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Why It Matters

  • A Real World Series for a Change

    Christian Caryl | Oct 30, 2007 05:36 PM
    So who was the winner of this year's World Series? No question - it was the Japanese. Okay, so maybe the Red Sox won too. But, let's be honest - how many Red Sox fans are there in the world? 20, 30 million tops? Still can't hold a candle to 127 million Japanese, the vast majority of whom tuned in to every minute of this year's Series between the Sox and the Colorado Rockies. They were rooting not only for Boston pitcher Daisuke Matsuzaka, who made headlines earlier this year when he signed a $52-million contract with the club and became the first Japanese to start a World Series; they were also pulling for Rockies star Kazuo Matsui, formerly of the New York Mets. As pretty much every Japanese fan knows, Dice-K and Matsui used to be teammates on the Seibu Lions pro team back in their home country. So Japanese fans had plenty of potential drama to savor. Could Matsuzaka redeem himself by staging a comeback from his weak performance in the playoffs? Would Matsui manage to put his more famous ex-teammate in the shade - and take revenge on the hated Mets who so clearly failed to appreciate his gifts? Thanks to the Sox' victory, of course, Matsuzaka is now being hailed as a hero back at home. More
  • Ahmadinejad's accountability moment

    Fred Guterl | Oct 30, 2007 01:28 PM
    The ouster of experienced nuclear negotiator Ali Larijani would seem to favor President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but Iranian politics is more complicated than that, reports Newsweek's Seth Colter Walls: Is Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad being set up... More
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  • King of Controversy

    Emily Flynn Vencat | Oct 30, 2007 12:01 PM

    Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah landed in London yesterday. Jenna Crombie of Newsweek's London bureau watched the Queen greet him. Her report:

    Tourists in London were treated to quite a spectacle this afternoon as Queen Elizabeth welcomed King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia to Britain. After an official state reception at the Horse Guards Parade Square in Whitehall, the King and Queen traveled to Buckingham Palace together, amidst much pomp and circumstance, in a gilded horse-drawn carriage.

    But behind the scenes, controversy lurks. Some British human rights activists, politicians and terrorism experts are furious at the warmth of the Queen’s welcome. Just a few days before his arrival, King Abdullah was widely criticized in the British media after claiming that the Saudis had provided the British with intelligence that could have prevented the July 2005 bombings in London, which killed 52 people. British officials hotly deny the allegation. Abdullah also implied that many countries, including Britain, are not doing enough to fight terrorism--a surprising accusation given that 15 of the September 11 bombers were from Saudi Arabia. The fact that earlier this year an investigation into the allegedly bribery-ridden arms deal between British defense firm BAE and the Saudis in the 1980s was called off has added to misgivings about the visit. And then there’s the shady subject of the Saudi human rights record--three British citizens imprisoned in the country recently claim they were tortured

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