Archives: December 2011

Kim Jong Il is dead (Balloon Juice)

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Published on: December 31, 2011
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Samsung MV800

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The Samsung MV800 ($279.99 list) is a compact camera that has been designed around one distinct feature: its flip-out touch-screen LCD. The slim shooter may be the perfect camera to capture the arm’s length self-portraits that invariably find a home as a Facebook profile picture.?This isn’t Samsung’s first foray into this type of camera. The Dual View TL225 ($349.99, 4 stars), has a front-facing LCD and was good enough to earn our Editors’ Choice award.?Sadly, the MV800 doesn’t live up to its predecessor’s pedigree. The tilting LCD isn’t a bad thing?I love that feature on the Sony Alpha NEX-5N ($699.99, 4.5 stars). The problem is that the MV800 only manages photos with so-so sharpness and doesn’t do well in lower light. Because of this, the Canon PowerShot Elph 310 HS ($259.99, 4 stars) remains our Editors’ Choice for mid-range compacts, even though it lacks some of the bells and whistles found on the MV800.

Design and Features
The MV800 is a light and slim camera, one that can easily slide into your shirt pocket. It measures just 2.2 by 3.6 by 0.7 inches (HWD) and weighs about 4.3 ounces. It’s actually smaller and lighter than the Canon Elph 310 HS, which measures 2.2 by 3.8 by 0.9 inches and weighs 4.9 ounces. Samsung advertises the camera as a 16-megapixel model, but by default the camera only captures 12-megapixel photos. The sensor is a 4:3 aspect ratio, but out of the box the camera is configured to shoot 16:9 images. To get the full resolution, you’ll need to adjust the settings to capture 4:3 photos.

The 5x zoom lens? covers a 26-130mm (35mm equivalent) field of view. This is a pretty nice zoom range for the camera, especially on the short end, as a wider-than-normal lens is ideal for closer shots. It isn’t as wide as the 21mm-equivalent fixed focal length lens found on the Casio Tryx ($249.99, 3.5 stars), another camera built around the self-photo concept.

There are few buttons to speak of, the camera’s rear is dominated by the 3-inch LCD. The screen itself is bright and crisp, so you won’t have any trouble using it outdoors on a sunny day. A Power button, shutter release, and zoom rocker are located up top, and the Home button and Image Playback button are located on the rear, to the right of the LCD. When you flip up the display, a second shutter release is revealed on the rear of the camera, allowing you to fire a shot when the lens and LCD are facing you. If you want to exercise any sort of manual control over the camera, you’ll have to do it via the touch screen.?

Thankfully, the touch interface is pretty responsive. Although it doesn’t support multi-touch input, you can swipe to scroll through photos. The camera utilizes it well for its menu system. Hitting the home button brings up an icon-based menu screen that grants access to all of the camera’s shooting modes. The standard modes are there?Auto, Program, Movie, and Scene?as well as some that you won’t find on every camera including 3D image capture, panoramas, and a Self Shot mode. Self Shot shows a flattering self-portrait of a model in the corner, so you’ll be able to emulate one of 11 poses to create a similar shot. Other special shooting modes allow you to create a picture-in-picture effect, add an artistic frame to your photo, or apply funhouse mirror distortion to faces.

Performance and ConclusionsSamsung MV800 Benchmark Tests
Not a particularly speedy camera, the MV800 takes about 2.3 seconds to start up and grab a shot, requires you to wait a full 1.6 seconds between photos, and records a 0.4-second shutter lag. Its performance is on par with the Panasonic Lumix DHC-FH27 ($229.99, 2.5 stars). That point-and-shoot starts in 2 seconds, requires 2.3 seconds to recycle between shots, and records a 0.4-second shutter lag.

I used the Imatest software suite to measure the sharpness and image noise in photos captured by the MV800. The camera recorded a center-weighted sharpness score of 1,475 lines per picture height, well shy of the 1,800 lines that denote a sharp image. Our Editors’ Choice, the Canon PowerShot Elph 310 HS, did much better in tests. It was able to capture 1,857 lines, which is significantly sharper.

