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tv   The Hidden Homeless  Deutsche Welle  April 19, 2024 5:15pm-6:00pm CEST

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of israel with reassurance that the g 7 has these back diplomatic lee that it's gonna take other actions against iran, for instance, in the realm of sanctions. let me just see rain for from tony blinking to try to try to give the impression to as well. you don't need to handle this entirely militarily. there also. so if you have the last several times that we have to that . so the title of the tone that they are trying to, to strikes that just take, let's take a look not the why the region, how did the neighboring nations react to it? it yeah, well i think it's really using to, to look a one in particular and that's jordan. now we know that when iran looks that massive a boom kind of barrel, i should have missed 1000 drones against israel. it wasn't just is really a defenses. the managed to shoot, but actually all of those projects alls down it was also allies in the form of the united states and other western countries, but also jordan, this a neighboring country as well. of course. and jordan shut down
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a number of drones that were, were flying over that space. um and so jordan has a great interest in this, not happening again to this note the coming in the escalade tree spiral. so you've had so similar language from the jordanians almost compared to the g. 7 intense, even though did these retaliations must end. but then saying that what it called the inhumane for on the semester ends now. so trying to kind of get the focus back to the, to the war and guys, which is of course, an on going on result. and i think that like between the lines, you can see that the jordanians are concerned about the image within the hour of well being potentially home by the fact that it helped these riley's offend off this attack, which is obviously something that could be unpopular in parts of their well, so i think jordan in from c and if i since deposition that and i think that may also have contributed to this pretty cautious apparent, attacked by these rallies on the wrong. instead that they realize that they conte
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wrote about too much, particularly for friends like jordan, which of health so much and in keeping it safe just recently. now moving away from israel, a and around the us secretary of state and to the bank and had some a tough comments on china and it's support for russia as well. so yeah, that's right, that i find that pretty interesting. so tony blink and saying that, you know, the chinese on the one hand, they want to be friendly and do business with you or. but on the other hand, they are still king by helping russia, the greatest threat to european security. since the end of the cold war, i'm a lead to bad bulk his german cows, but also echoing those comments. and i think is quite interesting to contrast the tone of their language on china to the tone of the language from all of salts. the german chancellor, when he was in badging just earlier this week, who's also expressing great concern about china support for russia, but using much, much common language. so i think you begin to see another glimpse of, of the differences that you have within the german government. it with respect to
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china. do you have lena bab booked that very much, taking a tough line off sholtes in the chancellor ship, taking a more money in line and interesting to see tony blinking kind of getting into the middle of that today with those comments that he made. chief international editor, richard volk, of that. thank you very much, which is a, that's a look not some of the other stories making headlines around the world today in the united states has vetoed a security council resolution, the full full united nations membership for palestinians. the us as an independent palestinian state should be established through negotiations between israel and the palestinian authority. no for the you. where is the results of the vote? well that a 100 students have been arrested of the pro palestinian protest complex. and we all columbia, you must say, was the mounting. the diversity distance itself from corporations, the basement, and profit from israel's military accident and thoughts rushed themselves strive on
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eastern ukraine, is killed at least 8 people, an injured thousands, more, a residential building was it, and the official se critical infrastructure was also damaged. president savanski has repeated his call for less than that was to help to find strength and it's defensive. the world's biggest election has begun in india, where a prime minister in the rental mode is seeking us the time and offices the 1st day of voting for the lower house. haldeman has closed, spoke to his battles, keep wait conditions to cost the balance daily. 1000000000 people are eligible to safe pop over the next 6 of us. and post address the prime minister and his indian nationalist b j. p. on course to women of the land slide. here's what somebody has to say. 10 didn't the texas have increased. it feels like we are overpaying for everything.
