Top Items:
Helene Cooper / New York Times:
Saudis Give a Grim What If Should U.S. Opt to Leave Iraq — Saudi Arabia has told the Bush administration that it might provide financial backing to Iraqi Sunnis in any war against Iraq's Shiites if the United States pulls its troops out of Iraq, according to American and Arab diplomats.
RELATED:
New York Times:
White House to Delay Shift on Iraq Until '07 — The White House said Tuesday that President Bush would delay presenting any new strategy for Iraq until early next year, as officials suggested that Mr. Bush's advisers were locked in internal debates on several fronts about how to proceed.
Cillizzac / The Fix:
House Democrats Extend '06 Gains to 30 Seats — House Democrats increased their 2006 election gains to 30 seats Tuesday, with former Rep. Ciro Rodriguez's (D) surprisingly convincing victory over Rep. Henry Bonilla (R) in a runoff election in Texas's massive 23rd District.
RELATED:
Audrey Hudson / Washington Times:
Muslim pilgrims urged to complain — American Muslims making a religious pilgrimage to Mecca are being encouraged to file civil rights complaints if they feel discriminated against by airlines. — The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), citing what it called the "airport profiling" …
Discussion:
Jihad Watch, Villainous Company, Little Green Footballs, Hot Air, Scared Monkeys, Stop The ACLU and Power Line
Julian E. Barnes / Los Angeles Times:
Pentagon's plan: More U.S. troops in Iraq — Boosting presence and aid, and an anti-Sadr offensive, carry risks but offer the best path to victory, military officials say. — WASHINGTON — As President Bush weighs new policy options for Iraq, strong support has coalesced in the Pentagon behind …
Ann Scott Tyson / Washington Post:
Army, Marine Corps To Ask for More Troops — The Army and Marine Corps are planning to ask incoming Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Congress to approve permanent increases in personnel, as senior officials in both services assert that the nation's global military strategy has outstripped their resources.
Nazila Fathi / New York Times:
Israel Fading, Iran's Leader Tells Deniers of Holocaust — A two-day gathering of Holocaust deniers and white supremacists ended Tuesday with President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad welcoming participants in his office and telling them Israel would not survive long. — "The Zionist regime …
Discussion:
Los Angeles Times, Agence France Presse, Captain's Quarters, Gateway Pundit and Matthew Yglesias
RELATED:
Carl Hulse / New York Times:
Democrats Consider Outside Ethics Panel — House Democrats are seriously exploring the creation of an independent ethics arm to enforce new rules on travel, lobbying, gifts and other issues that Democrats intend to put in place on taking power next month. — Senior party officials …
Jeff Greenfield / CNN:
Point of personal privilege — (CNN) — "Humor is the nitroglycerin of politics," a political analyst wrote long ago. "Very powerful, but if it's not handled carefully, it can explode in your face." — Actually, I wrote those words in a widely un-read book.
USA Today:
Majority say history won't be kind to Bush — WASHINGTON — History's view of George W. Bush will be harsh, Americans predict. — In a USA TODAY/Gallup Poll taken Friday through Sunday, a 54% majority says Bush will be judged as a below-average or poor president, more than double …
Discussion:
Taegan Goddard's …
Jonathan Clayton / Times of London:
Guilty of genocide: the leader who unleashed a 'Red Terror' on Africa — Ethiopia's brutal Marxist dictator, known as the African Pol Pot, became the first fallen leader to be found guilty yesterday of genocide in his own country after a 12-year trial. — Mengistu Haile Mariam …
Katharine Q. Seelye / New York Times:
More Journalists Join Political News Venture — Mike Allen, a reporter who covers the White House for Time magazine, and Roger Simon, the chief political correspondent for Bloomberg News, are joining the new multimedia political news venture being overseen by two former Washington Post journalists.
Matthew Hill / BBC:
Ukraine babies in stem cell probe — Healthy new-born babies may have been killed in Ukraine to feed a flourishing international trade in stem cells, evidence obtained by the BBC suggests. — Disturbing video footage of post-mortem examinations on dismembered tiny bodies raises serious questions about what happened to them.
Discussion:
Sister Toldjah
Alexander Bolton / The Hill:
Clinton hires faith guru — Burns Strider, one of the Democratic Party's leading strategists on winning over evangelicals and other values-driven voters, will join Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton (D-N.Y.) as she prepares to launch her 2008 presidential campaign.
James Peron / TCS Daily:
The Global Poor Are Getting Richer, Faster — In a report out today, The World Bank looks both at current economic growth rates and projections for the next 25 years. The report, Global Economics Prospects 2007 says "developing economies are projected to grow by 7.0 percent in 2006 …
Discussion:
Dean's World