Help wanted: U.N. special envoy Kofi Annan arrives in Moscow today to ask for Russian President Vladimir Putin's help in ending the bloodshed in Syria. Announcing that Putin would meet with Annan on Tuesday, following talks between the U.N. envoy and Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Monday, the Kremlin press service said only that Putin would underline his support for the envoy's peace plan, Reuters reports.
We've got your back: The commander of the United States Pacific Command, Samuel Locklear, met with Filipino President Benigno Aquino and reiterated the United States' commitment to help the Philippines establish a “minimum credible defense posture," especially in the wake of China's growing ambitions in the South China Sea. The three-day visit is Locklear's first to Manila since assuming command of the U.S. military forces in the Asia Pacific region in March. [ABS-CBN]
In other news:
The International Red Cross says there is now a "non-international armed conflict" — or civil war — across more parts of Syria, widening its earlier designation. [Voice of America]
The African Union elected its first female leader, South Africa's Home Affairs Minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, to lead the 54-nation bloc after a hotly contested election. [CNN]
North Korea on Monday announced the dismissal of its top military leader, the latest in what analysts describe as a series of increasingly bold shake-ups to strengthen support for young leader Kim Jong Eun. [The Washington Post]
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