Tuesday, 3 May 2016

Can Japan's defense firms bounce back from failed Australia sub bid?

Japan's recent failure to clinch a deal to sell submarines to Australia was a major disappointment for the country. Julian Ryall reports from Tokyo about the impact of the setback on the nation's defense industry. 
The announcement at the end of April that Canberra had chosen to spend A$50 billion ($38 billion) on submarines made by French contractor DCNS clearly caught the Japanese government by surprise, understandable given that ministers and the media had expressed absolute certainty that the Japanese bid, based on its Soryu class of vessels, held an "insurmountable lead" over the rival proposals.
The depth of that disappointment was voiced by Gen Nakatani, the Japanese defense minister, who told reporters in Tokyo, "I want to seek an explanation of why [the Japanese bid] was not chosen and have the findings reflected [in future export proposals]."
Much of the blame for the Japanese bid's failure has been directed toward the apparent change of heart in Canberra, where Malcolm Turnbull went back on the supposed "gentlemen's agreement" that Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe believed he had with Tony Abbott - who stepped down as Australian leader in September 2015 - to purchase the Japanese vessels.
Emphasis on jobs
Turnbull placed more emphasis on ensuring that jobs in Australian shipyards are safeguarded - particularly given that this is an election year - Japanese media reported, while there are also suggestions that Canberra came under pressure from China. Beijing is one of Australia's most important trading partners in a whole host of sectors and China has no desire to see Tokyo and Canberra forging closer security ties.
But blame for the missed opportunity must also be laid at the door of the Japanese government and the companies that were bidding for the project, both for overconfidence that the deal was as good as signed and for failing to go the extra mile when it was clear that the French and German bids were gaining traction.
"The defense export sector is an important one to the Abe administration and he sees it as a way to exploit Japan's technological knowhow and give the economy a boost," said Stephen Nagy, an associate professor in the department of politics and international relations at Tokyo's International Christian University.
"But this setback demonstrates that Japan needs to improve its sales pitch when it is bidding for major international contracts like this," he said. "Even if they have the best technology and products, it is possible that Japan overestimated the strength of its relationship with Australia."
Robert Dujarric, director of the Institute of Contemporary Asian Studies at the Tokyo campus of Temple University, says Japanese companies faced a number of disadvantages in the bidding process. But they can learn from the experience, he added.
Not tested in battle
"Japan does not have systems that are battle tested, a legacy of more than 70 years of peace and the self-imposed rule on not exporting weapons systems, which may have harmed their bid," he told DW.
"There has been a limited market for Japanese warships and military aircraft - their own - in those seven decades, while Japan's defense attaches overseas are not trained in selling Japanese defense equipment," he pointed out.
There is also a degree of reluctance on the part of the country's major defense makers - companies such as Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, who bid for the Australian submarines - to promote the military side of what they do.
"Mitsubishi Heavy would be much happier of the Japanese public thought of it as a maker of civilian passenger jets rather than as a 'merchant of death,'" Dujarric said. "So while it's acceptable for companies in Europe and the US to be associated with 'killing machines,' Japanese firms would not like that label."
'Bigger fish to fry'
Still, Nagy says the failure of the Australian submarine deal will have little impact on Japan's defense industry as there are plenty of opportunities in the increasingly uncertain Asia-Pacific region. "In spite of this loss, Japan has bigger fish to fry with potential deals with India, Vietnam and the other nations of Southeast Asia," he said.
That is underlined by the deal between Tokyo and New Delhi for the sale of long-range Shinmaywa US-2 amphibious patrol aircraft. "Japan has already deployed some very advanced surveillance equipment, as well as search-and-rescue vehicles, that are ready to be sold, while its first stealth aircraft has recently had its maiden flight," Nagy noted.
"But it could be argued that building close defense sector relationships is the most important part of these deals," he said. "These are developing nations with a need to build up their defense capabilities as tensions rise in the region - due to China's efforts to develop the disputed islands of the South China Sea.
"So if Japan provides defense systems to a number of nations in the region, they will keep coming back to Japan for upgrades and newer versions as that is cheaper than buying entirely new systems," he said.
As it has done successfully in other industrial sectors, Japan appears to be playing the long game with its defense deals, although it will not be in a position to challenge the world's largest arms exporters for many years to come.

Will Turkey get preferential treatment for visa-free travel?

