Top Items:
New York Times:
Bush Expresses Caution on Key Points in Iraq Panel's Report — President Bush moved quickly on Thursday to distance himself from the central recommendations of the bipartisan Iraq Study Group: pulling back all combat brigades over the next 15 months and direct talks with Iran and Syria.
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Dana Milbank / Washington Post:
In Theater of War, It's Iraq Study Group's Turn to Take the Stage — Minutes after the Iraq Study Group placed an improvised explosive device beneath the Bush administration's Iraq policy yesterday, panel member Lawrence Eagleburger was asked how President Bush reacted to the recommendations.
Thomas E. Ricks / Washington Post:
Senators Challenge Feasibility of Iraq Plans — Study Group Concedes Some Risks But Calls Its Proposal 'Worth a Try' — Members of Congress yesterday questioned the practicability of recommendations from the Iraq Study Group about how to reverse the chaos in Iraq, but they praised the panel's stark assessment of conditions there.
Discussion:
Informed Comment
White House:
President Bush Meets with British Prime Minister Tony Blair — Dwight D. Eisenhower Executive Office Building — PRESIDENT BUSH: Thank you all. Please be seated. I just had a good visit with Prime Minister Tony Blair. I appreciate you coming back, Mr. Prime Minister.
Frederick W. Kagan / NY Daily News:
Asking for chaos — Iraq Study Group fails the big test: how to quell the violence
Asking for chaos — Iraq Study Group fails the big test: how to quell the violence
Discussion:
Andrew Sullivan
Fox News:
NEW MEXICO GOV. BILL RICHARDSON: 'I AM RUNNING' IN 2008 — New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson is expected to formally file papers to form a presidential exploratory committee in January. But today he told FOX News "I am running," as he described the professional and personal experiences that he believes have prepared him for the job.
Discussion:
Washington Post, Donklephant, Macsmind, The Democratic Daily, JustOneMinute, Decision '08 and PrestoPundit
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Jennifer Talhelm / Associated Press:
Richardson Speaks Against Border Fence — WASHINGTON — New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson says a fence at the Mexican border authorized by Congress this fall "gets in the way" of U.S.-Mexico relations, and he wants the new Democratic Congress to reverse the legislation.
Times of London:
Ex-KGB spy 'was poisoned in hotel' — As Alexander Litvinenko was buried yesterday investigators revealed that they now suspect that the former Kremlin spy was poisoned in the bar of a luxury London hotel when he met two Russian businessmen. — All seven bar staff working at the Pine Bar …
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David Crary / Associated Press:
Groups Mixed on Mary Cheney's Pregnancy — Conservative leaders voiced dismay Wednesday at news that Mary Cheney, the lesbian daughter of Dick Cheney, is pregnant, while a gay-rights group said the vice president faces "a lifetime of sleepless nights" for serving in an administration that has opposed recognition of same-sex couples.
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Allahpundit / Hot Air:
Video: Steyn slams the AP and Iraq Study Group on O'Reilly — Our subject is bias: anti-Bush in the case of the American press and anti-American in the case of too many Iraqi stringers. No mention of Jamilgate specifically, alas, but he does refer to Bilal Hussein, whose scandal is sexier anyway.
Carl Hulse / New York Times:
Anti-Abortion Bill Stalls; Session Nears End — The House on Wednesday rejected an anti-abortion measure offered by Republicans as Congressional leaders struggled to bring the 109th Congress to a close. — On a 250-to-162 vote, backers of the measure fell short of the two-thirds majority necessary …
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Salah Nasrawi / Associated Press:
Saudis reportedly funding Iraqi Sunnis — CAIRO, Egypt - Private Saudi citizens are giving millions of dollars to Sunni insurgents in Iraq and much of the money is used to buy weapons, including shoulder fired anti-aircraft missiles, according to key Iraqi officials and others familiar with the flow of cash.
Discussion:
Reuters, Hot Air, The Moderate Voice, Bill's Bites, The Reaction and Middle Earth Journal
St. Petersburg Times:
Dean: Dems should keep out Buchanan — WASHINGTON - Republican Vern Buchanan might be the official winner in a messy Sarasota-area congressional race, but Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean says the Democratic-controlled Congress should not seat Buchanan without another election.
minneapolisfed.org:
Interview with David Card — David Card seems like a pretty mild-mannered guy. True, he speaks with conviction, but it is confidence backed by meticulous research and tempered with open acknowledgment of the limits of that research. Card, an economist — at the University of California, Berkeley, is the antithesis of a zealot.
Reuters:
European Socialists eager to work with U.S. Democrats — OPORTO, Portugal (Reuters) - European Socialists promised on Thursday to work to rebuild Europe's strategic alliance with the United States now that the Democrats control Congress after last month's elections.
Discussion:
Tammy Bruce
Peta Thornycroft / Telegraph:
Mugabe joins massive diamond rush — A British-listed mining company, the first to invest in bankrupt Zimbabwe since the political crisis began, was ordered off its valuable diamond claim yesterday. — While President Robert Mugabe has seized thousands of white-owned farms since 2000 he has, up until now, left mining property alone.
Discussion:
The Belmont Club
New York Times:
Long a Laggard, Wages Start to Outpace Prices — After four years in which pay failed to keep pace with price increases, wages for most American workers have begun rising significantly faster than inflation. — With energy prices now sharply lower than a few months ago …
Christy Hardin Smith / Firedoglake:
Is It January Yet? — Not that I want to rush right past Christmas morning at our house or anything (because, really, The Peanut is at the perfect age this year where the whole tree and lights and Santa are magic, and that is a LOT of fun)...but I've spent a little time trying to figure …
cpj.org:
Internet fuels rise in number of jailed journalists — CPJ census also finds more held without charge or due process … CPJ believes that journalists should not be imprisoned for doing their jobs. The organization has sent letters expressing its serious concerns to each country that has imprisoned a journalist.