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tv   [untitled]    October 20, 2024 7:30am-8:01am PDT

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san francisco is in crisis and we need real experienced leadership. we need mark farrell. our interim mayor who got things done. who showed we can clear tent encampments, fight crime, and address the drug crisis. who will make the tough choices for our city's future. "i'm mark farrell. i'm running for mayor because san francisco deserves better." "i'm ready to deliver that change on day one." mark farrell. a proven leader with the experience we need. direct redefining insurance have i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn stern warning to independence forces in taiwan on monday in circling the island with a record number of warplanes plus battleships and drones beijing show strength to taiwan and its allies. >> most conspicuous among them,
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the united states of america. taiwan's new president, had just given a speech days prior to the chinese war game, asserting that taiwan is not subordinate to china in an op-ed in the wall street journal, the american ambassador to japan offers a solution to chinese belligerents, a coalition around both trade and defense. among the west and its allies in asia joins me now, is that ambassador rahm emanuel, were you very good to see you, sir? >> so let let me ask you straight away. a the kind of fundamental question about taiwan that people were wondering about, which is, do you think that china can be deterred or as many people believe that xi jinping have as a core goal of his you know, kind of achievement of greatness and his legacy that he is going to reunify china with taiwan, which of course would have to be done by force. >> but to answer that question, you have to look at how the deterrence is working in before you even get to taiwan look at
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the south china sea, where we have the philippines with is a treaty ally for the united states and there has been this kind of, i would call it not kinetic, but this kind of belligerence. and because of the united states, it hasn't gone farther. so do i think deterrence works? absolutely. and we can put an economic system together that i've actually think, again and flips the script on china and leaves them isolated because their tactics have a weakness inherent in it and so before you get to taiwan it is working effectively as a deterrent. and when you integrate the political, the security in the economic into a strategy of deterrence it will have its impact. >> would that suggest though, that with regard to taiwan is that china is still at the end of the day rational in that if you push back and if it sees that kind of alliance, it will say to itself, this is a heavy price to pay because that's what happened. you point out so in your piece, australia held
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firm and the chinese eventually backed down australia on the economic front, expanded their network x we, i really exercise their trade alliances across the globe. and after three years of economic coercion, trying to isolate australia bended to its will. it fail. so it can work. you've got to make the most of it. that means we have to build hold up our security pieces. i on the defense side. we have to continue to work to bring other countries closer to the united states from a political diplomatic side. and then we have to have at an economic component where the three of them work interlocking all in the same strategy. we're china once isolated, backs off, as you saw, eight years ago, just take this so playbook not only australia on economic coercion, wolf warrior was seen as their diplomatic effort. it now cost them. they realize they've got isolated, so they've abandoned it as a strategy periodically pops up, et cetera. if you integrate the three components of that makeup of a foreign policy or national security
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security meeting on the defense side, the diplomatic efforts and political efforts and the economic into a multilateral alliance building effort. china then realizes the maneuverability in the room is limited. their strategies to take an input all the power in them. lithuania, a philippine, a japan agree if our strategy then is to make it multilateral, they can then becomes right let me ask you about talking about something that's really perhaps one of the most unremarked on massive shifts in foreign policy, which is the revolution in japan. >> japan went from being a very passive of player both in foreign policy and defense. and it has really become much more active. and it seems to be largely centered around the china threat explain that and why did it happen? >> well, i think there's china and i also think just the world change, but also they were ready to step up they went from one 1% of gdp to 2% of gdp on defense spending. they're going through the night to the third largest defense budget they
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have acquired counterstrike capability in real significant deterrent effect for us, they've normalized relationships through the trilateral with the united states, japan, and korea they rewrote their national security document to reflect the new world that they're in and they also lifted the exports on weapons tend to countries that are not in conflict. those are five fundamental changes to 70-year-old policies, each and every one of them in the same way, the united states, went from literally a hub-and-spoke to this lattice work system. we've taken the commanding control center and moved it, are going to moving it now in real time. into japan. and that simultaneous to all of japan is building a joint operations center. so this whole effort is really to basically japan is stepping up as a bulwark to the security. now, one other thing that sometimes gets lost the most popular country in the indo-pacific among all the people is japan so while we bring a lot of security, we bring a lot of other type of