The EU Commission might make concessions to Ankara on visa-free travel to save the migrant deal. Is the EU about to make an uneasy compromise that would erode its refugee pact with Turkey? 
By Wednesday, Turkey must have met all 72 EU criteria to allow Turkish citizens visa-free travel to the EU beginning this summer. Wednesday is when the European Commission is scheduled to announce its recommendation on the scheme. Ankara had only met 62 criteria by last weekend.
If the Commission insists on Ankara meeting all benchmarks by Wednesday, visa-free travel would have to be postponed. In that case, the Turkish government has threatened to let migrants journey unhindered to Greece once again, or to refuse to accept deported refugees - a nightmare for European governments. While Turkish visa waivers technically have nothing to do with the refugee situation, Turkey made sure that the two are seen as linked to the pressure on Brussels.
Turkey has more leverage
The Commission will make the recommendation, says Yanis Emmanouilidis of the Brussels-based European Policy Center think tank. To save face, it could extend the deadline to mid-June to allow Turkey more time to meet the requirements and allow visa-free travel as of the end of June. "They urgently want to make headway because they know how important the relaxed visa regulations are for the EU refugee deal with Turkey," Emmanoulidis told DW.
Critics fear the Commission might also make concessions concerning the criteria. Commission deputy president, Frans Timmermans, has denied the EU would lower its standards: "They are clear."
However, Sophie in't Veld, a European lawmaker from the Netherlands, wonders "whether the Commission will be as strict in assessing Turkey's progress concerning the visa criteria as Timmermans announced." Other politicians have also warned of showing weakness and allowing Ankara a "discount;" that is, preferential treatment.
Several European governments have also voiced concerns that instead of refugees from the Mideast, the EU might face just as many Turkish Kurds applying for asylum once visa-free travel is launched.
A need for emergency brakes
For just that reason, the conservative European People's Party group (EPP) in the European Parliament is urging the addition of "emergency brakes." "We want Turkey as a partner, but we're not naive," chairman Manfred Weber told the "Passauer Neue Presse" newspaper. If Turkey doesn't meet the criteria on a permanent basis, "visa liberalization must be suspended."
The governments in Berlin and Paris have also pushed for the option of suspending the visa waiver. The possibility already exists for visa-free travel deals in general. In the case of Turkey it could be suspended for at least six months; for instance, if the number of Turkish citizens who enter the EU skyrockets, but then don't want to return to Turkey.
The EU might want to put on the brakes if the number of asylum applications rises that are unlikely to be granted, or if Turkey refuses to take back Turkish citizens who had wanted to stay in the EU. If even one of these conditions applies, the EU can suspend visa-free travel. Berlin and Paris say they want this mechanism to work at short notice, a demand the Commission supports.
Yanis Emmanoulidis is confident that Turkish visa-free travel won't trigger anything close to the surge of refugees Europe saw last year. The migrant deal may have put Turkey in a "stronger position than in the past," allowing Ankara to put on more pressure, but Turkey also needs the EU on an economic and political level, he says. "Turkey is navigating difficult political waters, so it needs friends in the EU."

Satirical Erdogan doll up for auction on Ebay in 'solidarity' with Jan Böhmermann

A satirical doll of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has gone under the hammer on Ebay. The figure which is holding a goat in the colors of the German flag on a leash, has attracted a huge bid of 10,000 euros.
Erdogan doll on Ebay
The proceeds of the auction, which ends on Friday, May 6, at 3:58 p.m. local time (1358 UTC), will be donated to "Reporters without Borders." The non-governmental organization, which defends freedom of information and freedom of the press, uses donations for causes such as the medical treatment or legal fees of persecuted journalists. The unexpected offer of 10,000 euros ($11,500) was made on Monday by an Ebay bidder in Austria, the doll's creator Marcel Offermann told DW.
The 45-year-old artist from the western German town of Neuss, near Düsseldorf, said he recreated Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan as a 65-centimeter-sized figurine in solidarity with German satirist Jan Böhmermann.
Advertised on Ebay as "one of a kind," the porcelain reincarnation of the Turkish leader is accompanied by a goat - painted in the colors of the German flag, with the name "Angela" written close to its hind leg - which is held by "Erdogan" on a rein.
"Usually, I don't take such a clear stance," Offermann told local German paper "Rheinische Post, "But the Turkish President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan presents himself as a dictatorial ruler and leads the German nation on a leash."
Press freedom debate
The poem which aired on March 31 on the weekly German satirical show "Neo Magazin Royal" accused Erdogan of allowing the physical abuse of Kurds and Christians, violence against women, and repression of minorities in Turkey. It also contained numerous sexual innuendos, including the implication that Erdogan had participated in sex with goats, sodomy, and had a child-porn habit.
On the request of Erdogan, German Chancellor Angela Merkel allowed German authorities to launch an investigation into Böhmermann, citing paragraph 103 of Germany's penal code, which protects foreign heads of state from insult, as justification for the inquiry.
The decison has sparked a fierce debate on freedom of speech in Germany, as well as anger over Berlin's decision to give the investigation a green light. If convicted, Böhmermann, who has suspended his show for the time being, could face up to five years in prison.


