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Sunni Mosque Attacks Kill 13 in Iraq

Bomb attacks on Sunni mosques in Iraq killed 13 people and wounded dozens of other people on Tuesday, security and medical officials said.

Two rounds of mortar fire hit a mosque in Muqdadiyah, northeast of Baghdad, killing nine people and wounding 25, police and a doctor said, revising an earlier casualty toll.

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Kerry: Netanyahu Can't Confirm Syria Chemical Weapons Use

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had not been able to confirm to him on Tuesday that the Syrian regime had used chemical weapons against rebels.

"I think it is fair to say (the prime minister) was not in a position to confirm that in the conversation," Kerry said, explaining that he had telephoned Netanyahu following reports of their use.

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Jordan PM Wins Confidence Vote amid Syria Challenge

Jordan's parliament on Tuesday passed a vote of confidence in Prime Minister Abdullah Nsur who faces the challenge of dealing with fallout from the war in neighboring Syria.

The vote was passed 83-65 in the lower house.

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Kerry, Lavarov Discuss Syria, Political Solution

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov discussed the deteriorating situation in Syria on Tuesday, stressing the need for a political solution, a U.S. official said.

The two have met several times since Kerry took office earlier this year, with Syria a growing cause of international concern amid fears the bloody conflict could spill over into an already volatile region.

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Association: Two Orthodox Bishops Held in Syria Freed

An association of Middle Eastern Christians on Tuesday said that two Orthodox bishops reportedly kidnapped by rebels in northern Syria have been released, in a statement citing Syrian sources.

The French "Oeuvre d'Orient" association said that the two -- Bishop Yohanna Ibrahim and Bishop Boulos Yaziji, who were seized on Monday -- were already at Saint Elias cathedral in Aleppo.

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Protesters Kill Six Iraqi Soldiers

Armed protesters killed six Iraqi soldiers and kidnapped a seventh on Tuesday near Ramadi, west of Baghdad, a police officer said.

The protesters also burned two armored personnel carriers and were holding the kidnapped soldier at the site of their sit-in on the highway near Ramadi, First Lieutenant Ibrahim Faraj said.

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Hagel in Riyadh as Saudi, U.S. Plan Arms Deal

U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel arrived in Riyadh Tuesday to seal a major arms deal that will provide the Saudi kingdom with sophisticated missiles for its American-made fighter jets.

Hagel flew in from Jordan after a three-day visit to Israel in his first tour of the region since he took office two months ago.

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Syria: EU Plan to Buy Rebel Oil 'Act of Aggression'

An EU plan to buy oil from rebel-held areas of Syria is illegal and an "act of aggression," the Syrian foreign ministry warned on Tuesday in letters to the United Nations.

"In an unprecedented decision that contradicts international law and the U.N. Charter... the European Union has decided to allow member states to import petrol... under the pretext of supporting the opposition," state news agency SANA reported, citing the letters.

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Kerry: NATO Must Review Responses to Syria, Chemical Weapons

NATO must review its ability to fend off threats to the alliance from Syria, including the possible use of chemical weapons, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Tuesday.

"We should ... carefully and collectively consider how NATO is prepared to respond to protect its members from a Syrian threat, including any potential chemical weapons threat," Kerry told a meeting of NATO foreign ministers.

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Egypt ex-Finance Minister Gets Life in Absentia

A Cairo court on Tuesday sentenced Egypt's former finance minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali to life in prison in absentia on corruption charges, judicial sources said.

Boutros-Ghali, who served as finance minister under ousted president Hosni Mubarak, is accused of squandering public funds to the value of 20 million Egyptian pounds (almost $3 million), the court said.

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