Analysis: Father Time catches up with poor Italy

(Reuters) – Father Time finally caught up with poor old Italy on Thursday when they were deposed as world champions after suffering a dramatic and shocking 3-2 defeat at the hands of World Cup debutants Slovakia.

Sports | Italy

An aging squad, debilitating injuries and the admission after the match from coach Marcello Lippi that he had not trained his men well enough for the World Cup all contributed to their woeful performance in their three Group F matches.

Their 1-1 draws against Paraguay and New Zealand and Thursday’s defeat left Italy at the bottom of the section.

Although few people expected Italy to retain the crown they won four years ago, most observers thought they would at least reach the knockout stages.

However, their inability to overcome even a relatively modest team like Slovakia illustrates just how far Italy have fallen since winning the World Cup four years ago.

The performance of 36-year-old center back and captain Fabio Cannavaro, Italy’s record caps holder, summed that up perfectly.

The world player of the year in 2006, he looked a completely different person in Ellis Park where he was again beaten for pace and lost his positional sense time and again.

STRANGE QUIRK

By a strange quirk of fate, France, who lost on penalties to Italy in the World Cup final in Germany four years ago, also finished bottom of their group.

For the first time ever, the two finalists from the previous tournament have both gone out in the group stage.

But while France’s dramatic implosion was largely unexpected, the writing has been on the wall for the Italians for some time — although few predicted they would fail so dismally.

After opening with a 1-1 draw against eventual group winners Paraguay, which was not unduly criticized back home, Italy’s campaign nosedived dramatically last Sunday when they were held to a 1-1 draw by outsiders New Zealand in Nelspruit.

The result, the greatest in that country’s soccer history, represented one of Italy’s lowest points in their long World Cup story and one of the biggest shocks in the tournament ever.

Thursday’s defeat by Slovakia, no matter how thrilling and tense it was, brought absolute confirmation, if it was needed, that Italy’s time was up.

Lippi has been criticized since returning to the job of national coach two years ago for sticking too rigidly with too many players from the World Cup-winning side of 2006.

He was not helped by injuries to goalkeeper Gianluigi Buffon, or midfielder Andrea Pirlo, who came on as a second half substitute, but even with them fully fit it is doubtful if Italy would have gone all that much further.

OLD GUARD

Five of Thursday’s starting lineup were 30 or over and they gave the impression of men who had seen and done it all before and possibly took Slovakia’s threat a little too lightly.

In stark contrast, Slovakia’s mostly journeymen players, battled, ran and harried for every ball. They were far more concise in their passing and support play and, prompted by Marek Hamsik, who is with Napoli, played with a belief Italy lacked.

Robert Vittek took both his goals superbly, and Miroslav Stoch and Jan Durica more than matched the accomplished Gennaro Gattuso and Daniele De Rossi in their midfield duels.

To their credit, Italy did not go down without a fight, battling back from 2-0 and then 3-1 down to reduce the arrears and Fabio Quagliarella scored with a fabulous chip in injury time to keep Italy’s lingering hopes alive.

The match brought to a close Lippi’s second spell as Italy coach and also saw the end of the international careers of Cannavaro and Gennaro Gattuso after the trio said this would be their last tournament with the national side.

Lippi will be succeeded by Cesare Prandelli, who has left Fiorentina to take over, but the new coach is unlikely to be able to mold a world-beating team in the foreseeable future.

On the evidence of the last week or so, Italy’s young guns have yet to reach the level of the older generation.

Unless Prandelli unearths some major young talent for the Euro 2012 qualifying campaign which starts later this year, Italy could well be struggling for some time to come.

(Editing by Ken Ferris)

Europe drags global takeovers to six-year slump

(Reuters) – Global merger and acquisition activity in 2010 is off to its worst start in six years, and with economic uncertainty and a sovereign debt crisis in Europe, the second half could be just as disappointing.

Deals

As of June 22, global M&A this year was worth just under $976 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data, less than half the value of the first half of 2007, M&A’s peak year, and only moderately higher than the first half of 2004, when M&A was recovering from the dot-com implosion.

While the economic crisis has depressed activity around the world, Europe’s performance was bleakest, with added fears about sovereign debt and a longer recession dragging the region to its worst start in a decade and overshadowing tentative signs of recovery in the United States and Asia-Pacific.

