Morning Brief, Tuesday, October 17, 2006

North Korea Seoul and Washington are watching signs that North Korea may be cooking up another nuclear test. The South Korean government on Tuesday said it had detected movements suggesting North Korea might be preparing to conduct a second nuclear test, as tensions mount that Kim Jong-il’s regime will take another step to defy international ...

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

North Korea

North Korea

Seoul and Washington are watching signs that North Korea may be cooking up another nuclear test.

The South Korean government on Tuesday said it had detected movements suggesting North Korea might be preparing to conduct a second nuclear test, as tensions mount that Kim Jong-il’s regime will take another step to defy international pressure.

Meanwhile, the flow of pugnacious but oddly phrased rhetoric from the North continues unabated.

We will deliver merciless blows without hesitation to whoever tries to breach our sovereignty and right to survive under the excuse of carrying out the UN Security Council resolution."

Condoleezza Rice is making final preparations for her swing through the region. The administration has made clear, however, that while Rice will talk plenty about North Korea, she won't talk to it.   

Cops in Japan are warning that North Korea may respond to new sanctions with terrorism.

There are concerns that North Korea may launch large-scale terrorist attacks or sly and heinous activities in retaliation to additional sanctions," said Hiroto Yoshimura, deputy director general of the National Police Agency.

Iraq

The region is abuzz with rumors that wise elder James Baker will propose a major draw-down of American troops. And Iraq's embattled PM is getting nervous that America may be preparing to set sail.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri Maliki told President Bush on Monday that U.S. officials have been undermining his government, and sought reassurance that the administration was not preparing to abandon him.

It's starting to look a lot like open ethnic warfare on the Tigris. 

Iran 

Ahmadinejad says Iran won't give even a millimeter on its nuclear program (has he gone metric, too?). But, in a major concession to the West, he banned smoking in public places. 

Elsewhere 

Wal-Mart may be about to blue-light a major deal with China.

Hugo Chavez is on the cusp of a humiliating defeat in the UN General Assembly. 

Russian authorities nab three men suspected in the murder of a key Central Bank official.

Oil prices may be on the rise again. 

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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