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tv   The Bottom Line  Al Jazeera  October 23, 2020 8:30am-9:01am +03

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well considered one of the greatest footballers of all time brazilian legend pele is celebrating his 80th birthday a joint nurul izzah beat on vail to mark the milestone fans came to see it in the city of san toss where perry spent most of his career he's the only player to ever win 3 world cups and you can get much more on our website al to 0 dot com. and let's take you through some of the headlines here now to syria now u.s. president of trump and democratic nominee joe biden face stuff in their 2nd and final debate of the campaign they had lively exchanges ranging from the pandemic and the economy to corruption and election interference voters will decide the winner on november the 3rd we had the best black unemployment numbers in the
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history of our country hispanic women asian people with diplomas with no diplomas mit graduates number one in that everybody had to personally and you know what the other side wanted to get together they wanted to unify success is going to bring us together we run the road to success but i'm cutting taxes and he wants to raise everybody's taxes and he wants to put new regulations are never think he will kill it if he gets in you will have a depression the likes of which you've never seen. we can grow this economy we can deal with the systemic racism and the same time we can make sure that our economy is being run and moved and motivated by clean energy creating millions of new jobs and that's the fact that's what we're going to do and i'm going to say as i said to begin what is on the ballot here is the character of this country decency
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honor respect treating people with dignity making sure that everyone has an even chance and i'm going to make sure you get there the united states has imposed sanctions on 5 uranian groups accusing them of attempting to interfere in next month's elections on wednesday u.s. intelligence agencies said iran and russia had obtained information on u.s. voters the sanctions applied to iran's revolutionary guard and t.v. and media companies governments across europe are struggling with how to deal with a rapidly spreading coronavirus outbreak france's expanded curfews to more regions the number of infections 1000000. of those i headlines the news continues after the bottom line stay with us. pakistan's k.s.c. $100.00 is more than 36 percent we bring you the stories in development is that
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a rapidly changing the world we live in the water is going dispensable to economic activity but industrial uses the worst thing is to freshwater counting the cost on al-jazeera. hi i'm steve clements and i have a question how is america going to reconnect with the world after the election battle between donald trump and joe biden let's get to the bottom line. very soon we'll know which kind of foreign policy americans actually want will the u.s. be led by a president who shoots from the hip hates international obligations prefers temporary deals over long term alliances and just could care less about so-called western values or will it be someone who still believes in the world order created after world war 2 where america leans in on global security and works with allies to solve big international problems and invest in institutions like nato the w t o and the united nations with so many questions we're fortunate today to be joined by someone who has all the answers at least some of them embassador nicholas burns
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has spent close to 30 years in american diplomacy he's worked under republican and democratic administrations and served as the number 3 official in the state department he's also an adviser to the biden campaign and teaches diplomacy and international politics at harvard's harvard university and is director of the world renown aspens tribe strategy group nick it's great to be with you today let me just ask you point blank as we start this conversation when we look at the question of you know america engaged in the rest of the world does it really matter who wins this election. oh steve it matters greatly i mean there are 2 very divergent passed the united states in this november 3rd election and you just framed it in your opening don't trump in my judgment has been the weakest american president in our lifetime maybe in all of american history when it comes to the rest of the world he has spurned our alliances he's thrown the global trade pick system into disarray he has not stood up for democracy in
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a time of the increased power of authoritarian states like china and russia you can see the damage they're doing to human rights and democracy around the world and steve as you and i know that one of the strengths of america is the fact that we're an immigrant nation that we're multi-ethnic and multi-religious and maybe multiracial and don't trust being closing the doors to immigrants who strengthen our society as well as to refugees so i think you turn to american foreign policy upside down we're more isolated we're not respected by our friends and it shows in a pew public opinion poll just last month which showed that in many allied countries around the world vladimir putin and she shouldn't be paying have a higher confidence rating in places like germany and donald trump that's a crisis they aren't states joe biden is the antithesis and he will return us i think to the global role that we need to play you when you kind of look at this kind of broad question about you know the election we don't know the outcome of this election but there whether joe biden wins or not
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a huge number of americans are going to vote for donald trump what has not connected with them about the importance of the american foreign policy course that you're talking about well hopefully as you noted i'm going to advisor to the biden campaign a bigger number of americans will vote for joe biden and see if i can set answer your question by saying look at our public opinion polls the american people consistently rate nato very highly 75 percent of americans support it in the chicago council and global affairs. poll the american people are not isolationist not the majority of the american people they want us to pay attention to our alliances they want us to be involved in efforts to stem the pandemic the majority of americans don't believe we should have left the world health organization so i think that vice president biden is much more in tune with the greatest number of people in the united states the majority than donald trump for those supporting donald trump perhaps they think that his kind of bravado on the world stage and
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telling it like it is and the out right can castigation in criticism of our allies it's a very freshening way for an american president to act perhaps they don't feel connected to the reality and that is that you know a great number of jobs in the united states depend on our ability to export we're connected to the global economy and the big issues steve that you and i have talked about climate change the pandemic the global economy and getting out of the recession the u.s. can't do that alone we've got to be engaged with the world that's what joe biden represents nick you and i is also talking about the trust deficit out there in the rest of the world that when they don't think they can necessarily count on the united states in their dark days those are allies when you get to problematic countries you know they're filling a void right now in their own behavior and actions i guess my question to you is can trust balance back or snap back.
