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Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan seems to be mastering the art of dealing with Donald Trump.
In a [stunning policy reversal](, the White House announced after a phone call between the two leaders yesterday that the U.S. would stand aside and let Erdogan proceed with an incursion into northern Syria. Erdogan wants to create a buffer zone there to keep Kurdish militants at bay and have a place to resettle Syrian refugees currently in Turkey.
The Turkish leader has been [trying for months]( to get Trump to accede to his operation against the Kurds, who were U.S. allies in the fight against Islamic State. Top Trump advisers (some since departed) and the president himself had warned of the risks of abandoning the Kurds.
Erdoganâs ability to win over Trump is remarkable, given growing frustration in Congress and the Pentagon with the Turkish leaderâs actions. So far, heâs been able to evade threatened penalties over Ankaraâs purchase of a Russian missile-defense system and a multi-billion-dollar scheme to skirt sanctions on Iran.
But Trump also gets what he wants: Turkeyâs pledge to take responsibility for all Islamic State prisoners captured in the area.
So as he gears up for the 2020 election, he can tell his voter base that Islamic State doesnât pose a threat to the U.S. and America has now washed its hands of the whole Syrian mess.
â [Benjamin Harvey](
Trump and Erdogan at the opening ceremony of the 2018 NATO Summit in Brussels. [Click here for more]( on the Turkish militaryâs expanding footprint.Â
Photographer: Sean Gallup/Getty Images Europe
Global Headlines
[Ensemble piece]( | Trump faces new peril â and not just from the Democratsâ impeachment inquiry. There are now at least [two whistle-blowers]( coming forward to talk about his actions. Itâs unclear if the administration will let several witnesses speak to House panels this week as planned, and there are signs some Republican lawmakers are [growing restive]( about what else might surface regarding Trumpâs requests of foreign leaders.
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[Read how Trump's]( latest explanation for his July conversation with Ukraine President Volodymyr Zelenskiy â that he made the call at the behest of Energy Secretary Rick Perry â is undercutting a stalwart loyalist.
[Narrowed scope]( | Chinese officials are signaling increasing reluctance to agree to a broad trade deal with the U.S., ahead of talks this week that have raised hopes of a potential truce. Vice Premier Liu He said heâd bring an offer to Washington that wonât include commitments on reforming Chinese industrial policy or the government subsidies that have been the target of longstanding U.S. complaints, [Shawn Donnan]( and [Jenny Leonard]( report.
- Subscribe to Bloombergâs [Terms of Trade]( newsletter to get the big developments each weekday.
[Taking notes]( | Democratic Presidential candidate Elizabeth Warren made a mark with her âI have a plan for that!â slogan. But, on the crucial 2020 issue of health care, sheâs borrowing from rival and fellow progressive Bernie Sanders. Warren is the only one of the five top-polling Democrats without a sweeping proposal of her own.
- [Click here for more]( on how Joe Biden is seeking to reassure his donors after a [lackluster fund-raising quarter](.
[Empty-handed]( | North Korea left its first direct nuclear talks with the U.S. in eight months over the weekend discouraged by what it saw as an âempty-handedâ offer, showing how far apart the two sides remain. More than a year of historic contact between leader Kim Jong Un and Trump that failed to lead to a deal to end Pyongyangâs atomic weapons program.
[AMLOâs party troubles]( | Since its formation five years ago, Mexicoâs ruling party, Morena, has revolved around one politician: Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who it helped propel to the presidency in a landslide victory last year. But now, as [Eric Martin]( explains, ahead of Morenaâs first scheduled leadership contest, itâs gripped by fierce infighting that will have a major impact on the 2021 mid-term election and the course of AMLOâs government.
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âHong Kong [braced for more protests]( even as it worked to get back to normal after a weekend of chaos that saw demonstrators vandalize shops, clash with police and paralyze the underground rail network.âââââ [Click here for background]( on the unrest. Photographer: Justin Chin/Bloomberg
What to Watch This WeekÂ
- With just over three weeks until the Oct. 31 deadline, prospects for a Brexit deal [have faded](. European leaders signal they want progress by Friday.
- Violence in Iraq between security forces and protesters demonstrating against unemployment and corruption [has killed]( about 100 people and left Adil Abdul-Mahdi with the biggest test of his short premiership.
- Chinaâs Xi Jinping and Indiaâs Narendra Modi will meet Friday and Saturday in India, with an agenda expected to include defense [and trade issues](, along with New Delhiâs move to revoke Kashmirâs autonomy, a decision Beijing has criticized.
- Portuguese Prime Minister Antonio Costa [clinched a second term]( even as he faces stiffer economic headwinds.
- Tunisia [is counting votes]( from yesterdayâs parliamentary elections, as an exit poll suggests the moderate Islamist Ennahda party will get the most ballots while falling short of a majority.
Thanks to all who responded to our pop quiz Friday and congrats to reader Bill Brown, who was the first to correctly name Austria as the country where the Green party's support tripled at elections last week. Tell us how weâre doing or what weâre missing: balancepower@bloomberg.net.
[And finally]( ... In southern China theyâre breading giant pigs as heavy as polar bears. One animal weighed in at 500 kilograms, or 1,102 pounds, and some can sell for more than 10,000 yuan ($1,399). The idea that bigger is better is catching on in China, home to the worldâs most voracious pork consumers. With African swine fever by some estimates cutting the nationâs hog herd in half, pork prices have soared to record levels.
A visitor rides on the 750-kilogram pig at a farm in Zhengzhou city, Henan province. Source: Imaginechina via AP PhotoÂ
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