Top Items:
Richard Cohen / Washington Post:
The Runaway Train That Hit Scooter Libby — The attorney general called a meeting. He assembled all the U.S. attorneys in the Great Hall of the Justice Department and told them, in essence, that their chief responsibility was to decide whom not to prosecute.
Michael Yon:
Be Not Afraid … [From a prayer card I found on a base in Anbar Province, Iraq.] — Thoughts flow on the eve of a great battle. By the time these words are released, we will be in combat. Few ears have heard even rumors of this battle, and fewer still are the eyes that will see its full scope.
Discussion:
Captain's Quarters, National Review, CNN, Mudville Gazette, QandO, BLACKFIVE, Confederate Yankee and Jules Crittenden
RELATED:
Washington Post:
U.S. Forces Target Insurgents in New Operation — U.S. troops backed by helicopters and Bradley Fighting Vehicles launched a major offensive Tuesday to clear the Sunni extremist group al-Qaeda in Iraq from its new stronghold in Diyala province north of the capital, the U.S. military said in a statement.
Fouad Ajami / New York Times:
Brothers to the Bitter End — SO the masked men of Fatah have the run of the West Bank while the masked men of Hamas have their dominion in Gaza. Some see this as a tolerable situation, maybe even an improvement, envisioning a secularist Fatah-run state living peacefully alongside Israel and a small …
RELATED:
Andrew Cohen / Bench Conference:
The Price of Blind Loyalty — For months now we've talked about how the scandal at the Justice Department would have a terrible impact upon the government's ability to adequately and accurately enforce and ensure the rule of law. Now we are beginning to see precisely how this is happening.
RELATED:
Karen DeYoung / Washington Post:
Administration Struggles With Interrogation Specifics
Administration Struggles With Interrogation Specifics
Discussion:
Think Progress
Donna St. George / Washington Post:
Getting Lost in the Great Indoors — Many Adults Worry Nature Is Disappearing From Children's Lives — Linda Pelzman appreciates the beauty of the outdoor world, sometimes pulling her children into the yard to gaze at a full moon or peer into a dense fog.
Agence France Presse:
Pakistan says Rushdie knighthood may spark terrorism — Pakistan demanded on Monday that Britain withdraw a knighthood awarded to author Salman Rushdie, as a government minister said the honour gave a justification for suicide attacks by Muslims. — Angry protesters in several cities …
RELATED:
Heritage Foundation:
How High Will Gas Prices Go? — A state by state analysis — Mouse over map to view breakdown by state. — Based on a review of the energy legislation currently before the U.S. Senate, S. 1419, including the just completed section on tax changes, the price of regular unleaded gasoline …
safo2008.com:
Senator Obama Responds to the Indian American Community — On Monday, June 18, Senator Barack Obama issued the following statement in response to the concerns expressed by the Indian American community regarding the Hillary Clinton opposition research memo.
RELATED:
Ed Morrissey / Captain's Quarters:
Hillary — Inevitable? — The line on Hillary Clinton in this election cycle has her as an inevitability for the Democratic presidential nomination. Despite misgivings over her strong negatives, the Democrats have not seen any candidate of substance challenging her in the primaries.
Discussion:
Comments From Left Field
RELATED:
Charlie Savage / Boston Globe:
US agencies disobey 6 laws that president challenged — Officials regarded some as advisory — WASHINGTON — Federal officials have disobeyed at least six new laws that President Bush challenged in his signing statements, a government study disclosed yesterday.
Glenn Kessler / Washington Post:
Embassy Staff In Baghdad Inadequate, Rice Is Told — Ambassador's Memo Asks for 'Best People' — Ryan C. Crocker, the new U.S. ambassador to Iraq, bluntly told Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice in a cable dated May 31 that the embassy in Baghdad — the largest and most expensive U.S. embassy …
The Politico:
Republican candidates begin snubbing Bush — A president with dismal approval ratings and a bitter intraparty rupture over immigration are obvious problems for Republican politicians. — In recent days, however, the combination is emerging as something less obvious: an opportunity.
CBS News:
Iraqi Orphanage Nightmare — Exclusive: U.S. Troops Discover And Rescue Orphan Boys Left Starving, Chained To Beds — (CBS) It was a scene that shocked battle-hardened soldiers, captured in photographs obtained exclusively by CBS News. — On a daytime patrol in central Baghdad …
Diane Cardwell / New York Times:
U.S. Is 'Really in Trouble,' Says Bloomberg, Sounding Like a Candidate — Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg, sounding every inch the presidential candidate he insists he is not, brought his message of pragmatic, nonpartisan leadership to California on Monday, telling a crowd of Google employees that the nation was "really in trouble."
Roger Simon / The Politico:
You're nobody until somebody pardons you — When he was 13 years old, Anthony Circosta shot another kid in the arm with a BB gun, which was not a nice thing to do. — And even though Circosta's shot did not break the kid's skin, Circosta was convicted of assault.
The Hill:
Few senators read Iraq NIE report — Only a handful of senators outside the Intelligence Committee say they read the full 92-page National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq's ability to attack the U.S. before voting to go to war, according to a survey conducted by The Hill.
Scott Helman / Boston Globe:
McCain voices optimism on immigration plan — Says his support for measure has affected campaign — Senator John McCain had a wide-ranging interview yesterday with reporters and editors at the Globe. (MICHELE McDONALD/GLOBE STAFF) — Senator John McCain of Arizona said yesterday that he was …