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well steve i think i've separated 2 categories many of the allied governments take the governments of the nato countries are east asian alliances with australia japan south korea i think if joe biden wins there are no welcome him back and welcome and engaged credit ducted of active america back on the global scene because they want to see that america is in the interests of those countries to have the united states be active in the world i frankly think that foreign publics it may take a while for them to come back you know we left under donald trump's real leadership we made the disastrous decision to leave the paris climate change agreement you and i know you know pretty well it's low is the major issue in europe climate change along with a pandemic i don't think publics will forgive the united states as easily it will have to earn back the trust on the pandemic we are the largest we were but largest financial contributor to the world or the help organisation and we left it and left
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the rest of the world high and dry in the middle of a pandemic that's going to take a while to come back but you know what persistent effort with decades of experience the track record that joe biden has i think could close that gap with publics as well you know 2 of the biggest features of the obama administration where the iran nuclear deal veejay c.p.o. way but also something you know many people don't talk very much about but president obama had for nuclear summit but dealing with nuclear materials nonproliferation and we've seen the deterioration of those deals with the russians and other parties out there i guess my question is is a u.-turn possible on some of these key pieces of what president obama tried to put in place but but but president didn't continue. well i think certainly no one thinks we can go back to the world of 2016 i know vice president biden if you elect is going to be projecting forward in this decade but you're right steve we're living perhaps at the most unsecure time in terms of the safety and the number of
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the types of nuclear weapons in the 1000 from the 1960 s. the i.n.f. treaty interment intermediate range nuclear forces treaty lapsed a year and a half ago the start treaty that limits between the united states and russia the most powerful intercontinental ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads that is going to lapse on february 1st 2021 just a couple of months from now unless there is action and you see china completely unconstrained as a nuclear weapons power you saw india and pakistan clash last year fortunately mercifully it without nuclear weapons but they did with conventional weapons so i think arms control limiting. the number and type of nuclear weapons both strategic an intermediate is going to be a major priority and again vice president biden has a lot of experience in this domain with a lot of good people around him but president trump has made
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a hash of it so it just adds to that list of actions that will be on president elect joe biden's plate on january 20th in just a couple of months if he if he does win this election nic you've dealt with the entire world and understand the priority of threats that are facing the country i'm just interested in how if if you and the biden team come in how are they going to deal with russia how are they going to deal with china in ways that are different than what we see today. well steve you'll appreciate this i certainly don't want to if i was president biden's 1 elected president the united states i don't want to predict what he's going to do he'll have to make those decisions if that time comes i'll just keep my personal view though i think there's no question that here in the united states we're looking at a very worrisome rise of chinese aggressiveness and chinese power in the world that it really has to be issue number one for the united states in terms of the threats to the country to see what china did just during the pandemic this past summer its
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aggressive actions to stop a conflict with india on their very long border in the himalayas the fact that china smothered hong kong's democracy this past summer with a new security law that it was aggressive and bullying towards the philippines and vietnam and the south china sea and very much aggressive and sanctioning towards the united states the rise of china and the aggressiveness of the xi jinping government is a fundamental issue of the united states i'd i'd put frankly out glad a mere putin is acting in a similarly aggressive way if you look at what he's done in ukraine the threats he's made to the people just trying to demonstrate for democracy and valerie's the threats constantly to our nato allies in eastern europe that these 2 authoritarian powers are challenging the democratic world and unfortunately steve we don't have an american president right now who will stand up to them he wants to embrace them and he's not been tough enough and strong enough in dealing with him i think that's
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problem number one of course terrorism and the threat of terrorism is an abiding concern and a very serious continued threat to the united states we know that the islamic state is still not completely destroyed and that has to be a goal of the united states and our allies certainly on top of all of that in terms of immediate importance it's the coronavirus and it's the pandemic the 2nd wave that we think we may now be experienced. and here in the united states the united states has to work both within our country and also with other countries to bring it to a close hopefully with the arrival of impact seen if that happens in 2021 and the dispersal and distribution of that vaccine around the world and around the united states trying to climb out of the global recession that has been so injurious to so many americans whoever's elected and i hope is going to be vice president biden is going to have perhaps the most difficult global agenda that any president has faced
