Morning Brief, Friday, August 4

Conflict in Lebanon Hezbollah leader Nasrallah expands on the group's strategy for confronting Israeli troops. This [resistance] will continue, in every place and in every direction," he said. "We are not a regular army, and we don't fight like a regular army." Israel strikes near the Lebanese border with Syria. Human rights groups are counting and ...

By , a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies.

Conflict in Lebanon

Conflict in Lebanon

Hezbollah leader Nasrallah expands on the group's strategy for confronting Israeli troops.

This [resistance] will continue, in every place and in every direction," he said. "We are not a regular army, and we don't fight like a regular army."

Israel strikes near the Lebanese border with Syria. Human rights groups are counting and recounting the dead in Qana. 

U.S.-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) yesterday revised the number of fatalities in the Israeli air strike on the Lebanese village of Qana from over 50 to 28. HRW said that the figures, based on data released by the Lebanese Red Cross and a Tyre hospital, included 16 children under the age of 16. HRW said that no additional bodies were found under the debris.  

In Iraq, Sadr City shouts its support for Hezbollah. On the diplomatic front, France and the United States huddled on a Security Council resolution.

Cuba

Cuban commentators continue to heap scorn on Miami protesters, labeling them "vampires." Hopeful exiles contemplate all the remodeling that must be done when they finally return to the island.

"To accomplish anything in Havana, the first thing that needs to be done is the creation of infrastructure," said Nicolas Quintana, a professor of architecture at Florida International University in Miami.

 As if there weren't enough turbulence in the area, a tropical storm steams toward Miami and South Florida.

Asian Security

A South Korean study offers some new details on North Korea's missile program.

New underground missile bases have been built or are under construction around the border with China and along the east coast," the report said. Those "on the east coast could be seen as bases for medium- or long-range missiles targeting Japan and U.S. military bases in Japan," it said. 

The frontrunner in Japan's leadership race confronts reports that he made a secret visit to Yasukuni shrine.

Mr Abe has visited Yasukuni on several occasions in the past, but the April visit, if true, would have been his first since he was appointed Cabinet Secretary."

Japan's top diplomat, meanwhile, pooh-poohed a Chinese effort to link high-level talks with an end to the shrine visits. The linkage, he said, is "beyond comprehension."

David Bosco is a professor at Indiana University’s Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies. He is the author of The Poseidon Project: The Struggle to Govern the World’s Oceans. Twitter: @multilateralist

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