Morning Brief, Thursday, September 14

Gaza The economy is collapsing: The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development warned Tuesday that the economy could shrink next year to the level of 15 years ago, and unemployment could rise to over 50 percent. The World Bank expects gross domestic product to decline by 27 percent this year. Israel and the U.S. ...

Gaza

Gaza

The economy is collapsing:

The United Nations Conference on Trade and Development warned Tuesday that the economy could shrink next year to the level of 15 years ago, and unemployment could rise to over 50 percent. The World Bank expects gross domestic product to decline by 27 percent this year.

Israel and the U.S. are skeptical about the proposed new unity government of Hamas and Fatah. Israel maintains that Gilad Shalit, the Israeli soldier kidnapped earlier this summer by Hamas, is alive and being held in Gaza. 

Iraq

This is current state of Baghdad:

At least 60 bodies were found throughout Baghdad between 6 a.m. Tuesday and 6 a.m. Wednesday, the ministry official said. Forty victims were unknown; 20 were identified.

Nearly all were shot in the head, had clear signs of torture, or were blindfolded, bound or gagged".

Korb and Ogden in the WaPo respond to the recent call to send more troops to Iraq: Where would we get the soldiers?

Washington

Don't miss today's news of the U.S. Interior Department's inspector general slamming the department for entrenched cronyism, incompetence, and corruption. Incredible.  

Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson to China: We want you to succeed. 

The IAEA accuses the House Intelligence Committee of issuing a report on Iran's nuclear intentions that is "outrageous and dishonest". 

After Tuesday's bomb attempt on the U.S. Embassy in Damascus, the U.S. offers to move all non-essential diplomats out of Syria

Elsewhere

The International Crisis Group gets it right, releasing a report stating continued strife in Baluchistan fuels violence in Afghanistan. Poland agrees to bolster the NATO presence in Afghanistan by sending 1000 troops.

Hezbollah, like Israel, is accused of war crimes by Amnesty International. 

Shockingly, UNESCO gives Uzbek President Islam Karinov a culture heritage award, despite an alleged massacre in Andijan last year.   

Darfur rebels: We'll resume fighting if African Union troops pull out. 

Election confusion in DR Congo. Mexican ballots to be burned despite a plea from the new president-elect to keep them. Lysistrata, Colombian gang-style. And cue Neanderthal-Gibraltar jokes.

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

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