Morning Brief, Monday, July 17
Crisis in the Middle East Israel continues to pummel targets in southern Lebanon, where the death toll tops 140. The Guardian has photos of the destruction in Beirut. A Hezbollah rocket attack killed eight in Haifa, Israel's third largest city, on Sunday. Speaking at the end of the G8 summit in St. Petersburg, Tony Blair ...
Crisis in the Middle East
Crisis in the Middle East
Israel continues to pummel targets in southern Lebanon, where the death toll tops 140. The Guardian has photos of the destruction in Beirut. A Hezbollah rocket attack killed eight in Haifa, Israel's third largest city, on Sunday. Speaking at the end of the G8 summit in St. Petersburg, Tony Blair and Kofi Annan call for a UN peacekeeping force to be deployed in Lebanon to stop Hezbollah attacks. The US is quick to jump all over this development: some members of the Arab League criticize Hezbollah's "inappropriate" behavior over the weekend, though the head of the league later says Middle East peace is "dead." More analysis on the dueling dynamics among Arab governments:
It is nearly unheard of for Arab officials to chastise an Arab group engaged in conflict with Israel, especially as images of destruction by Israeli warplanes are beamed into Arab living rooms. Normally under such circumstances, Arabs are not blamed, and condemnations of Israel are routine.
But the willingness of those governments to defy public opinion in their own countries underscores a shift that is prompted by the growing influence of Iran and Shiite Muslims in Iraq and across the region.
The way some officials see it, Arab analysts said, Israel is the devil they know, but Iran is the growing threat.
Iraq
Nearly 100 Iraqis have been killed in the last 24 hours. In Mahmudiya, gunmen open fire on a crowded market place, indiscriminately killing more than 40 men, women, and children. As the wave of sectarian violence continues, Sunni leaders are now reportedly requesting that American troops stay in the country longer, in part to help stop the bloodletting.
G8 summit
Leaders push for a breakthrough on stalled world trade talks. Bush and Indian PM Manmohan Singh discuss a proposed nuclear deal. Host Putin swaggers, taking his moment in the sun to remind his fellow leaders of their own domestic woes. And yes, Bush used an expletive, and the world goes nuts.
Elsewhere
Ugandan peace talks are underway in Sudan. UN Security Council passes a resolution condemning the North Korean missile tests. Maoist rebels kill 26 villagers in central India. Flooding in China kills more than 160, and five are dead after a tsunami hits Java. Thousands demonstrate in Mexico City to demand a full recount of the recent presidential vote.
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