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51 Stories on John Negroponte
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Time.com: Washington's New Pakistan Problem

For years US policy has focused on one man, Pervez Musharraf. Now, with his power on the wane and a new coaltion government in place, it has a lot of catching up to do

Musharraf swears in old foe as new PM

Yousaf Raza Gilani was sworn in as Pakistan's new prime minister Tuesday by the same man he blames for jailing him for five years -- President Pervez Musharraf.

Castro's resignation won't change U.S. policy, official says

The U.S. embargo on Cuba will remain in place despite Fidel Castro's announcement that he's resigning as Cuba's leader, Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte said Tuesday.

U.S. presses China over Iran

U.S. Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte sought Chinese backing Thursday for new U.N. sanctions against Iran, warning that Tehran's alleged uranium enrichment and missile development programs remained a threat, the Associated Press reported.

Time.com: Searching for a Pakistan Strategy

The U.S. power-sharing plan is near death. Can diplomacy buy enough time to come up with a post-Musharraf policy?

Bhutto vows mass rally

Pakistani security forces clashed Wednesday with supporters of former Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, who vowed to go forward with a mass rally planned for Friday despite an emergency decree barring such gatherings.

India escapes U.S. list of worst human traffickers

India, which advocacy groups say may have as many as 65 million forced laborers, was spared the worst ranking on the State Department's new list of nations where humans are bought and sold.

Time.com: The Link Between Lebanon and Gaza

The fighting in both places, says Robert Baer, may be a troubling sign that al-Qaeda is making new inroads

Intelligence chief to move to State Department

President Bush on Friday nominated National Intelligence Director John Negroponte to become deputy secretary of state.

Wednesday, January 3

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The leaders of the new Democratic majority in the House will kick off their tenure Thursday with new rules designed to rein in the influence of lobbyists, limit free travel by members and make it harder for lawmakers to slip their pet projects into spending bills unnoticed.

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