Morning Brief, Friday, July 14

Crisis in the Middle East The death toll in Lebanon tops 50 as Israeli airstrikes continue. Israel has placed an air, sea, and land blockade on the country and targeted power plants, the Beirut-Damascus highway, phone antennas, and fuel tanks. The BBC has photos of the destruction. Hezbollah responds by firing more than 100 rockets ...

Crisis in the Middle East

Crisis in the Middle East

The death toll in Lebanon tops 50 as Israeli airstrikes continue. Israel has placed an air, sea, and land blockade on the country and targeted power plants, the Beirut-Damascus highway, phone antennas, and fuel tanks. The BBC has photos of the destruction. Hezbollah responds by firing more than 100 rockets and shells into Israel. Everyone is getting a little nervous about Iran's role in this crisis (and Ahmadinejad responds with bluster), but others wonder why more blame isn't being heaped on Syria:

Iran, of course, has long bankrolled Hezbollah, and the Israeli government said yesterday it feared the two kidnapped soldiers were being taken to Tehran. But Syria is the nexus of regional instability, giving shelter to several of the most intransigent Palestinian militants, transferring arms to Hezbollah, and undermining Lebanon’s frail sovereignty.

Israel can brutalize Lebanon all it wants, but unless something is done to stop Syria’s president, Bashar al-Assad, from exporting instability to buttress his despotic regime, little will change.

On the Gaza front, Israeli jets bomb the Palestinian Foreign Ministry. The crisis drives oil prices over $78 a barrel.  

G8 meeting

Bush arrives in Russia for this weekend's G8 meeting in St. Petersburg and meets first with embattled NGOs in Moscow. You'll be seeing lots of "how do Bush and Putin get along now" pieces over the weekend. You can start the trend here. FP has a guide to what Bush wants to elicit from his fellow world leaders. 

Mumbai attacks

India seeks three suspects in connection with Tuesday's deadly train bombings. Indian PM Manmohan Singh warns Pakistan that it must do more to curb terror, counsel Pakistan resents.

Elsewhere

The battle over the results of the Mexican election seems far from over. Bird flu in Indonesia claims its 41st victim. Iran reiterates its intention to respond to the nuclear incentives package in August and no sooner. South Korea suspends food aid to the North, and North Korean officials stop talks and storm home in response. In a first, control of Iraq's Muthanna province is handed over to local officials.

Carolyn O'Hara is a senior editor at Foreign Policy.

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