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Gen. Petraeus calls relationship with Karzai sound (AP)

A reporter lays on the pavement during a protest in support of two French reporters held in Afghanistan, Thursday,  Sept. 2, 2010, in Paris to mark the 250th days of captivity of French television reporters Herve Ghesquiere and Stephane Taponier in Afghanistan. The two disappeared Dec. 30, 2009 along with two or three Afghan employees while traveling in Kapisa province east of Kabul. Poster reads: Hostages for 250 days. (AP Photo/Jacques Brinon)AP - The top US military commander in Afghanistan says the sometimes strained relationship between the US and Afghan President Hamid Karzai is solid.


Google, Skype targeted in India security crackdown (AP)

In this photo taken on Friday Aug. 27, 2010, a man chats on his mobile as he walks past the hoarding of BlackBerry mobile in Ahmadabad, India.  Indian authorities are scheduled to meet Monday evening, Aug. 30,  to decide whether to ban some BlackBerry services in India, an official said, one day ahead of a government-imposed deadline for BlackBerry maker Research In Motion Ltd. to give security agencies access to encrypted data or face a ban. (AP Photo/Ajit Solanki)AP - India has widened its security crackdown, asking all companies that provide encrypted communications - not just BlackBerry-maker Research In Motion - to install servers in the country to make it easier for the government to obtain users' data. That would likely affect digital giants like Google and Skype.


Book says Nazi hunter Wiesenthal worked for Mossad (AP)

FILE - In this photo provided by the Simon Wiesenthal Center, Wiesenthal is shown attending a trial of suspected Nazi war criminals in Vienna, Austria in 1958. Renowned Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal worked for Israel's Mossad spy agency, providing information on war criminals and Germans working in Arab countries, an Israeli historian writes in a book released Thursday, Sept. 2, 2010. (AP Photo/Simon Wiesenthal Center, HO, File)AP - Renowned Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal worked for Israel's Mossad spy agency, providing information on war criminals and Germans working in Arab countries, according to a new book released Thursday.


China census highlights growing rights awareness (AP)
AP - Census takers counting China's more than 1.3 billion people already face a daunting task, and it's getting harder for the latest once-a-decade update.