tv Markus Lanz Deutsche Welle September 26, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm CEST
2:00 pm
this is deja vu news live from berlin president trump is set to unveil his pick for a key seat on the u.s. supreme court media reports say he's chosen the conservative judge of any county derek to replace ruth bader ginsburg will the nomination poor fuel on the fire of the divisive campaign just weeks before the presidential election also coming up another major political shake up in lebanon a diva the man designated to become the country's next prime minister steps down amid political infighting.
2:01 pm
i'm michael oku welcome we begin in lebanon where the there i'm sorry we begin with a major political fight in the u.s. over the vacant seat on the supreme court u.s. media reports say president donald trump will nominate amy kone barrett to fill that seat she would replace ruth bader ginsburg who died last week barrett currently serves as a federal appeals court judge and is known for her conservative religious views trump told journalists on friday he had made up his mind but he refused to confirm the speculation ahead of an official announcement on saturday. for more i'm joined by irwin collier professor at bard college in berlin and irwin it's really nice to have you with us. what do we know about amy coney buried in essence
2:02 pm
what effect would she have on the supreme court to start probably with the most important she is 48 years old which means with good health she could be around for a long time and she clerked after law school with anthony scalia justice antonin scalia scale yes who was a very conservative justice one of the originalist so. part of the school of jurisprudence in the united states that believes you have to 2nd guess what the founders and authors of the constitution would have said had they lived in 2020. if it puts a very conservative spin on what she does she's been an appeals judge since 1970 it was a very controversial hearing but split completely on party lines she was approved before that she was a professor of law at the university of notre dame and the perhaps the most
2:03 pm
interesting for the politics she is firmly in the anti-abortion side of the debate and as a very conservative catholic catholicism dominates the supreme court she would be the 6th catholic justice of the supreme court right now but that by itself doesn't tell you much because as everyone knows a religion like that goes from so to maior all the way to judge barrett so the concern is the chief justice will no longer be the swing vote in coming elections that it's clearly part of the plan ed that's clearly planted if she is in fact trumps nomination how likely is she to actually get that seat i mean the republicans certainly have the numbers. barring unforeseen. skeletons in her closet which strikes me as unlikely given that she's already been through a pretty serious vetting. it's
2:04 pm
a done deal they knew that before trump even announced it which made it was also sort of peculiar they said we have proven we don't know who he's going to name which isn't a rather odd way of doing things so the republicans are going to stand behind this nomination so turning to another big factor in this election all together the coronavirus pandemic of course the united states has hit another new milestone let's get this right 7000000 cases now more than 200000 deaths how significant is this likely to be going into the election in november well as the old saw goes one person's death is a tragedy 200000 is a statistic. this has been weighing on the american body politic and the difference in the polls when you see it it's been a steady difference between joe biden and donald trump to biden's favor that
2:05 pm
difference is built on a pandemic that has literally had no presidential leadership or a failed presidential leadership that won't change so a distraction from reality with another reality fighting about abortion rights gun rights libertarian interpretations of the u.s. constitution is an attempt to put a little bit of smoke when you're running out of mirrors like the smoke when you're running out of urban collyer from bard college for lynn really appreciate your insights glad to be here. and here's a look at other developments in the corona virus pandemic germany has confirmed the largest number of new infections since april with more than 2 and a half 1000 in the latest 24 hour period japan's prime minister. has told the united nations general assembly that his country is determined to host the olympics
2:06 pm
next year after the games were spoken duty due to the pandemic an experimental vaccine being developed by johnson and johnson ease proving to produce a strong immune response against the virus according to the latest results the early to mid stage trial is being backed by the us government italy was one of the 1st countries to impose a krone virus lockdown back in march the international community watched on as the country's hospitals overflowed and struggled to cope with the spike in cases but now it's a different story as many european countries begin to suffer a 2nd wave of cases italy has managed to keep its numbers relatively low. the images that can be forgotten in march italian military trucks carried dead bodies away to relieve an overloaded symmetry in a moment italians were gripped by grief and fear as the outbreak of the coronavirus
2:07 pm
pandemic upheaved society. now little normality has returned to italian law. bars and restaurants are open to manage trade temperature checks serving as a reminder to stay vigilant. other european countries including france spain and the u.k. a staring down a 2nd wave of the virus but numbers here are staying relatively low. figures in italy have stabilized for several weeks we are averaging $1500.00 cases per day. for the rest of europe epidemic hit italy earlier societally was very aware of the problem and immediately put in place a very severe and strong containment plan. experts say this is why italy hasn't had to impose it new restrictions being put in place in other parts of
2:08 pm
