Wednesday, October 17, 2007 - 9:20 AM
Middle East

Turkish PM Tayyip Erdogan tried to tamp down fears that Turkey would invade northern Iraq, but news that the Turkish parliament is expected to pass the "Iraq incursion bill" Wednesday is hardly reassuring. In the U.S. House, meanwhile, enthusiasm is waning for a resolution recognizing the Armenian Genocide.
U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates is pushing to bring all military contractors in Iraq under one authority. The State Department, which theoretically supervises contractors like Blackwater, is fighting back.
Asia
Burma's military regime detained nearly 3,000 protesters during the recent crackdown, a government newspaper acknowledged.
Japan will allow its navy to continuing helping NATO forces in Afghanistan.
Safety and quality concerns seem to have had no impact on orders for Christmas toys from China.
Europe
The pope named 23 new cardinals.
The British Foreign Office is preparing to claim an area off the coast of Antarctica.
The European Union's trade with China is "deeply unequal," the EU trade commissioner complained.
Elsewhere
The Bush Justice Department has focused on immigration and terrorism at the expense of "mobsters, white-collar criminals, environmental crimes and traditional civil rights infractions," according to the department's own data.
U.S. Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson labeled the decline in U.S housing prices "the most significant current risk" to the U.S. economy.
The U.N. and the African Union are investigating a possible new massacre in southern Darfur.
Please welcome the newest members of the U.N. Security Council: Libya and Vietnam.
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