Puppet MastersS

Rocket

Japan to intercept any North Korea missile deemed a threat

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© Reuters/Issei KatoJapan's Defence Minister Itsunori Onodera (C) reviews troops from the Japanese Ground Self-Defense Force 1st Airborne Brigade during an annual new year military exercise at Narashino exercise field in Funabashi, east of Tokyo January 12, 2014.
Japan will strike any North Korean ballistic missile that threatens to hit Japan in the coming weeks after Pyongyang recently fired medium-range missiles, a government source said on Saturday.

Defense Minister Itsunori Onodera issued the order, which took effect on Thursday and runs through April 25, the day that marks the founding of North Korea's army, the source told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

Following the order, meant "to prepare for any additional missile launches," a destroyer was dispatched to the Sea of Japan and will fire if North Korea launches a missile that Tokyo deems in danger of striking or falling on Japanese territory, the source said.

Alarm Clock

Apparent suicide of CIA official in Virginia

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© Wikimedia
A senior CIA official has died in an apparent suicide this week from injuries sustained after jumping off a building in northern Virginia, according to sources close to the CIA.

CIA spokesman Christopher White confirmed the death and said the incident did not take place at CIA headquarters in McLean, Va.

"We can confirm that there was an individual fatally injured at a facility where agency work is done," White told the Washington Free Beacon. "He was rushed to a local area hospital where he subsequently died. Due to privacy reasons and out of respect for the family, we are not releasing additional information at this time."

A source close to the agency said the man who died was a middle manager and the incident occurred after the man jumped from the fifth floor of a building in Fairfax County.

Sheriff

LAPD officers tampered with in-car recording equipment

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© Mark Boster, Los Angeles TimesLAPD Chief Charlie Beck and other top officials learned about officers tampering with recording equipment last summer but chose not to investigate which officers were responsible.
An inspection by LAPD investigators found about half of the estimated 80 cars in one South L.A. patrol division were missing antennas.

Los Angeles police officers tampered with voice recording equipment in dozens of patrol cars in an effort to avoid being monitored while on duty, according to records and interviews.

An inspection by Los Angeles Police Department investigators found about half of the estimated 80 cars in one South L.A. patrol division were missing antennas, which help capture what officers say in the field. The antennas in at least 10 more cars in nearby divisions had also been removed.

LAPD Chief Charlie Beck and other top officials learned of the problem last summer but chose not to investigate which officers were responsible. Rather, the officials issued warnings against continued meddling and put checks in place to account for antennas at the start and end of each patrol shift.

Members of the Police Commission, which oversees the department, were not briefed about the problem until months later. In interviews with The Times, some commissioners said they were alarmed by the officers' attempts to conceal what occurred in the field, as well as the failure of department officials to come forward when the problem first came to light.

"On an issue like this, we need to be brought in right away," commission President Steve Soboroff said. "This equipment is for the protection of the public and of the officers. To have people who don't like the rules to take it upon themselves to do something like this is very troubling."

Handcuffs

House Republicans want criminal charges for Lois Lerner

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© M.Scott Mahaskey/POLITICOThe controversy erupted when Lerner admitted the IRS gave extra scrutiny to tea party groups.
The House Ways and Means Committee will vote this week to formally ask the Justice Department to pursue criminal charges against former IRS employee Lois Lerner, an official at the center of Republican probes of the matter.

The committee will mark up a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder on Wednesday accusing Lerner of committing three crimes relating to the IRS's targeting of conservative groups seeking tax exempt status, a Republican staffer said.

The controversy erupted in May when Lerner admitted the agency had given extra scrutiny to tea party groups - an acknowledgement that has cost a handful of agency employees their jobs, including its commissioner, and prompted a series of congressional investigations.

Life Preserver

Uncertainty looms as war-weary Afghanistan chooses new president

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© Reuters/Tim WimborneA policeman checks a motorist at a road block on election day in central Kabul April 5, 2014.
Afghans head to the polls on Saturday to replace outgoing President Hamid Karzai. Looming over the vote, though, are threats of Taliban violence, a poor economy dependent on outside aid, and the impending exit of many foreign security forces.

After 13 years of rule by Karzai, eight candidates are vying for the presidency. Three of them - former foreign ministers Abdullah Abdullah and Zalmay Rassoul, and former finance minister Ashraf Ghani - are considered the favorites.

Voters on Saturday will consider just where their country stands after well over a decade of widespread bloodshed and foreign occupation. Since the US-led invasion to oust the Taliban in 2001, at least 16,000 civilians, almost 3,500 foreign troops, and thousands of Afghan soldiers have been killed.

According to a UN report, at least 45 civilians were killed and 14 injured from US drone strikes in 2013 - triple the amount that occurred in 2012. US figures show the US launched over 500 drone strikes in Afghanistan last year.

