Thursday, August 1, 2013

Obama may scrap Putin summit over Snowden asylum: Spokesman

President Barack Obama may retaliate for Moscow?s decision to give NSA leaker Edward Snowden temporary asylum by canceling a planned summit early next month with Russian President Vladimir Putin, the White House warned Thursday.

Press secretary Jay Carney told reporters that the U.S. had no advance notice of Russia?s decision and that the president is ?extremely disappointed.?

"He's not a dissident. He?s not a whistle-blower. He?s been charged with a crime,? the spokesman said of Snowden, stressing that Washington would keep pushing Moscow over the issue.

Obama had been scheduled to attend a Group of 20 countries summit in St. Petersburg, Russia, Sept. 5-6 and hold a one-on-one meeting with Putin in Moscow beforehand. But Carney said that plan was now at risk.

?We are evaluating the utility of a summit in light of this and other issues, but I have no announcement today on that,? Carney said. ?Our relationship with Russia, as is the case with other important countries around the world, is based in realism.?

Unless the White House is suddenly in the business of scheduling summits that have no ?utility,? an Obama-Putin summit could have been expected to make progress on issues like confronting Iran over its suspect nuclear program, or paving the way for the withdrawal of U.S.-led forces from Afghanistan, or Middle East peace, or nuclear arms control, or Syria?s civil war, or energy issues or counter-terrorism. Carney did not explain how the Snowden decision reshuffled that diplomatic deck, or how scrapping the talks would affect those critical matters.

?There is no question that there are a range of issues ? setting aside the disposition of Mr. Snowden ? on which we are currently in a disagreement with Russia,? Carney said.

?We have, over the past four and a half years, engaged with Russia in a way that has tried to move forward where we disagree and to move even further forward in areas where we can come to an agreement,? he added.

But Obama believes that ?there is a usefulness in engaging? countries with which the U.S. does not have ?purely harmonious relations.?

Carney's comments came after Republican Sens. John McCain and Lindsey Graham issued a thundering joint statement on the latest Snowden development, declaring "now is the time to fundamentally rethink our relationship with Putin's Russia."

?Russia?s action today is a disgrace and a deliberate effort to embarrass the United States. It is a slap in the face of all Americans," the lawmakers said. "We need to deal with the Russia that is, not the Russia we might wish for."

The two lawmakers suggested steps like broadening a law that targets alleged human rights violators in Russia, stepping up U.S. missile defense work in Europe, expanding NATO to include the former Soviet Republic of Georgia, or challenging the politically fraught convictions of high-profile Putin critics.

"And perhaps most importantly, we should speak out on behalf of the many people in Russia who increasingly are finding the courage to peacefully demand greater freedom, accountability and rule of law in Russia," the senators said.
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?Today?s action by Putin?s Russia should finally strip away the illusions that many Americans have had about Russia the past few years," McCain and Graham said. "We have long needed to take a more realistic approach to our relations with Russia, and hopefully today we finally start.?

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/-obama-may-scrap-putin-summit-over-snowden-asylum--spokesman-181116365.html

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Monday, July 29, 2013

Franklin, Ledecky shine, but US misses Phelps

BARCELONA, Spain (AP) ? With Michael Phelps cheering from the stands and a big assist from a teammate, Missy Franklin got off to a thrilling start in her own quest to win eight gold medals at the world championships.

Too bad the U.S. men didn't have Phelps for their relay.

Megan Romano turned in a brilliant anchor leg to ensure Franklin of a gold in the women's 400-meter freestyle relay Sunday evening, chasing down the Australians in the last, furious strokes.

Coming off a starring role at the London Olympics, Franklin is now one-for-one in Barcelona.

Seven more to go.

"Oh, my gosh, it was amazing!" said Franklin, who clutched hands with teammate Natalie Coughlin at the edge of the pool as they cheered on Romano. "We knew Megan could do it."

Overall, it was good start for the American team on the first night of pool swimming at the arena atop Montjuic. Katie Ledecky, still only 16 and preparing to start her junior year of high school, nearly broke the world record while winning the women's 400 free. Connor Jaeger pulled out a bronze in the men's 400 free, which was won in dominating fashion by China's Sun Yang.

It looked as though the final race of the night would produce another red, white and blue celebration.

Turns out it did ? but it was Le Tricolore that waved throughout the Palau Sant Jordi when the French rallied to snatch the gold away from the Americans in the men's 400 free relay.

