Saving Face/Climbing Down
US Expels Accused Diplomat, Settles Dispute with India

Devyani Khobragade is on her way home. The Indian diplomat, accused of mistreating and underpaying her nanny, was the focus of an international incident when US authorities had her arrested and strip-searched. In India, the retaliation for the alleged mistreatment of Khobragade was swift: defense barriers around the embassy in New Delhi were removed, US diplomats’ privileges revoked, and a torrent of criticism poured forth in newspapers and on TV.

Fixing the Schools
NYC Students Not Abandoning Charters After All

the schools got some good news today when the Independent Budget Office released a study finding that students do not transfer out of charter schools at a higher rate than traditional ones. This may sound like a small finding, but complaints that charter had a high attrition rate have been a key talking points for critics for years. Special Education, however, remains a problem.

La France C'est Moi
Hollande Asserts Right to Private Affair

There will always be a France. President Francois Hollande, who long ago dumped his wife and the mother of his four children Segolene Roya, now lives in the Elysée Palace with partner Valerie Trierweiler. But rumors are swirling in Paris, at last making it into the news, that he’s also having an affair with actress Julie Gayet.

© AFP/Getty Images
China’s Congo Plan

Why the world’s poorest nation is embracing Chinese investment over Western aid.

California 'Comeback'
Another Golden State Mullet Budget

California Democrats have eked out a draw in their ongoing fight with Governor Jerry Brown (D) over what to do with the state’s projected $4.7 billion surplus. Governor Brown will propose a budget using the state’s extra revenue to both pay off long-term debt and let loose the cash flow for the state’s failing public school system. This still looks more like a California in decline than one on the rise.

Oil Provides Options
This Is What Energy Security Looks Like

Boosters of the shale boom like to highlight is the idea of energy independence—that, thanks to fracking, the US won’t need to rely on foreign sources of oil for much longer. It’s a nice-sounding story, but unfortunately it’s a myth. Even if the US produced all of the oil it consumed, the price we pay for oil will still be vulnerable to shocks from supply disruptions abroad. Barring a kind of oil isolationism—a difficult undertaking that would alienate our allies—or a complete transition away from oil as an energy source, that’s the reality we have to live with. But while energy independence is fantasy, there’s no question that fracking has improved America’s energy security, and that’s being borne out in the global price for oil.

Africa's God Wars
Christians Persecution Deaths Doubled Last Year

Compliers of a new persecution watch-list found that Christian deaths due to religious violence doubled last year, and the prospects for this year don’t look any better. A recent UN report puts the CAR in an especially alarming light. According to the NBC news, UN officials are now saying, “this is Darfur, plus anarchy.” The public discussion about the CAR—and other places on the Open Doors list—has been comparatively restrained, even though the threat that some of these conflicts could spiral into genocide is very real.

The New Europe
Confident Germany Takes Swipe at Western Allies

Germany has started the year off with a bang. German exports and manufacturing are booming, and two ministers in Angela Merkel’s new cabinet took public pot shots at key Western allies. Germany has emerged as the top power in Europe, and they want to make sure everyone knows it.

Saving Face/Climbing Down
India Escalates Diplomatic Dispute with U.S.

The dispute between India and the United States over an Indian diplomat’s “mistreatment” at the hands of U.S. police is getting worse. Yesterday, India requested that the U.S. embassy in Delhi stop commercial activities at a well-known club that has a bowling alley and swimming pool and other amenities. The Indian authorities also said that U.S. vehicles would not be immune to traffic offenses anymore. Then the U.S. energy minister, after a “conversation with Indian counterparts,” canceled a planned trip to India, becoming the second American official to postpone a visit there.

Searching for friendly rebels
A Ray of Light in Syria?

Fighting between rival rebel groups in Syria over the past few days may offer the United States that rarest of opportunities: a second chance. The al-Qaeda-allied ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria), which just a week ago controlled a wide swathe of territory in northern and eastern Syria, is reeling from a campaign against it by less extreme rebels.

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