a missile cone to take a nuclear payload.


It is not believed to contain an explicit assessment that Iran is developing a nuclear weapons capability. "The IAEA's report will not likely contain any smoking guns," said Mark Hibbs of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.


But Western diplomats say the dossier will be incriminating for the Islamic Republic and present a compelling case that it is carrying out weapons-relevant work.


Iran says the accusations of military nuclear activity are forged and baseless, showing no sign of backing down in the face of intensified international pressure.


Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said he did not fear possible revelations, saying on Saturday:


"They are claiming that they are going to publish new documents. We know what the truth is -- let them publish them and we'll see what happens. Will they not be called into question as an agency that is under pressure by foreign powers?"


But Iran's history of concealing sensitive nuclear activity and its refusal to suspend work that can potentially yield atomic bombs have already been punished by four rounds of U.N. sanctions, and separate U.S. and European punitive steps.


In the run-up to the report there has been an escalation of rhetoric on both sides.


A senior U.S. military official said Friday Iran had become the biggest threat to the United States and Israel's president said the military option to prevent Iran obtaining nuclear weapons was nearer.


Ayatollah Mahmoud Alavi, a senior Iranian cleric, Sunday dismissed talk of a military strike by Israel as empty propaganda, taunting the Jewish state for screaming "like a cornered cat" rather than roaring like a lion.


Alavi, a member of the Assembly of Experts, a body that appoints and supervises Iran's supreme leader, said Israel would not dare attack Iran. "If they make such a mistake they will receive a crushing response from the Islamic Republic," he told the official IRNA news agency.


Israel bombed an Iraqi nuclear reactor in 1981 and launched a similar strike against Syria in 2007 -- precedents lending weight to its veiled threats to take similar action against Iran if foreign pressure fails to curb its atomic activities.


But many independent analysts see any such mission as too much for Israel to take on alone. Israel lacks long-range bombers that could inflict lasting damage on Iran's widely dispersed and fortified facilities.


Parsi said U.S. officials tended to view Israeli threats of military action as a pressure tactic to get Washington and Europe to adopt tougher sanctions against Iran.


But he said it would be dangerous to dismiss Israel's "saber-rattling" out of hand.


"How much longer can this game of brinkmanship ... be pursued before it turns into a self-fulfilling prophecy?" Parsi wrote in an article posted on the website of CNN.


(Additional reporting by Sylvia Westall in Vienna and Robin Pomeroy in Tehran; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

READ MORE » IAEA report on Iran set to raise Middle East tension

Israel-test fire missile to Iran debate rages

By Dan Williams

JERUSALEM | Wednesday, 2 November 2011 11: 00 am EDT

JERUSALEM (Reuters) - Israel test-fired nuclear program of Iran a rocket from a military base on Wednesday, two days after Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu warned that"direct and serious threat" is.

Hour introduction to close to Tel Aviv, which had been unknown in advance, coincided with a week long wave of speculation in the local media, the Netanyahu to the safe Cabinet consensus for an attack on Israel arch enemy was.

Netanyahu went Office comment on the reports, the unsourced unconfirmed and some commentators were the misinformation could be designed war jerk in the strengthening of sanctions against Tehran suspicious of foreign powers.

The introduction of Palmachim as the test of a rocket propulsion system described the Ministry of defence on which it was to work out.

"This is an impressive technological achievement and an important step in Israel's progress in the areas of missiles and space, a long time in the planning," Defense Minister Ehud Barak said in a statement.

Israel Radio military affairs correspondent, which is regularly informed of senior officials on defence issues, said that a "ballistic missile" was launched. The term generally refers to long-range missiles for the delivery of warheads.

Israel is widely as to such weapons, known as Jericho, as well as the Shavit to have rockets for the implementation of satellites into orbit. It has with the aid of U.S., which was update the interceptors shoot down missiles on the atmosphere used, to incoming ballistic arrow antenna sign.