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thing. japan brings a huge diplomatic credibility because developing, giving economic aid for the last, for 70 years, that's been the main part of their foreign policy and they have a trusted values. so that when you put japan's credibility and their diplomatic effort of years and working it. and then you also put what we can do diplomatically and security-wise and economically, that's a powerful one-two punch. and let me illustrate what point in the march 20 to vote in the united nations to condemn russia's invasion of ukraine aid out of the ten asean countries voted with condemning it four of them co-sponsored it that was, in many ways the work of japan. so the partnership between security and diplomatic japan is stepping up in a real way as a full partner with the united states in, i wouldn't say in lockstep, but in very deep coordination next on gps donald
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from says that jews who vote democratic should have their heads examined. >> our last rahm emanuel, what he thinks of that face of american foreign policy is going to be lonely. >> america first get here and albeit the lessons of history, america first, other weeds of korea special tonight at 8:00 on cnn. >> why did we choose safe place? we were loading are suv when crack safe flight came right to us and we could see exactly when they had arrived with a replacement. we could trust schedule free mobile service at safe flight.com. >> we pay her safe he place
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>> look at democratic run cities look at chicago, look at new york, look at san francisco, crime, illegal immigrants. housing is crazy expensive. in a weird way in a real sense, the democratic party is paying a price for what are seen as these ills of democratic cities. you will want some air of chicago are they right no, they're not right. >> i mean, first of all, there's challenges in urban area. there's challenges in rural area. now, we can sit here and talk about urban versus rural. and which one is what type but i actually think there are serious challenges in rural area that we have to work together, regardless of whether you represent us city because you need that part of america to grow and be healthy in the same way, there are challenges in urban area, but that it doesn't mean that they're not an economic contributor. they also have innovation capabilities. there the characterization it, doesn't
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get you closer to a solution and is not accurate characterization any more than just saying that all of rural america is only thing they care about is guns and and, and keeping everybody out in vigilante, a militia that's not a fair characterization of rural america. that's not what's going on. do they have challenges? yes. is there serious problems with fentanyl and other types of drugs? yes. that does mean it's a characterization of what happens at all over america. there's a contribution there that communities have that tightness, have that can actually contribute to helping solve a lot of problems in the united states. and i don't think demonizing a place as any good getting any closer to a solution there are things that have overshot the runway that need as history showed in the 60s and 70s, get self-corrected one of the things that all the polling is showing is that kamala harris, the democrats are having difficulty more difficulty than anyone believed they would with black and hispanic voters, particularly
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the defection of black men and hispanic men. >> why do you think that's happening? james carville says the democratic party has become too feminized. >> do you agree? >> there's a very influential book of boys and men that i read this year and the data when you look at college, you look, if you look at earnings, you look at kind of grades, et cetera we have a problem not that's not a solution that should be left to the republican party. we as a country have a problem which means we as a party that wants to compete nationally, have to have a set of solutions and it doesn't mean if you're emphasizing something that deals with the fundamental problems and education economic opportunity, growth, maturity, sense of it solution or alienation. that doesn't mean it comes at the expense of issues affecting women. it means that you're a party that's trying to be represent the whole country. and we have to be honest about it, because when you look at the statistics, we cannot as a country afford a lost generation here. and we're having that. it's very clear
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when you look at what's happened in 20 years, that what is happening to men of all ethnic or racial backgrounds that we have a lost generation. and we as a country, not just a party, can't afford that. you don't, we don't have a person of waste in this century donald trump says that if jews would a vote democratic, they should have their heads examined i think you've voted democratic all your life and you were being a democrat was one of the ten lost tribes what he said well, first of all, that's let's not a look i i have a i think when you look at this both at home here in america, the values that you grow up in a jewish home. an emphasis on education emphasis number respect and responsibility efforts is under killing the world, what is called sedaka that is the values that brought me and i grew up in a democratic them, but brought me and made me confirm my own views of that. that is who we are as jews, but also what the democratic party represents.