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even small things have become pricey of the phone charges to do something to what the current government is providing everything they are giving us a lot, especially to students. and that's why i think it's appropriate to vote for them. what those you have given my work to moody because did 5 d b a p, focus on security that inspires the youth, pencils, id. and the off course at the moment, concerns that some strong supporters of emoji dw correspondence charlie adults told me more about the background to this election. well, what is pretty divided if you ask me, you know, despite consultants like unemployment amongst the youth and price strikes, which have really been the bullying issues over the last few months. hill. mr. moody's popularity remains at overtime. height in india. i think people really like
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he's a sort of style of ruling and the absence of a strong enough opposition to much. oh, he enjoys an approval rating of over 80 percent amongst engines. i went to wonder if his political election riley's in the holy down official case. and people that told me that the light came because they see him as a champion of him to rights. and they also liked him for a raising india stuck to on a global stage. he's riding high on the socks a sofa in the hosting. the g 20 summit last september. and the fact that the western leaders had been going all direct carpet for him. because india is needed as a counter to china in the region a. so what about the health of india as democracy? then there are concerns on that a yes, they have been concerns about democratic back sliding under the prime minister ship also. and mr. moody or he's continued to be in power of for 10 years. and now he seeking a 3rd to him. so really the whole model for the indian democracy which have been
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the press for you to put instance the civil liberties and the rights of minorities . now that they're in the, under the spotlight for the wrong reasons. hill. since a prime minister movie came to power in 2014 india's a ranking in the woods press, freedom index has gone down by 20 places from 140 back. then $261.00, no rice groups like amnesty and human rights, which have expressed concerns about the arrests and track down on joining this and on activist some of them had been jaded, arrested in jail, under the communion, and to tourism laws. i'm the minorities in this country of muslims and christians have expressed concerns that they have the, the attacks on them all have risen under this government and the feel that they're going to be treated as a 2nd class citizen in this country. now give us an idea of what would a set term of modi look like?
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well, experts say that i thought i would see a more authoritative and more a so to style of a ruling under the time and a sort of under the prime minister ship of mr. moody. some fear that his taught to him could see the future of this country as a he knew majority and state as opposed to a secular, liberal democracy that it is known to be around the world. now in this place, in the democratic industries has fallen under the prime minister shape of mr. moody, but that's a charge that this government denies and they all have about to come up with their own democratic or index to prove or these charges to be wrong. but, but the exports still raised those kind of feels that this, this election could prove to be the back to, for the very sort of democratic india. thank you very much. the w. solve the ot us and then the more in gaza is overshadowing the stones of the vin is being out of the festival. the artist by presenting israel,
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is refusing to open its national pavilion until a ceasefire and hostage deal are in place. the global south is in the spotlight at this year's festival, which showcases work from mazda the last groups, especially indigenous office, of a 700 square meter. mural of the amazon covers the entire facade of this central pavilion. it's the work of all to spend when the queen indigenous people from brazil and peru and brings the spirit of the rang forest directly to the venice b. a know that despite the history of persecution and displacement, they preserve their traditions and spiritual identity. so the common in dodge being, the whole community paints what he's thinking. and he's thinking how to a queen, which is the oldest language if the, who the queen with that's what it is, very important to us. because it's a continuation of our on substance of this device to re,