“Weighing on the markets have been issues like the European sovereign debt crisis. The BP catastrophe has (also) impacted world markets and will continue to represent an overhang,” said Jeffrey Kaplan, global head of M&A at Bank of America Merrill Lynch..

Volatility and uncertainty have meant that Europe hasn’t been particularly conducive to M&A, said Guiseppe Monarchi, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Credit Suisse.

“It’s difficult from where we stand today to predict anything more than that we keep going sideways in M&A for the rest of the year,” he said.

First-half European M&A slumped 23 percent year-on-year to $227 billion.

The failure of British insurer Prudential’s $35 billion bid for American International Group Inc’s Asian insurance unit particularly depressed the region’s total.

The deal, an audacious transaction reminiscent of a bull market, was scuttled when shareholders balked at the price Prudential’s relatively new management was preparing to pay.

The picture was not quite so dismal in the United States, where first-half M&A fell just 5 percent to $339 billion and accounted for six of the year’s top 10 deals.

“Comparative statistics for the first half are distorted because of the significant government-related M&A last year. If you pro forma the data, the statistics are more compelling,” said Lee LeBrun, co-head of Americas M&A at UBS.

“However, most of the transactions which have been put on hold have not been shelved entirely and could very well return,” he said.

M&A in Asia-Pacific was down 1.1 percent to just under $186 billion, with the United States and Britain dominating large cross-border business as the most acquisitive nations.

EMERGING BRIGHT SPOTS

Companies that have spent the last two years conserving cash will be in the best position to lead a recovery in M&A, although how soon that will happen remains unclear.

“There are two trends ahead. Our clients are thinking, can we go outside our core markets to find higher growth, or can we find bargains — undervalued assets in mature markets,” said Hernan Cristerna, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at JPMorgan Chase & Co, which tops the advisory ranking for Europe this year.

Spain’s Telefonica, hit by stagnating sales at home, is offering a hefty premium to buy out its partner Portugal Telecom and take full control of Vivo, their lucrative joint venture in Brazil.

French giant Vivendi approached Kuwait’s Zain to buy Zain’s African telecom business but was eventually outbid by India’s Bharti. Consolidation in the emerging markets has added another layer of competition for western companies seeking strategic assets.

U.S. food conglomerate Kraft raised expectations about opportunistic bids with its purchase of Cadbury, especially acquisitions of European companies by U.S. peers, helped by the strength of the dollar against the euro and sterling.

News Corp’s $12 billion proposal to take full control of British satellite broadcaster BSKyB is a sign that more opportunistic pursuits may be in the pipeline.

“The market is certainly better than last year, with more $1 billion-plus deals, and we expect M&A will continue to accelerate,” said JPMorgan’s Cristerna.

(Reporting by Victoria Howley; additional reporting by Quentin Webb, Paritosh Bansal and Jessica Hall; Editing by John Wallace and Steve Orlofsky)

DEALS-Europe drags global takeovers to six-year slump

LONDON, June 25 (Reuters) – Global merger and acquisition activity in 2010 is off to its worst start in six years, and with economic uncertainty and a sovereign debt crisis in Europe, the second half could be just as disappointing.

As of June 22, global M&A this year was worth just under $976 billion, according to Thomson Reuters data, less than half the value of the first half of 2007, M&A’s peak year, and only moderately higher than the first half of 2004, when M&A was recovering from the dot-com implosion.

While the economic crisis has depressed activity around the world, Europe’s performance was bleakest, with added fears about sovereign debt and a longer recession dragging the region to its worst start in a decade and overshadowing tentative signs of recovery in the United States and Asia-Pacific.

“Weighing on the markets have been issues like the European sovereign debt crisis. The BP catastrophe has (also) impacted world markets and will continue to represent an overhang,” said Jeffrey Kaplan, global head of M&A at Bank of America Merrill Lynch. (BAC.N) <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Take a Look [ID:nN24244594]

Graphic showing regional M&A activity: link.reuters.com/buv45j

Reuters Insider: link.reuters.com/ged93m

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Volatility and uncertainty have meant that Europe hasn’t been particularly conducive to M&A, said Guiseppe Monarchi, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Credit Suisse.

“It’s difficult from where we stand today to predict anything more than that we keep going sideways in M&A for the rest of the year,” he said.

First-half European M&A slumped 23 percent year-on-year to $227 billion.