In a repeat of their stirring comeback at last summer's Olympics, Jeremy Stravius chased down Jimmy Feigen to set off a wild celebration among the huge French contingent in the stands.

"I actually didn't even see them until the last five meters," Feigen said. "Maybe I should have paid more attention to them."

Maybe the result would have been different if Phelps had not retired after London. He is in Barcelona to make some promotional appearances and attend the evening finals, but only as a fan. The swimming world is abuzz with speculation that he's planning a comeback, but not yet.

"He was texting me," said Bob Bowman, coach of the U.S. men's team and Phelps' longtime mentor. "He was disappointed we got beat. He was just giving me his critique. It was right on."

Of course, Phelps was on the relay team that lost in London. He helped give the Americans what looked to be a commanding lead, but Ryan Lochte couldn't hold off Yannick Agnel's furious charge for gold on the anchor leg.

This time, Agnel went out first for the French, and he was next-to-last when he handed off to Florent Manaudou. France was still only fourth after a blistering 100 by Fabien Gilot (the fastest of the night, 46.90). The U.S. was slightly ahead of the Australians when Anthony Ervin passed it off to Feigen.

He couldn't hold off Stravius, who touched the wall in 3 minutes, 11.18 seconds. The Americans took silver in 3:11.42, while Russia claimed the bronze in 3:11.44. The Aussies faded to fourth.

Phelps was in no shape to swim, even if he wanted to. He arrived at the arena wearing a boot cast on his right foot, having sustained some sort of minor stress fracture that apparently worsened from playing golf.

"I tried to get him on the relay but he didn't want to do it," U.S. assistant coach Mike Bottom said jokingly. "Bob actually was giving him a tough time. He was like, 'Hey, you ready to go? Let's go.' But he was limping around."

Even so, Agnel was asked whether he was glad to see Phelps in the stands rather than in the pool.

"I don't understand the question," the Frenchman quipped.

No swimmer has ever won eight golds at the world championships. Phelps came oh-so-close in 2007 when he won his first seven events but never got a chance in the eighth. The Americans were disqualified in the preliminaries of the 400 medley relay while Phelps was resting up to swim in the final.

The following year, of course, he won a record eight golds on a much bigger stage, the Beijing Olympics.

Franklin, now 18 and getting ready to go off to college at Cal-Berkeley, won four golds and a bronze in London. She just missed out on medals in the 100 and 200 free ? events she will again swim at the worlds along the 50 back, a non-Olympic event.

"I'm right where I was last summer, which gives me a lot of confidence going into the rest of the meet," Franklin said. "I think I am a little stronger in my backstrokes than my freestyles, but I've done a lot of work on my freestyle the past year so I really hope that it's going to be up there."

She was far behind on the opening leg after a blistering start by Australia's Cate Campbell. Coughlin and Shannon Vreeland chipped away at the Aussie lead before Romano finished the job. She edged Coutts by 0.12 seconds with a winning time of 3:32.43. The Netherlands finished another 3 seconds behind for the bronze.

"I just love to race. And relays are awesome," Romano said. "It's great competing for these girls next to me. I was doing it for them. It's fun and I love it. I can't not go fast."

Ditto for Ledecky, who's also planning a grueling program at these worlds that includes the 800 and 1,500 free. It looks likes she can handle the load, her star still on the rise after a stunning gold medal in the 800 at the London Olympics when she was a complete unknown internationally.

"It is easier," she said. "I am a lot more relaxed on the international stage after having the Olympics as a first international competition. It's just great to get back to a top international competition and to do well."

The only drama in her race was whether the world record would fall. She was on pace much of the race before winning with a time of 3:59.82 ? a mere 0.67 seconds off the mark set by Italy's Federica Pelligrini back in 2009 in one of those rubberized suits that are no longer allowed.

Melanie Costa of Spain took silver in 4:02.47, while the bronze went to New Zealand's Lauren Boyle in 4:03.89.

"I'm still in shock over the time," Ledecky said. "The U.S. has such a great tradition of distance swimmers, so I'm just trying to do my best to live up to that."

Sun looked as though he barely exerted himself winning the first final of the night.

The towering swimmer hopped out of the pool and flexed his fists for the crowd after winning the men's 400 free in 3:41.59, far ahead of silver medalist Kosuke Hagino of Japan (3:44.82). Jaeger was next in 3:44.85.

