Top Items:
Neil MacFarquhar / New York Times:
Tide of Arab Opinion Turns to Support for Hezbollah — DAMASCUS, Syria, July 27 — At the onset of the Lebanese crisis, Arab governments, starting with Saudi Arabia, slammed Hezbollah for recklessly provoking a war, providing what the United States and Israel took as a wink and a nod to continue the fight.
Discussion:
Haaretz, DownWithTyranny!, Daniel W. Drezner, Newsweek, TPMCafe blogs, The American Thinker, BBC, A Blog For All, the talking dog, The Sundries Shack, Alternate Brain, Sister Toldjah, Media Blog, Winds of Change.NET, Kesher Talk, NO QUARTER, The Corner, Brilliant at Breakfast, Andrew Sullivan, Outside The Beltway, Middle Earth Journal, Defense Tech and Copeland Institute …
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Charles Krauthammer / Washington Post:
'Disproportionate' in What Moral Universe? — What other country, when attacked in an unprovoked aggression across a recognized international frontier, is then put on a countdown clock by the world, given a limited time window in which to fight back, regardless of whether it has restored its own security?
Discussion:
Blue Crab Boulevard, Ozymandias, Crunchy Con, Israellycool, Media Blog, It Shines For All and Friends of Micronesia
Warren Christopher / Washington Post:
A Time To Act — Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's just-concluded trip to Lebanon, Israel and Rome was an exercise in grace, bravery and, to my regret, wrongly focused diplomacy. Especially disappointing is the fact that she resisted all suggestions that the first order of business …
Peter Beinart / Washington Post:
Pander and Run — After years of struggling to define their own approach to post-Sept. 11 foreign policy, Democrats seem finally to have hit on one. It's called pandering. In those rare cases when George W. Bush shows genuine sensitivity to America's allies and propounds a broader …
Sabrina Tavernise / New York Times:
Christians Fleeing Lebanon Denounce Hezbollah — TYRE, Lebanon, July 27 — The refugees from southern Lebanon spilled out of packed cars into the dark street here Thursday evening, gulping bottles of water and squinting in the glare of the headlights to find family members and friends.
Discussion:
Crunchy Con
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R. Jeffrey Smith / Washington Post:
Detainee Abuse Charges Feared — An obscure law approved by a Republican-controlled Congress a decade ago has made the Bush administration nervous that officials and troops involved in handling detainee matters might be accused of committing war crimes, and prosecuted at some point in U.S. courts.
Discussion:
Obsidian Wings, The Next Hurrah, Balkinization, First Draft, The Heretik, Needlenose, The Left Coaster and Bitch. Ph.D.
Bill Gertz / Washington Times:
Hezbollah leader said to be hiding in Iranian Embassy — Intelligence reports indicate the leader of Hezbollah is hiding in a foreign mission in Beirut, possibly the Iranian Embassy, according to U.S. and Israeli officials. — Israeli military and intelligence forces are continuing to hunt …
BBC:
Execution of a teenage girl — A television documentary team has pieced together details surrounding the case of a 16-year-old girl, executed two years ago in Iran. — On 15 August, 2004, Atefah Sahaaleh was hanged in a public square in the Iranian city of Neka.
Discussion:
Michelle Malkin, Blue Crab Boulevard, Andrew Sullivan, Tim Blair, Liberty and Justice and Secular Blasphemy
Jeffrey H. Birnbaum / Washington Post:
Congress to Adopt Scaled-Down Rules on Lobbying — Unable to agree on major lobbying and ethics legislation, Senate and House leaders have made plans to adopt vastly scaled-back versions of the measures as part of their rules so that lawmakers can claim that they responded to recent congressional scandals.
Sen. Harry Reid / The Huffington Post:
A New Direction — In my home state of Nevada, in Reno, families are paying $3.12 for the gas they need to drive to work - more than double the price they were paying in 2001. That means they have hundreds of dollars less each month to spend on food, medicine, and their other needs.
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Thomas Joscelyn / Weekly Standard:
Bin Laden's "Brothers" — The conventional wisdom is that Hezbollah and al Qaeda are rivals, not partners. The conventional wisdom is wrong. — THE LATEST ZAWAHIRI TAPE, his tenth in the last year, will leave some al Qaeda watchers perplexed. In it, Zawahiri refers to his "brothers" …
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Christy Hardin Smith / Firedoglake:
Just Read These... I know, Buffy the Vampire Slayer …
Just Read These... I know, Buffy the Vampire Slayer …
Discussion:
Macsmind
Randal C. Archibold / New York Times:
Las Vegas Makes It Illegal to Feed Homeless in Parks — LAS VEGAS, July 21 — Gail Sacco pulled green grapes, bread, lunch meat and, of course in this blazing heat, bottles of water from a cardboard box. A dozen homeless people rose from shady spots in the surrounding city park and snatched the handouts from her.
Sharon Roffe-Ofir / Ynetnews:
Long-range missiles fired at Afula — Escalation: Security officials say that five long-range missiles, equipped with more explosives than Pajar rockets used by Hizbullah so far, fired at Afula Friday noon. Sources say missiles may have been aimed at Hadera, Netanya.
Discussion:
Blue Crab Boulevard
Washington Post:
Wife, Friend Tie Congressman to Consulting Firm — Company's Clients Say They Get Access to Va. Republican — Two months before Rep. Thomas M. Davis III (R-Va.) became chairman of the powerful House Government Reform Committee in January 2003, one of his close friends formed ICG Government …
Carl Hulse / New York Times:
Republicans Near a Vote to Increase U.S. Wage — WASHINGTON, July 27 — Under intense pressure from their moderate wing, House Republican leaders moved on Thursday toward allowing a vote Friday on an increase in the minimum wage before sending anxious lawmakers home for a month of campaigning in the battle for control of Congress.
Lee Keath / Associated Press:
Hezbollah rocket hits deeper into Israel — BEIRUT, Lebanon - Hezbollah fired what it called a new kind of rocket, landing its deepest hit into northern Israel in 17 days of fighting. Israeli authorities reported that five rockets hit fields outside the town of Afula, causing no casualties.