Top Items:
Daily Mail:
Mutiny on Flight 613 — Passengers refuse to allow holiday jet to take off until two Asian men are thrown off plane — British holidaymakers staged an unprecedented mutiny - refusing to allow their flight to take off until two men they feared were terrorists were forcibly removed.
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Sam F. Ghattas / Associated Press:
Annan: Israeli raid violates cease-fire — BEIRUT, Lebanon - Israeli commandos raided a Hezbollah stronghold deep in Lebanon on Saturday, engaging in a fierce gunbattle, and the Lebanese government threatened to halt further troop deployments in protest as the 6-day-old U.N.-brokered cease-fire was put to a critical test.
Discussion:
Left I on the News
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Eleanor Clift / Newsweek:
The Osama Card — Expect the Republicans to use the specter of the terror leader to frighten voters ahead of the elections. — It will soon be five years since the 9/11 attacks thrust America into a state of perpetual anxiety, and the man who inspired and masterminded the carnage that awful day remains at large.
Zachary A. Goldfarb / Washington Post:
GOP's Financial Edge Shrinks — The traditional fundraising advantage held by incumbent lawmakers — which Republicans have regarded as a safety wall in their effort to keep control of Congress — has eroded in many closely contested House races, as many Democratic challengers prove competitive in the race for cash.
Discussion:
The Democratic Daily
Jennifer Loven / Associated Press:
Bush: Iraq War keystone in terror fight — WASHINGTON - President Bush said Saturday that his administration's determination to remain in Iraq and its efforts to end violence in Lebanon are key to protecting the U.S. from future terrorist attacks. Democrats countered that Americans …
Matt Crenson / Associated Press:
Gov't fulfills few Katrina promises — Nearly half of New Orleans was still under water when President Bush stood in the Crescent City's historic Jackson Square and swore he would "do what it takes" to rebuild the communities and lives that had been laid to waste two weeks before by Hurricane Katrina.
Discussion:
The Democratic Daily
Washington Post:
What Next? — The debate is over: By any definition, Iraq is in a state of civil war. Indeed, the only thing standing between Iraq and a descent into total Bosnia-like devastation is 135,000 U.S. troops — and even they are merely slowing the fall. The internecine conflict could easily spiral …
Captain Ed / Captain's Quarters:
Arab Media Take Aim At Assad — After Bashar Assad called Arab leaders "half men" for failing to rally to Hezbollah's support, state-sponsored media in Egypt, Jordan, and Saudi Arabia have castigated Assad in terms usually reserved for infidels. His critics have called him a coward and a dead rosebud, among other epithets:
Timothy Egan / New York Times:
The Rise of Shrinking-Vacation Syndrome — In August, when much of the world is hard at work trying to do nothing, Jeff Hopkins and his wife, Denise, usually take a week to chase fish in Olympic National Park — a ferry ride and two tanks of gas from here with a boat in tow.
Mike Allen / Washington Post:
A Tale of Two Pols — Back in 1993 when Sen. George Allen (R) was running for Virginia governor, he took a break from a swank fundraising luncheon to kibitz with reporters. "The soup has fritters in it!" he complained in the same tone he once used to scold someone who handed him what he called …
Discussion:
Rising Hegemon
Barry Casselman / Real Clear Politics:
Ned Lamont: Henry Wallace with a Website — First of all, greetings to the new poster boy of the 2006 mid-term US. elections, Ned Lamont, the Democratic Party nominee for the U.S. senate in Connecticut. — Who is Ned Lamont? — He is Henry A. Wallace with a website.
Discussion:
Power Line
Adam Nagourney / New York Times:
Democrats Set Primary Calendar and Penalties — The Democratic National Committee voted Saturday to penalize 2008 presidential candidates who defied a new nominating calendar devised to lessen the longtime influence of New Hampshire and Iowa, the two states that have traditionally kicked off the nominating process.
Martha Mendoza / Associated Press:
AP Probe Looks at Recruiting Misconduct — More than 100 young women who expressed interest in joining the military in the past year were preyed upon sexually by their recruiters. Women were raped on recruiting office couches, assaulted in government cars and groped en route to entrance exams.
David Stringer / Independent:
Terror plot police 'discover martyr videos on laptops' — 'Martyr videos' of the type left by suicide bombers, were reportedly discovered on at least six laptops owned by some of the 23 suspects being questioned in the foiled airline terror plot. — The BBC, citing an unofficial police source …
Discussion:
TigerHawk
Washington Post:
War Stirs Worry in Israel Over State of Military — Many Say Failure to Silence Hezbollah Sends Bad Signal — Sgt. Lior Rahamin's Israeli reserve unit had not trained in two years. When its members were called up for the Lebanon war, they didn't have straps for their guns, spare ammunition …
Renae Merle / Washington Post:
Verdict Against Iraq Contractor Overturned — Occupation Authority's Murky Status Cited — A federal judge threw out a $10 million jury verdict against an American company accused of overcharging on an Iraq reconstruction contract after concluding that the now-defunct Coalition Provisional Authority was not a U.S. government entity.
Discussion:
Firedoglake
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