The failure of British insurer Prudential’s $35 billion bid for American International Group Inc’s (AIG.N) Asian insurance unit particularly depressed the region’s total.

The deal, an audacious transaction reminiscent of a bull market, was scuttled when shareholders balked at the price Prudential’s (PRU.L) relatively new management was preparing to pay.

The picture was not quite so dismal in the United States, where first-half M&A fell just 5 percent to $339 billion and accounted for six of the year’s top 10 deals.

“Comparative statistics for the first half are distorted because of the significant government-related M&A last year. If you pro forma the data, the statistics are more compelling,” said Lee LeBrun, co-head of Americas M&A at UBS.

The value of deals worldwide in 2009, for example, was inflated by the UK government’s investments in Lloyd’s Banking Group and Royal Bank of Scotland.

In an ominous sign for the second half, deals slowed in mid-May through June as companies were reluctant to pull the trigger in the face of macro-economic uncertainty, said Gary Posternack, head of M&A for the Americas at Barclays Capital (BARC.L).

“However, most of the transactions which have been put on hold have not been shelved entirely and could very well return,” he said.

M&A in Asia-Pacific was down 1.1 percent to just under $186 billion, with the United States and Britain dominating large cross-border business as the most acquisitive nations.

EMERGING BRIGHT SPOTS

Companies that have spent the last two years conserving cash will be in the best position to lead a recovery in M&A, although how soon that will happen remains unclear.

“There are two trends ahead. Our clients are thinking, can we go outside our core markets to find higher growth, or can we find bargains — undervalued assets in mature markets,” said Hernan Cristerna, head of M&A for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at JPMorgan Chase & Co (JPM.N), which tops the advisory ranking for Europe this year.

Deals in the telecoms, media and technology sectors have exemplified the former trend.

Spain’s Telefonica (TEF.MC), hit by stagnating sales at home, is offering a hefty premium to buy out its partner Portugal Telecom (PTC.LS) and take full control of Vivo (VIVO4.SA), their lucrative joint venture in Brazil.

French giant Vivendi (VIV.PA) approached Kuwait’s Zain (ZAIN.KW) to buy Zain’s African telecom business but was eventually outbid by India’s Bharti (BRTI.BO). Consolidation in the emerging markets has added another layer of competition for western companies seeking strategic assets.

U.S. food conglomerate Kraft (KFT.N) raised expectations about opportunistic bids with its purchase of Cadbury, especially acquisitions of European companies by U.S. peers, helped by the strength of the dollar against the euro and sterling.

News Corp’s (NWSA.O) $12 billion proposal to take full control of British satellite broadcaster BSKyB (BSY.L) is a sign that more opportunistic pursuits may be in the pipeline.

“The market is certainly better than last year, with more $1 billion-plus deals, and we expect M&A will continue to accelerate,” said JPMorgan’s Cristerna. (Reporting by Victoria Howley; additional reporting by Quentin Webb, Paritosh Bansal and Jessica Hall; Editing by John Wallace and Steve Orlofsky)

Joaquin Phoenix docu ‘packed with scenes of sex, drugs and nudity’

London, May 12 (ANI): Casey Affleck”s documentary film on Joaquin Phoenix could shock fans as it narrates the tale of the actor”s bid to become a rap star, packed with controversial scenes of sex, drugs and nudity.

The ‘Walk The Line’ star announced plans to quit acting last year (09) and concentrate on making music.

He grew a straggly beard and waded through a string of bizarre public appearances, which led many to believe his career-change was little more than a practical joke.

Then, Phoenix”s brother-in-law Affleck announced he would be filming his friend”s burgeoning hip-hop career for a documentary.

This further fuelled rumours of an elaborate hoax – even though the Oscar-nominated actor insisted he was serious about becoming a rapper.

Affleck has now completed his film, titled ‘I”m Still Here: The Lost Year of Joaquin Phoenix’, and has previewed the footage in a bid to find a distributor.

Reports indicate that the tell-all tale features shocking scenes of the star apparently snorting cocaine, ordering call girls and having oral sex with a publicist – fuelling gossip the film is in fact a ”mockumentary”.

But Affleck is adamant the footage is real.

“I wanted to explore what I thought would be an interesting period in his life. He said he didn”t want to act anymore, he wanted to try doing music, and that, right there, says something”s going to happen…” the Daily Star quoted him as telling America”s ABC News.