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to adriano pedrosa is well acquainted with the indigenous alt if he's native, brazil for the past decade he's been the autistic director of the south polo museum of on this be another focuses on office from the global south and celebrates changing perspectives. up, comments, change the world, but it can change how we view the how we feel, the world, how we see the world, how we interpret the world, how we can gauge with the world. and that indeed can be something that changes his chosen title far and as everywhere is inspired by a series of neil and sculptures by thought is collective class on chain pedrosa expands the concept of following to to include the clear artist, faces persecution at home or the indigenous painter who feels marginalized. jeffrey gibson is defense, gay, and native american artist ever to represent the us with a solo exhibition. a while not to stoke an artist showcases his
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native greenland in new and authentic ways. in the danish pavilion. the work is based on the frustrations and confusions of the greenland take modern life which has been made quite complex because of a greenland you being used to be a colony of denmark. the republic of the name is making it simple appearance at this being on it with works that separate the spiritual power of you are the women and the deep roots of booty. yes, i'm very proud to be a long detail, a good deal because i was very important. important yet still lounge leon noon on the international stage by giving prominence to artists to have often been excluded from the great fig submissions of the post. this being on it seems to us
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a new top to, to our history, to and that's it for now. some the other one is update for you at the top beyond this of course always look more used on our website, dw, dot com, god f. as in berlin, the
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into the conflicts own, with tim sebastian. as the board and ukraine grind on the neighboring voltage states which anxiously from the ring side seat, pressing the west to increase a secure and make sure russia dozens with my guest this week is the last to be as 5 minutes to place you on this current and he's clear nature as to optics, go conflict next on d, w to the point. strong opinions, clear positions,
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international perspective. a growing frustration with the west as russia rams of aerial assaults. can ukraine hold its eastern front as it struggles under rock at a time? and how can its air defenses be strengthened? join us this week on to the point to the point in 60 minutes on d w, the show similar rent 16 times to grease ish bravo has to spend life from 500 to 600 new car and key more people than ever on the move worldwide in such a fashion, like you know, it's a very difficult journey. and one is very hard to
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take everything audio stuff, find out about some on storage, info, migrant, reliable news to migrate wherever they may be. the, as the warning ukraine grimes on the neighboring voltage states what's anxiously from the ring side seat, pressing the west to increase a to kill and make sure russia doesn't with my guest this week is the last to be as 5 minutes to fish on these kinds and he's clear nato as the optics game. the difficulty in the frustration that i feel is that as we are going step by step, russia is going full frontal flows. so how ready is nato to take on an expansion? is russia? why are some rich european states phil, i'm willing to meet the alliances defense spending targets and was present the
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macro really calling his allies colon christian, i'm just calling welcome to come pick tone to thank you very much. great to be here . your prime minister was just in the us recently trying to persuade congress to unblock the military assistance with the white house of promise to ukraine. she made the point of several times, russia must not be allowed to win this war. if russia does win the war, it will be down to. they has the taishan and refusal of the west to give it the weapons. it needs to when it was the idea sunk in yet in the west. well, i think it, i think it is. and if, if we look, i not on the other side of the plastic that on what is happening in europe. so in europe, when the world was starting, there was just a small handful of countries that were providing on the print, the baltics of poland. others were in the beginning, more hesitant. now we see that there is
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a full throated support for ukraine. we just the, in the european union voted 50000000000 uh and agreeing 50000000000 over 4 years that will support the government. we have the check initiative to get ammunition also outside of european union. we have seen that, for example, germany has gone almost 180 degrees from a very pacifist stands for, for obvious historical reasons to actually being the largest supporter of ukraine now. and now we see the french president coming with an initiative, you can read it many ways. but as a, as, as electric and foreign minister, i read it rather as simply that the french also understands that not only ukraine has to win, but russia has to lose the war. otherwise it's, it's a, it's a big security threat for all of your body of russia does. when is what i think, what is the resistance is a little too light to little into light?