Spain readies for fresh polls in June as parties fail to form coalition

A fresh round of polls could be in the offing for Spain after the country's political parties failed to form a coalition. Voting is expected to take place at the end of next month. 
King Felipe VI was expected to dissolve the parliament in Madrid on Tuesday and restart the polling process, four months after the last elections took place.
None of the parties, including Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's Conservative People's Party, were able to secure a complete majority to form a government despite weeks of talks after the December vote. Chief of the Socialist Party, Pedro Sanchez, was also unable to form a coalition before the deadline ended on Monday, leading to the call for fresh polls.
"We are going back to vote," a reporter of Spain's official RVTE channel said on television.
Polling campaigns were expected to begin on June 10, with the vote expected on June 26.
Spain has been in limbo after no party won a decisive majority in the December 20 elections. Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy's Conservative Party won 28.7 percent of the votes and was unable to find a coalition partner.
The socialist PSOE was able to get the support of the liberal Ciudadanos party, but could not win over the leftist Podemos in order to have enough seats to form the government.
mg/jm (dpa)


Brazil judge orders three-day WhatsApp block

A Brazilian judge has ordered a 72-hour nationwide shutdown of the popular messaging application WhatsApp. The move reportedly aims to increase pressure on the service to turn over client data records in a criminal case. 
The decision was delivered on Monday in the northeastern state of Sergipe by Judge Marcelo Montalvao will affect more than 100 million WhatsApp users across the country.
The exact reason for the order is not known due to legal secrecy in an ongoing case in the Sergipe state court. The decision appeared, however, to be the latest attempt to force the Facebook-owned company to turn over records to investigators of chats involving an accused drug dealer.
In March, the same judge ordered the brief arrest of Facebook's vice-president for Latin America, Diego Dzodan, on grounds of failing to comply with a court order to hand over the records. At the time, WhatsApp said it had no way to access the encrypted data. Dzodan was jailed and subsequently freed.
WhatsApp 'disappointed'
In a statement released on Monday, WhatsApp said the company was "disappointed at the decision" after doing the utmost to cooperate with Brazilian tribunals.
The decision "punishes more than 100 million users who depend upon us to communicate themselves, run their business and more, just to force us hand over information that we don't have," the statement said, without elaborating further.
Failure to comply with the nationwide block on "Whatsapp" could see Brazil's five largest mobile data providers, face fines of 500,000 reals (127,000 euros) per day.
Monday's court ruling marked the second time since mid-December that WhatsApp was targeted by a blocking order. A court shut down the service for two days shortly before Christmas, but restored it soon after following public outcry and a separate court which overturned the ruling.
Inquiry into opposition leader over corruption claims
News of the Whatsapp ban broke on Monday as Brazil's chief prosecutor asked the Supreme Court to authorize a corruption investigation into the country's opposition leader and one of embattled President Dilma Rousseff's top rivals, Aecio Neves.
Chief prosecutor Rodrigo Janot called the inquiry over allegations that Neves took bribes from a corruption scheme at a state electricity company, which is linked to a wider scandal centered on state oil giant Petrobras.

