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tv   Direct Impact  RT  August 13, 2024 7:30am-8:01am EDT

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i way of on color, and this is a significant mediation effort by the turkish state. we understand that the churches for minister met with the delegation separately, not at the same time, not in the same room, but at separate moments in time to ensure that the conflicting sides have their voices heard and their concerns express. for the most part, well, we understand that this given point is a small the, as in a position suggesting that you will be assigned a memorandum of understanding with some, all the land that it was a breach of international law. it was an insult, but also disrespectfully said, that it was disregarding the territorial integrity and sovereignty of some of the and this as a matter in and of itself. however, ethiopia as concerns are essentially taking into consideration that it is a landlord country that it does not have access to the red sea or any international waters for that matter. and this is where the conflict or the tensions arose for the most part. but what we also understand is the u. n also has a convention that protects lang lock countries suggesting that they have the right to and from the sea without extra terrace,
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by way of transit states. and this is something that you feel if he's going to have at the forefront of these negotiations. we understood that the negotiations initially started on july of 2020 for the 2nd meeting, which was held on monday. of course it was expected to happen much later throughout the year, but the 2 sides by way of on could have they moved up that schedule. they moved up the agenda to have that meeting done right here and right now. and this is significant for a number of different reasons because we understand the 2 sides, the 2 delegations that are currently protecting. and these negotiations have come to terms with the territory integrity and that of the sovereignty of the state of somalia. and some of the it has by one way, another problem is that if you will get that c access in one form or another, we understand that africa is currently hosted to the most number of countries that are land locked. and then there comes europe. but europe and nations for one way or another have trade deals and agreements in place to protect those land lock countries. whereas those in africa are also land lock developing con,
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to the sound that's 9 out of 12 of the most, um, 100 developed nations, according to you and index are land locked nations within africa. so this is going to be a significant push for ethiopia. it's also going to be important because it's the opium was not always landlocked when it retrieved essentially what's the seated in 1991, it prevented as the access for the european state. so there's a lot on the line. we understand that the tensions are nothing new. we understand ethiopians. some only have gone to war, time and time again over, over the course of history. but this meeting, this negotiation process here, we don't cut, it is significant for a number of different reasons. that, of course, putting an end to this conflict intentions between these 2 states providing a win win solution as opposed to a solution or a scenario which shows the loss of any one party if not both. but one more thing that is significant is this is also on cars attempt to play as a regional actor. it is also crucial understanding. that's the, is real gaza conflict is the number of conflicts that turkey has been involved with . the ukraine conflict is another international crisis that has been involved with
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. so there's a great deal of rhetoric and a great deal of understanding on the side of the church, but taking into consideration the matters of africa. this word circus says that we need to understand that these 2 nations need to essentially bury the hatchet and come to terms with a solution that would of, of course, benefit, not just them all the need to up here, but much of eastern northeastern africa. but as it is clearly res, i'm breaking news definitely came half of this. our passenger bus hasn't been hit by you clinic imposes in the city of literacy times in the guidance group. i big one person is being killed. i'm at least the t one civilians wounded the head of the province and crossed the bones had been used in the attack. well that around stop this news for i will be back in and just on the 30 minutes we'll see you then the
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everybody. i'm rick sanchez coming to you from the united states of america. this is direct impact and this is what we're going to be talking about. you see that right there? that's a nuclear power plant on fire after being bombed by a ukrainian drone strike. man, that's scary. looking at it, talk about a dangerous play. once again, this is direct impact on rick sanchez. let's do this. the . all right, so let's get to it. ukraine. after attacking the border town of the subject we told you about last week has now attacked the nuclear power plant again by the way. so i'm say it's the last gap about losing cause because ukraine is running out of will it seems as well as running out of soldiers as well as running out of ammo. so you know, once a country to do, right. but regardless of what you may think about it,
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or even what you may think of this more, when you start bombing nuclear facilities, you're opening up a whole different game. 8 most dangerous game. look at that, look at these pictures. and mean, here's what it's looked like, it looks like and where it happened. it's the supper actually, nuclear power plant considered one of the largest and all of europe. fire began when it was shell by you, cranium forces. but thank god for all the people of both ukraine and russia near their firefighters have now gotten it under control. after all, the reactors were shut down. here's a plant official talking about it, which you didn't. russ, the great and naser resume has once again shell the nuclear power plant of the city and their good dogs. it should be noted that the crenan regime supported by nato curators systematically, shells being tied notes of his upper rosure region, which is reached by drones, artillery bombardment and mortar artillery. so the international atomic energy
