Saturday, June 29, 2013

29/06/13 14:11 - from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks

» Edward Snowden may be the last of the human spies | Christopher Steiner | Comment is free
29/06/13 14:11 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from World news and comment from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk. 'Edward Snowden and the teams of analysts at the NSA, CIA and GCHQ who sit in front of our stores of electronic intelligence will hardly be necessar..
» PRISM NSA leaker Edward Snowden’s gross miscalculation | Washington Times Communities
29/06/13 14:02 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from Latest entries for Intelligence and World Affairs. WEST PALM BEACH , FL, June 29, 2013 – When Edward Snowden elected to release classified information to the world, he apparently saw himself as a Lone ..
» Latin America is ready to defy the US over Snowden and other issues | Stephen Kinzer | Comment is free
29/06/13 13:59 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from World news and comment from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk. An automobile of the embassy of Equador appears at Sheremetyevo Airport where an Aeroflot flight from Hong Kong carrying Edward Snowden arrived on S..
» Edward Snowden has not weakened president, says Susan Rice | World news
29/06/13 13:55 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from World news and comment from the Guardian | guardian.co.uk. Susan Rice said Edward Snowden's NSA leaks were something 'we will get through, as we've gotten through all the issues like this in the past'. Photo..
» Contra George Mitchell, NSA Surveillance Is Not a Minor Issue - Conor Friedersdorf
29/06/13 13:53 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from Master Feed : The Atlantic. The former Senate majority leader suggested that controversies over surveillance, the IRS and Benghazi are distractions. Reuters In an item yesterday, I praised the considerable a..
» Review & Outlook: The President and the 'Hacker'
29/06/13 13:52 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . Keith Alexander, the general in charge of the National Security Agency, told ABC News on Sunday that intelligence revelations by fugitive contractor Edward Snowden had "caused irreversible and significant damag..
» Review & Outlook: The President and the 'Hacker'
29/06/13 13:50 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . Keith Alexander, the general in charge of the National Security Agency, told ABC News on Sunday that intelligence revelations by fugitive contractor Edward Snowden had "caused irreversible and significant damag..
» U.S. Backs Trans-Adriatic Pipeline Choice
29/06/13 13:30 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty. T he United States has welcomed the decision by the international consortium developing Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz gas field to choose the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline to del..
» Iran, Russia plan joint naval exercise in Caspian Sea: Russian cmdr.
29/06/13 13:29 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from PRESS TV RSS News. Iran, Russia plan joint naval exercise in Caspian Sea: Russian cmdr. A top Russian Navy commander says his country and Iran are examining a plan to conduct a join naval exercise in the Cas..
» Russia won the long battle of pipeline politics, but now what does it do?
29/06/13 13:27 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from Quartz. Russia has won a big round in an almost two-decade battle with the West over the flow of natural gas from the Caspian Sea. But the June 28 victory is a mixed one for Moscow, for it helps undermine th..
» Russian pro-, anti-gay activists clash, police detain dozens
29/06/13 13:19 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . ST PETERSBURG, Russia | Sat Jun 29, 2013 10:38am EDT ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) - Police detained dozens of people when pro- and anti-gay activists clashed in the Russian city of St Petersburg on Saturday,..
» U.S. bugged EU offices, computer networks: German magazine
29/06/13 13:06 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . BERLIN (Reuters) - The United States bugged European Union offices and gained access to EU internal computer networks, according to secret documents cited in a German magazine on Saturday, the latest in a serie..
» Putin Triumphant at the G-8
29/06/13 11:16 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . Putin Triumphant at the G-8 29 June 2013 The meeting between Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin on the sidelines of the G-8 summit in Northern Ireland left an impression that the White House is ready to cooperate ..
» Russia's Crackdown On 'Gay Propaganda' And Popular Illiberalism
29/06/13 11:11 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . Over at The Nation, Alec Luhn recently wrote a quite good summary of the recently-passed ban on “gay propaganda” and the generally perilous state of gay rights in Russia. I encourage everyone to rea..
» Is search for Edward Snowden turning into sideshow? | Detroit Free Press
29/06/13 10:39 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . Whisked out of a luxury Hong Kong hotel, vanishing into the mysterious wing of a Moscow airport, Edward Snowden’s continent-jumping, hide-and-seek game seems like the stuff of a pulp thriller — a de..
» While N.S.A. Leaker Stays in Hiding, Russian TV Builds a Pedestal for Him
28/06/13 22:57 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . MOSCOW — While Edward J. Snowden has remained mysteriously hidden from sight during his visit to Russia this week, Russian television has been making him a hero. On programs that were hastily arranged and..
» The Service of Snowden - NYTimes.com
28/06/13 22:56 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story . LONDON — Edward J. Snowden, the whistleblower on global U.S. surveillance, has been called all kinds of things by members of Congress over the past couple of weeks — including a “defector̶..
» Op-Ed Columnist: The Service of Snowden
28/06/13 21:29 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Global Opinion. Deluded geek endangering his country or brave American? History will judge Snowden kindly.         
» Letters: For Gays, a Very Personal, Emotional Moment
28/06/13 21:28 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Global Opinion. Two readers describe their feelings upon hearing about the Supreme Court decisions.         
» Opinionator: The Up-in-the-Air President
28/06/13 21:28 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Global Opinion. Obama’s policies are sound and have majority support. It’s his fear of taking the fight to Republicans that is so maddening.         
» Op-Ed Columnist: A Nation of Mutts
28/06/13 21:28 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Global Opinion. There’s a fluid, hybrid New America before us. What is this really going to look like? What does it mean?         
» Op-Ed Contributors: The Criminal N.S.A.
28/06/13 21:27 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Global Opinion. The N.S.A.’s mass surveillance violates the Constitution and has never been authorized by Congress or the courts.         
» The Same-Sex Marriage Rulings
28/06/13 21:26 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Editorials. Two decisions by the Supreme Court are huge victories for the gay rights movement, but we still have a long way to go.
» Immigration Reform, Finally
28/06/13 21:26 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from NYT > Editorials. The success of an ambitious bipartisan bill in the Senate puts pressure on the House, where prospects of passage are long.
» Russia debates letting Snowden in from the cold (+video) - Christian Science Monitor
28/06/13 21:19 from Mike Nova's Shared Newslinks
mikenova shared this story from Russia - Google News. Christian Science Monitor Russia debates letting Snowden in from the cold (+video) Christian Science Monitor Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden, who Russian offic..

