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Political Web, page A1 … for 11:15 AM ET, February 22, 2006
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Top Items:

Washington Post:
Bush Threatens Veto Against Bid To Stop Port Deal  —  State-Run Arab Firm Poses No Threat, President Says Amid Bipartisan Criticism  —  President Bush yesterday strongly defended an Arab company's attempt to take over the operation of seaports in Baltimore and five other cities …
RELATED ITEMS:
Opinion Journal:
Ports of Politics  —  How to sound like a hawk without being one.  —  Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist is the latest Republican to broadcast his "independence" from President Bush on homeland security, yesterday joining Senator Lindsey Graham, Representative Peter King and numerous state politicians …
New York Times:
The President and the Ports  —  If President Bush follows through on his threat, he'll be making a strange choice for his first veto after more than five years in office.  After giving a pass to a parade of misbegotten Congressional initiatives and irresponsible budget packages …
Reuters:
Bush defends ports deal, threatens veto  —  WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Risking a showdown with the U.S. Congress, President George W. Bush threatened to veto any legislation that would block an Arab company's takeover of the management of major American seaports.
Squiggler:
Dubai Port deal - good or bad?  Everyone needs to calm down and take a deep breath.  —  Like so many others, when I first heard about the proposed Dubai port deal, my gut reaction was "no way!"  I had many of the same questions and reservations as I've been reading on many, many blogs, including some of the most influential.
Los Angeles Times:
Port hysteria  —  WHEN MEMBERS OF CONGRESS TAKE homeland …
Discussion: The RCP Blog and CNN
Bill Gertz / Washington Times:
Security fears about infiltration by terrorists
Washington Post:
Port Security Humbug
Monica Davey / New York Times:
Vote Due on South Dakota Bill Banning Nearly All Abortions  —  PIERRE, S.D., Feb. 21 — Lawmakers here are preparing to vote on a bill that would outlaw nearly all abortions in South Dakota, a measure that could become the most sweeping ban approved by any state in more than a decade, those on both sides of the abortion debate say.
RELATED ITEMS:
Linda Greenhouse / New York Times:
Justices to Review Federal Ban on Disputed Abortion Method
Discussion: Althouse and The Moderate Voice
Edward Wong / New York Times:
Blast Destroys Golden Dome of Sacred Shiite Shrine in Samarra  —  BAGHDAD, Iraq, Feb. 22 - Insurgents dressed as police commandos detonated powerful explosives on Wednesday morning inside one of Shiite Islam's most sacred shrines, destroying most of the building, located in the volatile town of Samarra …
Discussion: Informed Comment
BBC:
Iraqi blast damages Shia shrine  —  A bomb attack in Iraq has badly damaged one of the holiest sites in Shia Islam, sparking furious protests.  —  Thousands of Iraqis have gathered at the al-Askari shrine in Samarra, north of Baghdad, where two men blew up the famous golden dome in a dawn raid.
Discussion: Mark in Mexico
RELATED ITEM:
Omar / IRAQ THE MODEL:
Holy Shia shrine bombed in Samarra.
Discussion: The Fourth Rail and Reuters
Associated Press:
Poll: Youths Back N. Korea if Attacked  —  Nearly half of South Korean youths who will be old enough to vote in the country's next elections say Seoul should side with North Korea if the United States attacks the communist nation, according to a poll released Wednesday.
RELATED ITEM:
Times of London:
Prosecutors say Irving jail term should be longer  —  Austrian prosecutors have filed an appeal against the three-year prison sentence handed to the British historian David Irving, arguing that he escaped too lightly for the crime of Holocaust denial.  —  Irving was left stunned and open-mouthed …
RELATED ITEM:
Daniel Finkelsteim / Times of London:   The test that David Irving set me: do I really believe in the power of truth?
Elizabeth White / Associated Press:
Hecklers Disrupt Scalia at D.C. Appearance  —  WASHINGTON (AP) — Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia grew tired of a persistent heckler Tuesday and asked organizers of a legal seminar to do something about the outbursts - gently.  —  "Don't use force," Scalia told American Enterprise Institute workers …
RELATED ITEM:
New York Times:
Furor Over Cartoons Pits Muslim Against Muslim  —  AMMAN, Jordan, Feb. 21 — In a direct challenge to the international uproar over cartoons lampooning the Prophet Muhammad, the Jordanian journalist Jihad Momani wrote: "What brings more prejudice against Islam, these caricatures or pictures …
New York Times:
Force-Feeding at Guantánamo Is Now Acknowledged  —  WASHINGTON, Feb. 21 — The military commander responsible for the American detention center at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba, confirmed Tuesday that officials there last month turned to more aggressive methods to deter prisoners …
David Ignatius / Washington Post:
From 'Connectedness' to Conflict  —  One of the baseline assumptions of U.S. foreign policy is that "connectedness" is a good thing.  Linkage to the global economy fosters the growth of democracy and free markets, the theory goes, and that in turn creates the conditions for stability and security.
Discussion: Rantingprofs and Roger Ailes
Elana Schor / The Hill:
GOP Senator eyes public financing bill  —  Sen. George Voinovich, Ethics Committee chairman and a sometime gadfly to Republican leadership, is warming to Democratic-backed proposals for public financing of federal elections.  —  Voinovich (R-Ohio) told The Hill that he has met …
Discussion: TAPPED and The Carpetbagger Report
Ryan Lenz / Associated Press:
Motorcyclists Roll to Soldier Funerals  —  FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. - Wearing vests covered in military patches, a band of motorcyclists rolls around the country from one soldier's funeral to another, cheering respectfully to overshadow jeers from church protesters.
Joel Brinkley / New York Times:
Rice, on Tour, Finds Egypt Unreceptive to Hamas Aid Cutoff  —  CAIRO, Feb. 21 — Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice on Tuesday began a four-day visit to the Middle East, where she hoped to persuade Arab leaders to cut off financial aid to Hamas.  But she ran into trouble on her very first stop.
New York Times:
President of Harvard Resigns, Ending Stormy 5-Year Tenure  —  Lawrence H. Summers resigned yesterday as president of Harvard University after a relatively brief and turbulent tenure of five years, nudged by Harvard's governing corporation and facing a vote of no confidence from the influential Faculty of Arts and Sciences.

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More Items:

pbs.org:
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wtnh.com:
Lieberman opposes Broadwater Energy proposal
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Charles Bremner / Times of London:
Jews claim police hid killers' motive to appease ghetto
Robert Burns / Editor and Publisher:
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Associated Press:
Alleged Serbian war criminal found
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Alex Massie / Scotsman:
Neocon architect says: 'Pull it down'
Michelle Malkin:
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