Germany's domestic intelligence chief calls for more powers in anti-terror fight

Hans-Georg Maassen told a symposium in Berlin his intelligence agency needed more resources to fight threats from militant Islamists and right-wing extremists. He warned of a growing danger of terror attacks in Germany. 
Maassen told Monday's symposium, called to discuss the global threat posed by militant Islamists, that "a worsening security situation needed corresponding adjustments" in the powers and resources given to security authorities. Among other things, he suggested tighter supervision of conduct for convicted Islamists and the introduction of electronic tagging.
He also criticized a recent ruling by Germany's highest court, based on personal privacy concerns, to revoke some anti-terror powers accorded to the authorities under a 2009 law.
Maassen said the decision ignored the new dangers posed by the jihadist group "Islamic State" ("IS"), telling the some 300 security experts gathered at the meeting in the German capital that the extremists were planning to carry out terrorist attacks both on German soil and against German interests abroad.
The authorities received tip-offs about planned terrorist acts on a daily basis, he said, also warning that radical Islamists were "the most dynamically growing extremist scene in Germany."
In light of the growing threats, he called for better cross-border exchange of information within Europe to counter criminal and terrorist groups.
He also spoke about the risk posed by "IS" fighters who entered Germany disguised as refugees, saying this infiltration should be taken more into account in security planning and strategy. Speaking of a "security deficit," he said he was concerned about the large number of migrants without valid passports and whose identity had not been certainly established.
Right-wing threat
Maassen also called on the intelligence community to review the threat not only from Islamist fundamentalist groups, but also from right-wing organizations that have been carrying out attacks on refugee shelters in Germany on an almost weekly basis.
He warned that the political climate in Germany was "a lot rougher" than it used to be, as former non-voters and disaffected supporters of the established parties become radicalized against the backdrop of the refugee crisis.
German Chancellery Minister Peter Altmaier echoed Maassen's call for a better exchange of data between intelligence agencies, saying that current challenges could be met only by enhanced cooperation between agencies and police authorities within the framework of the rule of law.
He said the government wanted to ensure that in the future, information aimed at preventing terrorism could also be exchanged to avoid possible attacks.
tj/jm (AFP, dpa)

Debate over immunity of Turkish MPs descends into slugfest - again

Turkey's ruling AK Party and opposition lawmakers have brawled over changes to the constitution that could pave the way of prosecuting politicians. Multiple injuries reported after political tensions turn physical. 
Widely shared footage circulated on social media late Monday showing lawmakers from the ruling AKP and the pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party (HDP) exchanging blows in a committee room.
Parliament's constitutional committee had been meeting to discuss an AKP-backed proposal to strip MPs of their immunity from prosecution, after last week's session also broke up in physical violence.
Turkish lawmakers are constitutionally immune from prosecution while in office. Police can file dossiers against politicians, which can lead to a legal process only after the elected official is officially stripped of their title.
But the proposed change, championed by the Islamist-rooted AKP founded by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, would strip members of parliament of their legal immunity.
Erdogan: HDP 'not legitimate political actors'
Erdogan has called for members of the HDP to face prosecution, accusing them of being an extension of the outlawed militant Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK).
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus of the AKP deplored the chaos inside the legislature and put the blame on HDP.
"No one should hope to push the government into backing out (of its plans) with this kind of behavior," he warned, adding that "whatever happens, the demand to lift the immunity (of lawmakers)... will be presented to parliament."
Meanwhile, the HDP has released statements via Twitter saying its members have been hospitalized with injuries. The party also released a slowed-down version of the scuffles it says proves that its members were struck first by AKP members.
The HDP says the bill is directed at its members and warned that prosecutions would only hamper efforts to restart peace talks between the Turkish state and PKK.
Over the years, Turkey's Constitutional Court has disbanded several of the HDP's predecessors for allegedly violating the constitution by advocating secession.
Washington-based journalist Aliza Marcus - who was expelled from Turkey in the 1990s for alleged PKK sympathies - took to Twitter warning that Ankara's zeal to shut down the HDP was merely repeating past mistakes.
Thousands of militants and hundreds of members of security forces and civilians have been killed since a 2-1/2-year ceasefire between the government and the PKK collapsed last summer.
The PKK - listed as a terror group by the EU, US and Turkey - has been fighting an insurgency for minority rights and political autonomy for Turkey's Kurds since the 1980s in a long-running conflict that's left more than 40,000 dead.
jar/rc (Reuters, AFP)