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since the 1930 s. global a national agenda i should say since franklin up wrote eleanor roosevelt was elected in 1932 but joe biden's up to it and he's going to have a lot of support in the country to be an activist president who tries to heal the country and unite as to combat these these major concerns how do you make the case to americans that feel that they fought in iraq they fought in afghanistan they fought in korea they fought in vietnam you know generations of military families who feel after financial crises and you know sort of tough times that they fought these wars helping to secure the world but sort of china has won and i'm related to a lot of these folks and he gave you know it helped fuel you know some of the rise of donald trump but it also has helped fuel it bernie sanders and you know. and that kind of left wing of the democratic party i know that you talk to lots of communities and i'm just sort of interested in that dimension of america that
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thinks america's engagement with the world is not paying off very well what do you say to them. well firstly i think you're right to raise this issue i am hearing that from people and i think you and i have both been hearing it for a number of years now i think there is a recognition what i would say very respectfully when i do speak around the country to people as you're right america cannot go it alone and america should not have to shoulder the burden of these responsibilities alone and that's why we have alliances when i was u.s. ambassador to nato going into afghanistan every single they don't ally came in with us and they suffered they have suffered over a 1000 combat deaths and many many more thousands wounded they've really paid the price with us when we didn't when we went to iraq in 2003 or fewer went in with us but many did more than 18 of the nato countries eventually went into iraq with us so hopefully we're not going to be fighting these big land wars hopefully we can draw down the level of american forces continue to end iraq and afghanistan but we
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need to be ready and strong to defend the united states i think every american would agree on that and i think one of the central issues here and i say this to people steve is we're stronger in our alliances and leading our alliances and working with our allies than trying to be unilateral us going alone and i feel that president trump has a sunny unilateral course which pushes all the pressure on our taxpayers and i military to shoulder these burdens better to disperse it among our allies and better to be very reluctant to engage in major land wars in the middle east or asia in the future because we've certainly over the last 20 years paid the price for those kinds of engagements and i have to say steve i was involved in the bush administration in prosecuting the war in afghanistan and certainly present in that administration would end to iraq so i've got to bear some responsibility for this and one of the lessons that i've certainly learned and many others have
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learned is that we need to be very reluctant to use our military power only. when the chips are down there is no other option and we won't be putting our diplomats on point it's hard to do that now when donald trump has weakened the state department so much but i hope we can strengthen the state department and lead diplomatically i think a lot of americans want us to do that you know one of the other areas of that's been kind of a constant all server in the world but also a problem area for united states is the middle east and i can explain what we've done 1000000 away and we bomb libya hardly been involved in the aftermath or tried to negotiate palestinian israeli peace but we've withdrawn you know support from the palestinians you have look at jamal kesho his death and the relationship with the saudis and how to manage that or with the gulf and i'm just interested in what you think i like to call it the north star but what should be the principles whether it's interests or concern over human rights that ought to be guiding our
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engagement in a senior middle east policy. well i think this is the most unstable and dangerous part of the world and it will be for the next decade or so the modern middle east $22.00 arab countries israel turkey iran and we're going to have to have a multifaceted approach i do think steve that the china threat and a focus on china is going to be the largest issue certainly recovery at home from the pandemic and they cannot make collapse the recession is the major priority for any. any future administration on the middle east i think we need to be reluctant to use our middle military force only when necessary we should be forward deployed there as we are in places like saudi arabia and kuwait but frankly it is no longer going to be the central focus of the united states the way it has in the last few decades we need to be obviously protective of our friends protective of israel
