Thursday, October 3, 2013

Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials -- October 3, 2013



Government shutdown: Default Now Focus, As Treasury Warns Of 'Catastrophe' -- Linda Feldmann, Christian Science Monitor

On Day 3 of government shutdown, Democrats and Republicans shift the conversation to the looming debt limit, as chances grow that both issues will be resolved together.

With no resolution in sight to the government shutdown, Washington policymakers in both parties are looking ahead to a far more consequential deadline: the Oct. 17 debt limit.

If Congress does not raise the ceiling on government borrowing authority beyond $16.7 trillion by that date, the United States would soon head toward a historic default on its debt payments, risking a global economic crisis.

But that threat may be the bludgeon required to move Washington off the budget stalemate that closed parts of the federal government on Tuesday, analysts say.

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Commentaries, Opinions, And Editorials

Analysis: U.S. government shutdown fight could morph into debt limit superstorm -- David Lawder and Caren Bohan, Reuters

Why This Shutdown Is Different -- Richard Winchester, American Thinker

A new approach for Israel? -- Walter Pincus, Washington Post

Forget Rouhani´s overtures. We are still at war with Iran -- Con Coughlin, The Telegraph

Japan, US fortify military ties with drones. Will China take note? -- Justin McCurry, Christian Science Monitor

Will shortened Obama trip to Asia buoy China? -- Ralph Jennings, Christian Science Monitor

Relabelling relations between China and America has not resolved the underlying tensions -- The Economist

In Nuke Talks with Iran, Learn from North Korea -- Gordon G. Chang, World Affairs

Planning for North Korea's Coming Demise -- Lamont Colucci, US News and World Report

Why Germany’s Politics Are Much Saner, Cheaper, and Nicer Than Ours -- Olga Khazan, The Atlantic

Insight: Turkey questions its EU future as Brussels looks to Balkans -- Adrian Croft, Reuters

Does Scotland Want Independence? -- Denise Mina, New York Times

Nicaragua’s proposed canal: A man, a plan—and little else. -- The Economist

Why does Putin deserve the Nobel Peace Prize? -- Fred Weir, Christian Science Monitor

Chinese Farmers, American Farms -- Vanessa Hua, New Yorker

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