Globalpost: Dirty money of Aliyev regime reached the U.S. - Politics - Panorama

Globalpost: Dirty money of Aliyev regime reached the U.S. - Politics - Panorama

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Baku hopes to buy itself a favorable opinion in DC, the chair of the Azerbaijani-Americans for Democracy, a non-profit US organization promoting support for democracy and human rights in Azerbaijan Elmar Chakhtakhtinski wrote in US news agency Globalpost.
The Article says that a large US delegation visited Azerbaijan’s capital Baku last month to take part in the US-Azerbaijan Conference. Different rights groups raised concerns with the high-profile American involvement in what they saw as a PR show by the corrupt and repressive government of Azerbaijan.
A good example of such viewpoint is the recent piece by George Friedman, “Why Azerbaijan should matter to America,” published online by Forbes Magazine, the author says.
Friedman heads a geopolitical intelligence firm Stratfor and he also was one of the speakers at the US-Azerbaijan convention in Baku. In his article, posted shortly after his return from the convention, he defends the ruling regime in Azerbaijan, highlighting the country’s importance to the US energy and security interests to counter the criticism over the lack of democracy.
However, as the article says, even a quick Google search would have revealed Azerbaijan's appalling record on human rights and democracy. High-level corruption and persecution of dissent in that country is well documented by the world’s most reputable rights organizations, US State Department’s annual reports and the international media.
Azerbaijan is led by a president who has been recognized as the “most corrupt person” in the world for 2012 by the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project (OCCRP). More and more facts keep emerging about the enormous wealth hidden in secretive offshore holdings by President Ilham Aliyev’s family and his close circle of minister-oligarchs.
The tainted wealth of Azerbaijan's ruling elite has reached American shores and entered DC lobbying scene. The Azerbaijan American Alliance (AAA) was founded in 2010 by Anar Mammadov, a playboy son of the Azerbaijan's corrupt transport minister Ziya Mammadov.
Before founding AAA, Anar Mammadov was known for suing a newspaper that published a story about him paying $1 million dollars at a restaurant to grill a live bear from the venue's small zoo. His father, Ziya Mammadov, is mentioned in Wikileaks cables and OCCRP reports as one of the top corrupt Azeri oligarchs.
Millions of dollars are paid by AAA to a DC-based firm Fabiani & Company to establish contacts with the US officials. Former congressman Dan Burton is hired as AAA's Chairman. House Speaker John Boehner, Senator John McCain and other members of Congress and the US government officials have attended extravagant receptions hosted by AAA.
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Snowden is the leaker we’ve got

Russia won the long battle of pipeline politics, but now what does it do?