"I had a pretty good time for me because I don't have a major challenger here," said Sun, who won two golds, a silver and a bronze at the London Games. "If I had had one, I would have gone a lot faster."

___

Follow Paul Newberry on Twitter at www.twitter.com/pnewberry1963

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/franklin-ledecky-shine-us-misses-phelps-203542653.html

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Tomorrowland 2013: Great Guns! 'Super' DJs Laidback Luke, Martin Solveig Hit Stage On Day 2

MTV News was in Belgium with Luke and Super Solveig as they donned superhero capes and debuted 'Blow' on the Super You & Me stage.
By Sarah Karp Ward

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1711389/tomorrowland-2013-laidback-luke-martin-solveig-day-2-recap.jhtml

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Sunday, July 28, 2013

Zimbabwe faces poll with little violence this time

HARARE, Zimbabwe (AP) ? At the age of 89 President Robert Mugabe is on the campaign trail, seeking to extend his grip on Zimbabwe in an election next week that observers fear will be marred by fraud. But the opposition is gambling that there is enough discontent to unseat the wily political survivor, who has been in power for 33 years.

In the run-up to voting on July 31, rival supporters are seen wearing their party symbols in township bars and markets without the aggression and violence that has marked previous polls.

"There is more tolerance this time," Clive Nyakurerwa, a 30-year-old self-employed plumber, said.

But supporters of the challenger, Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, and pro-democracy groups warn it will be a mistake for the vote to be seen as credible just because there is little violence.

"There has been no transparency in the voters roll, no free media access and no freedom for political meetings. As we speak, our organizers are being harassed by police," said Martin Jambaya, a Tsvangirai party official from the northeastern Kotwa district.

It appears to be a tight race and Zimbabweans are hotly debating how this nation of 13 million will vote.

"Will it be for a new broom that citizens can put hopes and expectations on? And one that they can remove if it doesn't live up to those hopes?" asked civic activist Thabani Nyoni. "There has never been so clear a choice before."

Tsvangirai on Friday said he is deeply disturbed by chaotic preparations for the elections. He said the state election commission appeared not to be ready for Wednesday's vote.

"The credibility of this election is at risk. The chaos will lead to inconclusive and contested results" Tsvangirai said.

Tsvangirai sharply criticized Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, the South African chairperson of the continent-wide African Union organization, for declaring that that AU observers are "satisfied" with arrangements so far.

Mugabe led the nation to independence in 1980 after a bitter war against the white minority Rhodesian regime of Ian Smith. An avowed Marxist, Mugabe took the reins of one of Africa's most prosperous economies and ? after regional leaders at the time urged him not to destroy it ? he pledged racial reconciliation, tolerance and sound management.

His lengthy rule, however, has become authoritarian, scarred by the brutal use of force to crush an armed uprising in the 1980s in which thousands of civilians were killed. Mugabe, and his ZANU-PF party, have stayed in power through elections every five years, bolstered by his sweeping control of the police and military, which are led by comrades who fought in the bush war against Rhodesia.

Now Mugabe is opposed by Tsvangirai, 61, a former labor leader, and his party, the Movement for Democratic Change. Despite widespread support, Tsvangirai has lost every election since 2000 amid evidence of violence and vote rigging. Mugabe's victory in 2008 was so disputed and violent, regional leaders forced him to form a shaky coalition with Tsvangirai.

For years Mugabe's government has been restricted by sanctions but now it appears the international community wants to re-engage with Harare, say analysts.

"The outside world wants to see a country that can manage its own electoral processes and inspire confidence. They want to work with a government that is freely elected and accountable," said Nyoni, a senior research official with the Crisis in Zimbabwe Coalition, an alliance of 70 independent rights, civic and church groups.

Mugabe, increasingly frail, scheduled 10 campaign rallies up to voting day. Tsvangirai has been on a punishing campaign tour almost every day since July 4 when the nation's highest court ordered the poll to go ahead at the end of July.

Harare voter Regina Musa, 71, said Mugabe led a heroic fight for an end to white rule and was seen as the savior of the black majority, drawing massive crowds to his first public appearances then. But in this election, she said, his ZANU-PF party had to resort to drawing crowds by closing shops and markets to force people to attend his rallies.

She said those who attend get free T-shirts, baseball caps and food but have little enthusiasm for Mugabe's long "lectures" on his party's history of four decades and its liberation credentials instead of anything new to offer.

"Our lives have got worse. Schools and clinics have gone down, and there is hunger," said Musa, a market stall holder. "I can't manage to get enough food for my family."

