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tv   The Day  Deutsche Welle  July 12, 2024 12:02am-12:31am CEST

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ends and that's achieved mens over the 75 years of its existence is breed assessor . and the biggest political arrival donald trump took to the stage in florida to once again, be little the trans atlantic organization and criticize its members. faced with the prospect of trump returning to the white house in 2025, the current leaders of the 30 to nato states have dedicated their summit in washington to future proofing their commitments to each other and to the partners to rely on them. that includes pledges for long term security assistance for ukraine, and still on is remains on the call for lucian berlin. and this is the day the . so this is a very successful, the summit, very prepared with a lot of very important decisions to be already tokens will to take the language itself, the documents,
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it's really strong. we can see that said the aliens made the real steps forward. i think the language with russia is, of course, rather robust for self evident reasons. it's driving a war of aggression against ukraine is just about increasing our capabilities, increasing the strength of nato, and also spending more for the trends back to the in ski and the pain support pain the pump that you piece. that's basically that would just, this is not the piece also coming up on the day, a new survey shed light on an alarming rise and anti semitism in europe. need you say they have never been so afraid? just for germany, we seen jewish homes marked with symbols, receiving occupations, ups universities. and i think the jewish people just don't feel safe
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in europe anymore. the welcome to show on a 75th anniversary summit, nato want in super tray, one thing above all, unity and the plan largely worked without much wrangling over semantics. all 32 members agreed on their final communique way before the end of the meeting. but the harmony might not last the possibility of a 2nd term for donald trump is you as president, an outspoken critic of the alliance and support for ukraine? as many members fearing the worst, unsure of what nato's future will look like? member states declared that keeps future was indeed among them some day somehow. but despite this promise and wide reaching pledges of a few cranes willed them as a lensky is likely to be leaving washington disappointed restrictions on the use of
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long range weapons and military targets and rush of remain in place. he had called there lifting a game changer. curious speaking earlier on thursday, we of course, if you want to win, if i want to prevail, if i want to save our country and to defend it, we need to leave all the limitations i spoke about to this part. there's a list you can need with united states for that was secretary although and the united states will begin stationing long range missiles and jeremy from 2026. washington and berlin say that employment cements their commitments to nato and to european defense. the agreement includes tomahawk s, m 6, and hypersonic missiles. the weapons are nuclear capable and have
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a range of more than 2000 kilometers. they were banned under a treaty with russia until the us withdrew from that treaty 5 years ago. german chancellor or life shots welcome to a decision for the united states decided to deployed the precision strike capabilities in germany, which i think is a very good decision. and it fits into all the decisions we already took. it is something of deterrence, so it's secure in peace and it is necessary and important decision at the right time. the kremlin has reacted angrily to the announcement deputy for administer a survey re up golf that it was clearly directed against russia and vowed quote, without nerves, without emotions, we will develop a military response. and i can now welcome christine for xena, who is at the nato summit in washington. she is the managing director of geo
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strategy north at the german marshall fund. she works on us northern baltic and arctic security and defense issues. glad you could join us today, christine, how significant is this announcement that the u. s. will station long range missiles in germany starting in 2026? this is a really important step forward for having a credible to trend against the russians in question. when you look at what the assignments exploration has announced, the 1st big block of text is all about having a real deterrent can nieto do what it said. it's going to do 2 years ago. at the madrid summit, there was a movement of political will and a promise to defend every inch last year and build this. they were plans put in place about how to get the capabilities, organized and resourced, so that nato can do what it said. it could do, and now we're seeing that we're seeing the ability of nato to come together to defend its territory and to present a strong enough front that there isn't
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a question in any adversaries kind of mind about whether the us and whether germany, whether other allies are serious about defending their territory and so to times is a matter of strength and about whether others can call the literal, literally yes, but if you push, is there something scary that you're going to hit? and so this is an essential step for you repeat, secure, and essential step that hasn't gone down well in moscow, the russians have promised a military response. so need to be worried. this is a nato decision. this is a movement of a resources that are what in the alliance, this is tremendously far from nurses borders. meanwhile, russia is attacking and shooting cruise missiles at ukraine. for example,
