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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  June 27, 2024 12:02am-12:30am CEST

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be released classified us documents now those documents exposed to us government law is about the war in iraq. well, since the so long, she has become a hero, a free speech to some to others. he's a criminal. he was willing to put lives in danger all to satisfy an oversized need for attention are broke off and berlin, this is the day the . this is a huge wind for free speech. he performed as a tremendous public service. no one should spend a day in prison for giving the public news worthy and important information. regardless of what you think of he's activities, mister sanchez case had dragged on. full file to long join joined,
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needs the time to recover us on. she has been proud to lead me straight to london. certainly even his being crate is no justice. insert falsely. coming out of wall street journal reporter evan garcia, that she is on trial in russia charged with espionage charges that his employer and his president, called a force. this espionage charges are ridiculous. the targeting of american citizens by russian government is unacceptable. we condemn the detention of mister goose glitch in the strongest in the strongest terms to our viewers watching on cbs in the united states and to all of you around the world . welcome. we begin the day with a rather unlikely home coming for when he leaves found julia saw. this knowledge
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arrived in australia, wednesday, with extradition to the united states, no longer a possible threat. the us one to discharge to stay and trial and charging that he violated the espionage act when he posted classified documents in 2011 on his internet platform. we see leaks. this is a case that has spanned 3 presidencies from obama to trump, to bind extradition and a trial seemed certain until news that a plea deal had been reached was announced. massage entering a plea of guilty, receiving a sentence of time already served. his conviction lending credibility to the us case against him at the same time, allowing a song to walk away a free man, a free at last and back in the folds of his family, wife, stella and father joan in his native australia for the 1st time in over
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a decade for julie and assigned arriving at cambra, apple, which was the final act of an international drama that included 70 is refuge in london's ecuadorian embassy. and 5 more in a put to as high security prison. a consequence of publishing hundreds of thousands of classified us documents on his wiki leaks whistle blowing website. it made him a hero to free speech campaign is but a villain to the us government, which said he didn't. den get national security australia as prime minister in the albany z lead for years to free. i found he spoke to him by phone and off to his plane landed. he was very generous in he's prize of the strain governments. if it's the strain, government stands up for a strong and citizen series as found. his wife, stella said, her husband needed time to recuperate before speaking to the press, but she signed to support his on his behalf. it took millions of people. it took
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people working behind the scenes, people protesting on the streets for days and weeks and months and years and we achieved it as found. his final showdown took place in a quote to him in the us pacific island territory, where he was sentenced to time already spent in prison. his noise expressed relief, but said the plea deal highlights dangerous to press freedom. in order to win he's freedom. julian played a guilty to conspiracy to commit espionage for publishing. evidence of us will crimes, human rights abuse of human rights, abusing us wrong doing around the world. this is journalism. this is the criminalization of journalism. no one should spend
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a day in prison for giving the public news worthy and important information. in this case, information that the united states government had committed war crimes. he performed a tremendous public service. uh, not a crime. juliet sounds will no longer have to look at these shows or whatever comes next professionally. he'll 1st enjoy some wild is a time with his family. enjoyed nearby thomas read, he's a professor at johns hopkins university school of advanced international studies and founding director of the up arrow, which institute for cyber security studies. professor reed, it's good to have you on the program this evening. i want to start by talking about the platform 1st instead of the man. we can pdf is the platform created by julian designs. is it a, i mean what you, where he like, sorry, is it
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a force for good i think it's really important to look at which makes in a no honest way, which makes this both has been both a force for transparency, but really has also been abused by that actors and most notably, of course, the russian intelligence agency, g r u, and bear in mind the evidence that this happened just overwhelming the strong. it's just clear that this happened. we can mix, emerged at a time on the internet when the isn't it? early, 2, thousands, mid to thousands, was still seen as this unabashedly good thing. but keep in mind, influence operations dominates within the cold war, and now back with a vengeance. so we should expect to take sides of all sorts moving forward and seeing this in 2016 to be abused as well by, by doctors, by malicious offices. it's oh, are we talking about if we compared
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a 2006 to 2020 for the internet is difference of his platform is different, but also the nature of, of exposing the truce. it has also changed 1000 um, the nature of exposing the truth uh has changed, but i think it's important to appreciate. we live in a time where the activism is, again, a very wide spread thing in terms of there are lots of people of self interest in spreading certain types of new lists. and indeed we, especially in the united states, see funds of journalism that are really hard to distinguish from activism ultimately. and this leads to this really important understanding inside that the more ideologically committed somebody is. and there's no doubt that, for example, julian assigned and especially the supporters of wiki legs, were quite i do, i do