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well, i think right now we have to focus on what we can do. so that does not happen because if they were to, when they would have learned the less than that might makes, right, they will have assume that the west is, is, is somehow weak or divided or unwilling to stand up against him. and that aggression will continue in one direction or another. so in order for that, aggression not to go on because it probably won't go away, russia will be aggressive at the end of the more, even if they lose the war because put, than just secured. another 6 years for himself, that means their policies will remain unchanged. and i think this is a big wake up call for all of us that and in the sense, the lack of the vote in the us congress for the $60000000000.00 support package for you. train is a wake up call to us here in europe. that we have to get our military industry up
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to par. we have to make sure that we are investing in our own defense. and we have to make sure that we have a large enough and capable enough of armies. the military's a to stand up to, to any right. so that, that threat never materialized, isn't that just called the turns that is what nato is all about. and within nato, there's the united states, but there are also a $31.00 other countries, including all of us here in europe. and we have to do our share as well. yes. uh, some of the countries, of course, haven't been doing their share and i want to come onto back to them. and in a minute, you talked about germany turning a 180 degrees from its previous thoughts. what do you think of germany's refusal to provide long range taurus, missiles to ukraine? of course as s like in politician, i agree with those that it would be certainly beneficial to the training efforts if they had a these missiles at the same time, i have to say that unfortunately the discussion about the part of the missiles,
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a clouds over the the sheer fact of the volume of a the germany is actually giving, and it's rather unfortunate that because of the house you say a debate over one part of the age, it's overshadowing everything that germany is doing. so from a public relations point of view, it's too bad that this is distracting from actually the big story of germany. support has an issue i'm going to, i'm sorry to interrupt you, but it hasn't, hasn't germany and the west as well. being far too scared about most goes rhetoric, it's nuclear, are talking about is nuclear arsenal. to worry that the alliance looks weak to russia, or i'm, well, the alliance is growing a thanks to russia. we have no finland and sweden in the alliance. a thanks to russia's aggression in europe, as we see in germany, elsewhere, governments are actually quite massively stepping up investments in their own
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defense, thanks to russia's war in ukraine. our defense interest, the, all those slow is making the investments now and where we are behind the russian curve because they knew they were going to where they're on the work footing. we're getting there a so i'm inside nato is on the low 50 foot thing or should be on a war footing. it is moving in that direction. now we in the politics and then last year from, for 2 years, even before, before this, this outbreak were started, we were arguing that russia is a real security threat. a russia is, is a challenge to all of us. and for many years, we were told by many of our good friends and colleagues and allies that maybe were a little bit alarmist. it turns out, unfortunately, that we were right i, i wish i was wrong in this regard. and it is taken, so in the baltics it was, we never had any doubts about this. so we reacted very quickly. and then some other
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societies, the reaction has been slow or the extra reaction has been changed with a certain fear of oppression. we in the baltics have continually said, there's nothing to fear in a sense, but fear itself, but russia understands power if we are strong, russia will never attack. and if we are strong, russia will lose in ukraine as well. you said in january, russia will not stop. russia can only be stopped. stopping in. russia does not mean that it's over. it simply means we will have to continue. are you saying that you have evidence? russian couldn't tends to invade and seize of a southern states of the southern countries in europe, but no a. but if we read in the public sphere, everything that pretend has been saying his speech is the philosophies the doctrines of they are on an aggressive imperialistic direction. and this will not change uh, because of the ukraine, although the success of that is what we have to change. but even after the end of
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this work, what i'm arguing that we in nato will have to have a many or i would say, in order to understand the scope a 20 or a containment. and it turns effort to make sure that the rushes aggression never materialized is that is their internal wishes to somehow expand or intimidate neighbors. you're being a neighbor simply could never materialize because we are still visibly strong and we are getting there. we have though, in a to the of the, of the it has forward presence. also the german, the german presence in between that the canadians, and in last year the brits in estonia and many other allies as well. we already have a much more robust presence. they than we did 2 years ago. yes. not minister use it use you say that, but we talked about the 6 the penny and usa package that hasn't come through for ukraine. so i would ask whether europe can rectify the that enormous shortfall in its own defense spending. nato's european members need to stump up
