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Not a Green-Letter Day on Capitol Hill
In late February, prosecutors charged Nachman, 42, with making videos of himself having sex with girls as young as 14 in Congo and Brazil, where he was vice consul for several years. Prosecutors said he had his maid film the sex, which they said occurred "inside United States provided housing."
In April, Nachman copped a plea to possession of child pornography but acknowledged making the videos. Prosecutors also accused him of pressuring attractive Brazilian visa applicants for sex, but those allegations were not part of the criminal case.
Shortly after the hearing, Nachman, looking at nine to 11 years in prison under federal guidelines and held in jail pending sentencing, asked the judge in the case, Gerald Bruce Lee, to preside over his marriage to his 21-year-old fiancee, a Brazilian woman who lives in Maryland. The judge turned down the request.
Sentencing, which had been set for Friday, has been rescheduled for Aug. 22. Get there early for good seats.
Karzai: A Lover, Not a Fighter
This presidential campaign features war rooms on steroids, with each side wasting not a second to disparage the other. So late Friday afternoon, Republican National Committee spokesman Alex Conant fired off an e-mail rebuking Sen. Barack Obama for his criticism of Afghanistan's president, Hamid Karzai.
Here's the e-mail sent to reporters:
Subject: RNC React to Obama's Criticism of Karzai in CNN interview
All -- CNN just aired an interview where Obama asserts "the Karzai government has not gotten out of the bunker" -- ignoring the multiple assignation attempts on President Karzai. Here is an RNC response:
"Barack Obama had no interest in Afghanistan until he started running for president . . . yet he is audacious enough to assert that President Karzai has 'not gotten out of the bunker'. Obama's words are naively out-of-touch with reality . . . " -- Alex Conant, RNC Spokesman
Karzai constantly fends off advances from fashion models and movie stars. Maybe it's that hat? Or the cape?
Dissent Writ Small
President Bush, brushing aside opposition from human rights activists, has decided to attend the opening ceremonies of the Olympics in Beijing next month. But that doesn't mean critics of China's dreadful human rights record can't find ways to record their views. Take the recently signed supplemental appropriations bill for foreign operations, which contained this little tidbit:
TIBET Sec. 1412. . . . [U]p to $5,000,000 shall be made available to establish a United States Consulate in Lhasa, Tibet. (b) The Department of State should not consent to opening a consular post in the United States by the People's Republic of China until such time as the People's Republic of China consents to opening a United States consular post in Lhasa, Tibet.
Notice, however, the use of the word "should." That means that while State can give the Chicoms another consulate in this country, the department knows that folks on the Hill will not be happy. Meanwhile, that $5 million is likely to remain "available" for a long time.
Sound, Fury
On Friday, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates announced that President Bush has nominated Marine Col. William M. Faulkner"for appointment to the rank of brigadier general." The announcement continued: "Faulkner is currently serving as the commander, 3d Marine Logistics Group in Okinawa, Japan."
And F. Scott Fitzgerald said there were no second acts in American lives.



