Top Items:
Elisabeth Bumiller / New York Times:
Bush Makes Surprise Visit to Afghanistan on Way to India — NEW DELHI, March 1 — President Bush made a surprise five-hour visit to Afghanistan today to meet with President Hamid Karzai and to see for the first time the country created after the United States went to war against the Taliban …
RELATED ITEMS:
Reuters:
Bush makes surprise Afghanistan visit — KABUL (Reuters) - President George W. Bush began his first visit to South Asia on Wednesday with a surprise stop over in Afghanistan, where thousands of American troops are still engaged in hunting down the architects of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice
Washington Post:
Bush Makes Surprise Visit to Afghanistan
Bush Makes Surprise Visit to Afghanistan
Discussion:
Associated Press, The Fourth Rail, Democrat Taylor Marsh …, AMERICAblog, Rook's Rant and The Liberal Coalition
Victor Davis Hanson / Opinion Journal:
At War With Ourselves — We're winning in Iraq. Let's not lose at home. — Last week the golden dome of the Askariya shrine in Samarra was blown apart. Sectarian riots followed, and reprisals and deaths ensued. Thugs and criminals came out of the woodwork to foment further violence.
RELATED ITEMS:
Ellen Knickmeyer / Washington Post:
Shiites Told: Leave Home Or Be Killed — Sunnis Force Evictions As Iraq Tensions Grow — BAGHDAD, Feb. 28 — Salim Rashid, 34, a Shiite laborer in an overwhelmingly Sunni Arab village 20 miles north of Baghdad, received his eviction notice Friday from a man at the door with a rocket launcher.
RELATED ITEMS:
Sabrina Tavernise / New York Times:
Mixed Section of Iraqis Sees Hope Dashed
Mixed Section of Iraqis Sees Hope Dashed
Discussion:
Oliver Willis
Art Barnum / Chicago Tribune:
Alleged rape victim threatened with jail — A Naperville woman who on Tuesday refused a judge's order to view a videotape of her alleged rape could be jailed on a contempt of court charge if she does not change her mind Wednesday, and the judge is considering a request to drop sexual assault charges against the Burr Ridge man on trial.
RELATED ITEM:
Christopher Hitchens / Slate:
The End of Fukuyama — Why his latest pronouncements miss the mark. — I have a feeling that last week was a disappointing one for Francis Fukuyama, whose essay "After Neoconservatism" (adapted from his upcoming book America at the Crossroads) was awarded seven pages in the Feb. 19 New York Times Magazine.
Jonathan E. Kaplan / The Hill:
Former Conyers aides press ethics complaints — Two former aides to Rep. John Conyers (D-Mich.) have alleged that he repeatedly violated House ethics rules. — Deanna Maher, a former deputy chief of staff in Conyers's Detroit office, and Sydney Rooks, a former legal counsel in the district office …
Discussion:
California Conservative, PoliPundit.com, Norwegianity, Shakespeare's Sister, Wonkette and Wizbang
Gateway Pundit:
The Left Concocts a Poisonous Day of News — Three leading stories yesterday. — Three bogus stories yesterday. — ** ONE- CBS News is still true to form: — Bush Job Approval at 34% — Truth: The poll is 6.4 percentage points below the national average — Newsbusters:
Discussion:
Generation Why?, Mystery Pollster, Democracy Project, The Officers' Club, BobGeiger.com, ZenPundit and Gina Cobb
Peter Savodnik / The Hill:
House Republicans could see 10 to 15 more retirements — House Republicans have limited most of their retirements to conservatives in solidly red districts and a handful of statewide-office seekers, but political analysts say 10 to 15 more Republicans could announce in the coming months that they are stepping down.
Washington Post:
Gonzales Seeks to Clarify Testimony on Spying — Extent of Eavesdropping May Go Beyond NSA Work — Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales appeared to suggest yesterday that the Bush administration's warrantless domestic surveillance operations may extend beyond the outlines that the president acknowledged in mid-December.
Robert F. Worth / New York Times:
Prosecutors in Hussein Case Tie Him to Order to Kill 148 — BAGHDAD, Iraq, March 1 — As Saddam Hussein watched quietly from the dock, prosecutors on Tuesday displayed what they said was his signature on orders of execution for 148 men and boys, some as young as 11, in what appeared …
The Brussels Journal:
Anti-Jihad Manifesto Misses the Point — Today twelve international authors, most of them (former) Muslims, such as Salman Rushdie and Ayaan Hirsi Ali, but also a couple of "French philosophers," published a manifesto in the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo.
Phillip Longman / Foreign Policy:
The Return of Patriarchy — Across the globe, people are choosing to have fewer children or none at all. Governments are desperate to halt the trend, but their influence seems to stop at the bedroom door. Are some societies destined to become extinct? Hardly. It's more likely that conservatives will inherit the Earth.
Saeb Erekat / New York Times:
What the P.L.O. Has to Offer — MANY have argued that Hamas's winning of a decisive majority in the Palestinian Parliament provides yet another setback for peace and democracy in the Middle East. Some have even suggested that it vindicates Israeli unilateralism.
Associated Press:
Shays says he intends to vote for Lieberman — STAMFORD, Conn. —Republican U.S. Rep. Christopher Shays said Tuesday that he plans to vote this year for Democratic Sen. Joe Lieberman and encouraged other GOP officials to endorse the three-term senator. — Shays, R-4th District …
Bill Roggio / The Fourth Rail:
al-Qaeda's Foreign Fighters in Iraq — The pros & cons of al-Qaeda funneling both novice and experienced jihadis into Iraq — In the wake of the destruction of the dome of the Golden Mosque and the ensuing unrest, al-Qaeda in Iraq is hard at work with a suicide bombing campaign designed to increase the sectarian divide within Iraq.
Discussion:
Terrorism Unveiled, Associated Press, The Counterterrorism Blog and Interested-Participant
Tom Elia / theneweditor.com:
Howard Dean's Devastating Four-Point Plans — In a Tuesday speech before the Annual Conference of the Jewish Council for Public Affairs, Democratic Party National Chairman Howard Dean criticized the Bush Administration's defense policy, saying, "this is the weakest Administration on defense that we've seen in many, many years."
Anna Johnson / Associated Press:
Study: Few Americans Know 1st Amendment — CHICAGO - Americans apparently know more about "The Simpsons" than they do about the First Amendment. — Only one in four Americans can name more than one of the five freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment (freedom of speech, religion, press …
Alan Cooperman / Washington Post:
The House's Catholic Democrats Detail Role Religion Plays — Still reeling from the attacks on Sen. John F. Kerry's brand of Roman Catholicism during the 2004 presidential race, 55 House Democrats issued a joint statement yesterday on the central role that the Catholic faith plays in their public lives.
Associated Press:
Miss. House committee votes to ban most abortions — JACKSON, Miss. - A Mississippi House committee voted Tuesday to ban most abortions in the state - an unexpected move that left abortion opponents grappling to stake out a position on a proposal that could prompt a lengthy court battle.
Mark Tapscott / tapscottscopydesk.blogspot.com:
Oklahoma Bomb Squader Says Hinrichs Did Not Intend to Kill Self; Anti-Personnel Materials Found in His Apartment, Notes Describe AP Bomb Experiment — Oklahoma Bomb Squader Says Hinrichs Did Not Intend to Kill Self; Anti-Personnel Materials Found in His Apartment, Notes Describe AP Bomb Work