------------------------------------------------------
            The Hardball Briefing On MSNBC
------------------------------------------------------
Four years and over 3,000 American lives later, has the war been worth it?  
Tonight on Hardball, we continue MSNBC's coverage of the "Iraq War: Four Years 
In," at 5 and 7 PM EST with a hard look at what's worked, what hasn't and 
what's ahead for our country and the people of Iraq.  Chris is back and we've 
assembled the NBC News team of reporters and the best resources to talk about 
the military plan, the veterans, how the new Congress is shaping what happens 
next, and the effect of the media's eye watching every turn in the war.

We'll begin tonight with one of the earliest critics of the war, Democratic 
party chairman Howard Dean.  Then, what's really happening on the ground?  
We'll have reports from NBC's Tom Aspell, live from Camp Victory in Iraq, and 
NBC News Middle East Correspondent and Beirut Bureau Chief Richard Engel.  This 
Wednesday at 10 PM EST, Engel shares his war zone diary - a raw video journal 
four years in the making - in a must-see documentary right here on MSNBC.  Get 
all the details: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17636144/.

The recent scandal at Walter Reed Army Medical Center cast a spotlight on the 
treatment of veterans returning home from war and led to a flood of complaints 
about other veterans' facilities across the country.  Tonight, an exclusive 
report from Newsweek's Jonathan Alter on the questionable deaths of veterans at 
one VA hospital on the West Coast.  Learn more here: 
http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/3032633.  Then, we'll talk to Iraq veteran Paul 
Hackett, a former U.S. House candidate in Ohio about what's being done to 
ensure the servicemen and women who serve in the Middle East are being treated 
properly at home.  Plus, after the heavy causalities and equally heavy 
criticism, does the military still support the war?  NBC Military Analyst Gen. 
Barry McCaffrey (Ret.) will share his insight.   

Newsweek's Howard Fineman and Paul Krugman from the New York Times will join 
Chris to talk about the how the media coverage of this war has been different 
from any other.  Read the latest from Fineman, "The Timid Politics of War" 
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17644884/site/newsweek/.  

MSNBC's Tucker Carlson, will report live from Capitol Hill where Iraq war 
protesters from MoveOn.org have gathered today, and we'll hear from Sen. Ben 
Nelson (D-NE), who voted against the Democrat's recently proposed pull-out plan 
for Iraq. 

And we'll have the latest on the scandal surrounding Attorney General Antonio 
Gonzales and the White House after eight U.S. attorneys were ousted in a mass 
Justice Department purging from Hardball's David Shuster.  Today's questions: 
will White House officials, including Karl Rove and former WH counsel Harriet 
Miers, testify about what happened?  And what information will be uncovered 
when the latest batch of internal White House emails is released?  

Stick around for another live Hardball at 7 PM EST, when we'll hear from:
- Andrew Card, former Bush chief of staff
- Sen. John Kerry (D-MA), a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee 
- NBC's Chief Pentagon Correspondent Jim Miklaszewski
- Paul Rieckhoff, executive director of Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of 
America and author of "Chasing Ghosts"
- Rep. Rahm Emmanuel (D-IL)
- '08 candidate Rep. Duncan Hunter (R-CA) and member of the House Armed 
Services Committee
- Time's Baghdad Bureau Chief Bobby Ghosh

For the latest on all of today's political news, go to the best political 
website www.politics.msnbc.com, powered by NBC News and the National Journal.  
Don't forget to check out NBC's "First Read" http://firstread.msnbc.msn.com/ 
and MSNBC.com's political calendar http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/14708421/.


Shelby Poduch compiled the "Hardball Briefing" from Washington, D.C.

=========================================
This e-mail is never sent unsolicited. You have received this The Hardball 
Briefing Newsletter newsletter because you subscribed to it or, someone 
forwarded it to you.

To remove yourself from the list (or to add yourself to the list if this 
message was forwarded to you) simply go to

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/7140407/, select unsubscribe, enter the email 
address receiving this message, and click the Go button.

Microsoft Corporation - One Microsoft Way - Redmond, WA 98052
MSN PRIVACY STATEMENT
http://privacy.msn.com <http://privacy.msn.com/>

Reply via email to