
Israel: Following weeks of negotiations, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu reached a coalition agreement with two first-time politicians to set up a government that will contain a mix of secular and nationalist groups but not any ultra-orthodox political parties, which is only the third time since 1977 that such a party will not be included in the governing coalition.
While Netanyahu has made waves in recent weeks for his bellicose statements on the Iranian nuclear program, his new government likely portends a returned focus to domestic political issues. Yair Lapid, one of the political newcomers with whom Netanyahu brokered the agreement, campaigned on a platform that centered on reintegrating the country's ultra-orthodox population into Israeli political life, which currently exempts them from military rule and provides generous subsidies in order for ultra-orthodox men to continue religious study. Lapid will serve as finance minister in the new government, a role which will grant him wide control over the country's budget and places him in a key position to deliver on his promise to end subsidies to the ultra-orthodox.
Given the government's composition, it also appears unlikely that Netanyahu will be able to restart peace talks with the Palestinians. His other major coalition partner, Naftali Bennet, a nationalist who campaigned on a hard-line platform on Jewish settlements, will lead the economy of ministry and trade, and his party will control the Construction and Housing Ministry, which is a key post in the settlement question and one that carries an outsized role in laying the groundwork for talks to restart. Tzipi Livni, a veteran of Ehud Olmert's government, will serve as minister of justice and will head up peace talks with the Palestinians should they resume.
With control over 68 of the 120 seats in the Knesset, Netanyahu's coalition is a fragile one, cementing what was largely seen as a humbling election result for a man who had sought to consolidate power in elections earlier this year. "This coalition is a humiliating defeat for Netanyahu," Eytan Gilboa, an Israeli political scientist, told the Washington Post. "He wanted a very different coalition but couldn't break up the Lapid-Bennett axis. He has a narrow-based government, and at any point Lapid, Bennett, or both, could bring it down."
U.S./Finance: A new report from the U.S. Senate alleges that J.P. Morgan ignored internal risk controls and tampered with documents filed to regulators as the bank racked up staggering losses -- estimated at about $6 billion -- centered around the investment activity of one trader in its London office, a man better known as the "London whale."
Asia
- Charged with carrying out economic reform, Li Keqiang was approved by the National People's Congress as China's number two leader.
- Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi was heckled during a visit to a copper mine, the latest incident in the Nobel laureate's rocky transition from dissident to mainstream politician.
- The U.N. special rapporteur on human rights and counter-terrorism said that U.S. drone strikes in Pakistan violate that country's sovereignty and that Pakistani authorities had told they had logged at least 400 civilian casualties caused by such strikes.
Middle East
- U.S. President Barack Obama said in an interview with an Israeli television station that it would take Iran "over a year or so" for it to develop a nuclear bomb.
- Gunmen disguised as police carried out a carefully planned raid on Iraq's Justice Ministry that included the use of car bombs and at least left 24 dead.
- Thousands of protesters in Bahrain clashed with police to mark the two-year anniversary of a Saudi-led intervention to quell the uprising.
Europe
- In his first public mass as the head of the Catholic Church -- delivered in Italian, not Latin -- Pope Francis I urged the church to return to its roots in the gospel.
- French President Francois Hollande said that his country and Britain are pushing the EU to lift its arms embargo so that arms may flow to Syrian rebels.
- An influential British parliamentary committee said that it is not necessary to institute a ban on banks trading with their own money, a measure commonly known as the Volcker rule.
Americas
- Testimony resumed in a high-profile case against former Haitian strongman Jean-Claude "Baby Doc" Duvalier on charges related to human rights abuses and financial misdeeds.
- Cuban dissident blogger Yoani Sanchez arrived in New York for the U.S. leg of her international tour.
- The leader of Mexico's best-known vigilante group said that his group would no longer participate in masked, armed checkpoints.
Africa
- A Malawian court granted bail to 11 men accused of plotting a coup following the death of the country's former president, Bingu wa Mutharika
- Botswana's foreign minister apologized after for saying that Kenya's newly elected president, Uhuru Kenyatta, would not be welcome in his country unless he cooperates with the International Criminal Court.
- A consortium of countries issued an ultimatum to the worst offenders in the illicit ivory trade to crack down on the industry or face sanctions.
GALI TIBBON/AFP/Getty Images


















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