Brussels plays down TTIP revelations

Is it a sensation or a tempest in a teacup? Brussels says the secret TTIP documents are nothing but blueprints. Making any progress in the free trade agreement with the US is tedious. Bernd Riegert from Brussels. 
The scores of bracketed text passages in TTIP documents made available by Greenpeace are noticeable immediately. Everything in brackets represents either an EU or a US position, not a mutually agreed position. The texts are so-called consolidated chapters, designed to be a basis for further negotiation.
Speaking to reporters in Brussels, EU chief negotiator, Ignacio Garcia Bercero, made it very clear that the passages made public are by no means the outcome of negotiations, but proposals put forward by both sides. Nothing has been agreed, Garcia Bercero said, adding that the consolidated texts are a technical means of approximating positions.
The EU will never agree to many of the issues the US put in brackets, he said, adding that the really touchy matters won't be on the agenda until the very end of the talks. Nothing has been agreed until all questions are solved, Bercero emphasized.
Still worth continuing?
Greenpeace claims the US is putting pressure on the EU for approval of hormone-treated meat and genetically modified food. Beef is in fact one of the most difficult sticking points, according to Garcia Bercero, which is why negotiations on the issue haven't yet begun. The EU will never give in to Washington's demands, he added.

Is TTIP fundamentally flawed?

The various positions in the documents come as no surprise to Bernd Lange, an EU lawmaker who 
  European Parliament. The US hasn't budged in three years of talks, he told DW. "At some point you have to ask, is it still worth it?" If the Americans won't move, we must have the courage to say that we simply can't do it, he said.
The leaked documents also show that problems concerning EU market access in the US are a stumbling block. The EU negotiator has confirmed the contents of the documents and pointed out that the entire Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership depends on agreement in this area. It's not clear whether the negotiations will be concluded by the end of US President Barack Obama's term, which ends on January 20, 2017. Garcia Bercero "We're not pressed for time."
Muzzling lawmakers
The German Industry Association (BDI), a group with a vested interest in a comprehensive free trade deal with the US, says in order for TTIP to succeed, you need high standards and transparent investment protection with a mechanism that allows for appeals. "It's a good thing that the EU Commission, the German government and the European Parliament have pledged not to open up our high protective standards."
The publication of the secret documents is a "service to democracy" said Sven Giegold, a Green Party financial expert in the European Parliament. He said he was allowed to read the documents in a reading room set up for that purpose in parliament, but he wasn't allowed to speak about it. "The reporters removed the muzzles forced on us in the reading room," he said, adding that many citizens are fed up with the wheeling and dealing in back rooms. "You need a minimum of transparency," Giegold said.
The EU has pointed out that Brussels always makes public its positions on its website, but that the US demanded secrecy concerning Washington's positions and insisted on brackets in the consolidated versions.
Where is the leak?
What are the consequences of the leak? Clearly, there will be an investigation into who could have possibly passed on the documents, Ignacio Garcia Bercero said. Only the negotiating delegation, a few select officials and a small group of lawmakers from the 28 EU member states, the European Parliament and the US Congress had access to the papers.
Just a few days ago in New York, the EU and the US concluded the last round of TTIP talks without any major breakthrough. "There's a great deal of trust between the delegations and the mood is good, too," the EU chief negotiator said, declining to speculate on what the leaks might set off. "Of course, everyone tries to push through their own interests."

monitors the TTIP talks on behalf of the


Austria and Germany call for coordination on refugee initiatives

Austrian Defense Minister Hans Peter Doskozil and his German counterpart Ursula von der Leyen have reiterated the need to coordinate refugee initiatives EU-wide. There was no public mention of the Brenner Pass. 
At a meeting in Vienna Monday, von der Leyen said it was important to secure the EU's external borders in the ongoing refugee crisis.
"If we search for solutions together in the EU we will succeed, step by step," the Christian Democratic (CDU) minister said, adding that this was "the only way to curb the illegal routes and arrive at orderly migration."
The two ministers also agreed on closer military cooperation.
However, Von der Leyen did not comment on Austrian plans to introduce border controls at the Brenner Pass with Italy. "We must listen to what help Italy needs," she said.
Doskozil said he was "optimistic, that we will not have a second year, like we experienced in 2015."
Austria's Interior Minister Wolfgang Sobotka said last week that Austria could seal the Brenner Pass to avoid being "overrun" by refugees. Germany has objected to the plan.
Austria and Germany said Saturday they were in talks with the EU's executive body to extend temporary border controls brought in last year to help stem the migrant flow.
The measures - triggered in case of "a serious threat to public policy or internal security" - expire May 12.

