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  • Afghanistan's election commission has canceled Saturday's presidential runoff and proclaimed President Hamid Karzai victor of the war-ravaged nation's tumultuous ballot. Independent Election Commission chairman Azizullah Lodin announced Karzai as the victor during a news conference in Kabul on Monday.
  • Iran has apparently rejected a nuclear deal with the United States, Russia and France that it initially agreed to. Iran is saying it wants another arrangement, but Iran's leaders insist they are not reneging on the deal. The U.S. and Europe aren't so sure.
  • The de facto leader of Honduras has agreed to sign a deal to end the country's months-long political stalemate and form a power-sharing government with ousted President Manuel Zelaya.
  • Were any breakthroughs made when U.S. and North Korean officials met with other diplomats from Northeast Asia at UC San Diego this week? We speak to the organizer of the Northeast Asia Cooperation Dialogue about the purpose of the meeting, and what came out of the international discussion.
  • What's it like being a Christian woman living in the Muslim country of Pakistan? We speak to Rubina Feroze Bhatti about the challenges women and Christians face in Pakistan, and what kind of change she hopes to create by sharing these stories.
  • Talks on Iran's nuclear program may have produced a deal that could ease Western fears that the Islamic Republic is out to create a nuclear bomb. The agreement could be the key to resolving the long-running dispute over Iran's nuclear program.
  • Diplomats say the deal would see Iran ship most of its enriched uranium to Russia, stripping Tehran of most of the material it would need to make a nuclear weapon.
  • It has been more than six years, since the first conflict erupted in the war-torn region of Darfur, Sudan. Since then, a great deal has changed on the ground and some militia groups have broken off their alliance with the government. Washington Post correspondent Stephanie McCrummen shares her latest reporting after a recent trip to Sudan.
  • Despite dissent from developing countries, the U.S. and Europe seem to be abandoning the idea of extending or revising the Kyoto climate treaty when it expires in 2012. Instead they will form a new treaty, but some doubt it will be ready in December, when diplomats meet in Copenhagen. The news leaves many countries in the developing world frustrated.
  • The Nobel Committee recognized Obama for changing the tenor abroad. But it's unlikely to change it at home.
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