Good Morning Australia!! - The Dutton drama isn't over yet, and another spill attempt is possible - Trump's ex-lawyer will be giving his unique information to two different corruption probes - Police stop an international terrorist plot - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Supporters of Peter Dutton are circulating a new letter requesting a party room meeting to try and replace Malcolm Turnbull as leader of the Liberals, and therefore as Prime Minister.  The ABC reports that Turnbull's allies believe very few people have signed it, and it's not clear that all that much as changed since Turnbull won the first spill attempt by 48 to 35 votes.  But ten frontbenchers have also left the cabinet, putting the PM in a weak position. 

Donald Trump's ex-lawyer Michael Cohen is ready to "tell everything about Donald Trump that he knows" to US Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller, who is leading the investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 presidential election.  Cohen shocked the political establishment yesterday when he pleaded guilty to corruption charges related to using campaign funds to buy the silence of two women who had affairs with Trump, porn star Stormy Daniels and Playboy centerfold Karen McDougall.  In accepting a five-year prison sentence, Cohen said he did this on Trump's orders; Trump on Wednesday morning claimed he knew about the payments, but only "later on".  However, this is yet another version of several conflicting statements given by Trump and his team on the payments to Stormy Daniels.

And then New York state prosecutors confirmed that they will subpoena Michael Cohen as part of a probe of the Trump Foundation, an investigation completely separate from the Mueller probe.  The Empire State Attorney General is suing Trump and members of his family, alleging a pattern of "persistently illegal conduct" and personal enrichment at the nonprofit foundation.  Trump angrily tweeted that he won't settle the case.

German police arrested a Russian national for allegedly planning an Islamist attack.  Investigators say the 31-year-old identified only as Magomed-Ali C. because of German privacy rules had a partner and possessed explosives.  But "preventative measures" thwarted their plans, and the partner moved to France where he was arrested for plotting a separate attack.  French investigators alerted the Germans who arrested the Russian.  The would-be terrorists attended the same mosque as the Tunisian man who killed twelve people in the 2016 truck attack on a Berlin Christmas Market.

Israel is planning another 1,015 housing units in the West Bank.  The anti-settlement group Peace Now says that includes 400 houses to be constructed immediately, with the rest to be approved later.  The Palestinians and most of the international community consider the settlements to be in violation of international law.

Thai police seized $61 million worth of methamphetamine pills that were bound for Australia and the US through neighboring Malaysia.  Authorities said the drugs came a part of northeastern Myanmar that's under control of a rebel militia.  The UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) warned that the production and trafficking of methamphetamine in South-East Asia has reached "alarming levels".

Zimbabwe's Constitution Court on Friday will hear the challenge to last month's presidential election, which kept President Emmerson Mnangagwa.  The opposition claims the final count is the result of "gross mathematical errors" and is demanding its candidate be installed or a fresh election be held.  The 30 July poll was the first without longtime leader Robert Mugabe on the ballot.