Morning Brief, Wednesday, October 4

North Korean nukes China warns North Korea to step back from the brink, though others see the Chinese position as an appeal to the international community to remain calm while China handles the crisis in its backyard. (The region's papers weigh in here.) The topic will surely be on the agenda when Japanese PM Abe ...

North Korean nukes

North Korean nukes

China warns North Korea to step back from the brink, though others see the Chinese position as an appeal to the international community to remain calm while China handles the crisis in its backyard. (The region's papers weigh in here.) The topic will surely be on the agenda when Japanese PM Abe visits China for the first time next week.

Russia-Georgia diplomatic crisis

Putin decries Georgian "blackmail," continues a travel and postal ban on Georgia and targets Georgian businesses and organizations in Russia. Wait, who's blackmailing whom here?

Rice in the Middle East

Condi is in the Middle East to encourage dialogue between Israel's PM Olmert and the PA's Abbas. She's already met with leaders in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. Ignatius in the Post today thinks it's time for Rice to stop traveling with a Green Zone mentality.

Elsewhere

Firms from China and India are the most willing to pay bribes abroad in order to do business, according to a new survey from Transparency International

British commandos find no evidence that Iran is supplying weapons and training to insurgents in Iraq. 

An independent panel concludes that the IRA has ceased its paramilitary activities in Northern Ireland, paving the way for the new talks on power-sharing. 

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

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