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tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  July 26, 2024 5:00am-5:15am CEST

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the, the, this is dw news live from fill in tamela harris says the time is right for cx, 5 in gust there has been sold for movements and the talk to secure an agreement on this deal. and as i just told prime minister netanyahu, it is time to get this deal done. us vice president. and lastly, democratic presidential nominee steps into the line lot, 12 swift. it's ralph benjamin netanyahu. also coming up the philippines races to contain the toxic oil spill in the wake of type boon came a storm as well. very devastated pots of taiwan and china, the
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math in the house. welcome you. as far as president campbell of harris as hell talks with is ready, prime minister benjamin netanyahu at the white house. the adults are being closely watched for changes in time between harris, the presumptive democratic nominee for president and the incumbents. job i'm power said she told is riley prime minister benjamin netanyahu, about the serious concern about the scale of human suffering and gaza is rarely premier, is in washington hoping to show up support for the vote against them us. let's listening to more of what the vice president had to say. it is important for the american people to remember. the war and gaza is not a by mary issue. however, too often the conversation is by mary, when the reality is anything but. so i asked my fellow americans to help encourage
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efforts to acknowledge the complexity, the nuance and the history of the region. let us all condemn terrorism and violence. let us all do what we can to prevent the suffering of innocent civilians and let us condemn antisemitism. as pharma phobia and hate of any kind and let us work to unite our country. i thank you. they w report a step in simon's in washington and gave us his type of weiss from what kinda la harris had to say. what i saw was the obvious 1st that it was her and not president biden, who actually came out after meeting with benjamin at the department of israel and made those remarks welcome to the united states in the presidential election year of 2024. that's number one, number 2, she use the verbiage terminology in
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a clarity which treat seldomly here from dividing ministration. and that is no to number 3 in my account to you and that is really important. i want to quote her, she made sure that everybody understands that of course this administration and including her this throws on waiver report a support behind israel in its rights to defend itself against terror and war and everything else. but she says, it is also important how it's how it does so how it does so matters. she said, and that was really, really impressive. meaning here with the sound, but we have played before. you'd have you got to meet. she really tries to is being lost, be actually acknowledging, acknowledges the, the complexity of the situation in the middle east, the complexity for israel and the complexity resulting out of now more engaged since october 7th, last year. let's look at a step and
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a little more about the the contrast. as you pointed out, she said we cannot look away from the di, humanitarian situation and gaza. she also called for a safe spot. how much of a contrast are these woods from vapor harris compared to president? but well, i have to tell you the truth. i think this is what the president joe biden and now the administration officials detail, benjamin antonio or other administration officials from israel behind closed doors, but that opened and now at this time, this was kamala harris, 1st coming out as presidential candidate on a foreign policy issue. in that regard, and that is remarkable and to, you know, we should take note of this. however, the united states and that includes the, by the administration that includes carmella harris and everybody else who's working in this administration's thinking. thursday's. a blanket for example, is still on the the, the path of wanting
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a 2 state solution. first of all, a ceasefire. now a ceasefire deal which allows hostages to be released, which allows the guys in the residents to have a break for at least 6 weeks. and then take it from the secondly, and that is big picture thinking of the administration, end of kamala, hers is a 2 state solution. this is good old american middle east policy, which is not going to go away with tamala, harris wardrobe. i'm part of the big picture and what she alluded to was i ask my fellow americans to help encourage efforts to acknowledge the complexity and the new ones and history of the region. it's a worthy sentiment, but what does she want to achieve by signs? it's well, i think honestly, she is a little bit of catering to the potential volter voter block or voters segment. joe biden may, has, has lost in, in, in the last few months by wavering around,
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you know, there is a movement which started the michigan. this is the uncommitted movement that counts now for 750000 people who work uncommitted in putting the vote and or support for joe biden. she wants those back. and she also tries to make sure that americans understand that there is nothing, not complicated about anything in the middle east. it's highly complex. it is new orleans and politicians as well as the you and me, americans should be able to differentiate. that's what she needs. people to understand so she can make an argument that she is for absolute substantial and unwavering support for israel on one hand and a good heart look and how benjamin antonio and these are at least conduct this war in gauze, are at the moment, the deputy report a step in simon's in washington d. c. thank you so much. right. time to take
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a look at some of the other stories making news around the world now. and us so thirty's up, arrested. 2 of the world's most powerful drug lords is now l may of some bottom here on the lift was arrested with walking el chapo guzman in el paso, texas. the justice department said the 2 men lead to mexico seen a low, a car till one of the most violent and powerful drug trafficking organizations in the world. while i'm far as building out of control in western canada, tens of thousands of people have been evacuated in the provinces of british columbia, and alberta. authorities say up to half of the mountain resort town of jasper has been destroyed. as far as rights through the surrounding national park tossing kindly has slammed into mainland china where residents are pricing for strong winds and heavy rain full. the storm is left to trial of devastation coming at least 3 people as it swept across time one in the philippines, or thirty's,