Equally lacking in low-light performance, the MV800 was only able to keep image noise below 1.5 percent through ISO 200, a setting which is really only good for use outdoors or in brightly lit interiors. When an image is composed of more than 1.5 percent noise, it becomes noticeably grainy. Another touch-screen camera, the Canon PowerShot Elph 500 HS fared much better, snapping clean images through ISO 800.

Video is captured in 720p30 format. The quality is nothing to write home about?details are not as crisp as they could be and colors are a bit flat. You can zoom while recording, but the camera has a hard time reacquiring focus after doing so, leaving you with out-of-focus footage. The MV800 can connect directly to your HDTV thanks to a micro HDMI port, and you get a standard micro USB port for PC connectivity. The camera uses microSD memory for recording, which can be a bit more expensive?and easier to lose?than the standard, larger SD cards.

Although it succeeds in packing a lot of filters and gimmicks into its svelte body, the MV800 fails in its ability to capture sharp images and suffers greatly in lower light. While the flip-out screen is a fun feature, the camera it is attached to is disappointing, especially when you consider the price. For $20 less, you can opt for our Editors’ Choice, the very capable Canon PowerShot Elph 310 HS. You won’t get the flipping LCD, but you will get an 8x zoom lens and top-notch speed and performance.? If a touch screen is a necessity, the Elph 500 HS makes a lot of sense, as it’s a better performer, and is priced only $20 higher than the MV800. Its LCD won’t flip to face you, so you’ll just have to use some guesswork when you’re trying to capture your own mug.

More Digital Camera reviews:
??? Samsung MV800
??? Nikon Coolpix P7100
??? Panasonic Lumix DMC-GF3
??? JVC GC-PX10
??? Polaroid Z340 Instant Digital Camera
?? more

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ziffdavis/pcmag/~3/u8oYWjCCAOQ/0,2817,2397383,00.asp

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Arab team in Syria Thursday to prepare for monitors (Reuters)

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Published on: December 31, 2011

BEIRUT (Reuters) ? An advanced team preparing the way for peace monitors will arrive in Syria this week, the Arab League chief said on Tuesday, after more than 100 people were killed in one of the bloodiest days of a revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.

Security forces machine-gunned soldiers deserting from their army base in the northwestern Idlib province on Monday, killing more than 60, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. It said 40 civilians had been shot dead elsewhere.

The state news agency SANA said security forces had killed five “terrorists” in Deraa province on Monday night. It also said Assad had decreed the death penalty for anyone caught distributing arms “with the aim of committing terrorist acts.”

Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby told Reuters in Cairo that an advance team would go to Syria on Thursday, with the 150 monitors due to arrive by end-December.

“It’s a completely new mission … and it depends on implementation in good faith,” he said.

Syria stalled for weeks before signing a protocol on Monday to accept the monitors who will check its compliance with an Arab plan for an end to violence, withdrawal of troops from the streets, release of prisoners and dialogue with the opposition.

“In a week’s time, from the start of the operation, we will know (if Syria is complying),” Elaraby said.

Syrian pro-democracy activists are deeply skeptical about Assad’s commitment to the plan, which, if implemented, could embolden demonstrators demanding an end to his 11-year rule.

France said it hoped the monitors could carry out their mission quickly. But it also said Assad had a record of broken pledges and that Monday’s violence showed there “isn’t a moment to lose.”

“For months we have seen Bashar al-Assad not keep to commitments he made to his people and he has increased his efforts to play for time in the face of the international community,” Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero said.

In recent months, peaceful protests have increasingly given way to armed confrontations often led by army deserters.

Some opposition leaders have called for foreign military intervention to protect civilians from Assad’s forces.

The Syrian authorities have made it hard for anyone to know what is going on in their troubled country. They have barred most foreign journalists and imposed tight curbs on local ones.

The British-based Observatory said three more people had been killed in violence on Tuesday, two in the city of Homs and one in a village in Idlib province, the scene of a sustained military crackdown in the past three days.

State news agency SANA said a captain in the security forces had died of wounds inflicted by “terrorists” a week ago in the city of Hama.

