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Associated Press:
Lebanese Christian politician killed — BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) — Prominent anti-Syrian Christian politician Pierre Gemayel was assassinated in a suburb of Beirut on Tuesday, his Phalange Party radio station and Lebanon's official news agency reported. — His fatal shooting will certainly heighten …
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Lebanon Daily Star:
Pierre Gemayel's assasination — Prominent Christian politician Pierre Gemayel was assassinated in a suburb of Beirut on Tuesday his death will heighten the political tension in Lebanon, where Hezbollah has threatened to topple the government if it does not get a bigger say in Cabinet decision making.
Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Breaking: Anti-Syrian Lebanese cabinet member murdered in Beirut suburb — Via Snapped Shot. They're not 100% sure yet that it was a political assassination but Fox just broke in to say the shooter was a sniper. If the Syrians are behind it, it's both par for the course and incredibly stupid …
Los Angeles Times:
Pelosi-Harman friction strains Democrats' unity — WASHINGTON — When Jane Harman left Congress in 1998 to run for governor of California, her colleague Nancy Pelosi threw her a party — a chocolate-fudge sundae "social" in the House members' dining room. — Two years later …
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Rick Klein / Boston Globe:
Pelosi team tries to steer Democrats to the center — Wary of plans by House liberals — WASHINGTON — Anxious to chart a centrist course with Democrats' new majority in Congress, incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and her top deputies are busily working in private and public to rein …
worldpublicopinion.org:
Baghdad Shias Believe Killings May Increase Once U.S.-led Forces Depart but Large Majorities Still Support Withdrawal Within a Year — Shias in the Capital—Unlike Those in the Rest of Iraq—Oppose Disarming Militias — Most Shia Arabs living in Baghdad have shifted in recent months …
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Spengler / Asia Times:
Jihadis and whores — Wars are won by destroying the enemy's will to fight. A nation is never really beaten until it sells its women. — The French sold their women to the German occupiers in 1940, and the Germans and Japanese sold their women to the Americans after World War II.
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David S. Cloud / New York Times:
U.S. Considers Raising Troop Levels in Iraq — Pentagon officials conducting a review of Iraq strategy are considering a substantial but temporary increase in American troop levels and the addition of several thousand more trainers to work with Iraqi forces, a senior Defense Department official said Monday.
New York Times:
Clinton Won Easily, but Bankroll Shows the Toll — She had only token opposition, but Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton still spent more on her re-election — upward of $30 million — than any other candidate for Senate this year. So where did all the money go?
Associated Press:
Robert Altman, Leading Director, Dies at 81 — LOS ANGELES (AP) — Robert Altman, the caustic and irreverent satirist behind "M-A-S-H," "Nashville" and "The Player" who made a career out of bucking Hollywood management and story conventions, died at a Los Angeles Hospital, his Sandcastle 5 Productions Company said Tuesday.
Bill Sammon / Examiner:
Romney: 'I'm a conservative Republican' — WASHINGTON - Eager to position himself as the most conservative GOP presidential hopeful, Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney accused Sen. John McCain Monday of being "disingenuous" on gay marriage. — In an interview with The Examiner …
Discussion:
JunkYardBlog, The Right Angle, Classical Values, Miscellaneous Objections, PoliPundit.com and Oliver Willis
Paul Egan / Detroit News:
Suspicious airline passenger to stay locked up — A federal judge overturned a lower ruling Monday and ordered detention for a man stopped at Detroit Metropolitan Airport with articles about nuclear plants and suitcase bombs and the anniversary of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.
Jonathan Weisman / Washington Post:
Democrats Plan Series of Votes on Ethics Reforms — Despite divisions among Democrats over how far to go in revising ethics rules, House leaders plan a major rollout of an ethics reform bill early next year to demonstrate concern about an issue that helped defeat the Republicans in the midterm elections.
Richard Cohen / Washington Post:
The Lingo Of Vietnam — The way President Bush whisked through Vietnam — oh, if only we had done the same 40 years ago — it seemed as if he was feeling an obvious parallel with the war in Iraq. His aides, who somehow lose IQ points by mere proximity to the commander in chief …
CNN:
Poll: More Americans prefer Bush's father — WASHINGTON (CNN) — Only one in four Americans believe President Bush is a better president than his father, George H. W. Bush, a new CNN poll has found. — Six in 10 said the elder Bush, who served one term from 1989-1993, did a better job in office …
Adam Brodsky / New York Post:
DISSENT CRUSHED — WHY MUSLIMS RARELY SPEAK OUT, EVEN IN U.S. — MUSLIMS are often accused of not speaking out sufficiently against terrorism. Nonie Darwish knows one reason why: Their fellow Muslims won't let them. — Darwish, who comes from Egypt and was born and raised a Muslim …
Katharine Q. Seelye / New York Times:
Washington Post Reporters to Join Politics Web Site — The Washington Post, which has long prided itself on the depth and breadth of its coverage of national politics, lost two of its top political reporters yesterday to a fledgling multiplatform news organization, albeit one with deep pockets.
Discussion:
BuzzMachine
Yuval Yoaz / Haaretz:
In precedent-setting ruling court says state must recognize gay marriage — In a precedent-setting ruling, the High Court of Justice on Tuesday ruled that five gay couples wedded outside of Israel can be registered as married couples. — A sweeping majority of six justices to one ruled …
Steven Erlanger / New York Times:
Israeli Map Says West Bank Posts Sit on Arab Land — An Israeli advocacy group, using maps and figures leaked from inside the government, says that 39 percent of the land held by Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank is privately owned by Palestinians.