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agency did put out a statement by the way, quote, they say these reckless attacks and danger nuclear safety and they increase the risk of a nuclear accident and they must stop. now, that's what they say. well, that's what they're supposed to say. right, that's their agency, that's what they're supposed to respond to. but here's a funny thing about the statement they put out. it doesn't specifically refer to ukraine. doesn't even mention. meanwhile, hardly a paint from the us state department. and maybe that's fitting. considering the statement that we found just recently, it was written back in 2019 when this whole thing started. so what you're about to here is it a mission that people at the highest level here in washington dc knew almost expected, but this devastation that's taking place in new crane. now what occur? and they essentially decided to go along with it anyway. so, so here's where i found this since i ran report ran, does entail work for the c i a essentially and explains, of rush or quote. taking more of ukraine might only increase the burden all being
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at the expense of the ukrainian people. however, such a move might also come at a significant cost to ukraine and to us prestige and credibility. this could produce disproportionately large ukrainian casualties, territorial losses, and refugee flows. so i mean manila, there you go, there, it sounds to me like some bureaucrats were willing. and fed, so right, they're willing to sacrifice ukraine and the people of ukraine and that people would dive for a publishing russia and be making a killing from this from this proxy war. how do you see? yeah, right, absolutely. for folks like me and other people like you as well, that have been following the story going as far back as 2014, when really the initial cool happened inside of ukraine. you could see this
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burgeoning and brewing for all of those years of 2019, when this ran report came out. it shows that those folks right over there, a capitol hill, have disregarded everything that intelligence effectively agencies like rand, who does the actual leg work and war gaming to say that, hey, this is a bad idea. and that the government elected officials on capitol hill as well as the person currently occupying the white house. presumably joe biden, making this decision to move forward. in spite of what the, the eggheads will call them have told them not to do. they went forward with it anyway and then if we also look back at what's happening example raja at the power plant. now we've seen since this conflict began in 2022 that ukraine has consistently been showing the nuclear power plant. and i think at this point,
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because the i a e a is not specifically naming ukraine as the culprit. i think it's safe to say it is at the behest of the e. u. leaders as well as the united states, to kind of refrain from naming them. now they're also goes hand in hand with, with what we saw happen to the north stream to pipeline where everybody's trying to say, well, the russians did it themselves, right? well, up the pipeline and now they're trying to pull up their own scientist. example rosa if the russian spit on a. 7 side walk, it makes run page news in the new york times, but somehow you attack nuclear power plant and all slap on the risk. nobody's. my mother used to do that. i used to hate that. didn't just did your parents do this? so me and my brother is from time to time, would do something right. uh, but often times it was my brother who was older, who would do it. and he's the one who should get in trouble. but my parents would come home and say, we need to stop doing this. where's the way i wasn't involved?
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he's the one who did it. it's the same thing here. it's like, well, we all need to stop and be nice. well, we didn't know it. he did it, you know, and it's crazy. yeah. anyway, let me tell you about somebody. his name is the guy you need to know about. his name is ron ron, israel emmanuel rom is royal and manuel easy us and bassett, or to japan. but when it comes to serving either the us or japan, the clearly choose is neither which country does he defend his namesake. israel, here's what's happening. so japan is commemorating one of the most horrendous acts in history, the nuclear bombing. a matter of fact, during world war 2, but because protesters say that they would show up and interrupt the event protests, what israel is doing and gaza. the japanese officials chose to ask israel do not show up whether it's public event, so it wouldn't get out of hand. well apparently,
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that was enough for both and bassett, or emmanuel and a diplomat from the u. k. to say well of israel's not allowed to go, then we're not going to go either. that's weird and by the way, washer and bell originally also not invited but that's okay with the us. and that's okay with the british diplomats no complains there. here's what a japanese scholar, smart guy, it seems, thinks of all of this, of israel has actually no place invisible, then it is utterly outragious that, you know, people would even think that is real and should be invited. the russians and the valuations are not invited either. the west is perfectly happy with that, but when it comes to their ally is real. oh wow. you know, this is we have to make a big state the japanese decide who they want to invite. and somehow the u. k. and the united states, the say now you have to invite who we decide we want you to invite to your party. this one has nothing to do with my mother, but i do want your reaction. well, 111 thing i would know about uh rahm emanuel is his brother. i forget his 1st