U.N. TOLL

The United Nations has said more than 5,000 people have been killed in Syria since anti-Assad protests erupted in March, inspired by a wave of uprisings across the Arab world.

Several weeks ago Damascus said 1,100 members of the security forces had been killed by “armed terrorist gangs.” An armed insurrection against Assad has gathered pace since then.

Syria agreed to the Arab peace plan in early November, but the violence raged on, prompting Arab states to announce financial sanctions and travel bans on Syrian officials.

The United States and European Union have already imposed sanctions on Syria, which combined with the unrest itself have pushed the economy into a sharp fall. The Syrian pound fell nearly 2 percent on Tuesday to over 55 pounds per dollar, 17 percent down from the official exchange rate before the crisis erupted.

Elaraby said the Arab sanctions would remain until monitors begin reporting back. Arab ministers would decide the next step.

He said Gulf states would contribute about 60 of a 150-strong monitoring team led by a Sudanese general, which would expect freedom of movement and communication, including access to prisons and hospitals. Journalists would accompany the team.

The Arab League had threatened to ask the U.N. Security Council to adopt its peace plan for Syria, broadening the chances of international action.

Damascus said Russia, its longtime ally and arms supplier, had urged it to sign the protocol on Arab monitors.

As international pressure mounted, the U.N. General Assembly voted to condemn Syria’s use of force to quell protests, with Russia and China abstaining instead of voting against.

Arab rulers want to halt a slide towards a possible civil war in Syria that could shake a region already riven by rivalry between non-Arab Shi’ite power Iran and Sunni Arab heavyweights such as Saudi Arabia.

Iran, Syria’s key backer, said the agreement to let in observers from the Arab League was “acceptable,” if not ideal.

The U.S. State Department voiced skepticism. “We are really less interested in a signed piece of paper than we are in actions to implement commitments made,” a spokeswoman said.

(Additional reporting by Edmund Blair in Cairo, Dominic Evans in Beirut, John Irish in Paris)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/world/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111220/wl_nm/us_syria_arabs

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Backstreet Boys singer A.J. McLean was married in a Gothic ceremony yesterday

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The 33-year-old star tied the knot to model bride Rochelle DeAnna Karidis in a gothic-themed ceremony in a clear tent at the Beverly Hills Hotel, California, yesterday. The pair exchanged vows in a gazebo decorated with white hydrangeas and roman chandeliers before heading to the Crystal ballroom for a dinner and dance reception. A.J.’s fellow [...]

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Ford USB Music Box adds mass storage playback, smartphone charging to AUX-enabled receivers

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Sure, you’ve probably been leading a compact disc-less life in the living room and on the go for quite a few years now, but there’s one place where optical media often remains the only option for on-demand tunes: your car. Now select Ford owners in Europe have an option accessing and controlling their smartphones, flash drives or other USB mass storage devices from an in-dash audio system. The USB Music Box connects to compatible audio and nav systems with an AUX input, and lives in the glovebox, center console or armrest, pumping tunes through your car’s speakers with “great sound quality very similar to that of the radio.” Last time we checked, FM radio has an equivalent bitrate quite a bit lower than your typical digital music file, so that’s not exactly a glowing testimonial. Still, if you’re desperate for a way to carry thousands of tracks in your car without filling the trunk with an array of sizable silver saucers, it might be time to toss aside the gloves and open up the Music Box — assuming, of course, that you own one of ten recent models outlined in the PR just past the break.

Continue reading Ford USB Music Box adds mass storage playback, smartphone charging to AUX-enabled receivers

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Source: http://www.engadget.com/2011/12/20/ford-usb-music-box-adds-mass-storage-playback-smartphone-chargi/

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AP Enterprise: Russia oil spills wreak devastation (AP)

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USINSK, Russia ? On the bright yellow tundra outside this oil town near the Arctic Circle, a pitch-black pool of crude stretches toward the horizon. The source: a decommissioned well whose rusty screws ooze with oil, viscous like jam.

This is the face of Russia’s oil country, a sprawling, inhospitable zone that experts say represents the world’s worst ecological oil catastrophe.

