Top Items:
Robert H. Reid / Associated Press:
Al-Zarqawi May Be Among Dead in Iraq Fight — BAGHDAD, Iraq - U.S. forces sealed off a house in the northern city of Mosul where eight suspected al-Qaida members died in a gunfight — some by their own hand to avoid capture. A U.S. official said Sunday that efforts were under way to determine …
Discussion:
Let Freedom Ring, Centerfield, Obsidian Wings, The Political Teen and Transterrestrial Musings
RELATED ITEMS:
Jamal Halaby / Associated Press:
Al-Zarqawi's Jordan Family Renounces Him — AMMAN, Jordan - Family members of Jordanian-born Abu Musab al-Zarqawi renounced the terrorist leader Sunday after his al-Qaida in Iraq group claimed responsibility for the Nov. 9 suicide attacks on three Amman hotels that killed 59 people.
Discussion:
TigerHawk, Dreams Into Lightning, Tammy Bruce, Don't Go Into The Light and protein wisdom
Omar / IRAQ THE MODEL:
Zarqawi probably killed! — According to these two sources, Iraqi and US military forces in Mosul think that Zarqawi, al-Qaeda leader in Iraq was possibly killed in a raid on a house where members of al-Qaeda were holding a meeting. — Al-Mada paper said that terrorists hiding in a house fired …
Terence Hunt / Associated Press:
Bush Lowers Temperature of Iraq War Debate — BEIJING - After fiercely defending his Iraq policy across Asia, President Bush abruptly toned down his attack on war critics Sunday and said there was nothing unpatriotic about opposing his strategy. — "People should feel comfortable …
RELATED ITEMS:
Jason DeParle / New York Times:
'Mean Jean' Goes to Washington, and Invites a Firestorm — WASHINGTON, Nov. 19 - She grew up in the rough-and-tumble of a family auto racing business, went through concealed-weapons training, and bears a local nickname seldom applied to shrinking violets: "Mean Jean."
Howard Fineman / Newsweek:
Bush at the Tipping Point — A hawkish Democrat calls for an Iraq withdrawal, setting off a bitter fight in Washington over how, and when, the troops should come home. — Nov. 28, 2005 issue - As friends describe it, Rep. Jack Murtha of Pennsylvania had been searching his soul for months …
Tom Maguire / JustOneMinute:
Isikoff And Thomas Point To Armitage — Evan Thomas and Michael Isikoff of Newsweek review the bidding in the Woodward leak mystery, and single out former Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage as a likely suspect: … Motive and opportunity. Let's start with opportunity …
Discussion:
Decision '08
RELATED ITEM:
Newsweek:
Sources of Confusion — The Plame drama thickens, as Washington once again tries to guess who Bob Woodward's been talking to. — Nov. 28, 2005 issue - Who was Bob Novak's source? It's a parlor game any Washington insider or media junkie can play—and most do.
strategypage.com:
Journalism Versus Reality in Iraq — November 20, 2005: American troops are developing a hate-hate relation with journalists. The basic problem is that soldiers and marines in Iraq have access, usually via the Internet, to what the mass media is saying about what they think is happening in Iraq.
RELATED ITEM:
Reuters:
Locked doors thwart Bush's bid to duck question — BEIJING (Reuters) - Irked by a reporter who told him he seemed to be "off his game" at a Beijing public appearance, President George W. Bush sought to make a hasty exit from a news conference but was thwarted by locked doors.
Discussion:
www.AndrewSullivan.com
RELATED ITEM:
Patricia Dalton / Washington Post:
What's Wrong With This Outfit, Mom? — I heard about it in my kitchen before I read about it in the newspaper: After visiting the expanded Tysons Corner Center this fall, my 23-year-old daughter said, "You won't believe how weird Victoria's Secret's gotten: It's all red and black with a bunch of mannequins that look like porn stars."
John / AMERICAblog:
Washington Post ombudsman lets Woodward off the hook — I hate to even use the word "ombudsman" to describe the person who wrote this article in Sunday's Washington Post. An ombudsman is someone who writes as a kind of independent watch dog on what the newspaper is doing …
Discussion:
The Sideshow
RELATED ITEM:
Los Angeles Times:
How U.S. Fell Under the Spell of 'Curveball' — The Iraqi informant's German handlers say they had told U.S. officials that his information was 'not proven,' and were shocked when President Bush and Colin L. Powell used it in key prewar speeches. — BERLIN — The German intelligence officials responsible …