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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  February 16, 2024 6:02am-6:30am CET

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a mess in brussels following remarks by former us president donald trump, but what interpreted as questioning nato is future in response, the alliance is highlighting increases in spending and continued solidarity with ukraine. i'm new cooper's mckinnon invalid, and this is the day the it is and the national security interest of the night, the states to maintain the needs of us, the most successful allies and history. i see this as the challenge of our generation. we will continue to start with ukraine for ukraine, security for hours he just urgent. we have to continue provide them with issue. i expect that not the states to continue to be as don't show allied
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also coming up, donald trump faces weeks and course after a new judge denies his request to dismiss his case. obviously welcome to the show. nato defense ministers have put tools of a wrist between the us and europe behind the following a 2 day missing in brussels. the alliance hail the increase in defense budgets, which we'll see europe in member spending an extra 33000000000 dollars this year. and the alliance trust is continued backing to ukraine. the 5th ammo running short on the battlefield, nato defense ministers of stress more needs to be done to ensure that you train has the supplies with needs. we also discuss ramping up production over munition to refill our stokes. i continue to support ukraine,
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and we need to shift from the slow pace of peace time to the high temple production demanded by conflict. ne, to said it was set up a training center if you train, imposed in to say intelligence on finding the russian. a group of member states also want to send 1000000 drones to ukraine and other allies want to help clear mines in the water on country defense. she's also discussed the war with ukraine defense minister who's to move off in the ne to ukraine council. another topic, money star book announced historic progress and alliance defend spending. in 202418 of the 31, a 2 allies i estimated to achieve this subset goal of spending 2 percent of the g. d. p for defense spending among them. awesome, you come us this, this the bottom, it is important to emphasize once again the job and the like 17 other countries. when they change the agreed quote triple 2 percent for the 1st time in the biggest
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defense spend of the us has a tense bound by congress and releasing another 60000000000 for ukraine. this is having an impact on the ground. the fact that the us has not been able to make a decision so far, how old to have consequences. it is impact thing, the floors of support of the allies i doing their best to step in. but know how important the us decision is also sonya will take from all their own stokes, at the moment to send the media to, to ukraine demo. but we all understand that it's not enough when us will not be part of that. so we all need this decision as soon as possible at nature headquarters. the hope for the us does not give up on support for ukraine. it's a 2nd. none of the street of russia's invasion of ukraine is fast approaching the deputies. terry schultz has more now on whether keith can be satisfied with the
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commitments made to it at this meeting. that's right, a very somber anniversary that will be and i don't think you can afford to be satisfied with the outcome of this meeting. we just had an interview with the estonian defense minister, and he was at the forefront of getting the european union to pledge a 1000000 rounds of 155 millimeter ammunition for ukraine. a pledge that will fall far short was due to be delivered next month and not even half of it will be there . so definitely keep needs that ammunition that needed it yesterday. at the same time, there were some initiatives announced that i believe will make keys a bit reassured that nato will stand by his side for wonder is going to be a joint training center established in poland where ukrainians will come to be trained and the allies as well, will learn from ukraine, the country that knows best how to, how to fight russia. we also heard that there will be a 1000000 drones sent to ukraine, and various countries announced more contributions to what are being called capabilities. and that is something that was established under the ukraine defense
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contacts group, and certainly will a reassure ukraine that allies will continue to send contributions, still waiting, of course, on that 60000000000 package coming out of washington. let's take a closer look at this with stephen. what time he's a senior fellow at the american state's cross program with the economy he endowment for international peace. thanks so much for joining us here on the w, the full, the president donald trump made statements last week, which have been widely interpreted as cooling the nato alliance into question. but on the question of financing, and they towed off from president joe biden, actually closer than we may think as well, they're still pretty night and day on the alliance itself. so we shouldn't get past that point in a sense, it doesn't matter much if uh, exactly who funds, what if the united states is not really going to come to the defense of it's trudy
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allies. and that's what the president of united states is, is signaling, or that's to say it, it requires europe to fund a lot more, but you're right that, you know, united states has for a long time. this goes back a number of administrations including the obama administration, which actually helped to establish the, the 2 percent guidelines for g d, p, spent by nato allies on defense. so, you know, for more than a decade, the signal coming out of washington is that it expected and it wanted european allies to step up, spend more on defense and make more of a contribution precisely as the security requirements of defending eastern europe have increased due to the threat from, from russia that said, bite and has not been nearly as in fact about it, nor is he threatening as trump has gone to
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a band in the alliance altogether. so you've saw when trump made his statement, suggesting that he would be at best in different if nato were attacked, the end of the member of nato that were attacked by hadn't that quote, unquote paid. it's due is $108.00. 0, not really. how need a works, but let's put that aside. mm hm. you know, there was a, a real sense of outrage and alarm and european capitals because they are really now coming to confront the prospect that donald trump could very well return to the white house. if we can stay with joe biden, for the moment, would you say joe biden has being a master of his own state and during the 1st 3 years of his presidency, i mean, is the focus of us foreign policy. now, what biden intended it to be when he took office or not at all. uh, you know, 3 years ago, which feels like a long time. that kind of tells you the story, right?