europe apart from the strictly police to lock down and the robust contact tracing italians have willingly adopted mask wearing. but only the italian citizens have been very respectful of all the rules when i see on the news the images of the other european cities i see many more people without marks they need to leave. but they don't have much of a choice because they risk being hit with a hefty 400 euro fine i just think that syria i think they're placing for say nothing more and. it's not to say there won't be a rise in cases authorities say they are expecting one. but many here are hoping that the current measures in place will make that 2nd wave. their tsunami. that's highlight now some of the other stories making news around the world at this hour hundreds of coal activists have broken into
2:09 pm
a coal mine in western germany to protest against the country's continued extraction and use of fossil fuels has pledged to stop using coal by 2038 but environmentalists say that deadline is too late to effectively tackle climate change. french media reports say one of the suspects detained in connection with friday's. has admitted to carrying out the attack the incident left 2 people wounded it happened near the headquarters of satirical magazine. the side of the 2015. say it was clearly an act of terror. at least 26 people have died in a military plane crash in eastern ukraine the aircraft crashed and burst into flames while landing in the city of. authority say one person survived most of the victims were young military cadets. now the man designated to
2:10 pm
be the next prime minister of lebanon has resigned amid an impasse in efforts to form a new government. was parachuted into the position in the wake of last month's devastating blast in the capital beirut and the subsequent resignation of the government. to germany blamed political infighting over cabinet positions for his decision to step down lebanon has been gripped by months of protests over corruption and a protracted economic crisis he did have to say of his resignation. a cabinet based on the principles i insist on protecting national unity under. our constitution was bound to fail. and i apologize that the search for forming a government will have to go on with them and whatever is chosen to follow me for this difficult task i wish them all the luck given the dangers our country people
2:11 pm
and economy are facing. just let's cross straight to beirut where d.w. correspondent basil radii standing by basil it's good to see you another stalemate in the ongoing political impasse what more can you tell us indeed the counter known going ahead political toward 2 days ago president said what's your what did you notice what would happen if the french he shifted for you he said we go straight to hell it seems that the country lebanon now it's coming closer to the something political have special as you mentioned when you talk about lebanon we're talking about political financial economy collapse this happened after the announcement of the step down would be putting it prime minister nice pound notes. markets not get the u.s. dollars and now he is i don't hate 1000 more than $8000.00 given its bond for one
2:12 pm
u s dollars which means that the bodies found last i don't it's 80 percent of its value so the the situation it's very critical the all the bodies parties after the announcement of the step down all political parties said that they still hand. with the trash initiative but who's going to buy this now this is the main question. so basil to say the lebanon is suffering is clearly an understatement french president emanuel met call who has visited the country twice since the blast had given a 2 week deadline to lebanon to form a government in order to receive much needed financial aid they clearly have not been able to meet this demand what's next for lebanon this is the main question that i asked all my sources that i called after the announcement they said they still as i mentioned that they still. would be to actually be shifted somewhat to
2:13 pm
some forces that the flesh each to say in session that they gave the 1st 2 weeks and the 1st of september but then to get an extension for the end of the 2 weeks and all it's failed to achieve anything. in this regard so the transfer the main the fact that it reflects president has another alternative another initiative is the main question is what no one has the answer it seems that the some believe that the only solution now is the scientists the government back to the cabinet to the south right that's right what the student cabinet usually me to go back to it again since it seems that it's so hard to form a new government regarding the 2 amounts to a conflict confrontation between political parties and the regional conflict mainly because you know about the between the confrontation between iran and the us basil
2:14 pm
in reading in beirut for us as always basil much appreciate it thank you. sport now and in the bundesliga frankfurt kicked off match day 2 on friday night by beating her to berlin 31 in the german capital with frankfurt already sebastian mota fired in their 3rd goal in the 71st minute and it was a stunner walk it flew past the reach of the outstretched for to goalkeeper to win puts frankford in 1st place at least for one day. spanish side at lead to a ko madrid have signed forward luis suarez from rivals barcelona in a 2 year contract worth around 6000000 euros the year gray international passes medical on friday suarez was barcelona 2nd highest goal scorer of all time after lino messi but after a recent coaching change the 33 year old was told he was no longer
2:15 pm
a part of the club's plans suarez one for big titles with barcelona and a champions league. you're watching news up next the 2nd part of the documentary peace talks the oslo diaries don't forget you can get all our latest news and information around the clock on our website that's d.w. dot com thanks for watching. imagine how many push. ups right now in the world climate change a different story faces one plastic way and one week. how much we're going to get. we still have time to an ongoing. process.
