Skip to main content

tv   Documentary  RT  April 6, 2024 4:30pm-5:01pm EDT

4:30 pm
the i'm action are tense and welcome back to going underground rule got single around the world from the you a this week. and nato celebrated 75 years off to catastrophes in yugoslavia. iraq, afghanistan, syria, libby as to don, ukraine and venezuela. to mention a few at home nato countries today, phase mass opposition for their needs role in arming genocide in gaza, enabled by compliance they do a nation media a wide a war has already begun with britain in the usa area lead bombarding, signing, hit, human nature of nations on the active war on the ron is the, is nomic republics. diplomatic facilities in syria, which all get it in the past few days. single time use the nature of countries for billions to be defeated in a proxy war on russia through ukraine and nature. members of strengthening military forces against china around and now it's quick hit taiwan. joining me from chicago, his professor joined much and i'm also an co author of books including how states
4:31 pm
think of the rationality of foreign policy and the israel lobby and u. s. foreign policy. a thank you so much for of as much time as our coming on nato at uh 75. i suppose we better just quickly start off with what you thoughts. uh, when you uh, the news, the diplomatic buildings in damascus had been destroyed. presumably with american weapons of that act of war suddenly was not condemned by you and security council members. britain, france, and the united states. yeah, i was actually quite disappointed, but not surprised at all. the western countries didn't condemn the israel east for attacking the rainy and embassy in damascus. if any other country had done that to any other countries, embassy uh, the united states and its allies would surely condemn that country. i mean,
4:32 pm
can you imagine if the russians hit an embassy in any country around the world of the united states, and that's how i would have gone ballistic. but with this rule, as always, it's a different story. the israelis can do pretty much anything they want. and get away with it, and it just doesn't happen, doesn't it? i mean, there was the chinese embassy hit by mistake during the war and you just love you. but the very inviolable, the diplomatic facility in history tends to be and their conventions, so as well. they're supposed to be and uh, and there's good reason to that. and the fact that these realities violated that basic norm and basically get a free pass, it tells you something about israel's ability to pretty much do anything. it wants in international politics and get away with it because the united states will protect it. and do you think it was an act by the israeli government to draw the united states in as being, as is being talked about? is iran clearly does not wish to be further involved. uh,
4:33 pm
it certainly hasn't done what uh some fed some wanted as regards the genocide in guys we don't have any real hard evidence to know exactly what the israelis we're thinking. but that would be my guess the israel is have long been interested in dragging us the united states into a war with israel. i mean, excuse me or. ready or the ran and i think that this was probably a step in that direction. also, i think these realities are getting desperate at this point in time of the war and gaza is not going well at all. one cannot see a happy ending today conflict. they also have an ongoing conflict with has belonged their northern border, which is not going well. and there doesn't appear to be any end to that one either . uh, and then if you look at what's happening inside is real itself, with their all sorts of protests disagreements of one sort or another. to put it
4:34 pm
more bluntly, there are a lot of sin, triple goal forces at play inside of israel. and given all those factors, one could argue that the israel easy just interested in escalating to see if they can get the united states involved and that will help them solve some of these problems. yeah, we're going to speak to get in level of high rates on mondays you. i mean is there any society though, is not so much against the campaign against the b of god's i say against nothing. you know, but i say, i mean they, they agree with the campaign on god. is there any, if anything, one more or 5 values don't guys, or there's a remarkable survey that's out in israel from a legitimate institution, which shows that 68 percent 68 percent of his realities favor withholding humanitarian aid to the people in casa, basically says that 68 percent of the population favors of genocide is quite
4:35 pm
remarkable. and it supports your point that within is real itself. there's not why differences of opinion among those people on how this war should be conducted. this is why the argument that if you get rid of benjamin netanyahu, all things are going to change and we're going to live happily ever after. make those sense. it really doesn't matter whether you get rid of that. yahoo and replace them with benny gant's are not totally bad at the end result will be the same. these rallies will continue the same policies that they've been pursuing since october 7th. but this does not, this does not contradict the basic fact that inside of israel you have all sorts of sin, triple forces at play. and if the is rarely as in many cases or. ready or with each other. so when the united states of saying that the un security council over the seized by resolution, was it a p or operation by a lender,