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name, but the brothers and manuel the older brother is also a high level d and c delegate. that was part of the ouse during of joe biden. from the 2024 presidential cycle. so i think it's important to note that there's a brotherly connection there as well. yeah, he has the manual, but his brother is achia was a brilliant, brilliant site. that's it. who devised many of the medical plans involved in medicare and medicaid in the united states. so you can't take that away from him rather than another brother. the other brother is a, a big hollywood agent who is a big o n c a donor and delegate. so like i said, a lot of brothers and not a manual family and they play a lot in the d n. c swimming pool. and they decide, effectively who gets to play even here domestically as we saw the ouse ring of the
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sitting president off of the 2020 for re election. so you know, that should be worth noting. so when robin manuel throws his name behind who should be on the invite list for japan, that shouldn't come as a surprise either he was or is rather is the us on the way to japan. and it's worth noting that the it is, it was the mirror of nagasaki that declined to invite israel and the president to me o key should i just quietly didn't say anything didn't object and didn't say, hey, you got it. and, and rom emanuel, because the president didn't say anything or the prime minister rather didn't say anything. rahman might a manual decided to speak up on behalf of israel. and i think it's worth noting that this is the same people that are putting comma harris in front of the ticket there. so it would be interesting to hear what pamela harris has to say about around the math will doing such a thing. yeah, i don't, i don't have israel,
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i don't want hearing any of that. i read it. i don't think couple of harris in the middle of the campaign is going to be making public statements about any public policies. she's probably not going to do that until she will. of course you should probably. when was the last time and you as politics and somebody running for office did what they were supposed to do. uh no, this is uh, this might as well be a beauty pageant in our back in our high school at this point. and that's pretty much what we can expect. unfortunately, as you say, sacramento, that we appreciate it. all right, here's what we're going to do. when we come back, we've got a special guest, and i want to talk to her about something going on right now and is real cause i think you might recall that last week. you remember when we were talking about that incident in israel, where they hate using this word, but it's what happened. they saw them eyes, some guy who they had picked up in a raid. people in israel are supporting this and it's still become a bit of a controversy. well, there's video out of this now and i'm going to be talking to sarah bills. she's an
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independent journalist and the co founder of identity politics. pardon me, didn't geo politics. and she's going to be talking with me in just a little bit. you stay right there. don't go away. the, the, the, hey, welcome back. i'm rick sanchez. thanks so much for being with us. could you remember when i mentioned this story to you? i think it was a week and a half ago or so when this thing 1st happened and we were following it here. so the
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story that we've been following for you is, how is riley soldiers were accused of torturing palestinian captives. they weren't even proven to be members of a mas, just people, they picked up and then they saw them eyes them with a metal pipe. it's cause the attention of the entire world media, most of it because members of the can, that's it. and even protesters in israel, i've actually defended with these guys there. so i'm saying, yeah, this is what we should do to all our prisoners from now on sick, even though their captives weren't even prosecuted. let me say that again. all right, here's the video, we have this video now the incident, it's been leak that it's making the rounds. once again, all over the world. in the video, you can see the soldiers with guard dogs standing over these palestinians or on the ground. but all round it up and then and then suspected of being a guest part of from us. then one is walk to an area behind these 3 barricades there with those extra see that right there. and that's where the assault takes
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place. and here, here's the us state department, right? when asked about this, what do you think they're going to say here? listen for prisoners, human rights need to be respected in all cases and when there are alleged violations, the governor of israel needs to take steps to investigate those who are alleged to have committed abuses and inappropriate hold them accountable. and of course, the government of israel, etc. bells joins me now. she's an independent journalist and the co founder of getting part geo politics. she's joining us now to talk about this. and of course we would expect because that's what they always do. they do a thorough investigation and they come clean with complete transparency. does israel right? is that right sarah? to yes, we have investigate it ourselves and we found no wrong doing it. that's right. it's like but it's telling the thoughts. so please take that chicken out of your mouth and then tell me if you took the chicken and the fox said right, i investigated myself. i did not take that trip. oh,