jhb/jm (dpa, AFP)

Experts: US lacks leverage to compel cease-fire and eventual peace in Syria

Washington's decision to stay out of Syria's civil war means it has little sway to compel peace among the warring factions. As a result, the prospects for a sustained cease-fire and eventual peace may be far away. 
As fighting in the Syrian city of Aleppo intensified, with the death toll topping 250 in little more than a week, US Secretary of State John Kerry intensified his own efforts to reestablish the cease-fire that first took effect in February.
But after meeting with the United Nation's special envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, in Geneva, the usually upbeat Kerry struck a rather downbeat note, saying the conflict was "in many ways out of control and deeply disturbing to everybody in the world, I hope."
The original cease-fire agreement didn't even include the strategic town of Aleppo, although the situation had been relatively calm there until little more than a week ago. Since then, however, Bashar al-Assad's regime has been accused of deliberately targeting a major hospital and three clinics, which Kerry called, "unconscionable" and adding that "it has to stop."
But experts agree that making it stop will be difficult. The Assad regime, with the military backing of Russia and, to a lesser extent, Iran, may be perpetrating the violence, but analysts say US President Barack Obama made a strategic blunder by keeping the US out of the conflict.
"The US has no stake in it militarily or politically," said David Butter, a Middle East expert at the Royal Institute of International Affairs in London. "There is a residual sense that the US is the number one military and political power in the world, and if there's a crisis the US has to take some interest."
Kerry works to restore cease-fire
Yes, Kerry is working with the UN envoy and his Russian counterpart, but Butter and others say that by keeping the US military out of Syria the White House left itself without any leverage to influence events, including a peace process in the worn torn country, which has now claimed more than 270,000 lives since 2011.
Itamar Rabinovich, another Middle East expert with the Washington-based Brookings Institute said Obama didn't need to inject US soldiers into Syria's civil war in order to give Washington some negotiating power.
"One can make a big difference with a no-fly zone," he said. "It could have established a safe haven in northern Syria along the Turkish border."
That, however, would have been a more viable option before Russia made a stark military commitment to the Syrian regime last summer, Rabinovich said, explaining that a US-led no-fly zone would difficult, if not impossible, to implement now.
A handful of US military advisers, no more than 50 or so, is all that Washington has inside Syria. That won't give the US the desired leverage it needs to bring the Syrian regime and its military patrons to heel, the experts say.
Currently, the Assad regime has no incentive to negotiate a cessation of hostilities because, for now at least, neither the potpourri of rebels inside Syria nor any outside military force poses an existential threat to the regime.
If a cease-fire is achieved, Butter says it will be because the Russian's want to look like peacemakers - in effect using the US.
"Russia likes having the United States involved because it gives their (peace) effort legitimacy," he said. "Putin said military gains could be capitalized on by bringing in the US to legitimize the peace process."
He predicts that Syria is poised to enter a period of fragile cease-fires that will collapse and be patched together, only to see the cycle repeat itself for the foreseeable future - perhaps until a new president takes office in Washington.
No US leverage means more war
Without the necessary leverage to compel the warring sides to negotiate - and compromise - Rabinovich, from the Brookings Institute, says the process can't go forward.
That process, he said, should look like this:
A) a consolidated and durable cease-fire
B) agreement on a political solution
C) implementation of the agreement
He said the conflict in Syria reminds him of the long, drawn-out, civil war that broke out in Lebanon in the 1970s and dragged on for 15 years.
"I'm pessimistic…with all due respect to Secretary Kerry," he said. "President Obama is determined not to be drawn into Syria, and Russia is determined to keep Assad in power."
Butter agrees that there is no end in sight to Syria's civil war, but he questions the Kremlins' affinity for the Syrian strongman.
"Russia doesn't have the leverage to pull strings inside the (Syrian) regime," he said. "Assad is a very difficult entity to deal with, very slippery, saying one thing and doing another. They're stuck with him."