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a lot to click committed and save about that project. the more de la, ideologically committed to our users, to take advantage of your platform. and really of yourself, and i think we've seen this again and again, not only with with needs but also with other anonymous platforms and, and farms who benefits the most from platforms like wiki leaks which, which claim to be about promoting transparency. and i think the only honest answer to this question is that it really depends on the specific case. there are certainly situations where leak platforms have essentially helped transparency hubs. cartel and put a check on, you know, government overreach, or even companies doing the wrong thing. but in some cases, of course, they will be abused and then what's missing here is it's,
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it's so is of course an editorial oversight. if you're a business model, is keeping sources anonymous at all cost. sometimes not even knowing who your own sources are. that is very different from journalism, where you really should know where the source is, even if you keep it anonymous. and also way you make editorial and really also ethical decisions on what it is. okay, to disclose and what it is not okay to disclose. the boss had atoria well, besides an ethical choices have often been missing in the case of clicks on a big role she lives specifically in. does that, does that worry you, professor? if i compare what we solve, for example, with the, with the pentagon papers and the process that was followed before anything was ever printed in terms of ensure reading in, in filtering. what was actually going to be published. did that process? was there anything like that?
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taking place at wiki leads, or are we talking about information that was simply dumped into the public severe to be filtered as it may? yes. and again, here the answer is it depends on the case there were certain leaks, the bar were curated and in fact, prepared with a lot of labor and walk and. and sometimes even the business forms of decisions were made to keep certain things out of it appears. but this needs to one of the paradoxes, when we talk about picnics, while we see leaks, obviously celebrates transparency. we don't really understand very well how we get leaks as an organization. actually what there's only one person group presenting it truly in a song. but of course he wasn't the only one working for us. so the entire setup that is we can leaks how it made decisions, what to accept, but not to accept. for example, how, in fact certainly releases the as
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a protest that leaks is one of the most famous ones where one lake was released every day for the final. so 2 days of the 2016 us to let you know how much that decision made. why was it man and another one is a famous c, a alien vault, 7 and the voltage that was also released in a way that was designed to maximize effectively a con, uh, impact on c, a n t us government. what were the decisions there in this context? we've got some hard questions that we have no answers. we hold. yeah it, it feels like 2024. we're back to where we were, maybe in 2016 when we're talking about the influence that, that these platforms can have on democracy on the elections. before you run out of time, i want to ask you about the person julie decides in, in the, the, i guess his orbit. what do you make of those supporters and there seem to be many of them who see such as a champion of free speech. i think
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when we talk about league sites, when we talk about charismatic individuals around leaks, asylum, just one example, because so edward snowden tells the money we have to appreciate that we have to embrace anyway the contradiction, we have to be able to make 2 different have 2 different insights of the same time yesterday on the 100 advanced transparency and we learned a lot through them. but at the same time, they also made many cases, as you can see, clearly wrong decisions to release information that who's should never have to come public about certain individuals victims of the saudi government. and we can excuse just one example, or indeed, just straight up for an intelligence operations that have no link to surveillance. in the case of snowden, both can be true. the company as far as the good, and it flows from bad at the same time. yeah,
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transparency at any price that that seems to be the enduring question here. professor thomas reading johns hopkins university fest. we appreciate your time, your excellent analysis. thank you. thank you so much. in russia, the trial against us journalists and endorsed of it, she has begun behind toys doors. the wall street journal reporter is accused of spying for the us. he could face up to 20 years in prison. if he's found guilty, he and his employer have denied the charge. often more than a year under arrest. russia is now putting evan gosh corvettes on trial. the 2 year old john list was detained in march. 2023. were reporting in the city of your cutting book, according to his employer, the wall street journal, the russian prosecutors alleged gosh, because which was collecting secret information from
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a tank factory for the c. i a gosh, cubits denies the charges. so to his family employer, the white house you say he was wrongfully detained. this espionage charges are ridiculous. the targeting of american citizens by russian government is unacceptable. we condemn the detention of mister goose glitch in the strongest in the strongest terms. gosh, good, which is the son of soviet emigres and grew up in new jersey. he moved to russia in 2017 to work. there was a correspondent, the wall street journal. hi to him. in 2022 dash could, which is the 1st american john this to be jailed. and russian espionage charges since the soviet era, despite strange relations us and russian officials have indicated that talks on going about releasing, gosh, because it's in a prison. this will go, but the us and russia have not yet reached an agreement. in an interview,