Environmentalists estimate at least 1 percent of Russia’s annual oil production, or 5 million tons, is spilled every year. That is equivalent to one Deepwater Horizon-scale leak about every two months. Crumbling infrastructure and a harsh climate combine to spell disaster in the world’s largest oil producer, responsible for 13 percent of global output.

Oil, stubbornly seeping through rusty pipelines and old wells, contaminates soil, kills all plants that grow on it and destroys habitats for mammals and birds. Half a million tons every year get into rivers that flow into the Arctic Ocean, the government says, upsetting the delicate environmental balance in those waters.

It’s part of a legacy of environmental tragedy that has plagued Russia and the countries of its former Soviet empire for decades, from the nuclear horrors of Chernobyl in Ukraine to lethal chemical waste in the Russian city of Dzerzhinsk and paper mill pollution seeping into Siberia’s Lake Baikal, which holds one-fifth of the world’s supply of fresh water.

Oil spills in Russia are less dramatic than disasters in the Gulf of Mexico or the North Sea, more the result of a drip-drip of leaked crude than a sudden explosion. But they’re more numerous than in any other oil-producing nation including insurgency-hit Nigeria, and combined they spill far more than anywhere else in the world, scientists say.

“Oil and oil products get spilled literally every day,” said Dr. Grigory Barenboim, senior researcher at the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Institute of Water Problems.

No hard figures on the scope of oil spills in Russia are available, but Greenpeace estimates that at least 5 million tons leak every year in a country producing about 500 million tons a year.

Dr. Irina Ivshina, of the government-financed Institute of the Environment and Genetics of Microorganisms, supports the 5 million ton estimate, as does the World Wildlife Fund.

The figure is derived from two sources: Russian state-funded research that shows 10-15 percent of Russian oil leakage enters rivers; and a 2010 report commissioned by the Natural Resources Ministry that shows nearly 500,000 tons slips into northern Russian rivers every year and flow into the Arctic.

The estimate is considered conservative: The Russian Economic Development Ministry in a report last year estimated spills at up to 20 million tons per year.

That astonishing number, for which the ministry offered no elaboration, appears to be based partly on the fact most small leaks in Russia go unreported. Under Russian law, leaks of less than 8 tons are classified only as “incidents” and carry no penalties.

Russian oil spills also elude detection because most happen in the vast swaths of unpopulated tundra and conifer forestin the north, caused either by ruptured pipes or leakage from decommissioned wells.

Weather conditions in most oil provinces are brutal, with temperatures routinely dropping below minus 40 degrees Celsius (minus 40 Fahrenheit) in winter. That makes pipelines brittle and prone to rupture unless they are regularly replaced and their condition monitored.

Asked by The Associated Press to comment, the Natural Resources Ministry and the Energy Ministry said they have no data on oil spills and referred to the other ministry for further inquiries.

Even counting only the 500,000 tons officially reported to be leaking into northern rivers every year, Russia is by far the worst oil polluter in the world.

_Nigeria, which produces one-fifth as much oil as Russia, logged 110,000 tons spilled in 2009, much of that due to rebel attacks on pipelines.

_The U.S., the world’s third-largest oil producer, logged 341 pipeline ruptures in 2010 ? compared to Russia’s 18,000 ? with 17,600 tons of oil leaking as a result, according to the U.S. Department of Transportation. Spills have averaged 14,900 tons a year between 2001 and 2010.

_Canada, which produces oil in weather conditions as harsh as Russia’s, does not see anything near Russia’s scale of disaster. Eleven pipeline accidents were reported to Canada’s Transport Safety Board last year, while media reports of leaks, ranging from sizable spills to a tiny leak in a farmer’s backyard, come to a total of 7,700 tons a year.

_In Norway, Russia’s northwestern oil neighbor, spills amounted to some 3,000 tons a year in the past few years, said Hanne Marie Oeren, head of the oil and gas section at Norway’s Climate and Pollution Agency.

Now that Russian companies are moving to the Arctic to tap vast but hard-to-get oil and gas riches, scientists voice concerns that Russia’s outdated technologies and shoddy safety record make for a potential environmental calamity there.