The missile fired from Palmachim in a high angle to the sky flew, witnesses told local media a few minutes before the Defense Ministry official, announced the launch.

Dan Meridor, Minister for nuclear and intelligence Affairs and a member of Netanyahu eight-man inner Cabinet, played down the relevance of the launch for Israel look at Iran.

"The two things are separated," he said IDF.

Meridor lambasted as "unprincipled" a flood of newspaper and television discussions, triggered by a front-page report in the top-selling Yedioth Ahronoth daily, about the possibility of Netanyahu and Barak secretly, planned their security chiefs, against the advice with the Iran.

Three other members of the inner Cabinet condemned the Israeli media on Wednesday. No outright denied the speculation, and a Minister, Benny begin, accused the former official of the defense of leaking classified information.

"THREAT"

Iran, which denies nuclear bombs want to make Israel decline wants and then to compare it against the Nazis-Netanyahu-potent rhetoric for a Jewish State born of the Holocaust.

"A nuclear Iran is a serious threat for the Middle East and around the world, and it is of course a direct and serious threat to us," Netanyahu said in a parliamentary address on Monday, echo comments he has made in the past.

None have Netanyahu which take action Israel given. He has said that all options on the table to prevent that nuclear weapons are Iran buildings.

Raviv Drucker, political commentator for Israel's channel 10 television, saw both domestic and diplomatic gains for Netanyahu in the media focus on a military option, an October 18 following prisoner swap with Palestinian Islamist movement Hamas.

Israel, hopes to help international sanctions against the Iranians will include intelligence on military aspects of its nuclear project to stiffen an upcoming release of the UN nuclear watchdog, say Western diplomats. [nL5E7LO18Y]

"This speculation right good for Netanyahu, works, as he handling as sharp can be shown with the Iran, but ' back" from others in the operation (Israel place), ", said printers."

The Israelis bombed Iraqi reactor in 1981 and started a similar sortie against Syria in the year 2007 precedents weight on their veiled threats, similar measures on the Iran if it fails the uranium enrichment on foreign pressure, put an end to areas.

But many independent analysts see the mission as too much for Israel alone against the Iran too.

Although reputation, in the Middle East only nuclear arsenal with a technologically superior Luftwaffe, Israel lacks long range bomber that far distant permanent damage on Iran, distributed and attached facilities transmit can.

"The military option (against the Iran) is no empty threat, but Israel should not jump to lead it." The whole thing by the United States, and as a last resort should be "Moshe Yaalon, Israel said radio Minister for Strategic Affairs, army on Tuesday."

On the other hand, the intensity of public discourse to Iran, Israel's strikes on the Iraq and Syria were surprises. Israeli officials deny even the latter RAID, to discuss the United States as a nordkoreanischer provided reactor amid denials of Damascus against a desert site.

(Writing by Dan Williams and Jeffrey Heller;) (Editing by Louise Ireland)

READ MORE » Israel-test fire missile to Iran debate rages

Greek parties set for more wrangling, compromise

1 of 11. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou (2nd R) stands outside the Presidential Palace after his meeting with Greek President Karolos Papoulias in Athens November 5, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/John Kolesidis

By Dina Kyriakidou and Karolina Tagaris


ATHENS | Sun Nov 6, 2011 6:30am EST


ATHENS (Reuters) - Greek leaders were beginning a second day of talks and behind-the-scenes wrangling on Sunday to break a political deadlock that threatens to push the debt-laden nation closer to bankruptcy and out of the euro zone.


Greece's president has appealed for cooperation to resolve the political crisis after a tumultuous week during which Prime Minister George Papandreou first announced and then ditched a plan for a referendum on a euro zone bailout package, leaving his grip on power sharply weakened.


With cash in its coffers expected to last just over five weeks, Greece has been plunged into a fresh bout of uncertainty as both the ruling socialists and opposition conservatives offer rival plans to resolve the stalemate.