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protective of the gulf arab states working with egypt and jordan friends of ours in the region we ought to be wanting to work with them to try to contain it rainy and power and what i mean is what the iranians are doing to blow up places like yemen and syria and iraq and and certainly gaza and lebanon and that's i think most middle east countries arab countries and israel can agree that iran needs to be contained and frankly as if the civil syrian civil war can can slowly end and be better for it quickly and it but most people are predicting that we've got to be part of the recovery helping the people of those countries to recover certainly we want to be present in the middle east but we've been so present we focus so many resources there that we've actually been late to the china challenge and that's one of the mistakes the president trump has made among the many many mixed up mistakes he's made you know one of the books that became one of
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the most sought after books after 9. in occurred was a book by talmud johnson called blowback the costs and consequences of american empire and you know a couple of the points that challenge johnson raised was that america had done things in the world and sort of disregarded what the reactions of those partners with those communities and whatnot might be and when i look at the global refugee crisis today when i look at how big it is and i look at the way in which some leaders have demeaned dangle americal who took in a 1000000 refugees and you know the rise of populism i'm just wondering if worth one of these moments where we'll look back and say wow our disregard for people in time of need and refugee crisis is going to lead to substantial blowback and i i'd love to get your thoughts on that because it's do you do you share with me that this is an urgent concern that we are making a big mistake on i do steve the united nations says that there are 69000000 refugees and internally displaced people in the world today that's the largest
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number of refugees since the summer the world war 2 ended in 1945 to gives you a degree of the huge suffering out there the understates is always going to generous nation we are an immigrant nation and we're refugee nation albert einstein henry kissinger madeleine albright all refugees to the united states and our tradition really for a half a century is that we take in 60 to 70000 refugees a year we've taken the greatest number of refugees of any country we've taken up to a 1000000 immigrants a year and make them citizens and they strengthen our country refugees and immigrants make us demographically younger and you want to have a big workforce and the younger population to pick to earn to be productive earn the wealth that pays for senior citizens and of course it infuses our economy with talent if you think about the fact that 3 of our 4 biggest tech or 5 biggest tech company tech companies are run by an indian immigrants to the united states it's a powerful force so to see donald trump close the doors on immigration. he's
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imposed a religious means test he doesn't want muslims coming into the united states that's un-american to feel like that instead it's been a lot of attention in the press to the plight of refugees and the president's essentially shut down the flow of refugees into the united states is not it's not in our moral and ethical interest to do that and it runs contrary to what we know is the right thing to do and it's not even the smart thing to do because these people become american citizens they want to be part of our society they contribute within a couple of years as workers in a small business owners so the arguments are clear but the president is stuck back in some 19th century view of america and we're living in the 21st century we have to compete and i do hope we can turn this around a new administration you know nick one of my friendly criticisms of the obama administration was that after the financial crisis and after
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a moment of just doubt on every front that was an opportunity i thought that was missed to sort of revise international institutions like the united nations to give a place to some of the rising powers that needed to be brought in and in a more substantial way into decision making in the un and redo the security council etc and that there could be credit that came to the united states for being the one that was selfless in that moment in helping these and do you think that moment is passed because when i look at international institutions and whether they work or not anymore as donald trump is pulling out one of the question is could they ever work again can you bounce back without bringing in the turkeys in the indias in the brazils. well i think i think it's not too late steve these institutions have really had great value and the most of them were inspired if not created by the united states by democratic and republican administrations in the last 75 years and you've got to continually modernize them president trump for
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instance puerto president obama excuse me supported india for permanent membership on the united nations security council it didn't happen but he took that step president george h.w. bush when congolese rice was secretary of state actually made and i worked with condi on this a major effort to try to modernize the security council the fact is that's a good example steve the security council looks like the power balance of 945 if you don't have a ship a man or india or an african country or a south american country it on the security council as a permanent member it doesn't really reflect the world as it is doesn't reflect at all the world as it is in the 21st century so the i.m.f. the world bank the world health organization needs reform the world trade organization where china is getting off with a lot of large as needs reform and what president trump has done is to say it's too hard they don't do everything we say we're walking away that's not our leader