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while the is rarely citizens and protesting and jail breaking them out of jail, it's everything's just cheer chaos there. it's like a rogue failed state. there was his protest yesterday where he's a previous m p a. he's a very maniacal, very extreme far right. mm. he letter purchased yesterday saying this is sodom. and they were protesting their right to do whatever they want to palestinian furnace prisoners. so a biblical reason is that they're using the bible to, to, to, to approve of doing this, to another human be high to so sadly, i'm admittedly not well versed enough in the bible to manipulate any, since the 1st is to, to allow me to sexually abuse other people, but um they do their please far, right. is really zinah, sir, they, they do do that a lot. they. i mean, that's how we kind of gotten zionism to have such
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a strong foothold is by manipulating religious texts in a way. so they could be, but i, i don't think it's not. i think it's more still about a power of power dynamic and making sure that the palestinians remain dehumanized. isn't that what got them into this problem to begin with? i mean, i mean, i'm not excusing october 7th, it was a horrific, horrible attack on innocent people. but you couldn't make an argument that it got to that place because of what you just said. that the people who attacked these riley's felt the human eyes and not just in the last year or the last couple of years, but for decades. correct. and that's part of what you have to do when you're in these kind of, it's just a colonial, imperialistic movements as to the human eyes your enemy. otherwise you're going to feel the guilt of, of, of what take so much pain upon them. so that's a part that's kind of a feature that's not a bug,
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they have to be humanize the palestinian. so you can only be the humanized that long before you know, i mean, i think that the prediction was 2020 in the gaza strip. would it be unlivable or they last is another 4 years so you can only last so long and those conditions with that sort of psychological warfare against you. how does a mass mentality like this develop because, you know, and i know, i'm sure you have a lot of friends who are either jewish americans or is really americans. and they're wonderful, smart, sensitive people who are in every way no different than anybody else. but it seems, and obviously your religion has nothing to do with you know, foreign policy but, but it seems like this thing going on and is real right now where it's this week we all got to think like this and it, it just, i don't, i don't understand that, and i know that history is replete with a case with situations like like this,
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cambodia, etc. it just seems odd, doesn't it that they, it's like you almost don't you want to like go there and like shake them out of it and say look what you're doing to yourselves through reputation forever. i don't know. you don't, they don't see it like that. most of the people in there's but that's those are the outliers, those of the minority that say like, oh my god, this has to stop for the majority of them, their mentality is that this is within their right. this is still retaliation for october, the 7th. but they really do believe most of what their government says to them in regards to destroying him ass and wanting him to surrender. they don't have that in a distrust of the media and the government that we do here in america. the peer pressure does appear raised in the society that tells them everybody around them lies to them and wants them dead so. so it's like peer pressure, government control and yeah, yeah, yeah. well, and, and then you have, you know, a prime minister, who as we know, according to polls not according to sarah read,
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every poll shows that as soon as this war is over, when it's over, he's out, they don't want them there. so if i were him, i would do the same thing, donald rumsfeld and george bush and dick cheney did. let's keep this iraq or thing . go and look at our polls. are going up exactly. and to the weather, to uh, to keep it going or to just avoid the, the, the courts going to present um exactly that he also bb and yahoo knows he has a much stronger ally and donald trump. so if he kind of white knuckles it until then, i think at least he has the well it things can't get worse. yeah. won't, they can only get better for me. so i do think that he does how he does suffer from quite a low approval rating. but is really, is, are notoriously fickle and he could literally free a hostage tomorrow, at his approval rating to shoot up again, you know, and he, he is playing a good game. he's deliberately not rescued the american hostages. that's to keep
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american hostage, you know, and uh, you know, you don't really want the hostages free when the guy, you're negotiating the release of the hostages with you assessing it. but i mean, is there is, can there be better evidence of that? and he was a moderate, he was the one that was probably willing to come to the table and the most good phase, the guy that they would just put in charge just as the eye of coal, anti zionist. and i don't think he believes in a 2 state solution at all. so, but again, this could be what israel wants. israel might want an extremist on the other side. how do you figure it out? let's change topics and go to ukraine. have you figured out what the heck zalinski is doing there? because it seems like, at least by every credible report that i read, he's certainly not when thing, if anything, the russian troops are incrementally moving into his country. and suddenly he starts pulling troops, the very few he has left to try and stop the russians. any throws them into
