Top Items:
Lexington Herald-Leader:
Terror suspect gets 9 months in plea deal — AUSTRALIAN WILL SERVE HIS SENTENCE IN HOMELAND, CAN'T ALLEGE ABUSE — Australian David Hicks pleaded guilty at the Guant‡namo Bay Navy Base yesterday to supporting terrorism in exchange for a nine-month prison sentence under a plea deal …
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The Age:
Govt denies it sweetened Hicks' sentence — The federal government denies it sweetened David Hicks' sentence for its election convenience. — Hicks will walk free from an Adelaide jail next New Year's Day, even though the confessed terrorist was recommended a seven year sentence by a US military commission.
Michael Melia / Associated Press:
Australian Gitmo Detainee Gets 9 Months — AP Photo JHX103 — GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (AP) - An American military tribunal sentenced an Australian to nine months in prison Friday after he pleaded guilty to supporting terrorism - in the first conviction at a U.S. war-crimes trial since World War II.
Larry McShane / Associated Press:
Gallery told to shut down chocolate Jesus display — NEW YORK — A planned Holy Week exhibition of a nude, anatomically correct chocolate sculpture of Jesus Christ was canceled Friday after Cardinal Edward Egan and other outraged Roman Catholics complained.
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Kansas City Star:
Catholics outraged at `My Sweet Lord' chocolate crucifix display
Catholics outraged at `My Sweet Lord' chocolate crucifix display
Discussion:
The American Street
Anne Flaherty / Associated Press:
Pelosi Going to Syria Despite Objections — WASHINGTON (AP) - House Speaker Nancy Pelosi will visit Syria, a country President Bush has shunned as a sponsor of terrorism, despite being asked by the administration not to go. — "In our view, it is not the right time to have these sort …
Discussion:
The Reaction, Scared Monkeys, Booman Tribune, Tammy Bruce, DownWithTyranny!, Roger L. Simon, Think Progress and Sister Toldjah
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Jeff Zeleny / New York Times:
Planned Visit to Syria by Pelosi Is Under Fire From White House — A planned visit to Syria next week by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi drew criticism on Friday from the White House, which accused the Democratic Congressional leader of failing to heed the administration's admonitions against travel to Damascus.
Telegraph:
Paraded on TV again, their ordeal goes on — Fears were growing last night that the captured British sailors and Royal Marines would suffer a lengthy incarceration as the propaganda war took a menacing turn. — Diplomats are worried that the Government could find itself trapped …
Discussion:
Power Line
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Peter Baker / Washington Post:
At Walter Reed, Bush Offers an Apology — After Touring Hospital and Visiting Patients, He Vows to 'Fix the Problem' — President Bush yesterday paid his first visit to Walter Reed Army Medical Center since the uproar over shoddy conditions at the facility and emerged after a two-hour tour …
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Jim Rutenberg / New York Times:
Ex-Aide Details a Loss of Faith in the President — In 1999, Matthew Dowd became a symbol of George W. Bush's early success at positioning himself as a Republican with Democratic appeal. — A top strategist for the Texas Democrats who was disappointed by the Bill Clinton years …
Discussion:
The Mahablog
Steven Erlanger / New York Times:
Olmert Rejects Right of Return for Palestinians — Prime Minister Ehud Olmert said in interviews published Friday that Israel would not allow a single Palestinian refugee to return to what is now Israel, and that the country bore no responsibility for the refugees because their plight resulted …
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Bill Hess / svherald.com:
Kurd describes 'traumatized' Iraq, why his people worry about U.S. — SIERRA VISTA — The Kurds in Iraq are afraid they will again be left in a lurch if American troops are forced to leave next year, the Kurdistan representative to the United States said Thursday.
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Edward Wong / New York Times:
Shiite Cleric Condemns U.S. as His Militia Takes to Streets
Shiite Cleric Condemns U.S. as His Militia Takes to Streets
Discussion:
The Daily Dish
WSJ.com: Washington Wire:
'A Very Spartan Operation' — Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee, who's running for the 2008 Republican presidential nomination, established a low bar for rivals to clear in disclosing his initial campaign contribution totals. At a breakfast with reporters in Washington …
Steven R. Weisman / New York Times:
In Big Shift, U.S. Imposes Tariffs on Chinese Paper — The Bush administration, in a major escalation of trade pressure on China, said Friday that it would reverse more than 20 years of American policy and impose potentially steep tariffs on Chinese manufactured goods on the ground that China …
Pajamas Media:
BAGHDAD DISPATCH: MIDNIGHT COMPANY — "I often find myself in arguments with people about the behavior of American soldiers when they search homes. Many of the people I talk to base their argument and negative impression on the footage of some raids we see on TV or on experiences of presumed relatives or friends.
Discussion:
Wizbang
Nicola Boden / Sydney Morning Herald:
Iran will punish 'guilty' British sailors: diplomat — On video ... Nathan Thomas Summers, left, with other British captives in Iran. — IRANIAN authorities have started legal proceedings against the British military personnel it has seized and said they would be punished if found guilty, Iran's ambassador to Moscow said last night.
Discussion:
The Strata-Sphere
Matthew Kaminski / Opinion Journal:
Joschka Fischer's Strange Trip — From street radical to the German foreign ministry—and now to Princeton. — PRINCETON, N.J.—"You have to try this," says the Frederick H. Schultz Class of 1951 Professor of International Economic Policy at Princeton, pushing his cup my way with an impish grin.
Andrew Sullivan / The Daily Dish:
An American Conscience — More and more military prosecutors are refusing to prosecute "enemy combatants" in the terror war. Why? Not because some of these combatants are innocent. Many are not. But because many have been subjected to torture by the U.S.. From the WSJ today (subscription only, alas):