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in february of this year, vladimir putin indicated he wants to swap gas, give it to the russian, hit my sentence to life imprisonment in germany for muttering a chechen dissident in berlin in 2019 at this facility will definitely be just hoping to go to some experts say the trial could help bring the negotiations forward. it's a very unfortunate situation all around, but this may be a glimmer of hope in his eventful coming home. because this trial will establish the verdicts and russian injustice needs to see a verdict and a case before i believe that they're willing to do some negotiation for whatever might be the outcome. but by making the trial secret, while she is hiding his case away from the public welfare gosh, which the uncertainty continues a little while to bring in. now, paul beckoned. he's in the system as there is a wall street journal. he joys be from washington dc. mr. beckett,
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it's good to have you. um, with this, evan has been held by russian since march of last year. how much contact are, are you able to have with him if at all, i mean, are you able to tell us how he's doing, how he's holding up? thank you for the 1st 15 months until just this week. he was in a security services prison in moscow and we had lawyers who were able to see him once a week and we, he was able to communicate with us and with this family by less or so. we know that he has held up incredibly well. we always knew he was a great reporter. we've been astonished by what a strong and admirable man he is with his mood, the catherine burg, where the, the hearing was today. we don't know what the protocol to be for being able to keep tabs on him. we're hopeful that we'll be able to maintain that, but he's just enter this period of uncertainty as the hearing continues, the,
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the images that went out this week with this photo, of course, give it standing in a glass box inside device in court. and what is your paper able to do to help a colleague that you say is being held on baseless charges. so we're trying to kind of make sure that we can make life better for him in any way that we can be from correspondence communication to getting him in provisions that might like make life a bit better where he is. the thing is aggravating for us is it's not really a trial. it is a hearing at which the false accusations that'd be made against and will be endorsed by a judge and then he'll be convicted. so, you know where this leads is to a sentence of up to 20 years in russian prison or a work camp or wherever. and how confident are you that the us government is doing
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everything in its power to ensure evans relates to the governments, unresponsive to our concerns of last 15 months. and as you mentioned earlier, that have been a couple of attempts at a negotiation that would bring evan home. and we understand that those are ongoing . so we know there's activity, we just didn't notice there's progress. and this is a vital time for that. once you get to september and the us presidential campaigns and its final stages, it just becomes more on certain more volatile. so this is the window where the u. s . government has to act and we would really like to see them do that. and the next few weeks we had an analyst seems reported here just before you and i begin speaking. and he said that probably what one has to happen is this trial has to run its course. there has to be a verdict. they'll be found guilty. and then the kremlin will feel more comfortable
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about talking about a possible prisoner exchange. is that some your read on the situation as well? of the that's an interesting one because about a year ago the russians said that they wouldn't entertain any negotiations around as well for any other way to bring them home until after a trial. that said, we know that there have been conversations periodically through this whole time, so, you know, we don't, we don't believe it takes a verdict to get them back. but the russians did say that at some point it was no towards was that present, putting has never actually said that himself. so whatever the russians are feeling about the need for a verdict or, you know, we just need those negotiations to happen if they don't happen. then evans stays on this pre ordained pass to russian person. and there been reports that put
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evans name it together with paul wheeler. 2 is an american who is also being held in raj. he's been there for several years now that they would possibly be presented together in this prisoner exchange of does that give us any indication on how the kremlin values in american life at this point in time? that's why we've seen a fall wheel and be part of negotiations, but not come home. a couple of times of it's trevor reed is a former marine us marine who is in russia. and then of course, it's brittany griner, the basketball player who came home in swats. so poll wheel and so it have been part of the picture now for 2 other people who have left and we would be very helpful that any deal that involved oven also involve paul and it also involved
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other americans here of course, evans not the 1st he was the 1st since a cold war journalist to be detained, but since then also, camacho ready for you? has been there for a year now and yeah, we would like to see, oh, us citizens detained in russia released. yep. we, i knew in my work, i've met many americans who have frontier in berlin, who have going on to work in moscow and then moved on to other cities. and that's the usual run of things. and with evans, of course we, we see that it's not always that way. dw news, for example, the organization where i work is it's been banned from reporting from rush. i mean, russia is and can be a dangerous place for journalist. what would you say the journalist from foreign media outlets who are still you're still working in rush?
