Top Items:
David Stout / New York Times:
At Hearing, Gates Says U.S. Not Winning War in Iraq — President Bush's nominee to be Secretary of Defense said today that the United States is not winning the war in Iraq, and that an American failure there could help to ignite "a regional conflagration" in the Middle East.
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CNN:
Senate committee approves Gates nomination … WASHINGTON (CNN) — The Senate Armed Services Committee unanimously approved President Bush's defense secretary nomination Tuesday and sent it to the full Senate for approval, the committee's outgoing chairman said.
Robert Burns / Associated Press:
Gates Says U.S. Is Not Winning Iraq War — WASHINGTON (AP) - Robert Gates, the White House choice to be the next defense secretary, conceded Tuesday that the United States is losing the war in Iraq and warned that if that country is not stabilized in the next year or two it could lead to a "regional conflagration."
Zachary A. Goldfarb / Washington Post:
Kansan To Lead The DGA — Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius (D) will become chairwoman of the Democratic Governors Association next year, officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity told the Associated Press. — The Democrats are coming off a successful campaign season, picking up six statehouses in last month's elections.
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New York Post:
'I'M GOING TO GO FOR THIS' — HILLARY IS JUMPING INTO RACE FOR PREZ — Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton yesterday answered the question on everyone's mind - telling one New York lawmaker flat out: "I'm really going to go for this." — Clinton dropped the much-anticipated presidential bombshell during …
Discussion:
Hot Air
Examiner:
How to end AP's "60 Minutes Moment" on Iraqi Sources — You've probably not read much about it because only a handful of mainstream media outlets have covered it, but the Associated Press - for decades America's largest and most trusted wire news service - is at the center of a credibility crisis largely of its own making.
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Bill Roggio / The Fourth Rail:
The Military and The Media — FALLUJAH, IRAQ: I've completed the first leg of the journey to Iraq, after having moved through Dubai, Kuwait and Baghdad. I am now at Camp Fallujah. While in Fallujah, I'll embed with a Marine Police Transition Team (PTT) and also meet with the Civil Affairs Group.
Dahlia Lithwick / Slate:
Affirmative Inaction — ANTHONY KENNEDY IS SORT OF HORRIFIED BY VOLUNTARY SCHOOL DESEGREGATION. — Listen to the MP3 audio version of this story here, or sign up for Slate's free daily podcast on iTunes. — The two cases heard at the Supreme Court today, Parents Involved …
Discussion:
Legal Fiction, Lawyers, Guns and Money, Discriminations, PoliPundit.com, SCOTUSblog and How Appealing
White House:
Press Briefing by Tony Snow — White House Conference Center Briefing Room — MR. SNOW: Welcome. I have been unable to get you all the details you wanted on the lunch with Secretary Baker. It started at 11:30 a.m., not at 12:00 p.m. The President went straight from a policy time into the lunch.
Matthew Yglesias / American Prospect:
Bridge to Nowhere — Political consensus isn't going to solve America's Iraq problem. — Reading major American newspapers is a bit like trying to decipher an archeological text written in a dead language. Well-informed reporters bring you the facts you need to know …
Discussion:
The American Street
Kos / Daily Kos:
2008: If Obama runs, he wins — Standard caveats aside (it's early, we don't have a set field, blah blah blah), it's hard to see how Barack Obama loses the nomination barring scandal or the mother-of-all gaffes. — I've been working up a few scenarios given the primary calendar …
Discussion:
The Carpetbagger Report, Right Wing News, The Moderate Voice, Matthew Yglesias and Decision '08
Renae Merle / Washington Post:
Census Counts 100,000 Contractors in Iraq — There are about 100,000 government contractors operating in Iraq, not counting subcontractors, a total that is approaching the size of the U.S. military force there, according to the military's first census of the growing population of civilians operating in the battlefield.
BBC:
Veiled woman to give C4's speech — A veiled Muslim woman will deliver this year's alternative Christmas speech on Channel 4, the broadcaster has said. — Khadija, a Zimbabwean-born British citizen who has been wearing the full veil - or niqab - for 10 years, has been given the slot.
Discussion:
The Jawa Report
Robert Tait / Guardian:
Hardliners turn on Ahmadinejad for watching women dancers — President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran, who flaunts his ideological fervour, has been accused of undermining Iran's Islamic revolution after television footage appeared to show him watching a female song and dance show.
Heather Mac Donald / City Journal:
No, the Cops Didn't Murder Sean Bell — And here's what decent black advocates would say. — New York's anti-cop forces have roared back to life, thanks to a fatal police shooting of an unarmed man a week ago. The press is once again fawning over Al Sharpton, Herbert Daughtry …
Vanessa Gera / Associated Press:
Death camp site to be renovated — WARSAW, Poland - The International Auschwitz Council agreed Tuesday to modernize a 51-year-old exhibition at the site of the Nazi death camp and build walls to prevent the ruins of gas chambers from sinking into the ground.
jules crittenden:
A Dream of Mature Nations — A number of Canadians took offense recently to a Boston Herald column in which I slammed Canada and Europe in general for failing to hold up their end in this war for democracy, freedom and security. Specificially, I slammed them for being smug democracies …
Raymond Ibrahim / Los Angeles Times:
Islam gets concessions; infidels get conquered — What they capture, they keep. When they lose, they complain to the U.N. — IN THE DAYS before Pope Benedict XVI's visit last Thursday to the Hagia Sophia complex in Istanbul, Muslims and Turks expressed fear, apprehension and rage.
Discussion:
Riehl World View
Eric Boehlert / Media Matters for America:
'Civil war' and the real press scandal — The excited news coverage surrounding the decision by NBC, as well as other media outlets, to finally label the bloody chaos inside Iraq for what it really is, a civil war, came tinged with a strange, self-congratulatory tone, as if the journalists involved …
Daniel Zwerdling / NPR:
Soldiers Say Army Ignores, Punishes Mental Anguish — Medical records show that when Tyler Jennings returned from Iraq last year, he was severely depressed and used drugs to cope. When the sergeants who ran his platoon found out, they started to haze him.
Discussion:
The Moderate Voice, The BRAD BLOG, Outside The Beltway, Donklephant, Kiko's House, Gun Toting Liberal and The News Blog