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racing to contain an oil spill that's threatening the capital of manila. the storm is triggered, floods and months, lived across the archipelago, killing at least 20 people and injuring 100 small. a philippine tanker carrying nearly one and a half 1000000 liters of fuel sank after encountering huge waves in manila bank. the accident caused an oil slick stretching for several kilometers. the philippine coast guard launched an operation to contain this bill with floating barriers to stop any more fuel lifting and prevent a major environmental disaster close to the capital. official said they rescued all, but one of the crew members in a risky night time operation oil spill experts are concerned at the possible implications of a spill in such choppy waters. now what we know about the oil is that it's a really sick or does what they call a bunker from the bunk of fuel on and,
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and especially if it might not spread some of the other lights organs, but uh, but the problem with it is that it can stick to everything its very sticky. ready you know, the sink of the more it sticks. meanwhile, taiwan said 5 frasers were stranded off the island. and one more had sunk. search efforts were ongoing for its missing crew of tyson jamie has left a trail of destruction and several deaths across the philippines. and taiwan. torrential rains have cost severe flooding. residents in the southern city of calcium scramble to salvage their belongings, as flood voter inundated their homes. it's the strongest tropical storm to hit taiwan and 8 years. now the ty, food is battering mainland china is eastern food john, province with strong winds in torrential rain, facing this home if you will, that your preparations for the deluge were already well underway in food you,
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i'm doing switching. what about the national marine forecasts are issued. it's 1st read alerts of the year, probably twice on the. it's the latest storm in a summer of unrelenting weather extremes in china put prosecutors in the us of charge to north korean national attempted cyber attacks on government and military installations and private corporations. the us as the attacks are part of north korea's, if it's to advance it's nuclear program, the f b i a critical infrastructure organizations to quite state vigilant again such so i the operations north 3, it continues to carry out the sophisticated intrusions, targeting the us as a way to fund their military programs, thereby threatening the us and other countries in the region. protecting our companies and our critical infrastructure requires partnership. we ask the companies contact the f b i as quickly as possible when they believe they're experiencing
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a ransomware. of that earlier i spoke to information, we'll fix that given while he explained to me what kind of damage can be done besides the stealing of data. as well, what are you seeing? i think more and more in the us is this uh, the distinction of the type of activity we really worried about, which is pre positioning. which means that there's really not a lot of time between stealing data for us. the nice purposes and then maybe exploiting or disrupting it and render on your networks inoperable. so in the past several years, using a shifting how us government talks about defending against cyber us, you know, as a way from these notions of coal. so prevention and defense and toward kind of redefining the trust relationships that are engineered into much of the hardware and the software and the networks we use in the 1st place. so that at the very least we can limit the degree of mobility that intruders have. once the burden to
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a network and we can more quickly, easily mitigate and recover after detecting we hear a lot about the rice intensive, traditional weapons. i wanted a how serious is the cyber wolfy rice becoming at this point as well as the scene. i think it's certainly a need to warn you train, we're always going to be in a race or digital adversaries to leverage any advances a digital space might afford and certainly cyberspace. me that the dependency that we all have on cyberspace means that disruptions are certainly possible. it's not likely in the event or that you want to go conflict. where i think one of the lessons that folks are trying to draw the warning, the crane, and certainly the cyber aspects of versus war and ukraine. the degree to which that disruption for its own sake. that only loosely compliments or coincides with
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conventional military operations can really be decisive. so my sense is at least the f. b as in intelligence gathering, are always going to be really to the full point in where cyber capabilities are most useful. making cyber warfare kind of this a center piece of conditional military conflict is an awful lot harder. and so i think there are still as much as states are going to compete for those competitive advantages. i think warfare might be a limited frame through which we can kind of think about cyber operations. just briefly, we hear a lot about how much if it is being made to defend against cyber attacks. but how does the us defend its digital infrastructure from cypress is being honest like this. well, so the flip side of the dynamics that i outlined before, i think is that um uh, as much of us vertical as instruction industry runs on privately owned and operated networks. which means the federal government can simply impose or provide
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a degree of, uh, security for them. and it might video, political tensions, us faces of the private sectors gradually come to understand that they're not immune from cyrus. you know, as a disruption, surely by due to not being state run. however much progress we've made in the last few years in this regard. i think there are still those sectors, like health care, education, municipal governments that live below the so called so poverty line. rob, where there are some deeply relied on how the systems and lack of resources to do routine cyber hygiene. the recent attacks demonstrate the need to assure them up given walden washington, d. c. thanks so much for your input. a reminder about top story before we go. saw us vice president. pamela harris has met with these round spinning and meeting off towards the white house. i was told reporters she h netanyahu to rate to face 5 with some us to in the funding.
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that's all for this out done figured out which side of the deputy dot com and our social media channels. the insta, m. x handle is at the deputies. so i'm anthony hounds, good boss. and now the, not just another day. so much is happening all at once. we take time to understand this is the day i'm in the current use events analyzed by experts. i'm critical thinking is this is with the weekdays on d w. have you ever heard of something being kafka? ask? do you even know where the term comes from? behind it from scott.

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