U.S. says Iraq's PM in 'strong position' amid political unrest

Argentine court probes ex-president Fernandez over new case: media

An Argentine court has asked a judge to look into accusations of illicit enrichment against leftist former President Cristina Fernandez, state press agency Telam reported on Monday.
Fernandez, who left office in December after eight years and was replaced by center-right Mauricio Macri, has already been accused of money laundering and overseeing irregularities at the central bank while she served.
The cases have sparked massive demonstrations by her supporters, who say she is being persecuted by a new government bent on revenge. Fernandez is a divisive figure, revered by many for generous welfare programs and reviled by others for her economic policies.
The latest accusation, issued by a public prosecutor, was initiated by an opposition politician. Fernandez and her son have been accused of illicit enrichment and the falsification of public documents relating to a company called Los Sauces, Telam said, citing legal sources.
It said that Los Sauces in 2009 had over 9 million Argentine pesos ($635,000 at current exchange rates) in property investment.
A spokesman for the attorney general's office said the investigating judge had issued a secrecy order on the case.
Under Argentine law, the judge will decide whether to accept the charge and open an investigation.
($1 = 14.1660 Argentine pesos)
(Reporting by Maximiliano Rizzi, Writing by Rosalba O'Brien; Editing by Dan Grebler)

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North Korea capital gears up for congress; South fears nuclear test

North Korea has started welcoming delegates from around the country to its first ruling party congress in 36 years, state media reported on Tuesday, as rival South Korea expressed concern that Pyongyang could conduct a nuclear test before or during the event.
The isolated North has conducted a series of weapons tests, including three failed launches of an intermediate-range missile, in the run-up to the Workers' Party congress starting in Pyongyang on Friday.
North Korea's young leader Kim Jong Un has aggressively pursued nuclear weapons and could be looking to a successful test this week as a crowning achievement. South Korean Defence Minister Han Min-koo said Pyongyang's fifth nuclear test may come before or around the time of the opening of the congress.
"North Korea's goal is to be internationally recognized as a nuclear weapons state," Han told a parliamentary hearing on Tuesday. "We believe its nuclear capability is advancing."
At the congress, which foreign media organizations have been invited to cover, Kim is expected to declare his country a nuclear weapons state and formally adopt his "byongjin" policy to push simultaneously for economic development and nuclear capability.
It follows Kim's father's Songun, or "military first," policy and his grandfather's Juche, the North's home-grown founding ideology that combines Marxism and extreme nationalism.
Pyongyang citizens "fervently welcomed participants of the congress who have given all their patriotic passion ... as a new generation of true warriors of Juche revolution under the leadership of dear comrade Kim Jong Un," North Korea's official Rodong Sinmun newspaper said on Tuesday.
Security has been stepped up ahead of the congress.
The Daily NK, a website run by defectors with sources in North Korea, said that since mid-April, free movement in and out of the capital had been stopped and security personnel summoned from the provinces to step up domestic surveillance.
The party congress is the first since 1980, before the 33-year-old Kim was born. His father and predecessor, Kim Jong Il, who died in December 2011, never held one.
While some past party congresses featured representatives from countries the North has ties with, South Korean officials have said they were not aware of invitations sent to official foreign guests for the upcoming event.
North Korea has become increasingly isolated over its pursuit of nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, and was hit with tightened U.N. Security Council sanctions in March that were backed by its chief ally, China, in response to a January nuclear test.
Pyongyang has conducted a flurry of missile and other weapons tests in the run-up to the congress, although not all have been successful. It made three attempts last month of what was believed to be its intermediate-range Musudan missile, all of which failed, according to U.S. and South Korean officials.
The congress is expected to last four or five days, South Korean government officials and experts said. Kim may decide to take on the post of party General Secretary, a position held by his late father, elevating himself from first secretary.
"It is now his era, and the elders have passed away, and the idea will be that if he remains first secretary, then he might think he won't get enough respect because of that," said An Chan-il, former North Korean military official who now heads a think tank in Seoul.
(Reporting by Jack Kim and Ju-min Park; Editing by Tony Munroe and Raju Gopalakrishnan)

NATO weighs four battalions in Eastern states to deter Russia: U.S.