4:36 pm
thomas greenfield. because they allow us entering attentional netanyahu and ignoring what you just said about a daily popular support for the genocide within israel. why do you think that they have stained just before announcing more, more weapons? of course, after a resolution to $7.00, to $8.00 with us? well, the thing is that the by the administration knows that it's in deep trouble or in terms of november election. there are large numbers of progressives, large numbers of young people, and the error of american community in the united states that is deeply disturbed by what biden is doing with regard to god. so he's not that worried is a because he announced all those weapons often and that is as we know, the michigan 100000 and the primaries as well. but by lunch here is he wants his
4:37 pm
cake needed to write. he understands that he has to play k, the is real lobby and israel's supporters in the united states. and at the same time, he wants to try to placate air of americans and progressives who might vote against him. we're just not a vote for him. in the fall, so he abstained from this binding resolution. call him for a cease fire. during ramadan. he abstained, which allowed it to go through. uh and then as soon as the resolution went through, uh, linda thomas green field said that it was non binding. and of course it is a binding disillusion. had somebody could argue that this done binding is beyond me, but what was going on here is again vitamin was trying to appeal to both sides. when he said it was done binding, he was appealing to the israeli side by abstaining and letting the resolution go through the security council. he was appealing to progressives into the air of
4:38 pm
american community. the question is, do you think that this is going to work? and my answer is no. in fact, there's a pull out that shows that in almost all of the critical swing states, he is trailing a trump by a rather significant number. so who is advising the by the administration, given these tactics are clearly just going to alienate all sides. presumably here's what you, what you think i do and it will leave it as being on this show is be talking about the think tank group think. is that what's going on in washington? they all just think of this is the policy keep bombing them given the electro constraints as of november. i think it virtually everyone who is by using bind, understands the problem here and they would all love to fix it. but there is no fix . if the sides with these realities clear, surely, then he's going to alienate progressives,
4:39 pm
an error of americans and others. and this is going to cause him to lose in all likelihood in the fall. if on the other hand, he sides with the progressive and with the air of americans against these realities, this will in rage. the israel lobbying is real supporters in the united states. and he's likely to who's in november because he alienated those institutions and individuals. so he's in a damned if you do damned if you don't situation and there is no good solution for all the majority and polls show they don't support the war on guys as being, as it's currently being conducted in the united states don't. yeah, there's no question about that. you want to remember by the way, that 75 percent of democrats disapprove of what the israelis are doing and gaza and they disapprove of america's support of israel in this campaign. furthermore,
4:40 pm
50 percent of the people who voted for jo bite in 2020. this is 50 percent believe that israel is committing genocide in gaza. so bite has a huge problem here because he is supporting the is really, is almost completely. so the money is more important than from the donors because i've gives me the number of times as you say, it's obvious the decision to take if it was purely on electro at times, don'ts of what is right. what's not only the money, i believe the money matters a lot. it's also the influence of the law be in the media in the mainstream media. if i were to turn against israel in any meaningful way, you can rest assured that newspapers like the wall street journal and the new york times and the washington post would turn on by. and he would pay a significant price which would badly damaged his chances in the fall. so the media
4:41 pm
or is it enabling, you know, we have professor joseph night on this show the other week, the cleaner of soft power, the to even said that the soft power from the united states is globally be indented by the genocide. but then he said, look, there's a few pull out the other day he was quoting it, most people in 27 different countries would prefer the united states of, of china. so actually genocide and supporting genocide doesn't the us as reputation around the world that much or i think that's wrong. i think that there is no question that our reputation has been badly damaged. and furthermore, i think that the era emphasis on the importance of a rules based order liberal international order, which matters so much to us has been undermined by what the israelis are doing and what we're doing with the israel lease. and i think that is going to have long term consequences. you know,