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but it also relates to the state of israel. i worked side-by-side as you're on the 30 year anniversary of the peace agreement between israel and jordan i was with president clinton in aqaba when that was signed. one of the most powerful sublime moments was watching the israeli military leadership standard attention as our jordanian national anthem was played and watching the jordanian armed forces standard attention when he t64 was played, the israeli nationalists i've seen president obama agreed to the funding for the iron dome that is played an essential role to israel security but also what's in central, which is why we have commitment israel security isn't just the arms it's israels recognition the dreams of ben-gurion of the founding fathers to be accepted a nation among nations and that means you have to be honest when israel is wrong. and i have no problem saying that with my middle name thing is and i've seen president clinton, president biden. president biden. and that means the security comes with a two-state solution only one track his lead to peace and
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security. the negotiated track and so when a democratic presidents, but president clinton, president obama and i've not seen president biden, although i'm focused on the far-right of the fairies work towards a two-state solution. it's exactly why the idf leaderships for it because it's in israel security incident. so when you say as an american that your for israel security is not just the weapons you do. it's also taking advantage of that military effort with a political solution. you're going to have to do that eventually on the west bank, sooner than later. and you have to do it in the north and the south right now because the military can't do it, they create a space. and so when a president of united states says israel, the truth that's being a friend. and just doing something blindly is not a friend rahm emanuel always straight on thank you. >> next on gps, i'll bring you a clip from my special it is
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about the historical roots of donald trump's views on foreign policy before election day. vice president harris bases voters and takes to pressing questions lie. >> anderson cooper moderates a cnn presidential town hall, kamala harris, wednesday at nine eastern on cnn your home ambiance try airwaves, essential miss diffuser it's perfectly portable and blows with a regnant missed transport more space with eric essential midst the first fda cleared ed treatment available without a
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510200, coventry direct redefining insurance have i got news for you saturday at nine on cnn closed captioning brought to you by in fait help call 1807, 1000, 20 dealer, an invention idea, but don't know what to do next. colin van help today, they can help you get started with your idea called now 807, 100020 november presents a choice between two very different approaches to foreign policy for example, kamala harris wants to keep supporting ukraine in its fight against russian aggression. donald
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trump and jd vance wants to end that war, indicating that they don't want to be entangled in a grinding far off conflict that has caused the united states tens of billions of dollars in aid trump's views have revived one of the oldest debates in america isolationists movements have waxed and waned over the years. i dig into that history and my new special america first premiering tonight on cnn at 8:00 pm eastern and pacific i want to show you a clip about where that phrase, america first, actually comes from take a look nonstop flight the cross the atlantic the greatest startups international sensation most idolized man in the world for time magazine's first ever man
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of the year in 1928 he. >> was the natural choice politics, becoming the spokesman for the largest anti-war organization in us history. the america first committee. it included people from all walks of life from the architect frank lloyd wright the walt disney america first was the embodiment. the manifestation of this isolation sentiment. >> and it was hugely important and popular of europe but americans wanted desperately to stay out of the war 93% of them, according to
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one poll, the america first committee grew to 800,000 members. and charles lindbergh was its champion. >> we cannot win this war for england that is why the america first committee has been formed his biggest opponent, president franklin delano roosevelt who knew that if germany took over europe, america could be next it would take his most masterful political performance to ready a nation for war. a war that almost no one in america wanted to get it involved with but to pass his ambitious domestic agenda and save the country roosevelt needed the many isolationists in congress on his side on board on the domestic policy side and not moving too fast on the foreign policy fdr followed congress's lead on
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international matters signing neutrality extra prohibit arms sales to any warring country friend, or foe off hitler asking him to respect the sovereignty of 31 countries premiering tonight on cnn, 8:00 pm eastern and pacific and thanks to all of you for being part of my program this week, i'll see you here tonight and then back next week. >> don't let john king have all the fun experienced the cnn magic wall in the palm of your hand getting live results. expert insights, and an immersive election experience. the magic wall, find it in the cnn app today meet the
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