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the one on monday that hit the children's hospital and other russian missiles have fallen in nato territory in poland. we are not talking about need of shooting any, simply having something in place to be able to defend itself. if russia chose to be aggressive against no terrace, that is a different condition. russia should not try to threaten nato about what can, what nato can do on nato territory. and russia is the one that is actually to be narrow territory. what that specials in organizing massive sabotaged attacks across the line. now this is a true french pressure, has to show this bluster, it has to be a for its own audiences, very vocal about any changes. don't think we should be especially concerned about reactions to well, the exercise um different question. it's not going to result in the attack on
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the us looking at the pledges made to ukraine has promised a lot, but it seems unwilling to loosen the restrictions on how the ukrainians can use the weapons supply to them by washington. how big of a blow is that for president zalinski? this is a course they just might be depressed. and so the question is, how does he need the tax stop? it's important to have air defense systems, but by announced on tuesday, this will knock something out of the sky. but it's really important also for ukraine to be able to stop the, the, a task where it starts. and it's clear that that movement is not going to happen right now. a received an iterative approach by washington and by the whole alliance to providing aid and money, things that were off the table 2 years ago or now firmly every day in practice. this comes to whether or not there are tanks at 60 use. we have her give you the of the summer to day are going to be flying in the ukraine later this summer. that
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also was a red line providing a tack gums these longer range weapons also was off the table until it wasn't striking within russia was off the table until it wasn't. and so again, we're going to see a process of getting rid of development and it's very hard to man, just anticipate when the gamble break and when there's going to be a get a new decision. but there is a constant pressure to move forward as a one ski, and as we saw a clip to under a year mark, have they have been very grateful for the simple purchase that nato has given this summit. and that is a remarkable contrast to last year. we're inner and just, we've been was paramount, and here is gratitude for the serious supports that nato allies have given, is much more the tone and the message that we create the i want to talk about the communicate, i'm sure you've seen it. it kinda seems like the language has changed a bit on ukraine. we're no longer talking about victory,
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but more of success or of ukraine prevailing. what do you read into that? i language changes the most important word that was debated in advance of this summit declaration was the word of your reversible, does ukraine, haven't you reversible path to joining the alliance that where it is and the final communicate? i think many people are very happy about that. there are some caveats in terms of democratic and security progress. there is a need for ukraine to keep making that progress to be accountable to the alliance, which is on the way of seeing best spar. and of course, that is not a relationship that is going to be used. ukraine is under tremendous pressure to show that it is up for it. that will continue. i but the language about victory, it's interesting. jake sullivan, the national security adviser spoke here today. and he very much spoke about the success for the print failure for russia. he says,
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a shift in words. i don't think we quite know what this means. how would success, different from victory was failure, different from loss, or the words victory and boss? to cataclysmic in a way is failure and success more palatable? and can we define success in a more flexible way? in some ways, a, technically this can help you prayed, finish and complete this path towards 0, atlantic integration to getting into the european union to receiving a letter of invitation for nato. but again, there's a concern that all of this feels a little machine. it is in precise how does ukraine remain in the strongest possible position and how does the pressure learn that its invasion of ukraine was a catastrophic failure and one that it should not attempt anywhere else? the lack of repetition is going to be very important. but again, there are,
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there is word play and i think what is important is to show actual progress on the front lines and political change in the longer term. to make sure that the nato club does, in fact, eventually include ukraine and the stakes of attacking ukraine in the future would be so catastrophic that ukrainians would feel safe, sending their children for cancer treatment in a hospital. not worrying about a missile is going to hit the wall. they are there as christine per xena of the german marshall fund. thank you so much for all those insights gifts. it's the presidents of gaza city and those who had started refuge there are on the move. yes. again, on wednesday, the is really army issues. the 2nd full evacuation order of the city since the start of the war, affecting hundreds of thousands of people. united nations has expressed deep
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concern about the move, but israel's military says it's necessary to target tomas militants believe to have regrouped in the area. smoke seen over guys of states a just hours of to israel dropped lift. let's telling all its residents to flee the order, send thousands of photos, damian's on the round. again. that's what the deadline is going south because of the blocking of phone services and the harsh living conditions when i do. and also the lack of food and water that i can for, for the lack of the dozens of palestinians were reported killed across guys that over the past few days after these really are me, once again stepped up. it's operation is a gaze from us. israel says it's main goal is to destroy the remaining and militants, you have no interest in harming civilians in dollars, a city or anywhere else. we're trying to get to to the terrace where the terrorist