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another 56000000000 euros a year just to meet the alliances defense spending targets that comment defense spending targets. and there's no sign that they're going to do that is that it's an expense belgium, then the wendy of the target of 2 percent of g d p all day that the nato requires fact to is if the west is serious about you. crazy wanting to wait and then it's time to west up to its game, isn't it? and i, i agree. it is time to the west up its game and it is happening from a locked in perspective. i think for me, ukrainians perspective, it's happening rather slow. uh, but it is happening, this is why we are continuing. not only to argue, but we've put our money where our mouth, so we are moving up to 3 percent of a g, d p on defense spending, we've reintroduced the draft for buying new defensive weapon systems. and we are continuing to provide aid on
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a regular basis to ukraine. we are participating in the check initiative to buy a broad ammunition. so we are, we are doing everything that we think all allies could do. and it looks like, according to estimates that i have seen, that before they tell us, or for europe, i should say, to be able to, to, to fully, for mostly a, to fund its own defense. if it needs within nato. the number of would not be a 2 percent of g, d p will be closer to 3 percent of g d p. if we all spent this and all of us spent this, we might have some apple supplies for ourselves and for your brain that's, that's a big if, isn't it? because polls conducted by nato show pretty low levels of support for increasing defense spending. and that's in some of the member countries with the biggest shortfalls, like literally only 28 percent of people in that country wants to spend more on defense. if you don't get the money for this. none of these grand plans and none of
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the promises that were initially made to ukraine are going to be met, solve a to well i, i agree, is that not everyone is there, but if we look, turn back the clock 2 years, uh, the number of countries not meeting 2 percent, which much greater, that number is decreasing. and if we also look at the countries that you mentioned, a defense spending is going up. we once that curb to go up faster and this is the difference between also various politicians. politicians can take the stance of looking at public opinion and following public opinion or what i think what is needed that this if this time are politicians who argue a to the electorate. what it is that we have to do, what is the right thing to do and to make the policy happen? and the good news is that sense of urgency is expanding in europe. we see and money while the cost initiative is actually adjusting this thing. it needs to go further,
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but it is, we are certainly much, much further down the road. then we were a 2 years ago. nato is already more capable. it has 2 additional countries in the alliance. and even in the european union, it took us a little while to agree on the 50000000000 assistance for ukraine, but we did it. but as things stand, unless that money is forthcoming, nato and the european union are going to be guilty once again of over promising. i'm the delivering. and that's, and that's a bad reputation taps. let me ask you this. if you were a foreign minister of ukraine, at the moment of how satisfied would you be with nato, those are the contributions over the last couple of years. how satisfied would you be? well, i, i made with my a good friend, mr. cole, of, on a regular basis, and of course, as she feels and, and very rightly so that we need to step up the effort. and we,
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in lots of fully agree with him. and we are not only arguing how should we say that you should do it, not us. we are trying to also lead by example, more than one percent of g. d. p has gone out to a to ukraine. so far, we're continuing the effort. of course, they need weapons and ammunition. they don't need promises, and it's very concrete what they need. and we have a very concrete initiative now headed by the checks they have found the munition. now it's up to the rest of us to help fund and pay the money to buy the ammunition and to physically deliver it to ukraine. let's talk about the nature of strategy and nature plans um, just 2 years ago. your name, but it's totally a complain, bitterly that nato's plan for its defense was wholly inadequate because it involved allowing a potential rush in advance into the country with the aim of pushing it back 6 months later on those plans, the parameters the said estonia would be wiped off the map and the historic center
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of the capital raised to the ground is not the kind of plan nato device. so a lot fear as well. uh, um, let's look at the plans that we adopted the last summer, invidious. uh, these are new plans. uh they are now being uh, implemented also in terms of training, the largest natural military exercises a to date which is under this old crime wasn't fit for purpose. was it the, the old plan was based on a different world, which is a world where there is not we're in ukraine. the new plan is based on the reality that russia is not only a theoretical but, but a very real threat. and the plans have been a death, but nature was suppose to prepare for war. it wasn't supposed it's not bad for peace. time is not there for decoration. is it? uh no, it's not. and if you remember, it was just a few years ago that the french president even said that nato was brain dead. i think that was the term that he used, but things change uh,
