tv Inside Story Al Jazeera November 17, 2024 8:30am-9:00am AST
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the on the go and need tonight out is there is only move i left, is that the, this is where we, the effect allies from out is there is a mobile app available in your favorite top to just that 3rd attempt to move the new app from out to 0 new at you think? is it the same from 2 point oh is taking shape the us president select to nominate 15, members of his cabinet. some donald trump takes a raising eyebrow. how will they shape from foreign policy? and how will this affect them? at least this is inside story, the
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hello there and welcome to the program. i'm nora, kyle donald trump. foreign policy during his 1st time was guided by his campaign slogan, america fast. what he delivered, critic say, was chaos. he bun through 2 secretaries of state to defend secretaries before national security advisers. he left the us owls of the powers climate. the code on the wrong nuclear deal. as administration also recognized your worst limits as well as capital trump 2nd time will bring new challenges. the most pressing was, he said he'll end the fighting in ukraine on day one, but hasn't explained how his pounds on gauze, and 11 and just as vague and the people he's choosing to drive his agenda a controversial mock, or would it be nominated for us actually of state as hawkish on china, defense actually pick p takes that things. israel sit next to occupied. westbank and national security. advisor pointy, my pulse, what's the cost aid to ukraine? so how do trumps choices signal his foreign policy to come?
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well, they bring place to ukraine, garza lebanon, will raise these questions with all experts and just a bit. first, this report by, sorry, go together with donald trump. we are going to make america, not just the man who was was this is christine was donald trump. now monica rubio is an ally, tap should be the next us secretary of state. it's a tremendous honor to the present replaced with confidence in me in a position of such importance. rubio is a foreign policy hotline. a note favoring military might, over diplomatic measures. he supports the israel, is an wavering. here we are outside the office of senator marco's review. last year she told peace that to the masses to blame for the death of palestinians and gaza, or you from any way i want you guys to get this. i want to destroy every element from off. they can get their hands on. these people are vicious animals who did horrifying crimes. and i hope you guys post the palestinians,
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say trump. so many nations are made just set back in achieving piece heavy. and why should i have to show these indicators such as clearly that the us will continue to faith israel, and that will only handle the potential for a settlement and consequently prolonged the conflicts and suffering the palestinian people. then that's pete hexa. trump surprise picks the defense secretary, he's an army best friend and tv personality, with no political experience of many and the republican policy and in the defense industry are alarmed and he has excellent qualifications as a military officer or a junior officer. he's got excellent educational credentials, but he has no, i level national security experience and is never run. a large organization is confirmed hex that will have to do one thing. task was in the middle east and ukraine on the highly charged us china rivalry. accessed is also an outspoken
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critic of nato, but it's secretary general and says, the alliance is in tech to us security. i've worked with zillow from for 4 years in my previous law, sending us open the legs. and i had a very good working relationship with him. he will do everything needed to defense united states. and he is rather rare that your membership of nato is part of the defense of us from radios hotline policies, to headsets and experience. president trump choices continue to spot debate with gaza. nothing on an ukraine on the line. the stakes couldn't be higher. sorry. go out to 0. the inside story. the. well that spring, you know, guess now. and in washington, dc, no signage, a white house come this full the hell newspaper and coaches. so you k. natasha lynch, that professor of government at the university of essex. and then on off of michigan,
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my dreams wary professor of middle east politics at the castle, university of i will welcome to all of you know, it's been quite weak, but in washington is trying to gather speed with his appointments. and what's the feeling bad about his foreign policy picks a hi. first off the top floor, we have to say it is present electronic personal engine, dr. paula. so he's the one who's going to make the decisions that has always been the case in his political career. not having said all of that. the foreign policy choices, generally reflections worldviews. of course, it is people who are loyal to him who are part of that my go base for the most part . really only do not use a little bit of an exception to that more of an establishment republican kind of figure, even though he has previously dr. trump more of late, but if you look at people like pete hang chef or my coffee basically, that would be nominated to be on boss or treat as rails or various others. there
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are people who are really very much all not america 1st waiting that you alluded to in your introduction. absolutely. and natasha some of the reactions if we look now at europe, some of the reactions that i'm being seeing from that are woods like terrifying, unpredictable big and by the preferred picks are a bit less or full than the others. is that the general time that you'll hear? i mean, there's definitely a huge concern in europe with just the election of trump. but also with some of these picks that seem to be more based on loyalty, then, then competence. i know that europe has been preparing for this, and i am a chrome was actually sitting very loudly sounding the alarm that your cost to be prepared to be independent from us. they can't rely on us, they have to build up their own military and security measures. and there's going to be a lot of pressure on europe. and just looking at the case of ukraine is trauma pressures