2:16 pm
2:17 pm
was. the place you know ducks began 40 days after the mexico in hamburg luckily the 14 days of mourning was a full and when they're out and you see blood on the streets and people are saying this is the peace that you promised us and you could not say don't forget it was only at the o p. wasn't there
2:18 pm
a ceremony out of fun and rubbing and clean wasn't good. why why in march not before we headed back to the negotiating table since the wave of suicide bombings is really close to border to 2 and a half 1000000 palestinians poverty was rising throughout the occupied territories and living conditions declined our people were losing faith in the peace process but i knew we must not give up. his will to do the other 7007 he's also keen about the 6 or could it go in the future of slieve fact for the prominent arrangements or whatever but yeah that's going to sort of. go away now the trick of negotiating with the palestinians is not to address the main aspects of the prominent to enjoy. if we're trying to deal with a permanent arrangement now the whole thing will fall upon your problem if you have
2:19 pm
a bit of it if you don't think. it will set off without me despite the blood and the violence the process had a force of its own and in may $94.00 when we set out to sign the gaza jericho agreement granting the palestinian self rule in gaza the use of the uses. told the stage was finally set egypt president mubarak provided a suitably dramatic setting for the thurmont in cairo. the morning of the signing of the gaza jericho agreement faisal and i were being interviewed in jerusalem while watching on my broadcast of the ceremony. on my way to the interview i was held up by israeli soldiers at the checkpoints someone said to me this is your idea of peace tell the old man not to sign tell him to come at the checkpoint and sign it here along with the rest of us. i stared at the screen and
2:20 pm
wondered is this a celebration of the birth of the peace process or its burial. both sides appear to have sorted out differences over the gaza strip and jericho but within minutes it was clear that the deal like the stage positions was not going to plan it just finally gave it a go sell for a living. i'm sitting there and i see a 5 signing the document signing the book signing a document be all the pope's humans and then the guy who took the system brought the maps looked at them. didn't sign close the and went back to spare them copying was walking through the same. spot i walked up the stair. and i stand next to a beam and as he begins to sign i open it and then i whisper
2:21 pm
in his ear without show trying not to show any excitement up because everything was recalled and and filled and i told him are off the sign maps. so he says so what does he mean. i responded it means that there is no agreement. israel's prime minister. examines the documents. foreign minister shimon peres and also refused to sign. for a while it seemed as if the entire ceremony was about to collapse. because we had not been a part of that channel we didn't fully appreciate what the gaps were between the 2 sides israel saw this as a devolution of power as
2:22 pm
a power seems prove themselves. and saw this as we have to show this is a new day and as a new day we have to have all the trappings of statehood even if we don't have a formal yet so immediately they want to you know they didn't want controls over across he wants they wanted they wanted to be say you know the israelis are out of our lives. would have been without father if you know the negotiations says and. he says no no no. i was. they want to just. so i would go to them and says no they would quote me and to stop it. mubarak said it probably. the son of a bitch. after a brief interval the p.l.o. leader was assured that the signs of the jericho region was still under negotiation
2:23 pm
he signed the document and did a few comments finally with the briefest of answer except to go was done at the very last minute. on july 1st 1904 yasser arafat returned to his home and reclaimed his position as the palestinian leader. it was an ambivalent return he came back and had to govern palestine which was divided and driven apart. or perhaps israel brought him back in order to control him. what was the price we had to pay for his return home was this $1.00 of those minefields or was it the 1st step toward peace and the liberation of palestine.
2:24 pm
as we made our way to probably his time my heart pounding and i was choked with the emotion of the moment. i wept tears i had never wept before kissing and hugging all my relatives and friends. the last time i met my father in jordan i hinted that i might be coming home so it cried and raised his hands swearing he would prepare a feast on my return. my sadness was that my father had passed away just 4 months earlier after waiting for my return for so many years. so when i called yuri i said i'm finally back in march childhood on. a greeted me with the arab word of welcome
2:25 pm
and told me he was really pleased to hear my voice we have become neighbors and asked. one week after i returned to our bodies' we met once again in taba this time in order to negotiate the 2nd stage of the osce low process israel's withdrawal from the west bank. by spread out the map we had kept secret until then. the oslo accord stated israel will withdraw from most of the west bank within a year and the palestinians were expecting to receive control over the land immediately. but israel demanded a gradual withdrawal and offered the palestinians full control of only 2 percent of the land. the remaining 98 percent would be controlled by the israeli army.
