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Associated Press:
At Least 145 Killed in Deadliest Attack Since Start of Iraq War — BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) — In the deadliest attack on a sectarian enclave since the beginning of the Iraq war, suspected Sunni-Arab militants used three suicide car bombs and two mortar rounds on the capital's Shiite Sadr City slum …
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The Jawa Report, The News Blog, AMERICAblog, War and Piece, Rising Hegemon and Think Progress
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Mercury News:
Violence `spiking' all over Iraq — DEATH TOLL MOUNTS AS DECISIONS NEAR ON NATION'S FUTURE — BAGHDAD, Iraq - Iraqis are dying in record numbers and fleeing by the tens of thousands from an anarchic nation where armed men rule the streets and there's little faith in government institutions …
Kirk Semple / New York Times:
Deadly Attack Kills at Least 144 in Baghdad — In the deadliest sectarian attack since the ouster of Saddam Hussein, explosions from five powerful car bombs and a mortar shell tore through teeming intersections in the Shiite district of Sadr City on Thursday afternoon, killing at least 144 people and wounding 206, the authorities said.
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The Belgravia Dispatch
CNN:
More than 140 killed in Baghdad's Sadr City … BAGHDAD, Iraq (CNN) — A savage string of bombing attacks erupted in Baghdad's Sadr City on Thursday, killing more than 140 people, according to Iraq's health minister. — Police told The Associated Press the death toll was expected to rise significantly.
BBC:
Ex-Russian spy dies in hospital — Former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko has died in hospital three weeks after apparently being poisoned in London. — University College Hospital, London, said Mr Litvinenko had died at 2121 GMT on Thursday and the cause of his condition was still being investigated.
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Richard Beeston / The Australian:
Exclusive interview: 'The bastards got me' — THE poisoned Russian spy breathed defiance at the Kremlin as the effects of a mystery cocktail pushed him towards death. — "I want to survive, just to show them," Alexander Litvinenko said in an exclusive interview just hours before he slipped into unconsciousness, and later died.
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Publius Pundit
Michael Young / Times of London:
So how does 'engaging with Syria' look now? — In recent weeks the idea that the United States and the UK should "engage" Syria, but also Iran, to stabilise Iraq has been all the rage. On Tuesday, in an east Beirut suburb, Lebanon's industry minister, Pierre Gemayel, showed what the cost of engagement might be.
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Tony Hendra / The Huffington Post:
A Thanksgiving Prayer for Dick Cheney's Heart — and a Few Other Favorite Things — I give thanks O Lord for Dick Cheney's Heart, that brave organ which has done its darn-tootin' best on four separate occasions to do what we can only dream about. — O Lord, give Dick Cheney's Heart …
Discussion:
Mere Rhetoric
Agence France Presse:
Grandmother in first Hamas suicide attack in two years — A Palestinian grandmother blew herself up in the Gaza Strip, lightly wounding three Israeli soldiers, in the first suicide attack claimed by Hamas in almost two years. — The mother of nine and grandmother of 41 became …
Investor's Business Daily:
A Profiling In Courage — Homeland Security: Kudos to US Airways. Risking fines and a boycott, it did the right thing this week by removing a group of Muslim men from a flight to protect its crew and passengers. — By most accounts, the six bearded men were behaving suspiciously …
Discussion:
Dinocrat
Robert D. Novak / Washington Post:
A Bad Omen in Rumsfeld's Firing — Donald Rumsfeld, one week after his sacking as secretary of defense, was treated as a conquering hero, accorded one standing ovation after another at the conservative American Spectator magazine's annual dinner in Washington.
Robert Pear / New York Times:
Panel Calls for Big Changes in Medicaid — A federal advisory panel says that long-term care for aging baby boomers threatens to bankrupt Medicaid, and it recommends sweeping changes to rein in costs, including greater use of managed care for the sickest Medicaid recipients.
SeeDubya / JunkYardBlog:
Oh, Come ON, People — There is a principled, intellectually honest case to be made for increasing the security of America's borders. Part of it is pretty obvious to those of us aware of the simple need to keep terrorists, criminals, and drugs out. And, um, the freakin' Mexican Army.
Glenn Reynolds / Instapundit.com:
DIGITAL CAMERA CARNIVAL: Okay, the entries are in. There were actually so many that I'm breaking this Carnival into two parts, with the second to follow tomorrow or Friday. (That also means that it's not too late to send one in — just put "digital camera carnival" in the subject line so that I can find it.)