4:42 pm
he also said that he was here with the us intelligence council. he said the, on the other war, the other for him to the united states as well. that no one really had confidence in the means process in ukraine when europe and powers the united states were talking about the states of ukrainian regions with the russia is means being rewritten. and it hasn't been rewritten since 20. $22.00 people forgotten about that to justify the sending of millions of dollars weapons. does lensky to the situation surrounding the meds agreement is really quite fascinating because it's quite clear to me, the proven was deeply committed to making men's cork so that he could solve the controversy or the conflict in the done best. and of course, that's what it means was designed to do and who did not want to war. she wanted to
4:43 pm
solve the problem in the done best, diplomatically 3 minutes. what is happen subsequently? is that his interlocutor, cuz on zillow and merkle, for example, the french leader, holland, and parish poor shank go who was the ukrainian leader at the time? all 3 of them, those were his 3 interlocutors have admitted that they did not take the minutes process seriously. and what they were doing was stalling for time, so that the west could arm and train ukraine. in other words, they bamboozled and put in for a given good faith is needless to say, furious about what happened. the story doesn't play very well in the west. these days, so you can rest assured the in the west, the spin meister is, will go to great ways to tell
4:44 pm
a different story and they will try to blame for what happened. and they will come up with all sorts of excuses for why andre merkel and the others are really not telling the truth, and it was really poor. no wonder mind the whole process. i mean, this is the way the game is played these days. so have so much i'll, i'll stop you that more after this break. the boss can do augustine with key at the washington state, the bruce, the money to complete the rest of the guys has to phone up, send that to
4:45 pm
professional and city and to keep the list of over but huge. but they used to do this for the welcome back to going on. be great, and i'm still here with professor of political science of university chicago, joe and mash, i'm a resume assignment. we're talking about the circle mintz agreements that preceded the beginning of the really all war in 2022 proxy war and ukraine. you know, the newspaper this week is as nature plans, a $100000000.00 fund to shield give aid from the winds of political change and goes on to say in case donald trump is elected due by blinking sullivan. newton's gone, now, think of russia is a kind of developing countries, so it's a bit like afghanistan war and this kind of will, they can keep pouring in the weapons and eventually russia will just
4:46 pm
a table or the region will become a, a so on stable will will come to some kinds of uh and that will benefit the united states. what is the strategy as well? i think it almost everybody in the west now understands that the ukrainians are in deep trouble and that the russians, given the way the events are moving or are likely to win this war. and what the, by the administration naturally wants to do is everything possible to prevent that from happening. so i think at this point in time, what the administration, the budget administration is focusing on and what nato is focusing on is just, i mean, the tide. making sure that the russians don't roll over the ukrainians. and the question you have to ask yourself is, do you think that's possible? and my answer is no. i think this war's loss,
4:47 pm
and that the russians will ultimately win and agree victory. and the longer it goes on the terms of the piece, but we was for whatever government in ukraine there is at that time. oh, absolutely. i mean, from ukraine's point of view, the best possible solution is to end the war now, because the longer the war goes on, more ukrainians will, there will be more ukrainians who die, and ukraine will lose more territory. i believe it's in ukraine's interest to try to shut the war down immediately and preserve as much of the territory that they now control is possible and minimize the number of ukrainians killed moving forward . and to do that, what ukraine has to do is turn itself into a genuinely neutral country. it has to make it very clear that it has no intention whatsoever of joining nato. and it has to completely break off its
4:48 pm
security relationship with the west, especially with the united states. that could be no more arms transport transfers. there could be no more aid from the united states to ukraine. that relationship has to be completely separate. and again, ukraine has to become a neutral countries, and the sooner this is done the better. but of course, i think there is very little chance that ukraine will do that. and the west will agree uh to push you crane down that road. and the end result will be that ukraine will lose a lot more territory. a lot more ukrainians will die, and ukraine will end up as a dysfunctional, rob state. and when you say that you're coming from the perspective of saving the children of ukraine and also improving the strategic security interest, so western europe and of the united states. so why don't they just do that? i don't understand why say, don't do that. i mean,
