Morning Brief, Wednesday, September 20

Coup in Thailand While the Thai prime minister is away in New York for a meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, the Thai military stages a coup back home, surrounding several key government buildings and dissolving the constitution. The military leaders, who apparently have the support of the monarchy, have announced a national holiday today, ...

Coup in Thailand

Coup in Thailand

While the Thai prime minister is away in New York for a meeting of the U.N. General Assembly, the Thai military stages a coup back home, surrounding several key government buildings and dissolving the constitution. The military leaders, who apparently have the support of the monarchy, have announced a national holiday today, banning public gatherings and urging farmers and students to stay out of politics. More analysis on the tense run-up to the coup, how Thais have reacted, the effect on markets (which have remained calm), what it means for the region, and why we shouldn't perhaps mourn the end of the PM's reign.  

Iran

Predictably, Ahmadinejad lashed back at the United States in his speech to the U.N. General Assembly yesterday, and Bush's speech revealed his administration's love-hate relationship with diplomacy.  

Iraq

There's growing concern that PM Maliki can't hold his own, which might have something to do with the fact that there won't be any U.S. troop drawdown until at least next spring. Saddam's new judge orders him out of court

Elsewhere

The Pope says he was misunderstood. A second night of protests rock Budapest. Shinzo Abe is one vote closer to becoming Japan's next prime minister. And in South Africa, Jacob Zuma's corruption trial collapses.

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

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