“I had no idea what exactly was going to happen and all that would unfold and every day I spent with him on this journey. It ended up being more and more fascinating, more and more things happened that were both in the public spectacle and a very private internal implosion that I got to witness. It made for this unbelievable, one-of-a-kind movie. You”ll find out what was happening in his life in that period – what was going on before he went on (sic), what was going on afterwards,” he added. (ANI)

Despite IAEA findings, Iran sings its old nuke-for-peaceful-purposes tune

Tehran, Sep. 18 (ANI): Even as a secret IAEA report revealed that Iran is capable of making a nuclear bomb and is developing a missile system to carry an atomic warhead, Iranian officials have reiterated claims that the Islamic nation’s nuclear program is intended for peaceful purposes.

Fox News quoted Iran’s ambassador to the International Atomic Energy Agency, Ali Asghar Soltanieh, as saying that Iran is sincere in wanting to negotiate with the West.

He added that Western countries should “read between the lines” about Iran’s intentions.

Although the prospects of finding anything between the lines were almost nil after the surfacing of the IAEA report, but Soltanieh insisted that discussions with the West would be a “real, new window of opportunity.”

The secret U.N. watchdog report, titled “Possible Military Dimension of Iran’s Nuclear Program,” concludes:

*Iran worked on developing a chamber inside a ballistic missile capable of housing a warhead payload “that is quite likely to be nuclear.”

*Iran engaged in “probable testing” of explosives commonly used to detonate a nuclear warhead – a method known as a “full-scale hemispherical explosively driven shock system.”

*Iran worked on developing a system “for initiating a hemispherical high explosive charge” of the kind used to help spark a nuclear blast.

“Iran has sufficient information to be able to design and produce a workable implosion nuclear device (an atomic bomb) based on HEU (highly enriched uranium) as the fission fuel,” The agency assessed.

On October 1, Iran is scheduled to meet with the U.S. and five other world powers seeking curbs on its atomic activities for the first time in more than a year.

However, Tehran says it is not prepared to discuss its nuclear activities. (ANI)

German business confidence to slip, analysts forecast

Berlin – Business confidence in Germany slipped in March, economists expect a key survey to be released Wednesday to say, as boardrooms in Europe’s biggest economy face up to the global recession.

In a major test of the economic mood in Europe, the closely- watched Ifo business confidence index is forecast to have edged down to 82.2 points this month after falling to an 18-year low of 82.6 in February.

Based on a survey of 7,000 German executives and drawn up by the Munich-based Ifo economic research institute, the March index is likely to add to expectations that the European Central Bank will cut rates again next week in a bid to spur economic growth.

A factor dragging the index down in March is expected to be another sharp fall in the business leaders’ assessment of the current economic climate in Germany.

At the same time, however, the indicator’s component gauging expectations six months down the track is forecast to have gained ground on hopes of an economic upturn later in the year.

This comes in the wake of the slew of major fiscal stimulus plans unveiled by governments around the world and a round of hefty global interest rate cuts.

While the March Ifo indicator gauging current business conditions is tipped to slump from 84.3 points in February to 82.9 points this month, the index’s expectations component is forecast to jump to 81.8 in March from 80.9 last month.

But many economists believe that the German economy might now have started to bottom out, after the implosion of America’s Lehman Brothers in September helped to send the world economy into a sharp decline in the last months of 2008.

Indeed, the release of the Ifo survey is also likely to follow a batch of more positive readings from other recent economic sentiment surveys.

Considered a bellwether of the mood in the 16-member eurozone economy, Belgium’s business confidence survey unexpectedly rose to minus 28.6 points in March from minus 31.6 in February. Analysts had forecast a fall to 32 points.

At the same time, the preliminary composite purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for the eurozone, which draws together the manufacturing and services output indices, rose from 36.2 in February to 37.6 in March.

German investor confidence recorded a surprise increase in March to record its fifth consecutive monthly rise, a key indicator released last week showed, amid hopes of further rate cuts and a turnaround in Germany’s economy later in the year.

After posting a big jump in February, the Mannheim-based Centre for European Economic Research (ZEW) said its index measuring the sentiment among analysts and institutional investors edged up to minus 3.5 points this month from minus 5.8 last month.

But while those responding to the ZEW survey believe that the government stimulus packages and central bank rate cuts will help to lay the foundations for a pickup in the German economy six months down the track, they remained downbeat about current business conditions.