About 9,600 voting stations are to be set up across the country for the poll, monitored by some 600 African observers. Mugabe has refused to allow Western observer missions into the country, accusing Britain, the former colonial power, and the United States of backing and funding Tsvangirai as part of their "regime change agenda."

Mugabe blames Western economic sanctions ? travel and banking bans on him and his party leaders to protest a decade of human and democratic rights violations ? for collapsing the economy.

Young voters in the impoverished western Harare township of Highfield, however, say they have tired of political rhetoric and want jobs.

"We are looking for a better future. Since I was born, I have never enjoyed life," said Tarisai Chitanda, 22, unemployed and a member of the "born free" generation that has grown up since independence.

But Edmore Sibubi, 30, said he supported Mugabe's black empowerment program that gave many young people dreams of sharing the nation's abundant mineral wealth, natural resources and potential business assets.

Critics of black empowerment and Mugabe's often violent seizures of thousands of white-owned farms since 2000 insist that few have benefited except an elite of Mugabe party loyalists. Many prime farms still lie idle and this former regional breadbasket now imports most of its food and more than 1 million people rely on foreign-donated food handouts.

Zimbabwe's state broadcasting monopoly controlled by Mugabe has aired his 90-minute rallies live on its four radio stations and main television channel. The nightly news on one of those days allotted Tsvangirai just three minutes, mostly of derogatory comments about him.

In another development, mobile phone companies have been ordered by the state telecommunications body to block bulk text messages that have been successfully used by Tsvangirai's party and independent civic groups to circulate election information, said Kubatana, a group of civic organizations.

This new ban on mass cell phone messages is seen as a way that ZANU-PF is trying to stop the effectiveness of Tsvangirai's campaigning through social media.

Nyoni, the civic activist, said it is feared voting will be chaotic but not necessarily to Mugabe's advantage saying inducements or threats and long voting lines will likely anger voters.

"You have the land but you don't have the economy," he said. "People are connecting to this and they don't want to be told what to do when they get into that polling booth."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/zimbabwe-faces-poll-little-violence-time-132253340.html

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Lew says stubborn Congress risks repeating U.S. fiscal wounds

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew on Sunday warned Congress against manufacturing a crisis over federal spending in the months ahead, as looming deadlines set the stage for a repeat of the political deadlock which two years ago triggered worldwide financial market turmoil.

In coming negotiations with Republicans, who control the House of Representatives, Democratic President Barack Obama will focus on ways to create economic gains for the middle class over spending cuts, Lew said.

"We have already done a lot of deficit reduction," he said in an interview on NBC. Lew spoke on four TV talk shows, setting out Obama's priorities ahead of an expected showdown this fall.

By early November, Congress must raise the legal limit on the country's borrowing authority or risk an unprecedented default on the government's debt.

A debt ceiling showdown in August 2011 between Obama and congressional Republicans sparked wild stock market swings and cost the United States its top-tier AAA credit rating.

"We need to get the debt limit extended in a way that doesn't create a crisis," Lew said.

Republicans see the debt ceiling as the their best leverage in winning a deal with Obama that would cut federal government spending to lower the deficit.

Lew, who was Obama's budget director in 2011, reiterated the president's stance that he would not consider short-term spending cuts, nor would he offset defense spending cuts with reductions in other government programs.

"The president has made crystal clear, he's not going to negotiate over the debt limit," Lew said in an interview on ABC.

The debt ceiling is one of two fiscal deadlines facing Obama and Congress. By October 1, they must agree on a stop-gap measure to keep the government funded or face a shutdown.

Republicans have eyed this budget deadline as a way to roll back steep spending cuts for defense programs. But that is not an option, Lew said.

"The across-the-board budget cuts that kicked in are not good policy," Lew said in a Fox News interview. "We think they should be replaced by sensible, alternative entitlement and tax reforms."

Congress is scheduled to leave town August 2 for a five-week recess.

Asked about the possibility of a federal response to Detroit's recent bankruptcy declaration, Lew threw cold water on any chances the struggling city will get federal aid.

"Detroit is going to have to work with its creditors on this," Lew told ABC.

(Reporting By Patrick Temple-West; Editing by David Storey)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/lew-says-stubborn-congress-risks-repeating-u-fiscal-131024700.html

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Vice President Joe Biden touched down in Hawaii Saturday for a short stay on Oah...

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