U.S. Backs Trans-Adriatic Pipeline Choice

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The United States has welcomed the decision by the international consortium developing Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz gas field to choose the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline to deliver Caspian gas to Europe.
A State Department statement called the move "another important step in the process of advancing Europe’s energy security and promoting competition in the supply of energy resources."
The Trans-Adriatic Pipeline will  take gas from the Turkish border through Greece, Albania, and across the Adriatic Sea to Italy.
The move is seen as reducing European dependence on Russian energy supplies.
EU officials unveiled a "Southern Corridor" energy route plan in 2009. This is a network of pipelines aimed at bringing Caspian Basin gas to Europe via routes that avoid Russian territory.
Around a quarter of Europe’s gas is supplied by Russia.

Iran, Russia plan joint naval exercise in Caspian Sea: Russian cmdr.

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Iran, Russia plan joint naval exercise in Caspian Sea: Russian cmdr.
A top Russian Navy commander says his country and Iran are examining a plan to conduct a join naval exercise in the Caspian Sea in the second half of the current year.

Deputy Commander of Russia’s Caspian Flotilla Nikolai Yakubovsky announced the news after a Friday meeting with the commander of Iran’s naval fleet that has been dispatched to the Russian port city of Astrakhan, RIA Novosti reported. 

In 2009, the two countries conducted their first joint naval maneuvers in the Caspian Sea, involving about 30 vessels. 

Iran has dispatched two indigenously-built missile-launching warships to Astrakhan in a move to consolidate friendly relations between Tehran and Moscow. 

During the Iranian naval fleet’s stay at Astrakhan Port, the Iranian naval officers will visit some military and port facilities in Russia and hold meetings with a number of high-ranking Russian commanders and officials. 

On April 21, a group of Russian Navy warships docked at the southern Iranian port city of Bandar Abbas after a long journey from the Pacific Ocean. 

The fleet, which comprised Admiral Panteleyev anti-submarine destroyer and the logistic battleships Peresvet and Admiral Nevelskoi vessel with a crew of 712, entered the Iranian naval zone in a bid to further strengthen relations between Tehran and Moscow and promote bilateral naval cooperation to maintain maritime security. 

In recent years, Iran’s Navy has been increasing its presence in international waters to protect naval routes and provide security for merchant vessels and tankers. 

The Islamic Republic has repeatedly asserted that its overseas naval presence is meant to convey a message of peace and friendship to other countries. 

ASH/NN/HJL

Russia won the long battle of pipeline politics, but now what does it do?

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Russia has won a big round in an almost two-decade battle with the West over the flow of natural gas from the Caspian Sea. But the June 28 victory is a mixed one for Moscow, for it helps undermine the rationale for another Russian project—one that has been a key weapon in the country’s fight for energy dominance.
The story is tangled, and before we move to the details, let’s just identify one suprising winner—long-suffering Greece. It will fall along the transit route for the Trans-Adriatic Pipeline (TAP), which beat Western-backed Nabucco, the line over which the West has fought Russia since the mid-1990s.
With TAP’s victory, crows Greek prime minister Antonis Samaras, the world should understand that economically struggling Greece is on its way to recovery. After all, “who would invest money in a country facing economic, social and political threats?” Samaras said in a statement.