Info

Political newcomer Kiska trounces PM Fico in Slovak presidential election

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© Reuters/David W. CernySlovakia's presidential candidate Andrej Kiska (R) is congratulated by his supporters at his party headquarters after the first unofficial results showed he won the presidential run-off elections in Bratislava March 29, 2014.
Philanthropist and former businessman Andrej Kiska trounced Prime Minister Robert Fico in Slovakia's presidential election on Saturday as voters feared Fico and his center-left party would amass too much power.

Results from over 99 percent of voting districts showed the politically unaffiliated Kiska leading the center-left prime minister by 59.4 percent to 40.6 percent.

Kiska, 51, rode a wave of anti-Fico sentiment among right-wing voters as well as distrust in mainstream political parties because of graft scandals and persistently high unemployment.

"In a little while, I will become the new president. I will be the president of all, I will stand behind every honest Slovak," Kiska told supporters at his campaign headquarters. "This is a great commitment."

Alarm Clock

Gazprom Neft CEO says ditch dollar, look east if sanctions escalate

Alexander Dyukov
© Reuters / Anton GolubevAlexander Dyukov
The oil arm of Gazprom says 95 percent of foreign partners are ready to do business in the euro. The company's CEO said it could divert exports to Asian markets should the West intensify sanctions.

A study reveals the task in changing currencies is achievable assured Aleksander Dyukov, the Gazprom Neft chief executive.

"This shows that in principle there is nothing impossible - you can switch from dollar to euro and from euro, in principle, to rubles," as Vedomosti quotes Mr Dyukov.

Dollar

The Supreme Court's relaxing of donation rules just made US elections even more undemocratic and corruptible

Supreme Court building
© Daderot/Wikimedia Creative Commons
The finance chairman of the Republican national committee, Ray Washburne, travelled to Chicago last Wednesday to solicit money from two big funders who had reached their donation limit for this election cycle. While he was on the plane, the supreme court ruled that there would no longer be any limits. Washburne told the New York Times that when he landed and heard the news, he said: "Eureka". He came back with promises of more cash.

It's the American Way. Just as the constitution ostensibly requires that AK47s be available on demand, it was also apparently designed to open the sluicegates to money in politics, until the entire landscape is flooded with cash and cynicism and the border between what is unethical and what is legal is washed away. It's what the funding fathers intended.

There are lots of areas of American society that could do with more money: preschools, infrastructure, mental health clinics, homeless shelters. The one place it's not needed is in politics. Even in this most polarised of moments, this is one of the few things on which most Americans agree. Indeed, support for limits on campaign donations is high among all income and education levels, party allegiances and political philosophies, and has remained consistent over the last five years. During that time, the supreme court has systematically removed many of the restrictions that did exist. In 2008 spending on the presidential election almost doubled compared with 2004. In 2012 it almost quadrupled compared with 2008. "Every presidential election is the most expensive ever. Elections don't get cheaper," the federal election chairwoman, Ellen Weintraub, told Politico.

Light Saber

Russia urges Ukraine to halt military preparations to avert civil war

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© EPA/Maxim Shipenkov Lavrov urges Kiev to build national dialogue with all regions
The Russian Foreign Ministry urged Ukraine to halt any interior military preparations, which could instigate a civil war in the country, the ministry was quoted as saying on its Facebook.com account.

According to numerous reports, Ukraine is redeploying special task police units from all over the country to the southeastern regions of Ukraine in a bid to thwart anti-government protests, which flared up over the weekend. "According to our information, units of the Interior troops and Ukraine's national guards as well as militants from the illegal armed formation 'The Right Sector' are being amassed in the southeastern parts of Ukraine and in the city of Donetsk," the ministry said.

"We are particularly concerned that the operation involves some 150 American mercenaries from a private company Greystone Ltd., dressed in the uniform of the [Ukrainian] special task police unit Sokol," the ministry said. "Organizers and participants of such incitement are assuming a huge responsibility for threatening upon the rights, freedoms and lives of Ukrainian citizens as well as the stability of Ukraine," the ministry added.

Eye 2

Lizard Liz Cheney: Nancy Pelosi's 'spine doesn't reach her brain' if she's not proud of torture

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Fox News contributor and failed Wyoming Senate candidate Liz Cheney on Tuesday defended her father by saying that House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi's (D-CA) "spine doesn't seem to reach her brain" because she wasn't proud of so-called enhanced interrogation used by the Bush administration.

In a Sunday interview with CNN, Pelosi has accused former Vice President Dick Cheney of encouraging torture by setting "a tone and an attitude for the CIA."

And when it came to news that the CIA had misled Congress on the effectiveness of waterboarding and other interrogation techniques, Pelosi speculated that the former vice president was "proud" of the misrepresentation.

Speaking to Fox News on Tuesday, Dick Cheney's daughter fired back at the California Democrat.