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attack from, or where they have a set up base. these really military says it has pulled out its forces from guys, a seat is, should die district. after they completed a 2 week operation there, some of the residents went back there to assess the damage model. on the 5th or after the 1st incursion, we came here and repaired, or how is this all in an order to shelter ourselves? we fix the windows and covered them with plastic sheets. i know how you know about . we have returned to should jaya, after 15 days, you can see the destruction hang on. is that this very nothing. even trees got. there was a lot of greenery in this area. so i got a lot of stuff. what is the guilt of his don't tree? yeah, and what is my goal disability see, but i think that i'd be more then again it's as it's rarely soldiers return to some areas said had previously been declared clear of home us civilians in gaza. continued they search for a safe place of war and gaza also continues to have severe ripple effects
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on palestinians living in the occupied west bank. hundreds of thousands of people there have lost their jobs in part after israel revoked palestinian work permits following the october 7th turbo tax. by how much that, despite the militant group having its primary base and gaza, not in the west bank, the loss of their jobs in israel and the occupied territories is plunging, an increasing number of westbank residents into poverty. and this is cascading through the palestinian economy with dramatic effect. it'll be as funny for shar reports now from ramallah and from the nearby village of sofa and the occupied westbank. a good selection having good legit, somewhere else says he worked hard and was proud he could provide for his family until recently we were working in construction and before the 7 and the and everything closed he can see where he worked from his home. it's behind the security barrier as well. he always needed the permits to go there. but
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after last october is how much power attacks, eas, revoke the permit for what they said was security reasons. tens of thousands of other commuting palestinians and occupied westbank are in the same situation. and i'm out of, you know, we're being punished. we're being suffocated here. they were being besieged and i knew what under a lot of pressure, the fear of the month disconnected of punishment upon the stadiums of demand. and the type of hosting which i had lives in cell phones, a village near rum on. many here had jobs in israel, but without the permits to go there left relying on a form of work or savings. on top of that, everything has become more expensive installation and slow our truck routes through ease. really checkpoints, since october 7th, have been driving prices up on our roof. we used to buy for 5 different
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kinds of food we had to do. now we can band you for the one kind of that i would issue a lot of the for many palestinians. it's become a struggle to buy even the basics as the effect of job loss for it goes through the economy. the numbers are staggering. they're all bank estimates of this may. the 300000 people here in the occupied westbank have lost their jobs. know that they've got increased sales to can you to, to can use ralph and those as well because right now prize here because of the economy crisis. 96 is the most, are of the korean says the decision to free spell is seen and work permits will through the damage their relationship with these really authorities. i think that will make backlash against us. right. and settlers in the west bank because both about the unemployment reduces or all confrontations produce is what we call a strike against now. but one of the things that's responsible for their suffering
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don't believe which aids family relies on the efforts of 2 of his son. so still have work in the west bank and his wife, fearless at how it a day that there are many women who try to help the husband. he has got a plenty of things to sell and that's colorful. but in general, around many options that i didn't come in and then we can wear left with no alternative to say about my bundle i left to deal with the circumstances i for months is where the forces have controlled movement of palestinians in the occupied westbank with barriers permits and check points for decades. now, it's all even tighter and yet is really companies need workers like virginia. they have started hiring people from other countries like india sparking spears. the poverty here could become permanent
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the ripples from the war and gaza are also reaching europe on wednesday vandals, the face, the statute of jewish holocaust victim. and frank and amsterdam. they use read pains to write the word, gaza, according to newly published surveys, 75 percent of jews living in your own field. they're being held responsible for the actions of the is really government. that is just one of the findings of the study by the use fundamental rights agency. it was compiled before the last hair attacks and the resulting war and gaza. jewish community organizations have separately registered a sharp increase and anti semitic incidents since october 7th of 2023. the new study found that 80 percent of those questions feel that anti semitism has grown in their country. 90 percent say they have encountered anti semitism online and 76 percent feel there at times have to hide their jewish identity.