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. you crate into that, some kind of a surrender with, with russia and then has to give up a lot of territory will be europe that will probably be paying the bill of reconstruction. there's, there's just a lot of concerns also about the pick up till she covered her for intelligence because she'll be heading 18 intelligence agencies. and the democrats are concerned that she's sort of russian asset the uses russian talking points. and there is concerns about whether or not and you know, they'll be breeches of intelligence. certainly european. so i know they were preparing for this. there is a lot of concerns about where things are going to go. and i'd like to just add that in the previous trouble ministration. they're more traditional people surrounding from people that believed more and in democratic processes and were able to steer in better this time you, you don't have that. you have some really well pics of, i'm not what i want to pick up on from both of your answers. the festival. that's bringing my teams where it's get some idea of what the feeling is in the middle
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east. because much of you're normally based here in doha, feel pretty top 10 to the feelings throughout the region. here in the middle east, there's an important saying that which would be the difference between tom and the station. and by then by that it has approved or contributed to that kind of genocide then, because i couldn't go to that and 50000 the people majority of them are kids and women and and just more than 120000 product spirit. and basically the destruction of what goes up. so that's all of this happened. and the con, the investigation which, which basically contributed financially politically, to the, to a top of that was that, so that the new coming a decision. um they, they, they can do one thing which basically imposing solutions. they kind of doing more than kidding, which has been done already. the, i think the nature of the point that, that's maybe you know, so the perception is very clear that there is not a huge difference between um,
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by the administration or the time i misplaced it. and maybe the, that the good point about from he's been a clean people, they kind of need what he does and he doesn't know the session. and they can to some extent. but i'm not saying you're predicting, but they can realize that to you, what it creates more destruction to what type to what's happening and what adults. and i think one of the uh, ideas of focusing on one and image, which basically people should not be optimistic about everything that a trauma or his team will do it because smaller politics, the small differences, they may change the whole dynamic about what's happening in the middle east, so that is important to watch, especially when it comes to imposing solutions. and here what it meant by the output i think is a decision was to, for the on that to hold off on that and trying to impose solutions,
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including westbank and supporting the, to the i was trying to have uh, for a complete southern c. i'm in west bank. oh no, so let's pick up on that. but the impact that these picks might have on the middle east region because they all very, very much just pro israel, but apparently pro fall light is really pull. it sees, you know, you have like face and all of the occupied westbank putting supplements back into garza. where do you think the regions headed enough for the does the direction in my good. i mean you how, for example, you mentioned the occupied with fine. my comfortably easy i mentioned in my already around surgery has been nominated to be in charge of the boss or treat israel. does not use the phrase on an all new repair into the work altered by he refers to the territory as to day. i'm so, mary, it appears to believe that it was divinely granted to the state of history. oh no, i don't really want to get into position all defending by ministration,
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because i think those policies speak for themselves of the death tools fixture itself, but the by the ministration. in theory, a published believes in a 2 state solution. in theory, he believes that there should be the basis of a palestinian state one day obviously in the west by the guys of 9 is not at all clear to the trauma. ministration believes that one thing if i marry laurie just really briefly treat on what was said earlier, this statement was made that people are at least clear about tall truck leaves. i'm not sure that's true because if you look at the city of deer, martin and michigan majority of cities in the united states, mr. trump think for all the all hoops there. and i don't think there was people were putting on the basis of that less told with frank getting through them. so there they were, i believe made promises during trump's campaign,
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but he has already broken. now just briefly, can you just to expand on that for our audience? yes, absolutely. so basically you're in the account again, there was a michigan, there's a key stage in american elections. it has the highest concentration of out of americans in the nation. count on the hottest last the home from one of the 3 election day trauma. we're say things like, well ira, generally interested in pace. that's the only thing they're appealing to. he was at least implying that there was legitimacy to the criticism all by his policies. they're not, i certainly believe there's legitimacy to that criticism, but this is, there is no way from slots to wherever the trouble has any intention of moving in the direction that they appear to be implying. okay, latasha, one thing that we can be sure of at this stage at least, is that trump wants to end the was in the world. the ukraine will being one of them . we've got presence of domestic lensky of ukraine,