The component of the ZEW indicator measuring existing economic situation in Germany slipped in March by 3.2 points to minus 89.4 points.

That said, however, grim economic data and downward revisions to economic have continued to roll in as key export market dry up, order books contract and production plummets.

Commerzbank AG this week forecast that the economy could shrink by a dramatic 6 or 7 per cent this year amid a fresh batch of cuts in projections for the economic growth outlook. (dpa)

Lehmann withdraws from race to coach England

Melbourne, Jan.16 (ANI): Former Australian batsman Darren Lehmann has withdrawn from the race to coach the England cricket team, and instead, suggested that former team-mate Tom Moody take on the responsibility.

Lehmann, 38, last night said he preferred to concentrate on his first coaching foray with Indian Premier League side Deccan Chargers.

Champion Zimbabwe batsman and Moores’ assistant Andy Flower, ex-South African coach Graham Ford and former England spinner Ashley Giles are among candidates mentioned to steer England.

Moody, who has coached Western Australia for the past two seasons, is the blue-chip option to combine with new skipper Andrew Strauss as England prepares for its forthcoming tour of the West Indies, says Lehmann.

“I think the man for the job is Tom Moody. He has the experience and foresight to take England cricket back to the top,” Fox Sports quoted Lehmann, as saying.
“There’s some big characters in the England team but Tom would be able to handle them. He is a great candidate,” he added.

The Hyderabad-IPL franchise moved to secure Lehmann’s services following the implosion that saw England skipper Kevin Pietersen resign and Moores axed due to an “irretrievable breakdown” in their working relationship.

“I have spoken to Deccan and they have really helped me and said we don’t want to lose you,” said Lehmann.

“They have made things attractive and been so great that I have turned around and said it is only fair that I pull out of the race to coach England,” he added. (ANI)

World Bank knew all along about Satyam’s corrupt ways

Washington, Jan.13 (ANI): A FOX News report has revealed that World Bank officials have known for more than three years about corruption involving the highest corporate levels of Satyam, but felt no obligation to share that information publicly until late last month.

Now, in the wake of Satyam’s implosion, and after FOX News’s disclosure on October 10, 2008, that the company had been secretly banished from doing business at the World Bank in early 2008, the World Bank is coughing up more crucial facts.

In what it calls “the interest of fairness and transparency,” the bank late Sunday night officially declared on its Web site that it had banned Satyam.

The bank also named two additional high-tech companies that it debarred in 2007 from receiving contracts under its corporate procurement program. One is Wipro Technologies – India’s No. 3 software services provider, with 95,000 employees around the world – which the bank says it barred for four years for “providing improper benefits to bank staff.”

The second sanctioned firm is a Herndon,Va.-based company called Megasoft Consultants – the U.S. unit of a company called Megasoft Ltd that trades on India’s Bombay and Madras stock exchanges. The bank banned it for “participating in a joint venture with bank staff while also conducting business with the bank.”

Records obtained by FOX News, however, shed additional light on all three of the World Bank debarment cases, indicating that the affected firms shared corporate and even personal ties, and in the case of one firm may even have shared a collusive strategy for retaining

The ban on Wipro was prompted by the sale of about 1,750 shares for about 72,000 dollars.

Wipro did not reveal the World Bank ban itself since it was a World Bank policy not to discuss such investigations. Once the bank had changed its position, Wipro decided to issue a statement and clarify.

Documents obtained by FOX News, however, show something Wipro did not mention: that the shares it provided to the bank officials were dispensed – just weeks after it first began bidding for World Bank technology contracts back in September 2000.

A World Bank investigation report on the matter, which outlines the details, has never been made public.

In the case of Megasoft, FOX has learned that the company was used as a vehicle to obtain World Bank contracts after bank officials had grown concerned that Satyam already had too many such deals.

Indeed, according to internal bank sources, Satyam was informed that it would not be able to bid on many future contracts. By that time, however, “many contracts that Satyam didn’t bid on or get, Megasoft was getting,” a former World Bank anti-corruption investigator told FOX News.

According to sources reached by FOX News, the World Bank’s relationship with Megasoft was facilitated by Ben Hu, a longtime World Bank technology official and former commissioner of China’s main securities regulator, who became a director of Megasoft in 2003, at the same time as he was serving as a World Bank consultant.

According to company records, Hu never attended a Megasoft board meeting. He left the board in 2007.