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it's hard to even be a look back 3 years. but 3 years ago, divine and ministration took office, hoping to keep events in the middle east, off the president's desk, and even wanted to de prioritize security affairs in, in europe and its side in its 1st year. what was called a stable and predictable relationship with the russia and notably put in and by didn't held a summit in geneva in that 1st summer of the, by the administration. so the goal of the administration was to prioritize for teacher competition with china in asia. and tackle trans national challenges like climate change and pandemic. not to mention of course, to revive american democracy at home and look at where we are now. senior policy makers are absorbed managing laura europe and multiple related conflicts in the middle east. exactly. the places that we're not supposed to be the priority. now
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you could draw 2 diametrically opposite conclusions from the state of affairs. one conclusion, which is quite popular in washington, is that the united states see and united states can't really pull back from anywhere. so it might as well dig in gall and invest more resources encountering and occurring that actions in the middle east, in europe, and everywhere else. but the 2nd conclusion, and this may be where the united states is headed, where it would be instead, united states cannot expect to be able to set its own strategic priorities. clear enough, unless it, unless it practices retrenchment in the middle east and even perhaps a europe trust. and if it doesn't do that, it's heading towards overstretch and politically drop. or if not, you can honestly and militarily on sustainable commitments. and so i think the choice between trump invite and to some degree may reflect those 2 kinds of opposite conclusions. say, looking ahead,
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would you say the bite and administration does have a clear view of what it wants? internationally, whatever has happened in the last 3 is as well, of course, the binding ministration will tell you that it does. and it will tell you that it's still putting the top priority on strategic competition with china. and that the u. s. department of defense considers try to be it's pacing threat and that is not untrue. but i think at this point uh, a lot of what we're seeing is crisis management and improvisation. um, a major question i think, is the extent to which to bind in ministration. at this point, if it gets past the election in november and united states wants to do more to bring the war in ukraine to a conclusion, how does it respond to the political problems it is had with, with congress and the republican party in getting ukraine aid renewed the
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administration has adopted capacious ams toward the war, and is basically defer to key of in terms of setting what the objectives are. and i think the president has left himself some room to specify, you know, exactly what is it that the united states for its own interest is seeking to achieve toward the war. and so there may be room to take a somewhat more circumscribed approach to the war that can be more politically sustainable in the united states. but it's very much unclear how the white house will, will react to the trouble. it's had with congress and to judge from the president's recent address in which he, you know, said that the renewing ukraine a was meant to combat russia and not renewing ukraine. aid was to play into hooton's hands. you know,
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he continues to use this very morally charged, loaded up framing of the, of the conflict that doesn't seem to be landing with the people that he's trying to persuade. speaking, what time from the company he endowment for international peace. thanks so much for your time today and for your analysis. my pleasure. the us media are forcing the biden administration has warned. it's your opinion allies about russian efforts to develop nuclear weapons based in space to target satellites. the republican chair of the house intelligence committee, mike ton, has cooled it a serious national security threats. he's off president biden, to declassify relevant information. the kremlin says the reports are rooms by the white house to get congress to back aid the ukraine. and we can welcome now on the dana as crowd se ortega,
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who specializes in the space security at u. n. i. d, i on know that some a ton of us institute institution within the u. n, there was such as this element and international security. welcome to dw, thanks so much for your time today. can you help us understand watson attack by nuclear weapons up in space? would look like thank you very much for having me. well, so let me, per se, is this by saying that we need to learn more before saying anything definitive about flow. this what 10 is exactly, but it seems unlikely that it's new to what some past say. it's more likely that it's a new what a new to code device rather than a nuclear onto the device. so it's an important distinction. so it's likely that this is an electronic ton of space. assets like a gamma, which would in to stay with stuff lots communications. or alternatively,
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this could be a nuclear powered space talk, which would potentially could potentially be repurposed to us as an untie stuff. a lot device. so this is, this is an important distinction. we wouldn't be facing exactly the destination of a nuclear device in space, which is actually prohibited by international space. no applicable as established by the space tracy. okay, that is a little bit reassuring. but the question remains, i mean, why use this particular kind of weapon in space? i mean all the other ways of, of destroying satellites. definitely, uh there are many different types of town space technologies on the development of these sorts of technologies is not new states across the whole different school spectrum states that are active in space have been developing these come space technologies to many decades of the so the concern is that,
