1. The U.S. military's top officer charged Thursday that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, in releasing tens of thousands of secret documents, had endangered the lives of American troops and Afghan informants who have assisted U.S. forces. Joint Chiefs of Staff - Wikileaks - United States - United States armed forces - Classified information
    Washington Post - Jul 29 09:00pm
  2. Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike Mullen will appear along with lawmakers to discuss the war. Read more...
    The Hill - Jul 31 09:14am
  3. Guests to be interviewed Sunday on major television talk shows: Talk radio - Radio - ChelseaLately - Arts - Formats
    Washington Post - Jul 31 09:00pm
  4. Before the online site WikiLeaks published a trove of classified documents about the Afghanistan war, government investigators interviewed Boston-area acquaintances of a military analyst charged with providing other documents to the site in an effort to prevent additional leaks, according to one ... Wikileaks - Business - Security - Investigation - Fire and Security
    Washington Post - Jul 31 09:00pm
  5. WASHINGTON, July 30: Chairman of the US Joint Chiefs of Staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, has asked the Pakistani spy agency to “strategically shift its focus” as any ties with the terrorist outfits that had come to light in the wake of the WikiLeaks episode was unacceptable.
    Pakistani Newspaper - Jul 30 10:27pm
  6. Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen is ordinarily a mild-mannered man. But they could barely contain his anger on Thursday at WikiLeaks for publishing tens of thousands of secret documents about the Afghanistan war.
    Wired News - Jul 29 04:33pm
  7. Turns out the Joint Chiefs of Staff's assessment that Wikileaks would have "blood" on its hands may be right
    AnandTech - Jul 30 01:34pm
  8. Guests on today’s TV news shows: • ABC’s “This Week,” 9:30 a.m. — House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, California Democrat; Defense Secretary Robert Gates .
    The Kansas City Star - Jul 31 07:30pm
  9. Letters on safety for Seeing Eye dogs, the bear hunt, Governor Christie's plans for gambling, Atlantic City and the Meadowlands,
    The Record and Herald News - Jul 31 11:27pm
  10. America is one of many countries that forbid openly gay people to serve in the military. Others are: Cuba, China, Egypt , Greece, Iran , North Korea , Pakistan, Yemen, Saudi Arabia , Singapore, South Korea , Turkey and Venezuela . See a pattern? With a few exceptions, those are not countries where free people want to live. By contrast, Australia, the United Kingdom, Israel , Belgium, Canada, the ...
    Post-Tribune - 57 minutes ago