2:26 pm
arafat stared at the map silently and then announced about it was an unbearable humiliation these are prison camps he yelled you want to destroy me with those words arafat left the room. what you were suggesting deviates from the signed agreement i shouted you keep 98 percent of the land we won't accept that you can enforce this approach on arafat and push him into a corner. but remember this a one sided agreement will not last. last it up without saying another word and summoned his driver. we exchanged a polite and cold handshake and we each went our separate ways.
2:27 pm
as hours went by we waited nervously in the hotel's lobby some israeli reporters informed us that arafat had issued a statement about the talks collapsing. we were all on edge but refused to cave in . a sound against the law now is the time to decide do they want agreement or not and 2 main issues are on the table hebron and withdrawal maps are of so i believe we'll know in the hours or in the days but where the end of the negotiation is almost at this stage of the final decision. later that evening arafat's personal assistant came rushing towards me arafat asked that you come to our blog room immediately she said he's collapsed. i went to a large room and found him lying in bed pale as a ghost trembling nodding in and out of consciousness.
2:28 pm
hold on my friend i whispered i need you to stay with me. the doctors found collapse to be a result of extreme fatigue caused by the many hours of negotiations but i knew the truth. the map i presented to him had broken his heart. there was something very personal in east making it wasn't political. festival it wasn't that political ambition it was a very human race. there's a symbolic. picture where people went to israeli tanks on the streets and put on my branches. that the acts that the story of your lives and your homes the irony of that can do your kids an oppressed people who went out and gave them
2:29 pm
2:30 pm
moon i wonder why i'm driving to my office and the guards tell me a bus was blown up as we drove there and the whole square was awash with blood. and bodies were still lying there body. people wailing and weeping. as shown us to thousands of people were there and when i walked in they surround murder and see what you've done to us try to see what you've done to us much as it . i had the meeting with you here and ron. we all felt that time was running out and
2:31 pm
that we had to act fast. we agreed on deliberations that would lead to a permanent agreement utilizing the same framework we use an os low. quick discreet talks and no empty slogans. mahmoud abbas and i deliberated over the draft for almost 2 years. behind the scenes without the wreckage of the taba hotel we touched on the most sensitive points of the process the for the very 1st time at least theoretically we had a document in our hands with a comprehensive solution the withdrawal to the 67 borders the establishment of a palestinian state of course keeping the settlement blocks intact and making jerusalem the capital of both nations my plan was to set up a meeting with ravine. i told him that i would like to meet with him about the permanent solution and he said it's not possible. so i told him let's do it when i
2:32 pm
return from the united states on saturday nov 11th. no one could have guessed under what circumstances that meeting would take place. on september 5th we reassembled in taba i must admit that after our last encounter i wasn't looking forward to another round of this endless boxing match. it was the they asked ts meeting i've ever been in my life we just wanted to be anywhere but in that room as i was leaving the room i turned around and the israeli and palestinian delegations are talking to each other and having a cup of coffee i think it underscores the point that. part of what happens in negotiations is the humanisation of the other side you no longer see just the
2:33 pm
quote unquote enemy but you see a person and you learn about that person's family and their ups and downs of their happy moments and you get a sense of how committed they are to peace and you never able to translate that to the public. that evening we improvised a friday prayer service we led candles and much to the astonishment of the palestinians singer recited the kiddush prayer. we opened with everybody love saturday night in 3 languages. afterwards abu alaa and myself joked around by imitating the peres and arafat conversations meanwhile we taught who was the ass for how to sing my you disha mama. it was nice to get around again. later that night i received a call from jerusalem a bus had exploded in the center of the capital.
2:34 pm
to tell the government stop the peace talks. we sat and watched the news silently no one said a word no one doubted that our palestinian friends opposed to terror and that it was directed towards them as well. 2 days later called me up from his room and asked me to watch the arab evening news with him. we watched images of a 7 year old boy's funeral a boy who had been killed that day by the israeli army. abu alaa was right when he said that neither side has dominion over suffering. that night to a lawyer and i reached the final draft of the osce low b. agreement. is the most lamentable he also be accords was signed by early
2:35 pm
severe on the israeli side and as well enough for the palestinians according to the treaty the israeli army will withdraw from 6 name cities in the whistle bank besides jericho and elections with the palestinian council will take place and much else. shows us that up today on this is a day of achievement visits are probably in this morning he achieved the signing of the oslo be a court of the government debated for 5 hours you know what the minister has described as an historic meeting about an historic treaty are you. on your show due today with the help of the israeli army we rule over more than 2000000 palestinians . and control daily lives through the civil administration all shallow this is no peaceful solution or we can go on fighting. we can continue killing and being killed off the government only we are not so bad we can also try to bring
2:36 pm
a halt to this endless cycle of bloodshed we can't give peace a chance. i don't think houses are gathered to protest the ratification of the oslo be agreement and what the nationalist camp calls the forsaking of security and the abandonment of the homeland i do show a little careful look i asked this huge crowd is there anyone amongst you the police yes i don't find out that. i fell over you say no but there is someone who doesn't care about your painting has said that mr rabin i did that did. i. i.