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and that's why it's important to continue to have these debates of the multi actual level to try to, to come up with messages to mitigate the potential stress that these town space assets compose to, to be in the whole community. because even if this might not be a nuclear device, any source of interest, there is any source of damage that sucks a lot to myself that could cause very damaging and very long lasting, reverberating effects to uh, services that we enjoy on uh, on, on which we rely on our everyday lives. uh so this is definitely an issue of concern, but again, i do want to stress that this is not something new on the business, something out definitely the international community has been to the basing for some time. okay. but let's just talk about the reach because i mean you've made very clear these on actual nuclear weapons, but obviously power full capable. and,
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you know, what would these kind of what, this kind of technology also be capable of hitting reaching targets on us. so you know, directly, if you're imagining a missile that shoots from a device in space and reach us at that, that is relatively unlikely because of how overall mechanics work is not the most efficient way to target something or not. or do you want to also give a list of the same, or i know it's not the case and for any type of work in a uh, box the way the base would what? so essentially it's and it would be a no genetic types of capability. so like a done which would generate a noise on the same range. it radio frequency band, us, uh, the space system or the ground station that's being targeted in order to block or in to stay with the signal traveling uh from in this case space to us. um,
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so in this and that is how it would be felt on us. it wouldn't be a direct source of damage, but it would be the damage that would be felt would be red. the bracing in nature of the case, it could disrupt, or it could interrupt the services that a specific stuff. so lots provide to me really, fairly interesting space security expert on the dana has karate. it will take us. thank you so much for sharing your expertise in helping us understand that technology best. so thanks for your time. now the 1st criminal trial of a former us president is set to go ahead next month. and you will judge has rejected the bid from donald trump to have the case dismissed. the charges stem from hush money paid to to women before the 2016 presidential election. and the trial is now scheduled to begin on march 25th. after the hearing trump said the case was interfering with his presidential campaign or
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the race to more or less. i'm drawing now by richard painter. he was the chief white house ethics lawyer during the george w bush present presidency and is currently a little professor at the university of minnesota. so welcome to the w. now this is a criminal case. what does that mean for the defendant, the, for the president, donald trump, as well this case? so we'll proceed to trial and late march. the judge decided that today this case has nothing to do with joe biden. the bonded ministration. this is a manhattan county prosecutor prosecuting a case of concerning hush money that was paid and concealed in 2016. and this
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is part of a case that was pursued by the federal government by the justice department. while donald trump was president, his own lawyer, michael cohen was at the jail in connection with these hush money payments by the united states department of justice. once again, while he was president, he was not invited because d o j, the justice department will not indict a sitting president. but here at the county attorney in manhattan has said that is also a felony under new york lot of falsified business records to cover up any type of crime. and that includes concealing the spending around a $130000.02 pay stormy daniels to keep your mouth shut. and that money was funneled through donald trump's lawyer, michael cohen, and went to jail for those. and this was a felony under new york law. if donald trump was involved in orchestra reading, that payment and both of buying those business records, then it would be convicted,
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he is to be presumed innocent until he is convicted of. but that's where this case stands at this point, and it has obviously nothing to do with joe barton. this is not a political prosecution. this is the county a new york manhattan prosecution for falsified business records. under new york law . me, the experts are describing the prosecutor's case as being on a lot sleep on tested legal basis. so given everything you've said how, how strong is this case as well the, the part of the new york statute is the new york. the businesses should not be used to funnel money for the purpose of violating a law anywhere, whether it's in the antarctic getting there and we're in germany or another state or under federal law. we can't have new york businesses falsifying their financial records in order to cover up crimes committed elsewhere. new york is not of money laundromat. and this is very, very important to the integrity, the business commute in new york, where i practiced law before i became