Gazpromneft, an oil subsidiary of the gas giant Gazprom, is preparing to drill for oil in the Arctic’s Pechora Sea, even as environmentalists complain that the drilling platform is outdated and the company is not ready to deal with potential accidents.

Government scientists acknowledge that Russia does not currently have the required technology to develop Arctic fields but say it will be years before the country actually starts drilling.

“We must start the work now, do the exploration and develop the technology so that we would be able to … start pumping oil from the Arctic in the middle of this century,” Alexei Kontorovich, chairman of the council on geology, oil and gas fields at the Russian Academy of Sciences, told a recent news conference.

The same academy’s Barenboim said, however, that Russian technology is developing too slowly to make it a safe bet for Arctic exploration.

“Over the past years, environmental risks have increased more sharply compared to how far our technologies, funds, equipment and skills to deal with them have advanced,” he said.

In 1994, the republic of Komi, where Usinsk lies 60 kilometers (40 miles) south of the Arctic Circle, became the scene of Russia’s largest oil spill when an estimated 100,000 tons splashed from an aging pipeline.

It killed plants and animals, and polluted up to 40 kilometers (25 miles) of two local rivers, killing thousands of fish. In villages most affected, respiratory diseases rose by some 28 percent in the year following the leak.

Seen from a helicopter, the oil production area is dotted with pitch-black ponds. Fresh leaks are easy to find once you step into the tundra north of Usinsk. To spot a leak, find a dying tree. Fir trees with drooping gray, dry branches look as though scorched by a wildfire. They are growing insoil polluted by oil.

Usinsk spokeswoman Tatyana Khimichuk said the city administration had no powers to influence oil company operations.

“Everything that happens at the oil fields is Lukoil’s responsibility,” she said, referring to Russia’s second largest oil company, which owns a network of pipelines in the region.

Komi’s environmental protection officials also blamed oil companies. The local prosecutor’s office said in a report this year that the main problem is “that companies that extract hydrocarbons focus on making profits rather than how to use the resources rationally.”

Valery Bratenkov works as a foreman at oil fields outside Usinsk.

After hours, he is with a local environmental group. Bratenkov used to point out to his Lukoil bosses that oil spills routinely happen under their noses and asked them to repair the pipelines. “They were offended and said that costs too much money,” he said.

Activists like Bratenkov find it hard if not impossible to hold authorities to account in the area since some 90 percent of the local population comprises oil workers and their families who have moved from other regions of Russia, and depend on the industry for their livelihood.

Representatives of Lukoil denied claims that they try to conceal spills and leaks, and said that no more than 2.7 tons leaked last year from its production areas in Komi.

Ivan Blokov, campaign director at Greenpeace Russia, who studies oil spills, said the situation in Komi is replicated across Russia’s oil-producing regions, which stretch from the Black Sea in the southwest to the Chinese border in Russia’s Far East.

“It is happening everywhere,” Blokov said. “It’s typical of any oil field in Russia. The system is old and it is not being replaced in time by any oil company in the country.”

What also worries scientists and environmentalists is that oil spills are not confined to abandoned or aging fields. Alarmingly, accidents happen at brand new pipelines, said Barenboim.

At least 400 tons leaked from a new pipeline in two separate accidents in Russia’s Far East last year, according to media reports and oil companies. Transneft’s pipeline that brings Russian oil from Eastern Siberia to China was put into operation just months before the two spills happened.

The oil industry in Komi has been sapping nature for decades, killing or forcing out reindeer and fish. Locals like the 63-year-old Bratenkov are afraid that when big oil leaves, there will be only poisoned terrain left in its wake.

“Fishing, hunting ? it’s all gone,” Bratenkov said.

___

Bjoern H. Amland contributed to this report from Oslo, Norway.