For Papandreou, only a coalition government ruling for at least several months can set Greece on the road to national salvation and secure a financial lifeline from international lenders before the money runs out.


But the conservative opposition led by Antonis Samaras flatly rejected the idea, offering its competing vision of snap elections -- and demanding Papandreou's resignation after two years of grappling with economic, political and social turmoil.


"Even now, we hope and wish that Mr. Samaras changes his position," Angelos Tolkas, a deputy government spokesman, told Greek television. "The country cannot afford to be left ungoverned. And we are running out of time."


President Karolos Papoulias, who meets Samaras for talks on Sunday, has urged the opposing sides to overcome their differences and get to work solving a crisis which risks wrecking international faith in the entire euro project.


"Consensus is the one and only way," Papoulias told the prime minister when he went to the presidential palace to launch his drive for a coalition government on Saturday.


At immediate stake is the fate of Greece's 130 billion euro bailout, agreed by euro zone leaders to keep Athens afloat and restore confidence on global financial markets that the euro zone nations can handle a crisis that could afflict much bigger economies such as Italy and Spain.


Newspapers were packed with speculation over various scenarios that could emerge from the talks, with the Kathimerini daily calling it "Haggling atop the Titanic."


Papandreou's socialist cabinet is due to meet informally on Sunday, as his PASOK party searches for support among the smaller parties, with Finance Minister Evangelos Venizelos playing a leading role.


Only a week ago the bailout deal seemed in the bag, but then Papandreou dropped a bombshell by announcing he would hold a popular vote on the package -- which demands yet another wave of austerity be imposed on the long-suffering Greek population.


With the deal threatening to unravel, Germany and France told Papandreou that Greece would receive not one cent more in aid unless it fulfilled its side of the bargain.


Papandreou retreated on the referendum, but only after German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Nicolas Sarkozy said Greece must make up its mind whether it wanted to stay in the euro or not.


A CHASTENED PAPANDREOU


Chastened, Papandreou was forced to signal that he was willing to stand down. He himself raised the specter of Greece's future in the euro.


"My aim is to immediately create a government of cooperation," he said at the presidential palace. "A lack of consensus would worry our European partners over our country's will to stay in the euro zone."


Here he hit a raw nerve. Greeks have fought tooth and nail against the spending cuts and tax rises demanded by their international lenders in the euro zone and IMF, with some protests turning violent on the streets of Athens.


But there is also a widespread fear that Greece might be forced out of the euro and will have to go it alone with a revived national currency.


"Europeans don't trust us anymore, they will throw us out," said Tassos Pagonis, a 48-year-old Athens taxi driver. "I hope we don't return to the drachma."


The opposition showed little sign of giving ground.


"We ask for a short-term transitional government in order to restore a sense of stability and then the country goes to the polls," said Samaras. "We did not seek a role in this government, only that Mr. Papandreou, who has become dangerous for the country, resigns."


Opinion polls suggested Greeks favor Papandreou's model of a longer-serving unity government.


One survey commissioned by Proto Thema newspaper showed 52 percent of the public backed the idea of a national unity government while 36 percent wanted snap elections. Another poll commissioned by Ethnos newspaper put support for the rival proposals at 45 percent and 41.7 percent respectively.


A government source said Papandreou's deputy, Finance Minister Venizelos, was already negotiating behind the scenes to win support from the smaller parties for a government that Venizelos himself wants to lead.


"Venizelos is having contacts with party leaders to secure their agreement," said a government official who requested anonymity.


In snubbing Papandreou, who survived a parliamentary confidence vote in the early hours of Saturday, Samaras acknowledged the leading role being played by Venizelos in the maneuvering for power.


"Whenever we try to find a way out, the Papandreou-Venizelos government invents new obstacles to block it," he complained.


(Writing by David Stamp and Deepa Babington, Editing by Rosalind Russell)

READ MORE » Greek parties set for more wrangling, compromise