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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.

Bulb

Europe's top court nixes invasive phone and email data collection law

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© Shutterstock
Europe's top court on Tuesday struck down an EU law forcing telecoms operators to store private phone and email data for up to two years, judging it too invasive, despite its usefulness in combating terrorism.

By allowing EU governments to access the data, "the directive interferes in a particularly serious manner with the fundamental rights to respect for private life and to the protection of personal data," the European Court of Justice (ECJ) said.

Advocate General Pedro Cruiz Villalon declared the legislation illegal and told the European Union's 28 member states to take the necessary steps to withdraw it.

The decision to scupper the 2006 Data Retention Directive comes as Europe weighs concerns over electronic snooping in the wake of revelations about systematic US surveillance of email and telephone communications.

The revelation that US agencies collected data on millions of European citizens - and even tapped the phone of German Chancellor Angela Merkel - sparked a wave of controversy and prompted lawmakers on both sides of the Atlantic to rethink their data surveillance laws.

Megaphone

Jon Stewart rips Rumsfeld and Cheney: 'Look how f*cking proud' they are of torture

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Daily Show host Jon Stewart observed on Monday that, as the Senate moves closer to declassifying a report trashing the Central Intelligence Agency's "enhanced interrogation" techniques, the political figures behind it - including former Vice-President Dick Cheney - were resurfacing in the public eye.

"He's like the Wilford Brimley of torture," Stewart said of Cheney, before launching into an impression of Cheney doing a Brimley-like ad for waterboarding, gruffly calling it, "The right thing to do."

Stewart also showed footage of former Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld from Errol Morris' documentary The Unknown Known in which Rumsfeld parries a question about memos related to torture, blames the memos entirely on the Justice Department, then congratulates himself for, in his mind, stumping the questioner.

Sherlock

Meet the Americans who put together the coup in Kiev

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© APGeoffrey R. Pyatt, is the current United States Ambassador to Ukraine
If the US State Department's Victoria Nuland had not said "Fuck the EU," few outsiders at the time would have heard of Ambassador Geoffrey Pyatt, the man on the other end of her famously bugged telephone call. But now Washington's man in Kiev is gaining fame as the face of the CIA-style "destabilization campaign" that brought down Ukraine's monumentally corrupt but legitimately elected President Viktor Yanukovych.

"Geoffrey Pyatt is one of these State Department high officials who does what he's told and fancies himself as a kind of a CIA operator," laughs Ray McGovern, who worked for 27 years as an intelligence analyst for the agency. "It used to be the CIA doing these things," he tells Democracy Now. "I know that for a fact." Now it's the State Department, with its coat-and-tie diplomats, twitter and facebook accounts, and a trick bag of goodies to build support for American policy.

A retired apparatchik, the now repentant McGovern was debating Yale historian Timothy Snyder, a self-described left-winger and the author of two recent essays in The New York Review of Books - "The Haze of Propaganda" and "Fascism, Russia, and Ukraine." Both men speak Russian, but they come from different planets.

On Planet McGovern - or my personal take on it - realpolitik rules. The State Department controls the prime funding sources for non-military intervention, including the controversial National Endowment for Democracy (NED), which Washington created to fund covert and clandestine action after Ramparts magazine and others exposed how the CIA channeled money through private foundations, including the Ford Foundation. State also controls the far-better-funded Agency for International Development (USAID), along with a growing network of front groups, cut-outs, and private contractors. State coordinates with like-minded governments and their parallel institutions, mostly in Canada and Western Europe. State's "democracy bureaucracy" oversees nominally private but largely government funded groups like Freedom House. And through Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs Victoria Nuland, State had Geoff Pyatt coordinate the coup in Kiev.

Stormtrooper

Attorney General Eric Holder claims 'vast amount' of discretion in enforcing federal laws

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Attorney General Eric Holder
Attorney General Eric Holder said Tuesday that he has a "vast amount" of discretion in how the Justice Department prosecutes the laws that are on the books.

Holder's remarks, during testimony before the House Judiciary Committee, came in response to GOP accusations that he is flouting the law with its positions on marijuana legalization and criminal sentencing.

Leading the questioning was House Judiciary Committee Chairman Bob Goodlatte (R-Va.), who asked Holder whether he believed there were any limits to the administration's prosecutorial discretion.

"There is a vast amount of discretion that a president has - and more specifically that an attorney general has," Holder responded. "But that discretion has to be used in an appropriate way so that your acting consistent with the aims of the statute but at the same time making sure that you are acting in a way that is consistent with our values, consistent with the Constitution and protecting the American people."

Republicans on the panel grilled Holder on the Obama administration's decision not to interfere with marijuana legalization efforts in Colorado and elsewhere, as long as states establish adequate regulations.

War Whore

U.S. to send more troops to eastern Romania for "specific missions"

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Basescu: Troops Coming for 'Specific Missions'

The Russian annexation of Crimea has become a catch-all justification for the US to escalate its military presence virtually anywhere even remotely close, and today it was announced they are planning to send hundreds of ground troops to eastern Romania.

There are already 1,000 US troops in Mihail Kohalniceanu, and President Traian Basescu says the US has requested permission to add 600 more "for specific missions" in the Black Sea.

The letter announcing the request to Romania's parliament also reported the US plans an unspecified increase in the number of aircraft at the base, part of the US effort to increase its military might in the Black Sea region.

Despite making a huge deal of increasing their sway there, the Black Sea hasn't seen significant naval combat in generations, nor would there be any conceivable reason to expect Romania, a NATO member for the past decade, would even theoretically be a target for invasion by Russia, which doesn't border them.