Brig. Gen. Stephen Lanza lauds Iraqi Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki for focusing on rebuilding, rather than rushing to assign blame as he did in the wake of the Aug. 19 bombings.
US helicopters are flying in Afghanistan and Iraq three to five times more than they would in peacetime. With two helicopter crashes, Afghanistan saw its worst day for US deaths in more than four years on Monday.
Two pilots who flew past the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport told investigators that they were distracted by a discussion of a new crew-scheduling system.
Doctors and patients remain unsure whether some critical medicines used to treat illnesses like cancer and heart disease are actually beneficial, investigators found.
AP - Health care legislation heading for the Senate floor will give millions of Americans the option of purchasing government-run insurance coverage, Majority Leader Harry Reid announced Monday, although he stopped short of claiming the 60 votes needed to pass a plan steeped in controversy. Reid, D-Nev., said individual states would have the choice of opting out of the program.
AP - Not sleeping, the pilots say. They were engrossed in a complicated new crew-scheduling program on their laptop computers as their plane flew past its Minneapolis landing by 150 miles — a cockpit violation of airline policy that could cost them their licenses.
AP - President Barack Obama mourned 14 Americans killed Monday in helicopter crashes in Afghanistan and told a military audience he will not be hurried as he evaluates whether to alter U.S. strategy in the war.
Two helicopter crashes Monday in Afghanistan killed 14 Americans, NATO said. Three DEA agents died. "They were doing this nation proud," President Obama said.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid announced that he intends to move forward with a health care bill including a public insurance option allowing states to opt out.
The pilots of the jetliner that last week overshot its destination by about 150 miles have said they were using their laptops and lost track of time, federal safety officials said.