Good Morning, Australia! - The Americans who stopped a massacre in France say the gunman kept pulling out weapon after weapon - South Korea might have a serious problem off of its shores - Uncollected garbage is turning into a national crisis in Lebanon - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The gunman who US servicemen stopped from shooting up a crowded train in France over the weekend is amazingly denying terrorism accusations.  Witnesses say 25-year old Moroccan Ayoub El Khazzani's Kalashnikov rifle jammed, allowing the two Americans to pounce, disarm, and subdue him.  A lawyer who represented El Khazzani at the beginning of his detention says the suspect claims that he just happened to find the AK47 in a park before boarding the Paris-bound train in Brussels.  Police in France, Spain, and other European countries already had El Khazzani on their radar because of alleged ties to Islamist terrorist groups.

The American who sustained the worst injuries in the clash with the train gunman is speaking after being released from hospital.  Off duty US Airman Spencer Stone says had just awoken from a deep sleep when his friend, Oregon National Guard member Alex Skarlatos, signalled him to go into action and stop Ayoub El Khazzani.  Stone says they suspect kept pulling out weapons as fast as they could take them away.  El Khazzani managed to cut Stone on the neck with a box cutter before they finally brought him down and restrained him.

South Korea accuses the North of deploying submarines while the two nations hold talks in the truce village Panmunjom to try to ease last week's tensions.  Defense officials in Seoul say some 50 submarines - which comprises about 70 percent of the North Korean submarine fleet - had left their home ports and were nowhere to be found.  US and South Korean planes are searching the waters around the Korean Peninsula for any sign of those subs.  Last week, the North and South traded artillery fire over an array of loudspeakers the South uses to blast propaganda across the border.

Lebanon's Prime Minister Tammam Salam is promising to take action on police who used tear gas, rubber bullets, and water cannons to disperse thousands ot people protesting uncollected garbage in Beirut.  Dozens of people were hurt in the clashes on Saturday and Sunday.  Salam insists the people have a right to protest.  But at the same time, there's no money to pay public workers to clean up the city:  Parliament is stalemated, and there is no president. Government can't even legally make the decision to sell bonds to get money to pay the trash collectors.

Japan is feeling the first effects of Typhoon Goni, coming up from the south towards Kyushu.  A 66-year old man drowned when he fell from his fishing boat in seas churned up by Goni.  Earlier, the same storm slammed into the Philippines, killing at least 14 people.  Thousands of people were evacuated to higher ground while torrential rains flooded homes and buildings and caused mudslides; several domestic flights were cancelled. 

This is cool.  Workers used a backhoe to dig a ramp, after a baby elephant fell into a dry well in in Ramakuppan village in India's Andhra Pradesh.