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also saying that he wants this war to ends next year in a diplomatic manner. does he believe that from will be able to deliver that? and that's the ending? well, what can you cranes favor? so the lensky believes he has no choice, he's been put in a corner here because he knows that he's not going to be receiving the type of aid that was coming with a military. that was kind during the by administration. and they know that they're about to face a really hard winter. they know that they're struggling to maintain their levels of recruits. they, they know that their infrastructure and much of their infrastructure has been destroyed. and that they're not going to be able to continue to wage this war without us support, which is the, the largest donor. and so i hate zalinski is hopeful that he can get some kind of deal that doesn't force the ukrainians to seems so much territory. and to remain really insecure indefinitely. so he's trying to every
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single to the us and they don't be told that that trump will be able to create some sort of deal. but i think he's been pushed into a corner on this. i don't think this is what the premiums wanted at all, but they feel that they haven't choice to what extent can europe natasha move to fill the gaps that's going to be left by the us should it stop is age to crime? to? i think it's going to be very difficult because there's already fatigue with providing the level of a that the ukrainians require. an probably the most difficult stages of the conflict for russia. they've been able to weather and they seem willing to just keep losing none in large numbers and just keep this war going on indefinitely. i don't know if the result is there from the europeans. i think they are individually trying to increase their own security. you know that in the baltic countries where they actually fear russian aggression and countries like a sonia unlocked and they're trying to double their,
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their number of military troops. and there are many countries in, within nato that are trying to get towards, you know, spending 2 percent of their g, p on their military spending, knowing that they will have to be alone and they are going to be able to rely on us now with the pick of market reveal that means that he was one of the people that wrote the legislation that said that the us can't leave nato. that does mean that there is some commitments. no. um, but do you refuse? know that they will have to shoulder a lot of the burden before. absolutely, and budget one area that we do know that the us will continue sending aid to israel . this trump team is being highly critical on 5, and this threats to withdrawal ministry aid as well, doesn't keep up humanitarian aid deliveries and improve the situation in gone. so that's going to be no thoughts, threats coming from the trump administration. although i think it's expected that
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is where you want to see more support from a trump mist ration more then not only and but it comes to the political support but also, and to the idea that the strong believe of what that's in yahoo has in mind that says to me, as someone photo in the region important, then that military important done politics because the model begins to close to the ideological aspect, that by 10 yahoo believes and that's the great support that then you know, once i think that is what he wants to do in 2025. that's when he talks about the uh, basically so solvency on on, on a 2 part was turned by. what's about, i think what's important also to, to, to minutes to monitor is how much are the, the team of, of, of the term can have, i would say agreed,
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and the agreement on the how things should be done on that at all. because they are having a many voices coming from the agent. and there is also the impact coming from different countries in the region to try. so these are the cut eyes and it's on a policy towards the middle east. and this would have also impacts. and i, and i think we saw the meeting up at a mask, we'd be around in either present in the united vision. that's and in decatur about what's i quoted is the entire system within. i mean, this is expected from someone who was water elected, pointing change was motor in product. it's not many because that's not to expect. there's someone who's not elected and they don't allow me to send one centers to say that the jump in the, in the areas where most of my data, where a majority g was voted for based on the social agenda by this time. and this is number 2, so i don't think so. i mean, i, i, i don't 2 places where mister adams are there. and the major issue number one to
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the associate that they are would also be alive because the father, a less agenda, the agenda that democrats has posted the last 4 years. and those are those that have families and they are what is the only point to didn't see it because it came from a drum is associated as in that and then the last $4.00 the is i want to look at see on who's actually picked up cause there's the product is administration so, so i think i'm gonna try out. i'm assuming i've already talked to them. number one is to ensure that agenda. and number 2, that's a either other mentors. indeed, you know, if this administration going to be experienced enough to deal with the very complex nature is not just laid out for us in the middle east, all of the conflicting relationships that are going on. they fully plugged into one of that. so i was maybe slightly on hours or not. if you own a question,