2:37 pm
may be using john when the president of the united states is majesty king hussein of the hashemite kingdom of jordan his actual inseam obama believe the barak president of the arab republic of egypt is actually the seeds out to be prime minister of israel chairman arafat. please take a good pablo. the saudi you see was impossible. goes on a gerbil just too easy a sugar. and to our great being a soldier inserted in your way to do. to make peace moment most of. these where the years of hope when they do these camps
2:38 pm
felt that they were somehow. indicates. to their people the fruits. i don't go in the same hotel a spontaneous get together of the oslo veterans among them the original negotiators and. it was 100 you know let's say one day off. i'm good at this yes i am. this i believe that. the process we have to be there to continue despite of all the difficulties we face but if we succeed. we have both we have a good level to push this process for one. point i concur with what i said and we have no choice and there is some good common language around this table if you can. see also like the taste highlight is the friendly perception of us
2:39 pm
where personal guards are let down and on the podium gets her phone number to me says. there's chemistry among the women in the she and addresses out of foster the 1st time in a personal to human. what the situation spoke. and the story is species me i. are still up to believe sure but knowing. that you are close to be sure each i. i. if. if. if if i was not one post i was valid and not since it.
2:40 pm
is and replies a lot of. oh i've got to. i was 3. i think for yet sacrum been at the shimon peres the yossi beilin and to their friends i say to you throughout. the hour. we will rally our forces and we will succeed obviously was we will put an end to those threats but we will succeed was because there's nation is much stronger than its government was i. was through. rabin and
2:41 pm
arafat felt isolated and the hostile environment was the peace camp wasn't going out into the streets to protest was instead they chose to avoid confrontation was the peace opponents hamas on the palestinian side and the greater israel camp on our side was now on to public opinion with the face off wasn't between israel and the palestinians but between those who supported peace and those who objected to it . mr abiola why do you like to make the settlers angry as. much what are they accusing me of now cut off forsaking the settlers life's like why most people said that the settlements bole stop our security where is their security look beautiful. a far problem today just fighting you security for settlers. but do you see the settlers as pioneers should absolutely not
2:42 pm
what do you see them as. 'd i see them as people who are implementing their political philosophy they believe in the greater israel what is dying isn't it these days. some hill near ramallah bringing 700000 immigrants to israel and absolving building a society and economy of. the tiny settlements surrounded by hundreds of thousands of palestinian. in early october john freedman a friend of peres convinced him to arrange a rally in support of the peace process. peres urged robin to accept the initiative but rabin wondered would be believin leave their homes in those days rabin was more pessimistic than ever.
2:43 pm
if too much is heard in the middle east from the few extremists tonight the supporters of peace and a huge rally in tel aviv this is the young israel tired of obvious service tired of chasing palestinian stone throwing children through refugee camps all sides are mobilizing but this is now becoming one of the most contentious moments in israeli history for the past 5 perhaps no surprise is fighting and there is a popular i'm about to piece. that obama before it was the happiest day of his life. i've known him for 15 years i do never seen him so happy. he has many downs just he didn't know if people would show up or call how they behave. and to his pleasant surprise the crowd was enormous and the enthusiasm was incredible. and young men and women jumped into the pool in
2:44 pm
their clothes and praised him and peace and me to a little. i had known him for 15 years and i never saw him seeing that was the 1st time i ever saw him seeing. i was up and we both sang and neither of us a great sing is the hard go afterwards he hugged me like he never hugged me before . i never saw him so happy as he was that night i have a. good
2:45 pm
deal allow me to say. i'm also new norcia. i want to thank everyone of you. for coming here to stand up against violence i feel peace. at all. not so when the rally was over i started walking down the stairs. to my car was parked in front of his car and next to his casket his driver i asked him to get stuck he said there he is he was maybe 10 or 12 meters away from me most i got in the cockpit tried to started it and just as we closed the door we heard 3 gunshots strong.
