A
summary of what's in
the
major
Posted Thursday, March
15, 2007, at 6:01 AM ET
31 Plots
Everybody leads with news
that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the suspected mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks,
confessed that he organized
those attacks, and quite a few more, at a military hearing on Saturday at
Mohammed's admission is
hardly a surprise. In its final report, the Sept. 11 commission discussed
several interrogation reports in which Mohammed allegedly took responsibility
for the attacks. But this was the first time Mohammed faced any sort of legal
proceeding and the first time he was able to make a long statement without
interrogators. During the proceedings in
In the hearing, Mohammed
expressed regret for some of the civilian deaths. "I'm not happy that 3,000 been
killed in
The New York
Times and Washington
Post point out it's not clear exactly how involved
Mohammed could have been in all the plots he detailed. The Sept. 11 commission
at one point described Mohammed as someone with extravagant ambitions who had a
vision
that was "a spectacle of destruction with KSM as the self-cast star, the
superterrorist." But the Los Angeles
Times quotes a terrorism expert, who says most of the
plots he described did seem to have some leadership from Mohammed. USA
Today points out that the majority of the targets
described by Mohammed "were not hit," such as the
The Mohammed confession
managed to take away some of the spotlight from the growing controversy
surrounding the Justice Department and the fired
The NYT and WSJ front, and everyone mentions,
President Bush saying that he still has confidence
in Gonzales but he pointed out that "mistakes" had been made and he
was "frankly not happy about" the way the Justice Department handled the
controversy. Specifically, Bush pointed to the changing explanations that were
given to Congress about the firings. In a Page One analysis, the Post says that the discrepancies
between the e-mails released this week and the previous statements made by
Justice Department officials "is quickly becoming the central issue for
lawmakers."
The WSJ Page One story says the controversy
surrounding Gonzales "has exposed a potentially serious vulnerability—he lacks a
significant base of support outside the White House." Conservatives never
particularly cared for Gonzales, but he always had Bush's support. Now that Bush
is an unpopular president, "having a power base of one" makes him more
vulnerable.
In a separate piece inside,
the WSJ points out that despite all
the information that has come out about the firings, it is still unclear exactly
why the
The LAT fronts a dispatch from
The NYT fronts administration officials
acknowledging that it will take
longer for the Iraqi government to reach a series of goals that the
Bush administration had said would be met by this month. Officials now say they
expect the goals to be met by the end of the year. This delay means that the
additional troops sent to
The Post's Reliable
Source reports that a profile of Patrick Fitzgerald posted on the BBC's Web
site yesterday quoted from what it said was the prosecutor's blog:
"Now that I am in Chicago and D.C. I have found ... the rampant graft and
corruption to be a travesty—a travesty of a mockery of a sham of a mockery of a
travesty of two mockeries of a sham." The line is actually from Woody Allen's Bananas and the blog is, of course, a
fake.
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