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a border town to attack russia, and now he attacks a nuclear power plant had. can you make sense? it isn't for us as well. i couldn't. so this morning i decided to look at the western main street and media. so they figured they could tell me why is doing it, or even they don't know, which i thought was really interesting. uh, the london times called this excursion risky a total of 8 times in a, in a very short article. and the picture of him depicted him almost like hitler. so is quite interesting. i don't think anybody knows what to make of it. the, the articles that i've read have hinted that and kind of just the firms that the west had no idea. yeah, the p o mike mike call, you know, i worked at fox, i worked at nbc, i'm as nbc i worked at cnn. i worked at of all a univision, i worked him all of these places and i can tell you that these people, although they're wonderful people and i have no problems with hanging out with them
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and having beers, they're generally really stupid when it comes to the thing you know, geo politics and then it's frustrating because these are interesting stories that should be told with information and history and perspective and they had, they got, they ain't got none of that. a well known but the presenter is not all the analysts make good presents. not all presents or good analysts do just that. lucky. it goes your double threat. but um, yeah, everybody's kind of in the dark. they kind of have that recency bias or kind of like that. what's in front of me by us. this is all that really matters and it's an isolated incident. but if we looked at the, the pattern of behavior, we had terrorist attacks and pretty honest. and then we have a frequent terrorist attacks on cry may. and then they got, it kind of got the sense of size to them. so now the lensky is like, i gotta do something big. i mean, we're moving a carrier to the middle east for israel, a whole carrier strike group. the ones he must feel pretty left out,
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pretty jested right now. do you do get a sense? i think you're on to something near sarah. i get a sense that, well, we still in, you know, do the oh ukraine got to protect ukraine park. um it's mostly talk. i have a sense that that, that, that, that place where we used to be, we're no longer there and i'm not sure wherever going to get there again, from the standpoint of, it's all about defending ukraine now or in the future. what's your sense? you know, i don't think so either. i think that this sort of looked at avail and especially donald trump get some elected. it will be even worse. yeah. so we were very indifferent to ukraine prior to this further 2022. and now all of a sudden, you know, the liberal media really put on the, the, the, the, the just jet engines and like sympathy and charities and stuff like that. and i
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really got a sense, but there was a strong war fatigue with this war. i don't feel like americans feel connection to it. i think it was all artificial to begin with. they could never find it on about one final thing since you're talking this way. i find really advanced, fascinating. and i think that although you know like me and my do and like every other human being has weaknesses, i think he's got a better deal political outlook than just about anybody with a possible exception of jimmy carter who's ever run for this type of office. what's what do you think? i think that the, an ongoing consensus is but ged man says weird. that's like the, the, the news name or something. so i'm i, by the way. so right. yeah. i kind of want weird people in this group. i think some people don't really appreciate uh, his foreign policy or his lack thereof, but a lot of people really do like his views on each frame and his frankness to just say, i don't care about your brain. i'm not even picking up the phone. yeah. why are we
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there? what, why are we still fighting there? what's it got to do with me or my kids? and why are we building schools here? and why are we feeding the contractor? somebody comes from a working class family in middle america. he doesn't care what's happening and quarter, or don't yet. down to 30 seconds. how do you see the electron right now? i don't know if for some reason they're using a i, they're going crazy. everything's up in the air. the poll switched from day to day up and down, up and down. yeah, i don't know and, but tonight is really big. i'm a long will be just having a conversation live with donald trump and i think that we'll see another search his his pulls a gun, he really knows how to connect with regular people and come ologist does not have that gene in her. yeah, yeah. she's paying attention though she's, she's standing where she needs to stand and saying what they write for her. she's not, let's see how that works out. you are a pleasure to talk to sarah,
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thanks so much as always. we're out of time. we'll do it again. thanks so much. that's our show. remember, always look outside your own box shows. they don't live in boxes as we like to say, how much your interest will be looking for you again. next time, the, what is part of the the employee would post good. isn't the defense you of us and bidding the word or is it something deeper, more complex might be present there?
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let's stop. without cases. let's go products or the russian to fight against the store. you create a method. quitman and of course the region. the key news is more than 2000 soldiers, no further attempt to push people into russian territories. jersey. oh, the god of the us is apparently considering websites didn't let him is and then speak with another politician. but the message coming from russian intelligence. these really attack would have never happened, right? you would never have attacked your brain and we'd have no inflation. and we wouldn't have had the afghanistan view, take a few of those events away and we have a different world. donald trump goes on the wall falls that gives him president vi and those escalating conflicts around the world.

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