The NATO alliance is weighing rotating four battalions of troops through Eastern member states, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said on Monday, in the latest proposal by allies to guard against aggressive behavior by Russia.
The Baltic states - Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - which joined NATO in 2004, have requested greater presence of the alliance, fearing a threat from Russia after it annexed the Crimea peninsula from Ukraine in 2014.
Carter acknowledged NATO deliberations included the deployment of the four battalions to the Baltic states and Poland. The Wall Street Journal said this would likely total about 4,000 troops split between the United States and its allies.
"That's one of the options that's being discussed," Carter told reporters traveling with him at the start of a three-day trip to Germany, declining to enter into details about the deliberations by the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
"We're obviously involved in those discussions. I just don’t want to get out in front of where that goes."
U.S. officials say the goal in Europe is to move increasingly from efforts to reassure allies to broader activity to deter any aggressive moves by Russia.
The United States has already budgeted to sharply boost military training and exercises and last month announced it would deploy continuous rotations of U.S.-based armored brigade combat teams to Europe.
Carter's trip to Germany will include meetings with Army General Curtis Scaparrotti as he takes over as the next NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe, succeeding U.S. Air Force General Philip Breedlove.
Scaparrotti told a Senate hearing last month that a resurgent Russia was displaying "increasingly aggressive behavior that challenges the international norms, often in violation of international law."
(Reporting by Phil Stewart; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Tuesday's National Newspaper Front Pages

Sky News takes a look at the stories making a splash in Tuesday's national newspapers.
THE PAPERS' TOP STORIES
:: The Daily Telegraph
Labour has suspended 50 members it accuses of anti-Semitic and racist comments amid the worsening crisis engulfing the party.
:: Metro, The i, The Sun
Leicester City have pulled off one of the biggest sporting upsets in history by winning the Premier League - having been given odds of 5000-1 at the start of the season.
:: The Times
David Cameron is put an attempt to curb Islamic extremism at the heart of the Government's Queen's Speech
:: Daily Mirror
Midlife health checks have been proved to be "almost useless" and cost taxpayers £450m a year
:: The New Day
A Briton is battling the Zika virus after catching the disease while working on a maternity ward in Brazil
:: Financial Times
A surge in investment in artificial intelligence is giving the US a lead in the race to dominate the robots market.
:: Daily Mail
Dozens of ministers and officials are cashing in on their time in office by picking up lucrative jobs in the private sector after they leave.
:: The Guardian
The British government is using "clandestine propaganda" to change the attitude and behaviour of young British Muslims as part of a counter-radicalisation programme.
:: Daily Express
Savers are ignoring the potential risk posed by the EU referendum and paying money into their pensions in the run up to 23 June

Trump Looks To Victory As Cruz Fights For Life

Supporters hope victory in Indiana will help to generate donors and support in California, the giant prize which votes next month.
Donald Trump could take another decisive step towards the Republican nomination for president in the next 24 hours.
His chief rival Ted Cruz has staked everything on winning Tuesday's primary in the mid-western evangelical heartland of Indiana.
But polls show he might come up short against Mr Trump again - and even big supporters say that might doom his campaign.
Conservative talk show host Pat Miller, a Cruz fan who compered a rally for him in Fort Wayne, told Sky News: "If Ted Cruz doesn't win Indiana, then he is going to have sit down and do some maths and see if there is any outside shot at all.
"Ted Cruz is very dedicated, he is going to push open every door he can, but he's also not stupid."
However, Mr Miller believes victory for Mr Cruz would set him up for a scrap for delegate votes with Mr Trump at the party's convention in Cleveland in July.
No-one really knows what that would look like, how it work or how Mr Trump would react to being robbed of the nomination by the party machine.
The billionaire continues to dominate the race and believe he is now what he terms the "presumptive nominee".
Mr Cruz's campaign has generally fared better in states with a high proportion of voters who identify as evangelical. They are often wary of Trump.
Jim DeCamp, a former Army chaplain who is now chairman of Indiana's Pastors' Alliance, said: "There are things that we think of when we think of the ingredients of what made this country great and I'm looking for someone who is going to champion what made this country great."
Ted Cruz embodies those qualities, he added.
During a campaign stop at a coffee shop, Mr Cruz's wife Heidi and his prospective running mate Carly Fiorina declined to answer questions about his chances.
The candidate himself dismissed recent opinion polls.
He said: "The polls are everywhere.
"I'll tell you where this race is: this race is tied in the state of Indiana, it is neck and neck and it depends on turnout."
Supporters hope victory in Indiana would be a springboard to generate donors and support in California, the giant prize which will vote next month.
Mr Cruz appears determined to stay in until Cleveland and fight until the last - defeat in Indiana might make the pressure intolerable.