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laura, the there is a tendency, i think in america, i'm in the washington establishment to talk about the experience of o o l's. if we look at the historical record, isn't true, that experience leads to why is your decisions in the middle east or anywhere else? i mean, it was made back in the days, for example, by henry, sent them against paragraph obama. but her view in which i considered support for the water was one of the main reasons why she lost her product right here. people like dad she made donald rumsfeld are extremely experienced and foreign policy did not lead them to make good or solid decisions. so it is true that someone like the text uh, for example, has printed the whole material experience. he has to be fair to a master's degree from our. but i guess what i'm pushing back on is the idea. the experience in the shells leads to good decisions. i don't think there's really very
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much, i'm just for the all the reason to american best. okay. well, i can certainly say my to agreeing with you wholeheartedly that attached to do you agree? that's, that's true to some extent of you. you can have the new a comes that they had all kinds of experience and they were making all kinds of bad decisions when it came to, to our rock in particular. and the way the conflict enough can assume was, was handled. but i think it with the role department of defense, you do need some experience. you need some experience managing. if you've got 2700000 employees, if you're running an enterprise that's worth 800000000000. and in the case of pete, i stuff his experience is running a small tune. yes. on combat experience with that certainly isn't that anywhere near enough that would be needed to to run the department of defense? and i think that's a really poor package. it said, um, you know, real concerns throughout the, the a, from us policy makers. of course they're going to be loyal to jerome. but i think
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this really shocked them, and they'll be a couple of senators that are really going to have a tough time with supporting the types of to be the new department of defense. secretary know thompson says unpredictability. as a diplomatic strength, would you agree with that? well, well i think the, do i agree that trump is unpredictable? certainly. yeah. and she has provided a both of those about over many, many years a, you know, one only needs to look at his dealings with north korea to have a very clear example of a woman that he was about to reach enormous destruction over a 100 miles the duration of li, referred to the north korean leader of them by the end of his tribe, he was talking with them reading level low letters to each other. so there is certainly unpredictability. like i guess the argument implicitly, your question is, goes on predictability on food arrivals. around groceries, is there a question that we'd better get ourselves in line because there's no telling but
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from my day the supporters which say, hey i, i also think the flip side of that is there is a lot of, i'm sure the under the security and sometimes the lack of fire of a, particularly as it relates to, to europe, which natasha repair, to not only to the situation in ukraine, but the situation in edinburgh. aust, waves of eastern europe on where exactly the united states speaks of a, you know, traditional allies or other eastern european nations that are not traditional allies, but seeing the danger by potential russian expansions or by to. but it seems that the, the, the leaders of the countries that are going to benefit most from the trump administrations and the ones that have a measurable payment. i'd say nothing. yahoo is one of those people. if the washington post reports has to be believed. and that's me all who was planning to gift a lebanese cease 5 proposal to trump on his entry into the white house to give him an initial foreign policy boost. do you think that's going to what i think i'm in
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the holidays, isn't it? in uh, as soon as the crisis and lebanon, he's failing, he's the, was trying to define the big street by bringing back to the success to the, uh, the, there, the citizen, the north and his right. he has failed to do. so he's, he has done with destruction 11 and nothing has to be seen as well as that is a talking most of us, it does it as like, i think what is, what is the connecticut is what he's trying to do is of course, i agree with that i, i actually, i did the project 2 weeks ago and a session here that there would be a sort of a i just showed up from, within the, out to tom. so he can give him the color. it's actually, but i think this would not be helpful in, in to aspects number one. that is a serious a issues. but his like he is facing internally and there's a domestic politics. and secondly, i think that there shouldn't be a that we expect to see more or trying to do to the administration,
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especially with the sideline or but of course. yeah. and that's the point that i want to bring in discussion because we talked about deposition, but we, we forget that this, the new and decision one to decide line one of the, the big, the so called bay city come. but of course, in the united states postal code, the state, the state, now we're starting that he's trying to actually get to the bottom of this by what he's doing now with most of the more he's doing this, the more of the decision making, the process and why something wouldn't go to a new concept. i really smart, a great decision maker space sickly, similar to autocratic, redeems. so basically there wouldn't be no the lions on those so odd experience a the memory of the country without a defense input and policy and security does. no, it'd be glad you decided line. and this would be all decision would be made based on that short reports short, i would say a combination done last maybe week or 2 weeks. and then that decision can be made.