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i think the risks of reporting from russia have risen exponentially in the last couple of years. and that's really why haven't was taken as whitehouse is buying bars. so things have changed. i think it's been, it's been a steady deterioration, but that deterioration is accelerated a lot. so it's become a very dangerous place to, to practice journalism because they've effectively made journalism as you and i understand it into crime. so that's obviously the decision that each each organization makes for itself. but you did see in the wake of evans detainment that many american reporters and many americans use that as it's essentially withdrew, which you also feel is just exactly what the kremlin probably wanted. so yeah, lots of correspondents who are in moscow and no covering russia from berlin from to buy from warsaw from london. and they do so very gamely. but they would be the 1st to say that it's far from my deal and you need to be on the ground all back. it is
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under the wall street journal and mr. beckett, we appreciate you taking the time to talk with us today. we certainly wish evan all the best. thank you. of the appreciate your interest. a hypersonic missile launched by north korea has exploded mid flight. the launch was a retaliation to the us, deploying a nuclear powered aircraft carrier to the region to take part in the military drills with south korea and japan official said the missile blew up of the north korean coast, close to the city of one sort of this comes as the us begins, its military exercises with its east asian ally, dw east asia correspondent, james j to reports on what is behind these exercises this month. the coast guards of south korea, japan and the united states in lockstep during drills in east asian waters. the 3 countries have recently held, mold joints exercises during close, the,
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in the face of been increasingly a set of china and unpredictable north korea. now the military ties a set to deep and further this week, the nuclear power to us that cross carry of us theodore roosevelt. dalton, south korea, heads of the freedom edge exercises, the 1st of multi domain drills between the 3 nations. that means exercises across different military units, like a see outside the space. the intent is to improve the interoperability between our navies. and the intent is to ensure that we are ready to respond to any crisis or contingency should preparing for any crisis has been made more context by the russia and north korea. last week inks, a new strategic partnership, including a mutual defense project, wanting concerns, mosca could supply some young with intelligence for its weapons program. needs to
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need is kim, german, and instruct him if you said, you know, you said, you know, position to us. i did say she allied sweet readings towards it perfectly. we see what is happening in nature. look, always blog is for me. right now you've always already moving to asia as if to what time and place of residents. this of course, creates a threat to all countries in the region including russia. definitely, we are obliged to respond to this and we'll see both of us and it's of the series blame each other for stoking confrontation of the day. continues online. we will see you here tomorrow, the
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village see in the us has become the newest symbol in the quote. so joe biden is planning an electric vehicle revolution 12, donald trump, great american electric power. a rude felicity cannot make a political party made in germany next, on d, w. stop the boat. limiting immigration has become a major campaign issue right before the british general direction. many people
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regarded the country as a model of multi culturalism for a long time. now a lot of immigrants feel unwelcome, how do they feel about the intensifying discourse? and what does this imply about the current state of british society and economics? focus on europe. in 60 minutes on d, w, the people in trucks, in judgment, trying to see the city center and more refugees are being turned away as the board families, planes on the tanks in syria. the credit on entering this way to get straight to people to focus on the gmc around the world. more than 118. we
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should have the they tend to be in the early thirties, mail, well educated, or more than average. i usually live in the countryside. these are the typical buyers of electric vehicles in germany. they are also more environmentally conscious, or at least tend to use more environmentally friendly cleaning products according to one study. but how about everyone else? to more conservative people tend to buy diesel or gasoline powered vehicles instead . and what's that like in the us? more on that in a moment. also i made today china driving for i t independence.

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