4:49 pm
a slightly different question is, why did we start this more to begin with? uh, why did we, uh, push nato expansion into ukraine when the russians made it clear that they viewed it as an x, a central threat. and if we didn't stop, it would lead to war. uh, that was manifestly clear for years and nevertheless, it a return. we double down and in wait 2021. early 2022. when it looked like a war was about to happen. and the russians actually made an attempt to solve it diplomatically in december of 2021. we basically told them we weren't interested, and we allow the war to happen. and then after the war broke out, and there were negotiations in this bundle, it looked like it was a serious possibility. the war could be shut down. we basically told the ukrainians to walk away from the negotiations and to pursue war. this is remarkably foolish, the end result is that ukraine is going to be destroyed. so i think the fact that
4:50 pm
we're not moving now to push ukraine to become neutral is hardly surprising given how foolishly we have behaved in the past. we of course, meaning the west here and that includes the united states. you say, you don't know, but then in whose interest i mean is it limited a tree industrial complex because even that analysis that you just gave me, as you know, is more or less a band in the media or of nato nations, with a boring the weapons in, in the, in the free media of nato nations. i mean, obviously we know, lloyd austin worked a great the on and the, and to be blinking though is a west exec because it really that base that it's military contracts. what i mean, they are very open about the importance of military keynesian isn't as a strategy regarding ukraine to improve jobs at home. is it's about money that way . i think it's a somewhat complicated story. i think that for many years,
4:51 pm
up until 2014 for sure. maybe even up until the war broke out. in february of 2022, we thought that we could shop nato expansion into ukraine, down the russians throat. do you want to remember that we had 2 big traunches of nato expansion before the whole ukraine fiasco? one was in 1999 that's from poland hungry and the czech republic came in. and then we had another big expansion in 2004. that's when the baltic states remain near bo gary and a handful of other states came in. and, and all those cases, the russians were deeply opposed and made their opposition very clear to the west that nato expansion was unacceptable to them. but nevertheless, they were weak and we forced it down their throat. and i think we felt that we could do the same thing with ukraine. okay. the russians don't like nato expansion into ukraine, but what are they going to do about it?
4:52 pm
then when it looked like a we're was going to break out. i think we came to the conclusion that we could beat the russians. i think this is why we told the ukrainians to walk away from the negotiating table in this tumble in march, april of 2022 right after the war started, we thought we could be the russians. we had a theory, a victory, of course, that your victory was fundamentally flawed and things, if not turned out the way that we believe that they wouldn't turn out. and now we have people openly talking about the possibility of the use of nuclear weapons. i mean, we had a former assistant secretary defense, larry called for the reagan administration, saying, of course, if necessary, the united states was use nuclear weapons based in labs the now based on germany, to save the people of ukraine. how far is the united states just talking about the importance of ukraine now is go to this stage and they privately, as far as you know,
4:53 pm
just realize that it hasn't worked out the way you just said they hoped it would. or they have. they certainly realize it hasn't worked out, and i think almost everybody at this point in time understands that the ukraine could collapse and end up is a dysfunctional run state. and the russians could end up control, sorry to interrupt proposal. but, you know, with the native celebrations of 75 years, all those leaders, i don't, uh, i'm not saying anything like that. obviously. no. they'll be celebrating, look, see if the russians, when, even if it's an ugly victory, this is going to be a devastating defeat for nato. and the leaders in washington or celebrating the 70 percent of birth rate of data are going to want to go to great ways to downplay what's happening in ukraine and celebrate the alliance and talk about its wonderful future. so you won't be hearing much discussion of just how desperate things are in
4:54 pm
ukraine. uh, but uh, the fact is the situation is developing in ways that are going to be disastrous. prenatal. you see, you don't get rushing media and mobile south media. there's talk of doubling down by nato countries. big focus will massacre in moscow. the ties to the, i mean, you might want to explain what isis k is, because i think most people around the world see it as a capitalized by us policy in afghanistan and iraq. and syria, people are saying the doubling down on it and fronts a has plans, according to the russians. i'm sending more than a 1000, maybe one uh 1000 foreign legion nato for it. and he chose a country member, a soldiers to help zalinski of which approaching and said that they will, they will um, react to that military. i don't believe the french are going to send troops in to