2:46 pm
enough more much of the old she got me to call my face we're now seeing an edited footage from the peace rally this is what we know so far in the face 3 shots were fired the prime minister nabil fahmy the jewish vendetta group claims to have shot rob. we still don't know the condition of the prime minister moments of us in washington should. i went to the hospital. layer of b. i mean the family and close friends were there to go and the hospital director took me aside and said it's a bad situation almost hopeless. a few minutes later he came to tell me it was over she was last.
2:47 pm
2:48 pm
now because people who are fighting each other be don't go going as each other they kill each other and so on was in the play but then later i saw robin's meeting with out of what i saw meeting after meeting after meeting after meeting i was there every single meeting and i saw how the relationships develop after there wouldn't rabin was assassinated out of i told me where it's estimated the peace process. and i disagreed with him. on that i was not about her be vigilant it's about institutions it's about. have replacements and so on and me the bribe is for the has happened to me very significant express.
2:49 pm
paris was. was not himself was not himself. he was very said deeply said. he was already the prime minister and on saturday i came to his home with all the maps and all the material. and i said to him. this is the women that i have it with. i think that we can go for it you have the exact border you have the solution for jerusalem everything else and. i think that now is the time i mean everybody is so confused including also but still there is the support for for peace even more than before as a result of this is finished and let's use it. for his memory and finish the job.
2:50 pm
and it isn't doing very carefully for 2 hours and then he said not now not mom i don't think that people are ready to leave the jordan valley which was part of the method so that israel should withdraw before the dawn of. and. i think that today to bring it to the people i mean with his image was a little orosi much a word but this is the opportunity i was not. enough to tell him it is your biggest mistake reconsider. i did not come again to him with this and. maybe it is in me maybe it is part of my weakness
2:51 pm
maybe it was just a mistake i don't know but if you ask me where do. i regret it i had i had apparently to fight for. him for the permanent agreement. on may 5th 1996 i found myself back in the familiar surroundings of the hilton taba . i wondered about the 3 years that had passed since i 1st met abu allah and also low since then our lives have become a combination of promise and anguish. the process was started and withstood tremendous trials. since the 1st day and asked low and up until this current exchange in may 961001 100 days of peace talks had passed when we said our
2:52 pm
farewells that day i never imagined that it would be my last and final meeting with abu allah in my official role as head of the israeli negotiating team. if i had known it was all going to end maybe i would have come up with something more intelligent to say to him but all i said to our boy allow was see you soon my friend. nearly 80 percent of israel's 4000000 voters dreams of polling stations everyone seemed to understand why piss alexion was important. in suburban tel aviv voters chose peres the peace process that he would one be in a bloody army already in a bloody war in the west bank city of hebron jewish settlers voted for netanyahu this one to be give our land but there are so of course we are working for me i mean if i go tonight those who support the steps israel has taken toward peace mark
2:53 pm
going into the hole that they may be the ultimate winner. and have told us. that he should sufficient a turnabout in the 1906 election the next prime minister is binyamin netanyahu and you know he received 50.4 percent of the dots on that call while shimon peres received only $49.00 and a half percent shop was the but it's. it's
2:54 pm
like someone building a breach and building and building and building something that could have really changed. the middle east and to. make these comments one seen hundreds and it was a waste. i felt so bad. when it all collapsed because i hailed it already and i felt we can do it we can do it and then. it went wrong and i know it's not in my life by probably not in my kids' lifetime maybe the grandchildren. should. should. shoot.
2:55 pm
2:56 pm
2:57 pm
of an optimist. to believe there's a chance for peace between us and the biggest enemy among the girls and i'll go down the can. mold for us. ronaldo there is an ongoing war. about congo there were people think in all the mobic story only victims. more wars opening. unless it's moving up close ropes.
2:58 pm
2:59 pm
i'm not proud and i will not succeed in dividing us out not succeed in taking the people off the streets because we're tired of this dictatorship. taking the stand globally was that matters. made for minds. that will never be found. connected to the highest levels of government why did journalist. have to die. was threatened by his fork. and the reasons are still unclear to. start september 3rd on t.w. .
3:00 pm
news live from berlin president trump is set to unveil his pick for a seat on the u.s. supreme court media reports say he's chosen the conservative judge amy tony barrett to replace ruth bader ginsburg the nomination for fuel on the fire of a divisive campaign just weeks before the presidential election. i'm not.
42 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on