The US schemed to keep Russia out of its backyard

The story goes back to the collapse of the Soviet Union. Having defeated its Cold War rival, the US drew a figurative line around the southern half of the USSR—the eight new states of the Caucasus and Central Asia—and announced a strategy to keep them from ever falling again into Moscow’s grip.
The US plan was to back the construction of oil and natural gas pipelines to carry the region’s energy to Western markets, avoiding Russian soil, and thus bolster their economic independence. In 2006, the first line materialized—the 1,100-mile Baku-Ceyhan oil pipeline from Azerbaijan to the Mediterranean. A companion natural gas pipeline soon followed. That took care of the Caucasus side of the Caspian.
But the Central Asian states, the so-called “stans,” turned out differently. There, the US and Europe envisioned a roughly 3,500-mile (5,600-kilometer) natural gas line starting in Turkmenistan, crossing west over the Caspian, and going on through to Europe. Such a line would provide Central Asia with the same independent economic channel as the Caucasus now enjoyed.
Routes of the proposed trans-Caspian, Baku-Ceyhan and other pipelines.Thomas Blomberg/Wikimedia Commons
Only, Turkmenistan balked. Year after year, it could not seem to commit to the proposed line, or any onshore drilling deal with a Western company to produce the needed gas exports. Some said Turkmenistan was afraid of Russia; others blamed its deep suspicions of all foreigners. Whatever the case, hopes for a decisive Turkmen embrace of a trans-Caspian pipeline seemed lost.

Then the US decided to abandon Central Asia

In 2002, the West pivoted. It proposed a new, shorter pipeline called Nabucco (named after a Verdi opera), which would skip Turkmenistan and instead start in Azerbaijan. This proposal seemed to have a better chance of success, but completely ignored the line’s original rationale—Central Asia would no longer be rescued from Russia’s grip. But the US and the European Union argued that, while they were no longer saving Central Asia, they could rescue Europe, which, they asserted, relied far too much on Russian natural gas. The effort gained particular momentum after 2006, when Russia, in aseries of disputes with Ukraine, shut off the natural gas supply temporarily to Europe.
In 2007, Russia’s Vladimir Putin responded with his own weapon—he would build “South Stream,” a $39 billion, 1,500-mile pipeline that, in a direct challenge to Nabucco, would carry Russian gas to the heart of Europe.
South StreamCourtesy: South Stream
But it seemed to many experts that the two lines—Nabucco and South Stream—were incompatible. For reasons of both supply and demand, only one would be financed and built.
Meanwhile, smaller players emerged that muddied Nabucco’s prospects for success in Azerbaijan. Among them was TAP, a relatively small line that would carry just one third of the volume promised by Nabucco, but would also cost a lot less.
TAP, Nabucco and other Caspian rivalsTAP
The climax came June 28. A BP-led consortium in Azerbaijan announced that it would build TAP. The decision appears, at least at this stage, to have rested on the economics. TAP came in cheaper even when Nabucco shortened itself even further into a compact version that it called “Nabucco West”.
By keeping the pressure on Nabucco, Putin provided time and breathing room for TAP to make its case. And that resulted in a much diminished threat to Russia’s dominance of the European gas market. TAP will supply just 10 billion cubic meters (about 330 billion cubic feet) a year of gas compared to the 30 billion cubic meters (1 trillion cubic feet) a year of gas that Nabucco originally proposed to ship into the continent.

With no Nabucco, what is South Stream’s rationale?

So Russia’s South Stream pipeline might now seem to have a clear road ahead. Putin has not yet commented, but in the past he has said that he will build South Stream regardless of Nabucco’s fate. And a series of bilateral agreements along its route suggest a project etched into stone.
Yet the math is challenging. In order to finance big oil deals signed June 21 with China, Russia’s heavily indebted Rosneft had to get pre-payments from Beijing totaling $60 billion-$70 billion. In aspeech on June 28, Alexei Miller, the CEO of Russian gas giant Gazprom, boasted of plans for enormous liquefied natural gas (LNG) plants in Vladivostok and on the Baltic Sea, toward an aspiration to supply 15% of the world’s LNG. Such plants cost billions of dollars. In short, Russia has a lot of competing needs for its cash.
Meanwhile, the European market is uninviting: Gas competition is stiff from Norway, Qatar and potential supplies by the end of the decade from the US, Israel and Mozambique. Europe is also turning to cheaper coal. And its energy appetite as a whole is stagnant at best.
So there is reason to at least call South Stream’s economic calculus into question. And now that Nabucco is dead, there is no glory to be won in it either.
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Russian pro-, anti-gay activists clash, police detain dozens

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ST PETERSBURG, Russia | Sat Jun 29, 2013 10:38am EDT
ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) - Police detained dozens of people when pro- and anti-gay activists clashed in the Russian city of St Petersburg on Saturday, just two weeks after parliament passed a law banning homosexual "propaganda".