___

Nataliya Vasilyeva can be reached at http://twitter.com/natvasilyevaap

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/enterprise/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20111220/ap_on_bi_ge/eu_russia_oil_calamity

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New beginnings (Balloon Juice)

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Make sure you measure everything (Offthekuff)

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North Korea quickly names ‘great successor’ after Kim Jong-il’s death (The Christian Science Monitor)

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Published on: December 30, 2011

Beijing ? South Korea put its troops on alert and Asian stock markets fell on Monday in signs of concern that the sudden death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il could spark instability in his secretive, nuclear-armed nation and beyond.

Most North Korea-watchers, though, predicted that a dynastic handover of power to Mr. Kim?s youngest son, Kim Jong-un, would lead to few surprises. The younger Kim was quickly named the ?Great Successor? to his father, the ?Dear Leader,? by Pyongyang?s official news agency, keeping power in Kim family hands for a third generation.

Though Kim Jong-un, believed to be in his late 20s, is thought to have been educated in Switzerland, which might have given him a broader perspective than his father or grandfather enjoyed, ?in the immediate future there will probably be no change,? says David Kang, head of Korean Studies at the University of Southern California.

IN PICTURES: Kim Jong-il’s cult of personality

 The new leader ?will keep his head down for the next couple of years and the government will still be run by elder statesmen,? Professor Kang says.

Well-placed Chinese observers agree. ?I do not see a big impact on regional security because the personnel situation is under control? since Kim Jong-il announced last year that his son would succeed him, argues Liu Xuecheng, a Korea expert at the China Institute for International Studies, a think tank in Beijing linked to the Foreign Ministry.

China wants stabilityAt the same time, Professor Liu points out, ?power is still concentrated in the military,? which will continue to exert significant influence over North Korean policy, while Pyongyang?s key neighbors ? China and Russia ? have both indicated their support for the young Kim.

China is especially concerned that its maverick prot?g? does not get out of hand. ?Collapse and chaos would be a worst-case scenario? for Beijing, whose ?basic policy is to secure the Korean peninsula?s security and political stability,? says Cai Jian, a North Korea expert at Fudan University in Shanghai.

The prickly North Korean government has long sought to keep Beijing at arm?s length, but in its current dire economic straits, ?they will need China more than ever? to see them through the power transition, suggests Scott Snyder, director of the Center for US-Korea Policy at the Asia Foundation.

That aid will certainly be forthcoming, adds John Delury, a professor of politics at Yonsei University in Seoul. ?Chinese diplomats will be in hyper-stability mode to soften out any bumps that they can.?

ARCHIVES: A Russian emissary’s record of traveling across Russia with Kim Jong-il in 2001

US food aid in question   The United States, too, is currently considering resuming food aid to Pyongyang. Though the status of that deal is now in doubt, recent talks between US and North Korean officials mean that ???channels of communication were opening, and at this stage that is important,??

  There seems little prospect, though, that international negotiations aimed at ending North Korea?s nuclear weapons program, and welcoming the country back into the community of nations in return, will resume any time soon. The Chinese-sponsored ?six-party talks? have been suspended for the past three years, and have achieved little since they began in 2003.

Dramatic steps on nuclear program unlikely ?North Korea will be very inward looking for months, or even years,? says Peter Beck, a research fellow at the Council for Foreign Relations in Washington. ?The regime will be stable but it will be hunkering down? as Kim Jong-un establishes his authority and shows filial piety by staying out of the limelight.

His father waited three years before formally taking power, following the 1994 death of his own father, the man who founded the North Korean state, Kim Il-sung.

 ?North Korea will not be adopting any new policies during a long mourning period,? says Professor Liu. ?Kim Jong-un will need this time to consolidate his rule and to prepare any policy adjustments.?

 While that probably means that Pyongyang will not take any dramatic steps soon to close its uranium enrichment and nuclear weapons programs, as Washington demands, it also makes it less likely that the government will lash out with unpredictable military attacks, such as its artillery assault on a South Korean island last year.

The South Korean news agency Yonhap reported that the North conducted a short-range missile test on Monday, shortly after Kim Jong-il’s death became public, according to the Associated Press. The report included the assessment of two South Korean military officials who did not confirm the test but said that it was likely part of a routine drill. 