It took seven months of “knowledge-transfer” – including the conversion of Satyam contract employees into employees of two other major Indian technology companies, Tata Computer Services and EDS – before Satyam was shown the door. (ANI)

World Bank knew all along about Satyam’s corrupt ways

Washington, Jan.13 (ANI): A FOX News report has revealed that World Bank officials have known for more than three years about corruption involving the highest corporate levels of Satyam, but felt no obligation to share that information publicly until late last month.

Now, in the wake of Satyam’s implosion, and after FOX News’s disclosure on October 10, 2008, that the company had been secretly banished from doing business at the World Bank in early 2008, the World Bank is coughing up more crucial facts.

In what it calls “the interest of fairness and transparency,” the bank late Sunday night officially declared on its Web site that it had banned Satyam.

The bank also named two additional high-tech companies that it debarred in 2007 from receiving contracts under its corporate procurement program. One is Wipro Technologies – India’s No. 3 software services provider, with 95,000 employees around the world – which the bank says it barred for four years for “providing improper benefits to bank staff.”

The second sanctioned firm is a Herndon,Va.-based company called Megasoft Consultants – the U.S. unit of a company called Megasoft Ltd that trades on India’s Bombay and Madras stock exchanges. The bank banned it for “participating in a joint venture with bank staff while also conducting business with the bank.”

Records obtained by FOX News, however, shed additional light on all three of the World Bank debarment cases, indicating that the affected firms shared corporate and even personal ties, and in the case of one firm may even have shared a collusive strategy for retaining

The ban on Wipro was prompted by the sale of about 1,750 shares for about 72,000 dollars.

Wipro did not reveal the World Bank ban itself since it was a World Bank policy not to discuss such investigations. Once the bank had changed its position, Wipro decided to issue a statement and clarify.

Documents obtained by FOX News, however, show something Wipro did not mention: that the shares it provided to the bank officials were dispensed – just weeks after it first began bidding for World Bank technology contracts back in September 2000.

A World Bank investigation report on the matter, which outlines the details, has never been made public.

In the case of Megasoft, FOX has learned that the company was used as a vehicle to obtain World Bank contracts after bank officials had grown concerned that Satyam already had too many such deals.

Indeed, according to internal bank sources, Satyam was informed that it would not be able to bid on many future contracts. By that time, however, “many contracts that Satyam didn’t bid on or get, Megasoft was getting,” a former World Bank anti-corruption investigator told FOX News.

According to sources reached by FOX News, the World Bank’s relationship with Megasoft was facilitated by Ben Hu, a longtime World Bank technology official and former commissioner of China’s main securities regulator, who became a director of Megasoft in 2003, at the same time as he was serving as a World Bank consultant.

According to company records, Hu never attended a Megasoft board meeting. He left the board in 2007.

It took seven months of “knowledge-transfer” – including the conversion of Satyam contract employees into employees of two other major Indian technology companies, Tata Computer Services and EDS – before Satyam was shown the door. (ANI)

US to increase non-military aid to Pakistan to prevent economy-driven “chaos in the country”

Washington, Jan.13 (ANI): The new chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, John Kerry, has said that he will try to increase the non-military U.S. aid to Pakistan upto three times from what the US offers currently, to prevent the present economic crisis from triggering “chaos in the country.”

Kerry said that economic assistance to Pakistan is very necessary as it continue to struggle in the fight against terrorism.

“I think it is essential, they (Pakistan) have a huge economic crisis. If anything winds up being one of the triggers for chaos in the country, it’s going to be the economic implosion, as much as anything else,” The News quoted Kerry, as saying.

Earlier, the US Vice President-elect Joe Biden, on his visit to Pakistan had drafted a Senate measure which suggested to increase the economic assistance to Pakistan to help fight terrorism in the country.

The Kerry version of the Pakistan aid bill, which he co-drafted with Senator Richard Lugar, recommends a tripling of non-military aid to Islamabad, to $1.5 billion annually, for five years.
Kerry said that the prime focus should be to destroy the root cause of terrorism prevalent in Pakistan.

“Look, we can spend $12 billion a month in Iraq, or we can spend over a couple of years $1.5 billion to reduce the potential of terror in the very place where the top terrorists live,” he said.

Kerry also hoped to revive the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT), which would commit United States to refrain from testing nuclear armaments.

The Senate had rejected the CTBT in 1999. (ANI)