BEIJING, CHINA/WASHINGTON, USA - US arms sales to Taiwan hurt China's national security, its foreign minister said, escalating the rhetoric in a dispute threatening to deepen rifts between the world's biggest and third-biggest economies.
WASHINGTON, USA - President Barack Obama will unveil a $3.8 trillion budget proposal on Monday for fiscal 2011, the New York Times reported on Saturday. The White House declined to comment on the report.
MIDDLE EAST - The United States has quietly increased the capability of land-based Patriot defensive missiles in several Gulf Arab nations, and one military official said the Navy is beefing up the presence of ships capable of knocking down hostile missiles in flight.
UK - An unrepentant Tony Blair was heckled and jeered by families of Britain's war dead last night as he declared he had 'not a regret' about invading Iraq and toppling Saddam Hussein. At the end of what had been billed as his 'Judgment Day', the former Prime Minister made it clear he would do the same again - and warned world leaders they may soon have to take similar decisions over Iran.
UK - A senior adviser to the Queen has met secretly with the leader of the Roman Catholic Church in England and Wales to express concern over the Pope's offer for disaffected Anglicans to convert to Rome. In a highly unusual step, Earl Peel, the Lord Chamberlain, asked Vincent Nichols, the Archbishop of Westminster, to meet him following Pope Benedict XVI's decree.
USA - President Obama is planning to increase spending on America's nuclear weapons stockpile just days after pledging to try to rid the world of them. In his budget to be announced on Monday, Mr Obama has allocated 4.3 billion pounds to maintain the US arsenal - 370 million pounds more than George Bush spent on nuclear weapons in his final year.
USA - Russia urged China to dump its Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bonds in 2008 in a bid to force a bailout of the largest US mortgage-finance companies, former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson said. Paulson learned of the "disruptive scheme" while attending the Beijing Summer Olympics, according to his memoir, "On The Brink."
NIGERIA - The main rebel group in Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta says it is ending the ceasefire it declared last October. The Movement for the Emancipation of the Delta (MEND) said it did not believe the government would restore control of resources to local people.
CHINA - China has expressed its anger over a proposed US weapons sale to Taiwan worth $6.4bn (4 billion pounds), which includes helicopters and defensive missiles. Chinese Vice-Foreign Minister He Yafei said the move would have a "serious negative impact" on co-operation between the US and China.
TOKYO, JAPAN - When Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) was on the brink of overtaking General Motors (GM.UL) as the world's biggest automaker in 2008, executives were busy sending out warning signals about the dangers of being No1.
EUROPE - The European Union made clear on Thursday it would not abandon Greece and let Athens' mounting debt crisis jeopardise the eurozone, even as Germany and France played down suggestions they had already formulated an emergency rescue plan.
DAVOS, SWITZERLAND - The global economic recovery could lose pace later this year, dashing hopes for a rapid escape from the deepest downturn of the postwar era, economists and investors said at the World Economic Forum's annual meeting at this Swiss ski resort.
SUDAN - A vote for independence in oil-rich Southern Sudan's referendum next year could be catastrophic, the African Union's top diplomat has warned. In an interview with French broadcaster RFI, Jean Ping likened Sudan's situation to "sitting on a powder keg".
UNITED NATIONS - A United Nations report on climate change that has been lambasted for its faulty research is under new attack for yet another instance of what critics say is sloppy science - guiding global warming policy based on a study of forest fires - adding to a growing scandal that has undermined the credibility of scientists and policymakers who back the UN's findings about global warming.
USA - You've heard it before, how the pharmaceutical industry has a giant "revolving door" through which corporations and government agencies frequently exchange key employees. That reality was driven home in a huge way today when news broke that Dr Julie Gerberding, who headed the CDC from 2002 through 2009, landed a top job with Merck, one of the largest drug companies in the world. Her job there? She's the new president of the vaccine division.