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Top Slovakian Official On Romney’s Missile Defense Attack: ‘People Have Moved On’

Slovakian Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak

Since Mitt Romney is not taking on any of the difficult situations the U.S. finds itself in around the world — he’s not visiting Afghanistan, for instance — his tour of European countries and Israel is instead focusing on promoting longstanding U.S. alliances. Though he’s already stumbled on his first stop in London, the theme was designed to go something like this: Mitt Romney will restore U.S. alliances spurned by the Obama administration.

One example Romney constantly holds up is the Obama administration’s decision to cancel land-based missile defense systems in Europe and instead focus on ship-borne systems and interceptor radars placed directly in the Middle East. Obama’s spurning “began with the sudden abandonment of friends in Poland and the Czech Republic,” Romney said at his VFW speech this week. “They had courageously agreed to provide sites for our anti-missile systems, only to be told, at the last hour, that the agreement was off.”

But it turns out that the Eastern European allies themselves don’t feel so spurned by President Obama’s decision, and some even support the new plan put in place. Speaking to the Wall Street Journal in Washington on Thursday, Slovakian foreign minister Miroslav Lajcak, who is also a deputy prime minister, said changing missile defense plans was a non-issue for his government:

People have moved on. We are in a different situation now. We are discussing a different project. I see no reason to revisit discussions from three years back.

In fact, this has been a non-issue for quite sometime. The Polish foreign minister said at the time of the new missile defense configuration announcement: “When President Obama announced the new configuration of the system, we did say that we liked the new configuration better, but I think you didn’t believe us.”

Lajcak went on to give the Journal an explicit endorsement of the Obama missile defense plan, lauding its NATO auspices rather than the abandoned Bush administration’s bi-lateral approach with host countries. While Romney said in his speech that Obama was bowing to Russia — whom he considers the U.S.’s “number one geopolitical foe” — Lajcak, in the Journal’s words, said “the U.S. and its European allies must continue to try and explain the defense plan to Russia, which remains skeptical.”

Romney’s tour theme may be falling flat so far, but at least he didn’t — like his adviser making the same attack — refer to Czechoslovakia in his speech. (HT: Blake Hounshell)

NEWS FLASH

Slovakia Approves Bailout Fund Increase | Game back on in Slovakia since “opposition leader Robert Fico, head of the Smer-Social Democracy party, announced that he had struck a deal with the remnants of Radicova’s coalition, promising to back the fund in exchange for early elections that analysts say Fico’s party is well positioned to win.”

Remember you heard it here first. The vote didn’t fail because because there was no majority support for the bailout, it failed because Fico was seeking unrelated concessions.

Yglesias

What You Need To Know About Slovak Politics

To expand a little bit on yesterday’s Slovakia happenings, I think much of the original reporting on this was somewhat confused and the parliamentary no vote isn’t necessarily that consequential. To see why, let’s step back and remember what we’re talking about. The leaders of the big Eurozone states decided that they want to expand something called the European Financial Stabilization Fund in order to be able to backstop Portugal and Ireland in the event of a possible Greek default. This requires the unanimous approval of the Eurozone parliaments, which includes Slovakia. All of them except Slovakia already agreed, and yesterday Slovakia said no.

But — and here’s the tricky part — the EFSF expansion actually seems to have majority support in the Slovak parliament.

To understand what’s happening here, you need to look back at the outcome of the 2010 elections. Then-incumbent Prime Minister Robert Fico led the social democratic Smer party to capture the largest number of seats. But a coalition of four substantially smaller center-right parties collectively had a majority in parliament and used it to form a governing coalition. Slovakia’s Prime Minister Iveta Radičová supports the EFSF expansion, as does her Slovak Democratic and Christian Union party and two of its three coalition partners. The problem is that one of the three coalition partners doesn’t support the EFSF expansion and Smer doesn’t want to bail the prime minister out by delivering the votes she needs to pass the bill. But they’re not determined to kill the bill either, they just want to use it as leverage. It’d be as if Nancy Pelosi withheld Democratic votes from the TARP legislation unless Bush and Boehner agreed to make some separate concessions on taxes and SCHIP.

Yglesias

The Shame Of The Crowded Field

The ridiculous thing about these Republican debates is that you keep needing to wade through this vast field of candidates who are essentially doing book tours in order to hear the actual presidential candidates debate. Rick Santorum is not going to be a major party presidential nominee. Nor will Herman Cain. Michele Bachmann had a brief moment when it kinda sorta maybe looked like she could possibly break through, but she didn’t. The actual choice Republicans are making at the moment is whether Rick Perry or Mitt Romney will run against Barack Obama. This is an interesting question, and I for one would like to see the relevant information presented rather than a lot of nonsense from pizza salesmen and Newt Gingrich.

Initially I thought the lack of mano-a-mano debates was helping Perry, since Romney was clearly the superior debater but Perry could kind of hide behind all the other nutters and muddy the waters. But now that Romney seems to have the upper hand against Perry, it’s the reverse. Perry would really benefit from a high-risk, high-reward opportunity to reset the narrative about his skills as a candidate. Based on what we’ve seen so far, even people who prefer Perry on the merits must be worried that he’s too shaky to be a reliable standard-bearer against the incumbent.

Meanwhile, on the issues, nobody said “Slovakia.” There was this weird exchange about whether or not Romney would support a new bailout if, hypothetically, the European situation were to cause some unspecified insolvency of American banks. But why not ask a question about the actual situation? Should the president be phoning up Slovak parliamentarians?

Yglesias

Czechoslovak Monetary Divorce

Prague Castle

Prague Castle

Tyler Cowen is looking into the dissolution of monetary unions. One recent case is the 1993 “Velvet Divorce” of the Czech and Slovak Republics. The basic mechanics of the switch. The countries had divided back in January, but maintained a single currency for a little bit, though the Czechs insisted on splitting up since they thought the Slovak economy would be weaker:

The current bank notes will be exchanged for stamped ones in the ration 1:1 since Thursday 4 till Sunday, February 7 at all post offices and detached sections of the Czech Savings Bank. During those days the banks will stop withdrawal from accounts and deposit books. Till Sunday only not-stamped bank notes are valid in the Czech Republic.

Stamped notes with the value of 100, 500, and 1000 crowns together with not stamped notes of lower value (10,20,50 and coins) will be valid since Monday, February 8. On the same day the Czech currency will be enriched by the first Czech 200 crown bill with the portrait of J.A.Komensky.

Every citizen aged 15 and more can exchange money to the value of 4000 crown, a person below 15 can exchange maximum 1000 crowns. The exchange will be certified in the identity card.

Persons who will not be able for serious reasons exchange money can do so within the following 6 months. If someone has at home more than 4000 crowns, he can deposit it in the Savings Bank of send through post to his own addresse where it will be delivered already stamped.

The situation in Slovakia was basically the same. Anticipation that the Czech Koruna would appreciate relative to the Slovak one meant “thousands of Slovaks rushed across the Czech border to have their old notes stamped as Czech.” Key to making this work is that at the time I believe the České Spořitelna bank was still a state-owned monopoly so capital controls could be applied in a straightforward and effective matter with ease.

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