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operate so a leader will understand that we have to pinch in the american voice has to be heard right united states needs to put shoulder to it and i think that's what i hope very much that america returned a better attitude one last question nic i recently had a conversation with former national security advisor h.r. mcmaster and he made this point that's been hovering in my brain a little bit said america to succeed needs to become less strategically narcissistic that it needs to become a more empathetic nation both with its rivals but also with its allies it needs to understand where they're coming from because it just can't you know be a might makes right nation that plod through the world without regard to consequence for others and i'm interested in this concept and whether you think he's on to something. well i think he might he maybe i think what he's trying to say and what i certainly believe is that we need to put our diplomats front 1st forward deployed for the united states are we need to be looking to be working with
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other countries in a much more productive way say in the world health organization for instance returning to nato and that we've got to leave diplomats and work on problems like climate change and future pandemics these are not military issues they won't work if we put the 82nd airborne forward they were well for us but we won't resolve them if our diplomats are front and center that tells rebuilding the state department i do think at the same time steve we've got to be tough with our adversaries like china and russia tough to stand up for american values and interests the way the president trump is not and that some there are times we have to cooperate with them and say i'm with china we should be tough minded and limiting our military ambitions but we have to work with them on climate change and work with them in the last stage of ending the pandemic we have to be realistic and forward looking and we've got a presidential candidate joe biden who can do all that the president trump will
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lead us down the wrong path well the ambassador are nicholas burns good friend i want to thank you for your thoughts today we're going to see very soon which kind of foreign policy americans want thank you for joining us today steve thanks very much for this opportunity so what's the bottom line some countries are quite open about their preferred candidate russia turkey israel and some of the gulf states come to mind they want donald trump but guess what they don't get to vote other nations would like to see a different america more and gauged in global problem solving but let's not forget that that america is still america with or without trump this is still the country that invaded iraq for dubious reasons and it bombed nations like libya without doing much to deal with the bloody aftermath there the bigger question is can the united states ever become a more thoughtful and less narcissistic superpower it'll take much more than one election for that to happen and that's the bottom line.
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global pandemic. family comes 1st. for every american health care has never been more important. because the new disease does not favor republicans over democrats bridge over poor or black over white. america decides how to care for a nation. extensive coverage of the us elections. on al-jazeera. when i think of my life i think of potential when i think of potential i think what being what is not i think of the old people need to do to give control to ellen and i'm doing something that they come to coddle tell me it's impossible i think all the challenge. here is my child and they're going to tell us the money is being sold and this is my mantra. my nigeria on al-jazeera.
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in countries like mine people have been killed too because we in the united states have privatized the ultimate public function for this was a deal with saudi arabia things were done differently saudis other arabs when they came to britain for being all to help of the past bombs deals although you'll rumsfeld was meeting saddam isn't that interesting the shadow on al-jazeera when the news breaks and the racism protests continue in a number of cities across the united states when people need to be heard in the council area line nearly $500.00 times with a story about 80 percent of this land does al-jazeera has teams on the ground people are just talking about wind and solar as if that's going to solve the problem if want to bring more room documentaries and life moves on
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and online. ready. i'm sam is a than with a look at the headlines here now to syria now u.s. president trump and democratic nominee joe biden have faced off in their 2nd and final debate of the election campaign they have lively exchanges ranging from the pandemic and the economy to corruption and the election interference voters will decide the winner on november the 3rd we had the best black unemployment numbers in the history of our country hispanic women asian people with the plum is with no diplomas mit graduates number one in the everybody had the big.

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