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and that is very dangerous to the partition of the state to the institutionalization. and then i can just say also to the battery is that it is not because that was always talking about the state code and, and the decision making process environment. but that's to be on the issue is that is to deal with domestic politics of the united states, which of course has a huge impact on the rest of the well the tasha as we see and us perhaps retreating from global alliance, is like nato, like the paris climate, a quote, it becomes less of a world lead up, perhaps less relevant to what we see new alliances, fleming, and it's place. i don't know, it's hard to say, but we know that the us retreating from multilateralism has a huge impact. the river rates all around the world. first of all, just effects the level of democracy when the us is and it's most democratic that actually has knock on the facts and the level of democracy around the globe. we see
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very different trading relationships that have happened. we have more democracies trading more, we not talk procedure, then they're trading with other democracies. and we just don't have a leader with the us sort of stepping away from this and going forward with this america 1st agenda. and i think one of the issues with trump, when you saw was actually on this internal entity has already that has already been stated that i don't know how much he even cares or knows about foreign policy. and he says he can make the deals quickly. he likes to be unpredictable. we don't have the evidence that in downtown theory actually works. and you certainly very focused on the enemy, within the gutting the deep state, you know, getting rid of 50000 civil servants, trying to find his enemies. what the nice thing the justice system, the local on. so i think there's gonna be a lot of chaos to come. not just in the last minute, but we have, we're talking about this particular teen now. how long you think it's going to last
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. i mean, if the historical record has any guy, not pretty long, mr. drunk, but the 1st time run out of a true massachusetts ministration. lots of people checked or not falling into just favor. one thing i made just in the final few seconds, the recall is the parts of june natasha. um and you're probably making the multi lot the list of those reports intersect with the specifics that we have been talking about. so for example, at least the family nominated to the young bosses or to the united nations isn't or really she don't have a share of skepticism the little aside for you as assess for long semitism. obviously that has a very direct impact on the situation and gaza on funding for online and things of that nature is going to be very interesting for years at the very least. many thanks to a little guess for joining us here today. no spanish. natasha lives that and much you, larry and thank you to for watching. you can see the program again any time by visiting
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a website this under there, a dot com for further suggestions. you guys will facebook page that facebook dot com forward slash a inside story. it wasn't during the conversation on x on homeless as a inside story from me, laura kyle and the whole team here. bye for now. the around 3 quarters of sub saharan africa is cultural. heritage is on display in west and museums didn't happen over night. we were rob cover time. the 1st episode reveals how you repeat and colonize ation. remove tens of thousands of on the facts . and the young people struggle to reclaim restitution. africa stolen episode one. 0 no. just the era how it's reported. look at actual information on the ground. look at the way that this issue
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is framed in the media. how is used to justify the escalation for louis clay? i need a new years that are known as the media. and this is how it is westernized is, is online, which has been aimed at the smartphone generation. the 1st ever female let this operational can't do that. what they're trying to sell right now is a full blown genocide, the listening pace because the media on out is era. when they open the clinic, i think they're primarily expecting people who have insurance a baker. and you know, that kind of makes sense. so, except for the fact that clay is one of the top 5 uninsured counties in georgia on the pores campus in georgia and has worth health status of georgia. i couldn't envision at 1st even being able to stay open here cuz i assume they'll take some patients. but i'm going to stay open. i can't abandon my
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individual patients and knowing that they're not going to get the care that they need. and so i can't leave you can't just walk away. have a good day now. the is there any strikes of the house in central gauze otherwise come kill at least 10 palestinians, the color so robin, you want to go to 0 life headquarters here in the also coming up a trail of destruction in the philippines after i'd say it's 5, it's 6 type food in a month, hundreds of thousands of people.
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