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and with the change who is brought about the change is a mr. put in and the russian warmer sheet and that's the difficulty and i, i could spend all of my time as luck in 5 minutes. start complaining about what we have not done. but i also have to acknowledge that incredible amount has been done . we simply need to continue and to do more and the direction is very, very positive. again, if we take a look at germany, germany crates, it's a 100000000000 euro, a defense fund, which is now being implemented as germany builds up its armed forces. this is very, very good for all of nature, and this is what we need. so it's the step by step pledges and realization. the difficulty in the frustration that i feel is that as we are going step by step, russia is going full frontal forward. and there's this balance between the policy of russia and the democracy of nato. and what we have to realize is that we need to
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move it into the next year. we're in 2nd year. we need to get to 4. and then the fiscal year ukraine ken, when this war is also given the tools to when it's a buffet with about 20, it's justified and, and having it spouts minutes. but there's a lot of talk about nato security guarantee to its members. but these on cost on guarantees of a doesn't mean that nato troops will amuse you, of a rush into battle against anyone threatening a member country. does it? how safe do you feel? how safe those lots, via feel? with this famous article 5 treaty on the books, we feel very safe. and what has to be remembered that in lafayette, as in the baltics, that's an entire easter fling. at theoretically, if an attack were to happen, nato troops wouldn't have to rush in there all over the here. they're here on a daily basis it's,
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it's physically impossible and very small numbers in very small numbers. it's physically impossible to attack any of the baltic countries without attacking other countries, nato soldiers at the same time. and that, that is that, but in and of itself is part of the turns. and those numbers you say are small. but 5 years ago they were much smaller. so the numbers are actually increasing and the canadian, a government, which is heading the, the, the nato efforts in latvia has placed also budgets already money. still very real money a to move up to a full brigade. and you can say, well, there's one brigade is 10 brigades, this is the question for the, for the military people, i'm a politician. but the, the ramping up is very, very visible surface. article 5 is, is a guarantee for all member states is i would ask you whether you think that the u. s. is the lead nation in nato with go to ball, say, for the sake of albania, or north macedonia, or, or slovenia. i say it's not going to work for the sake of someone. we are
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all in the military alliance together, and that is our combined power. the combined power is for 75 years where nato has been working. it has the 3rd war, and that is, it's goal. nature was not form and it's not working in europe in order to fight a war. nature was there so that a war would never have to be fought. and the difficulty the brain has is that it is not in they told it was not in mitchell for the attack. and that, i think is the reason that the what, what fulton was speculating on because it's not the nato, no one would help it. but look, we're even ating ukraine, even though we have no formal obligation to do so. and the, so the nato alliance is a preventative alliance is not supposed to fight a war, although it's fully capable of doing so. it's supposed to prevent
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a war which it has done for many years. and it's right now we have, we have to increase our capability to stop the russian war machine before the war is a broader and to stop it in ukraine. well, yes, i mean, the idea, well, there wouldn't be a war, but just an idea. well, that wouldn't be the bullet as we already have in, in europe. you mentioned the presence of microns reason, suggestion, but fronts could conceivably send troops to ukraine not on his own, but as part of a multi lateral deployment would like to and principal be prepared to join such a mission. this is a very sooner escalation, as you're talking about what my calls a suggestion. i think the strength of this suggestion is it starts to create strategic ambiguities for russia. and my con does have a point in nato. in democracies, we have all the time, put down red lines. what we won't do, what we won't do, what we will not do,
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and forgot forgetting about the fact that russia looks at this and says, oh, well, we can count, they won't do this, they won't do that. they won't do the 3rd my call and suggest and actually create strategic. i think you would need for russia a and sort of blurs the red lines that we have a drawn ourselves. so the point is not now to say what we will or what we won't do . what we must do in nature is increase our spending increase our defense interest rate a do all of us in a very visible and transparent manner. so the put in sees, we are serious problem, i call search these allies not to be cowardly. these are the moment was being approached in europe, where it will be appropriate, not to be a college, has nato being cowardly, of individual countries being cowardly. now, i would argue, no. nato has shown no indication of being a cowardly a nato has shown the opposite. uh, as the pressure comes up, natal upsets game. the only issue at hand is we need to up our game quicker. that's
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all that's it, that's, that's it. stakes, that's all the discussion that we need to do. everything that we're doing, we simply need to do it quicker. i want to talk if i'm in the remaining time that we have about some of the responses your government has made inside latvia to the war and ukraine, notably the decisions a phase of russian language is one of your countries, official languages in the media. and then education to check the loyalty of russian speaking minorities who account for almost 30 percent of your population. i want them as to how this could have been anything but deeply divisive in your country. while i have to correct some things that you're saying, there's simply not true. so russian has not been an official language of that country. since we regained our independence. we have one official language that is locked in. we have a long standing a policy in our educational system to make sure that all the people living in last year. certainly all citizens learn our national language so that we can communicate