North Korea has carried out two underground nuclear weapons tests, but ?its capability is rudimentary at the moment,? says Greg Moore, author of a soon-to-be-published book on North Korea?s nuclear program.

 ?They don?t have anything they can drop from a plane or put on a missile,? Professor Moore adds. ?At least we don?t have to worry about whose finger is on the button,? in the wake of Kim Jong-il?s death, ?because there is no button yet.? 

IN PICTURES: Kim Jong-il’s cult of personality

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/stocks/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/csm/20111219/wl_csm/438490

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Obama: Iran and Cuba ties don’t benefit Venezuela (Reuters)

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CARACAS (Reuters) ? The United States believes that increasingly warm ties between Venezuela, Iran and Cuba do not benefit the Venezuelan people, U.S. President Barack Obama said in an interview published on Monday.

Venezuelan leader Hugo Chavez and his Iranian counterpart, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, have expanded the two OPEC nation’s close business and political relations in recent years, exacerbating tensions between Caracas and Washington.

In May, the United States imposed sanctions on Venezuela’s state oil company PDVSA for defying U.S. law by sending at least two tankers carrying $50 million in oil products to Iran.

“Venezuela is a proud, sovereign nation … The U.S. has no intention of intervening in Venezuela’s foreign relations,” Obama said in the email interview with Venezuela’s El Universal. “However, I think the government’s ties with Iran and Cuba have not benefited the interests of Venezuela and its people.

“Sooner or later, Venezuela’s people will have to decide what possible advantage there is in having relations with a country that violates fundamental human rights and is isolated from most of the world. The Iranian government has consistently supported international terrorism.”

Responding during a televised cabinet meeting later on Monday, Chavez told the U.S. leader to quit meddling.

“Obama, mind you own business, man. Focus on governing your country, which has become a disaster. Now you’re going looking for votes by attacking Venezuela,” he said.

“Obama, you’re a phony … Go and ask the black community in your country what you are to them: the biggest frustration in I don’t know how many years,” he added.

“Go and ask the many people in Africa who may have believed in you because of the color of your skin, because your father was from Africa. You’re a descendent of Africa, but you are the shame of all those people.”

Chavez’s alliance with Ahmadinejad, as well as other anti-U.S. leaders, is a source of pride for the socialist and a central part of his efforts to build alternative axes of power.

‘IDEOLOGICAL BATTLES’

Since coming to power 13 years ago, Chavez has sought to project himself as the head of a global “anti-imperialist” movement inspired by his friend and ideological mentor, former Cuban president Fidel Castro.

Chavez lauds Castro’s communist-led revolution and underwent cancer surgery in Cuba in June. After recuperating from that and four sessions of chemotherapy, Chavez is now focused on winning a new six-year presidential term at an election next October.

In his interview, Obama said the U.S. administration was closely watching the run-up to the Venezuelan vote.

“We felt great concern to see that measures have been taken to restrict press freedom and to erode the separation of powers that are so necessary for a democracy to flourish,” he said.

A year ago, the U.S. government revoked the Venezuelan ambassador’s visa in retaliation after Chavez rejected Obama’s choice of envoy to Caracas. That appeared to bury any lingering hopes of a rapprochement between the two men.

But most analysts say neither will risk jeopardizing trade ties, principally Venezuelan oil exports that amount to about one million barrels per day and are crucial to both economies.

There was a window to improve relations after Obama took office in January 2009 and promised more engagement with foes. Chavez toned down his tirades against the “Yankee empire” and shook hands with the new U.S. leader at a summit.

But within months, he said Obama was disillusioning the world by sticking to his predecessor George W. Bush’s foreign policies, and the rhetoric from Caracas cranked up again.

In his interview with El Universal, Obama said most people in the region were worn out by the war of words.

“I think most people in Latin America are tired of refighting old ideological battles that contribute absolutely nothing towards improving their daily life. Our people want to know what we promote, not just what we oppose,” he said.

“I look forward to the day when the governments of the United States and Venezuela can work together more closely.”

(Additional reporting by Mario Naranjo; editing by Christopher Wilson)

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/latam/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20111220/pl_nm/us_venezuela_usa_obama

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