4:55 pm
ukraine. i believe the americans will tell them in no uncertain terms that that is not possible and the germans will do the same. and i think to be significant resistance within france itself. if i'm a chrome tries to do that, or you were talking before about the possibility of the west using nuclear weapons to defend ukraine, should the russians, when i think that's extremely unlikely, i think the united states is not going to initiate nuclear use. i don't even think we're going to think seriously about that possibility. and again, i don't think we're going to send in troops either. i think that we will just have to accept the fact that we lost in ukraine, and then what we will do foolishly, i believe, is everything possible to undermine russia's position in those parts of ukraine that it ends up annexing. and more generally doing everything we can to cause
4:56 pm
trouble for russia moving forward. so even if we get a frozen conflict, i think what's likely to happen here is that you're likely to have an intent security competition between ukraine and the west on one side at russia on the other side for the foreseeable future. and the potential for escalation in this competition, this nasty competition will be significant. what's it like being a scholar in international affairs? right now? i know in the media, i mean in britain it's a legal factor to mention that there were any nazis or near the think now head ceiling groups in ukraine. israel is just band l g 0, a t is band and c, g, c and the chinese and the radians tv stations and breaking up academics and scholars. the tools like you, you just don't see on the media or in the big think tanks. i've interviewed many who say no ukraine, so as a johns it can and get grimy a back. what's it like being as goal of these days?
4:57 pm
if you have my views, it's going to be a rough road to hole in the main stream media. and in fact, you're going to be basically iced out. they're not going to be interested in hearing your views. there will be, you know, if occasions where you slipped through the iron wall and you get to make your case . but those occasions will be few and far between what we have in the west is a particular mantra about the ukraine conflict that is dominant. it dominates to this course and anybody who challenges that dominated view. ready is going to be attacked. uh and, and is going to be frozen now. is one of the reasons for the failure of nature. i'm not hearing all of the sites. i believe that i believe the fact that we in the west have in effect, shut down the marketplace of ideas when it comes to talking about ukraine has led
4:58 pm
to all sorts of trouble. i thought if we, i think we had had a more open debate about ukraine and the idea of bringing ukraine into nato after 2014 uh, that we might have been able to had this problem off. but uh after 2014, when the crisis broke out, that was february, 2014. i became very difficult for people with my view to be heard. and on those occasions when they were heard, they were basically smeared is pollutants puppets or apologise for russian behavior, or what have you, has the drama as you haven't. thank you. my pleasure. and that's it for the show of continued condolences to those very by u. k. you as you ongoing and balance and i am living in yemen, syria and iraq will be back on monday with these really dry list. gideon levy until then keep in touch my role as social media, if it's not sense of your country and job title going on the warranty if you are normal, don't come to it's new and old episodes of going undergrad. see you monday,
4:59 pm
the 19th to the one with the nazis health situation. ultra nationalist view, establishes the claim, the independent state of croatia. shortly on the seizing power. they build the scene of us concentration camp a place associated with the worst atrocities committed in yugoslavia during world war 2. the stash is used to come system to isolate and exterminate subs, roma, jews, and other non catholic minorities, and political opponents of the fascist regime. conditions in the scene of us. campbell who renders the gods to which it to arise and the prisoners. they send them a consultation temps. so most of them died 6 was incredible
5:00 pm
genocide. the in the headlines philadelphia international. it's a possible comm before the store. as long as right now we're on iran and i'm the middle. it's not the to around want. it will retaliate for deadly is really stripe, but it's called southern syria. down breach in central rupture leave settlements downstream in our data with water forces these occupation of more than 4000 people . a growing concerned as india is representative to the international monetary fund lashes out of the organization constantly upon the plane, the successive as countries booming economy. the.

23 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on