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let's bring in lawrenceville and tyler from jeremy's i'm a day on tonia foundation, that's an organization engaging against far right parties, racism, and anti semitism. great to have you on the show. again, it's now learned this survey was conducted before the october 7th terror attacks. and the start of the war against him off escalations in the middle east have in the past often led to spikes and anti semitism. now is the true extent of the problem then even more severe and that's for sure. i mean, what we've seen after october 7 is severe rise of global anti semitism in relation especially to israel. and also is really related some interesting um, just for germany, we seen jewish homes smart with symbols, receiving occupations, ups universities. and i think the jewish people just don't feel same
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in europe anymore. john and that should never happen here. you've talked to a lot of people effected by this. of course. just give us a sense of how this, this rising anti semitism is impacting the daily lives of jewish people living in europe. i mean, it would be not used to say, but it has been easy before october 7th to express your jewish identity in europe or in yeah, germany. i mean, i think that's the country that i can talk most about, but um it just has severely increased the people now need to hide that equity. people have to take security measures, not just for that expression of religious rituals within center dogs. but also, i mean just for they do live for gatherings and all of these things have changed
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severely. and i don't think that we have yet to reach the peak of this rise on purpose. i'm a dozen women, you're almost all jewish people who took part in the service that they had experienced anti semitism. where in society does that have come from? it's no longer just the far right. is it, you know, of course not. i mean, the never, it has just been the far right. especially if you look into countries like friends where we've seen a lot of anti semitic terror attacks driven by them is that's what's in the way, leads to this new spike. and as i mentioned, this also social media ends the expression of what we called by ro advertised on most of it doesn't no longer needs any established anti semitic
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thoughts. but uh, through the sheer exposure to insight somebody concept, especially on platforms like picked encore and it's the ground. and the combination of loose ends this information together with anti semitic tropes. we see this new rise off, what i would call byron into something that says, what can be done to rain that in the rain and online have speeds because it's often anonymous. i mean, a lot of ways the backgrounds have the responsibility to delete the recognizable as some other comp time. does that happen? no impact this yes. especially i think not all platforms carry that out super well, but especially anita, we'd see a growing sense ability towards impact submitted content that is now smacked
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immediately and being taken down. but then we also have that for like picked out where, especially young people are confronted with the conflict between israel and the purpose of this time. and we've seen that, for example, after the bombing of the hospital, i'm temporary where the combination of an uncertain use situation less to an immediate spike, anti semitic incidence. this adds videos being shared. that's just where not prompting the true while even established newspapers, one not even sure about what has happened at the same time. we have your most unpleasant medic mobilization online and what can be done immediately and what should be done is just exciting of solidarity by the civil society.
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everybody of us can show what this expression of a b, it's sort of differently both the jewish population and europe. thank you so much for coming on the show that was lauren's blowing. tyler from the i'm gonna do antonio foundation and that is our time. but make sure to stay informed, stay engaged and stay in touch. so you can follow our team on social media. our handle there is at the the news. it is the latest headlines or analysis you're looking for at there's always our website, w dot com for now though from the entire team on the day. thank you so much for spending part of your day with us by the
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to the points. strong opinions. clear position, international perspective. nato is celebrating its 75th anniversary and the shadow of unprecedented challenges with 32 members. it is the biggest, it's ever been budgeted. also stronger. find out on to the court the to the point next on the w. on conference on this week, our 1st interview with a survey is randy minnesota says to god the wolf again raising key questions on his
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government practice human rights and his prison, and us expectations coming in discriminatory. i'm excited to please. i ask for a fact that he wants to do to join anti war protests to come pick in 60 minutes on d w, the little guy. this is the 77 percent of the platform for the suite issues and share ideas the you know, or the side that will be a north of bridge, and hatcher, and then topic applicant's population is really fast. the young people clearly have the
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solution. the future is 77 percent. every weekend on the w, the nato is celebrating its 75th anniversary in the shadow of unprecedented challenges. just as alliance leaders were gathering. russia bombarded a pediatric hospital in chess, killing and wounding thousands of children and profiting ukraine's president to renew his please. for additional care defense systems. whether such support will be forthcoming. even if donald trump for to return to the white house, is just one of the doubts worrying nato members. the alliance is bigger than ever. but does that make it stronger, or potentially more divided? can 32, a member states may.

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