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a loved professor. we can have new york businesses may use this, why? so if there was falsification of business records to conceal the $130000.00 pay off to start mcdaniels, that is a very serious crime now who committed the crime and whether donald trump was above neck prime. that's what's going to be determined at trial. but this is not a spacious legal theory or, or some obscure statute. mm hm. uh, new york, once again does not. what is business records in new york businesses bank falsified to conceal crimes anywhere? will trump be able to find any way to avoid having to pair a to a pair and close? oh, i'm sure he'll look for way. he has 3 other uh, pending cases, uh, 2 federal charges, one for the classified documents, another for the attempt to overturn the election a georgia case, which is somewhat chaotic right now of that situation. but the new york prosecutors decided in new york judge decided that this new york case is good to go 1st
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a given some of the delays and the other cases, of course you will look for the la. busy like the delay all these cases until after the election, a get himself elected president then use his power and the presidency to have all the charges dismissed, but it may or may not work out that way. so would you be expecting of a day before the election in november or no or oh yes, if this case goes to trial in like march, they would almost certainly be a verdict in the sometime in april. and i know what to be found guilty. how would the appeal process, what coming could he even end up in jail? well, a, this is a serious offense, and if he were convicted of the felony of falsifying business records, there's a possibility of incarceration or probation. we don't know what the penalty would be depending on how many counts were conducted on, but that's why we aren't there yet. he's presumed innocent until he is found guilty . but if the work convicted, this would be
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a complication for he is becoming the next president of the united states. even though we would not automatically disqualify someone from the presidency for a criminal conviction for anything other than direction or sedation. mm hm. they did it as we don't know what's going to happen but, but all of this was happening. you know, this case, the other civil cases, but trump is facing. do you expect them to seriously affect his bid? so when the white house for a 2nd time, well i was hoping that the republican party would look at some other other very strong candidates. so we still have nikki haley in the race. the former governor of south carolina, who is a everybody's conservative, is donald trump more consistently conservative than donald trump. and he doesn't have any criminal indictments halla hanging over here. so maybe the republican party has 2nd thoughts. if not, we go into the, the election in november and the american people have to decide who they want to be in charge of the country, the presidency for the next 4 years. right?
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terms of painting from the university of minnesota. so thank you so much for your time. it was a pleasure talking to you. thank you for adding me. now, this could be history in the making a private mission to the moon has blocked it off from the kennedy space center. a cape canaveral in florida, a 3 to one ignition. and with the american aerospace company intuitive machines launched, it's all to see us land on a rocket made by equinox space, ex company. it is trying to become the 1st commercial spacecraft to successfully land on the surface below which was originally planned for wednesday, but it was postponed because of a technical selection of this time. everything went according to plan and it's the landing. and so it goes well to see us will search for vasa on the moon and bought some cooling a 2nd space, right. and that turns the rocket for,
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as honestly the black one and that is the show for today, follow the same on social media as dw in use. and if it's the latest headlines you're looking for those with a website that's d, w dot com for now from the entire team on the day. thanks so much for spending thoughts of your day with us. the
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let's view the be. we are happy that we are boxing the story. we have a getting a visa is more difficult than finding gold plus the 2 years for for the present in the stories and issues that are being discussed across the country. news african next on d w into the conflict phone with tim sebastian, i guess this week is alexi gunter, unco ukrainian. m. p. angelica to the parliamentary assembly council of us
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for a year ago, gone to ranko, had post price because the landscape and reservations about him. because he still believe this presidents will be due crying to victory conflict. in 16 minutes on d. w the shuttle the, the more people than ever on the news world volume in such a fashion, life, facile jessica middle passage to now the piano. is it going back on the card of activity or something then that's ok. that's the nanda
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foundation, one back to the find out about robina story. in some language. reliable news for migraines? wherever they may be. this is the deputies africa coming up on the show. africa without plastic. plastic waste is 5 running out of control on the continent will tell you about the latest efforts to clean up spurred on by a band in lagos, and the young people in south africa who could change the direction of the country in the upcoming election. we will hear from one of them a now the 1st for loops on your will, the actress kicks office spent as jury president of the prestigious food and knowledge. she's the 1st black person to ever have federal.

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