Top Items:
Washington Post:
White House, Joint Chiefs At Odds on Adding Troops — The Bush administration is split over the idea of a surge in troops to Iraq, with White House officials aggressively promoting the concept over the unanimous disagreement of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, according to U.S. officials familiar with the intense debate.
Discussion:
Balloon Juice, Talking Points Memo, Grasping Reality …, The Carpetbagger Report, Right Wing Nut House, jules crittenden, NO QUARTER, PoliBlog (TM), The Heretik, The Impolitic, CNN Political Ticker, Political Animal, Middle Earth Journal, AMERICAblog, Unfogged, Taylor Marsh, Matthew Yglesias, Unclaimed Territory, On Deadline, Discourse.net, Hullabaloo, Suburban Guerrilla, Outside The Beltway, White House and WTF Is It Now??
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Julian E. Barnes / Los Angeles Times:
Sadr Army is called top threat in Iraq — A Pentagon report cites the danger of the Shiite cleric's militia. — WASHINGTON — Armed militiamen affiliated with radical Shiite Muslim cleric Muqtada Sadr pose the gravest danger to the security and stability of Iraq, surpassing Sunni Arab insurgents …
New York Times:
Attacks in Iraq at Record High, Pentagon Says — A Pentagon assessment of security conditions in Iraq concluded Monday that attacks against American and Iraqi targets had surged this summer and autumn to their highest level, and called violence by Shiite militants the most significant threat in Baghdad.
Ann Scott Tyson / Washington Post:
Pentagon Cites Success Of Anti-U.S. Forces in Iraq — The Pentagon said yesterday that violence in Iraq soared this fall to its highest level on record and acknowledged that anti-U.S. fighters have achieved a "strategic success" by unleashing a spiral of sectarian killings by Sunni …
Claudia Rosett / New York Sun:
Mystery Surfaces Over Apartment of Kofi Annan — As Secretary-General Annan prepares to leave his post at the United Nations, a mystery is surfacing surrounding his apartment on Roosevelt Island, subsidized by New York taxpayers, which is still in use by the family of his brother, Kobina Annan.
Discussion:
The Rosett Report, The Corner, Joe's Dartblog, Assorted Babble, jules crittenden, Don Surber and Slublog
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Stephen Dinan / Washington Times:
Conservatives fear tax-increase deal — The Bush administration has sent signals since last month's elections that the president is prepared to accept some tax increases on upper-income families, worrying congressional Republicans and fiscal conservative watchdogs who say he will compromise …
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Neil A. Lewis / New York Times:
Senator Removes His Block on Federal Court Nominee — Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, who blocked the confirmation of a woman to the federal bench because she attended a same-sex commitment ceremony for the daughter of her long-time neighbors, says he will now allow a vote on the nomination.
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Nazila Fathi / New York Times:
Election Seen as Setback for Iran's President — Partial returns from Friday's Iranian elections suggested today that President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad had experienced a major setback barely over a year after his own election. — The victory of a pragmatic politician, Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani …
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James Glanz / New York Times:
Iraq Insurgents Starve Capital of Electricity — Over the past six months, Baghdad has been all but isolated electrically, Iraqi officials say, as insurgents have effectively won their battle to bring down critical high-voltage lines and cut off the capital from the major power plants to the north, south and west.
E. J. Dionne Jr / Washington Post:
'The Real America,' Redefined — When a nation alters its philosophical direction and changes its assumptions, there is no press release to announce the shift, no news conference where The People declare that they have decided to move down a different path.
Zachary Coile / San Francisco Chronicle:
Pelosi seeks input from diverse array of confidants — (12-19) 04:00 PST Washington — All eyes in the capital are fixed on Rep. Nancy Pelosi of San Francisco as she prepares to be sworn in Jan. 4 as the nation's first female House speaker. But less notice has been paid to the lawmakers …
Discussion:
TIME
BBC:
Libya sentences medics to death — A Libyan court has sentenced five Bulgarian nurses and a Palestinian doctor to death for knowingly infecting hundreds of Libyan children with HIV. — The medics have been in detention since 1999, during which time 52 of the 426 infected children have died of Aids.
Mark Tapscott / Examiner:
Pelosi preparing new shackles for free speech — WASHINGTON - Incoming House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has cooked up with Public Citizen's Joan Claybrook a "lobbying reform" that actually protects rich special interests and activists millionaires while clamping new shackles on citizens …
Discussion:
Blue Crab Boulevard
Corey Kilgannon / New York Times:
Please Let It Be Whale Vomit, Not Just Sea Junk — MONTAUK, N.Y. — In this season of strange presents from relatives, Dorothy Ferreira got a doozy the other day from her 82-year-old sister in Waterloo, Iowa. It was ugly. It weighed four pounds. There was no receipt in the box.
Salena Zito / PittsburghLIVE.com:
Unabashed, Santorum soldiers on — TRIBUNE-REVIEW — Rick Santorum says he will remain a vocal advocate of America's war on terror — what he calls "the greatest problem ... a very grave threat to the future and security of our country" — despite losing his U.S. Senate seat.