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them and they have the equal opportunities in the job as and you locked in would have. so uh, any country making sure that its citizen speaks the national language. i think this is quite common in europe, and certainly we are no exception to that, but they would be thrown out to stay calm and speak it. no, they were being thrown out if they know it again it, it, this is, this is simply not true. we have among, among our citizens, we have a small, a minority of russian nationals, people who are not locked into have russian citizenship who permanently reside in latvia, and of those russian nationals. a portion of them are people who you used to have either permanent residency status in last year, or even a less than passport. who gave that up some years ago for a russian passport, but not to live in russia, but to live in logic. and for these small subset of, of,
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of russian citizens who live in latvia on a permanent basis, who used to have our citizenship or our permanent status. we ask of them if you wish to continue to reside in lafayette as russian citizens. then please, at least for the minimum level, learn our language, and this is not an outline. just thing to ask. these are not, that has nothing to do with my know are these, these are foreign nationals who reside in laughter. and they are foreign nationals who gave up our status. our citizenship for russian citizenship last july. your own, the central statistical bureau showed the old groups or the polled said the attitude of lot 3. and so the russian speaking population had changed for the worse . and the majority of russian speaking families now believe that fascism was increasing in the country. that was not the case at the start of the war. that's not quite the outcome you want to visit. i'm. i don't know what data you are
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relying on the data that i was just introduced by the, in the, in the government we were looking at is that as the word progresses, the proportion of not looking at what language people speak at home within the percentage of people supporting russia has been decreasing. i think it's around 6 or 7 percent. so that means 90. 9394 percent actually do not support pressure regardless of what language they're speaking a. so a, there, there is a rather common misconception about what people in life do you think or don't think there are attempts. this is a narrative that falsely comes from russia about all of the russians who are living in laughter. it's simply not the case. young people in our country all speak the national language. they are actually quite well integrated. there is there? no, there are no. um us, we say tensions on the street level. the never have been. and it's simply
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a question to what russia is trying to convey to, to the world, is that our country in some sense, belongs to russia. and this is simply a false now to a given by an imperialistic power. and what we are saying is, please come, please come and visit a speak to people, look around this as a fantastic country, we actually feel quite good and quite safe here. uh and uh, they, the attitude of the population towards russia's aggression in, in ukraine is quite visible. russia just held a presidential election and of the russian citizens living in last year, approximately 2 percent participated in the election. only 2 percent of russian citizens residing permanently unless you voted in the russian presidential elections. i think that speaks book quotes of attitude of these people and these are not ethnic minorities. these are russian citizens residing here or push janice currants where you have to leave it the thank you very much of data being on
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complex. all right, thank you. on the,
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to the points, strong opinions, clear positions, international perspectives, growing frustration with the us as russia rams. of aerial assaults, can ukraine hold its eastern front as it struggles under rocket attacks? and how can its air defenses be strengthened? join us this week on to the point. to the point. in 30 minutes on the w
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the might see me. how much can we do simultaneously? multitasking these, the modern methods. because if we do too much at once, we get it all wrong, mess things up, risking brain damage. so let's stop this self sabotage, humans and multitasking watch. now on youtube, v w documentary, my name is the calls back said wow, thank you so much for joining in. welcome to don't hold bad. a lot of people do that. as soon as i was saying it loud and things would have been nosy, they like good everyone to ok. sharing into the microphone. sorry. check out the award winning outcome. don't hold back
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the business dw news line from valid reports of explosions in the sky over a rock rainy and media say at defense systems take in that a nuclear facility in the other city. also useful as well as previously said it would retaliate for the wrong strong and be solid tax. last week it us secretary of state, as the princess, the g 7 group of nations is more united than ever will hold your on to the account
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of some crimes president for the lead states. again, appeals to west and allies. so.

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