Today’s edition of quick hits:
* When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu talks about establishing a “clear red line” with regards to Iran’s nuclear program, he apparently means that literally.
* Syria: “Roughly two months into this important yet scarcely documented battle, Syria’s antigovernment fighters have succeeded in laying siege to the heavily fortified Abu ad Duhur air base. They have downed at least two of the base’s MIG attack jets. And this month they have realized results few would have thought possible.”
* Syrian officials, meanwhile, sent text messages over cell phones nationwide with a message for rebels challenging the Assad regime: “Game over.”
* Eurozone austerity: “The Spanish government on Thursday presented a draft budget for 2013 with a package of tax increases and spending cuts that, while unpopular with the public, it said would guarantee the country could meet deficit-cutting targets agreed to with the rest of the euro zone.”
* GDP revisions: “The U.S. economy grew even more slowly than originally thought in the second quarter of 2012, according to new data from the Commerce Department. One culprit? The severe heat and drought that has dented crop production in the Midwest this summer.”
* In another scoop for Mother Jones’ David Corn, there’s a new video of Mitt Romney explaining that his private-equity firm, Bain Capital, intended to “identify potential and hidden value in companies, buy significant stakes in these businesses, and then ‘harvest them at a significant profit’ within five to eight years.”
* Heartbreaking: “Victims of sexual assault in military say brass often ignore pleas for justice.”








