March 21, 2007:
Some of the 2,000 Russian technicians helping to build Irans first
nuclear power plant, have started leaving. There is a dispute over late
payments for work done. The Iranians deny this. The power plant is 95 percent
complete, but eight years behind schedule. Russia has refused to deliver the
nuclear fuel until the Iranians come up with the money. Iran believes the
Russians are giving in to UN and American demands that the power plant not be
built. This is considered part of a campaign to derail Irans nuclear weapons
program.
March 20, 2007:
The Russian weapons industries are coming back to life, having received
$30 billion in orders last year. Russia is also trying to become the worlds
biggest exporter of weapons. Revised data indicates Russia shipped $8 billion
worth last year, about two thirds as much as the United States.
March 19, 2007:
The Russian economy is growing, at over eight percent a year, nearly as fast as the Chinese. It's not just
Russian oil exports, but all aspects of the economy, including manufacturing
and agriculture.
March 18, 2007:
China and Russia are trying to form a commercial aircraft building
consortium to rival Airbus and Boeing. Large passenger and freight aircraft are
a booming business (over $100 billion a year). China and Russia would have to
invest at least $20 billion to make a go of it, and be willing to swallow even
more in losses before possibly making a
profit.
March 13, 2007:
The government says that is counter-terrorism efforts detected and
prevented over 300 terrorist attacks in the last year. No details were
provided. But there has been a sharp decrease in the number of terrorist
attacks inside of Russia over the last few years.
March 11, 2007:
About twenty Russian journalists have died under mysterious
circumstances in the last eight years. Many are believed to have been killed by
gangsters or businessmen who felt offended or threatened by published material.
But some of the deaths are believed to
have been ordered by government officials. Whatever the case, it's clear that
reporters have to be careful who they diss in print. In Russia, the response is
often a threat, not a letter to the editor. The journalists protest, but they
don't get a lot of public support.