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tv   The Stork Army  Deutsche Welle  September 1, 2022 3:15am-4:01am CEST

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her 2 children, remember her, for her sense of fun, and her sense of fashion made her a global style icon. when she died at the age of 36, the world was shocked to being she still remembered by many is one of the most photographed women in the world. her legacy will last forever in these images. that she is update at this hour. stay tuned for dark film coming up next, falling into activists trying to state saved storks from extinction, of course is more on our website to pass at t w dot com. thanks my watching. music . 15 years ago, the international gathering of peace and cooperation becomes the scene of a horrible tragedy. arab terrors, armed with sub machine guns, went to the headquarters of the israeli team and immediately killed one man.
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they're all gone out. i witnesses experienced the terrible events, the long shadow of the 1972 olympic massacre stored september 3rd on d w. ah ah, ah ah, i saw the bluish white flash and then i had the sensation of floating up in the air. and that at the end of my consciousness, when i woke up, i found myself in the total darkness and silence. so that happened in the morning.
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it was dark dug twilight. i saw some moving objects approaching me from the centre part of the city. then i realize there were a profession of human beings, but they look like the procession of ghost. the hell was raised straight up and they were bleeding in black and swollen. and this skin and the flesh were hanging from their bones or one who actually experienced that drivable horror. i can never let any human being till experienced ever again.
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and you decision makers of the world please. b, i him a sure. she really, really, it is people all over the world were very worried or hurting people in the soviet union and the u. s. it, joe, so your new can arms, race was getting out of hand busted with potentially catastrophic consequences. so you're asian, but it's not because of the risk of a fatal political decision. but because of the possibility of a technical mishap, is a loyal we're
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95 father, the pilot drops his ordinance. 50 mega ton, we're a huge deal, but those guys with all the exclusives used in world war 2 multiplied by didn't we have some 30000 nuclear weapons. $10000.00 of those are targeted against the soviet union. so if anyone has 20000 nuclear weapons, 6000 of those are targeted against us in united states. history is pros totally erroneous to think that tomorrow is
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determined by today. because to water was determined and reserve for the world was going into a blind alley. had to world power at the time with alliances on the one side, most cow and devotion packed organization on the other side, united states and nato. and after the 2nd world war 2, many was divided and the some part became the t d. o. and last summer, in state, and in the g d r, about 370000 soviet troops. the stations were it's generally accepted by military analysts. but once a nuclear war starts,
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it will inevitably become a major exchange with the turkish, the billing to get somebody to not do something. first, the cost will see the benefits and usually that's associated with a threat. you can deter by a massive retaliation. you can also deter by strong defense, which is called to turn through denial. if you're not going to be able to carry out your actions against me, then you're not going to try it. but the 1st place that depression and france since the times as a general goal meets all and others have always believed to total utility parents and not in the limited use of nuclear weapons. in the sixty's, which led to tension between the goal in the united states, it's going to cost us wanted to impose of flexible, determine the strategy. if west germany were attacking the western powers would
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attack germany and france gets attacked, poland would be attacked in retaliation. but also for the onion, it of home france rejected that. a 6 limited nuclear strikes have months for consequences. it's like a ladder, isn't that you climb wrong by wrong? get back with me. i think it's important for people to distinguish between strength and the use of force. they are the same thing. i think the stronger you are less likely will have to use the strength. one of the great items of strength was when we had a long negotiation with the soviets, to get rid of intermediate nuclear forces and actually to cut changing forces and have, and with our nato allies. we had agreed that if the student succeed,
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we would deploy missiles or on the counter when somebody had said already deployed . so that happened to make sure that the private of ballistic missiles, called pershing, and germany was a very traumatic event. and the soviets walked out of the arms control negotiations fanned war. and it was a very tense time. but our deployments went ahead and that was a basic show of strength. after deploying america, nuclear mythos was peak of a new code for no negotiate, no meetings, that all pets in the 2 of us, united states. and so that, you know, there was
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a period when i was involved in some research and computer modeling of the consequences of the so called dynamic balance of the extra strategic exchange. on november, the 983, moscow and washington were linked by satellite and television or a most unusual scientific commerce unit. there was a special institute working mathematical institute and you keep them, we have this academician was leading this girl, but they have come to this conclusion on the nuclear winter which practically crude and there will be no winners in case of the new claim or
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beneath the globes, or to domesticated in wild sources, a food would be destroyed. most of the human survivors would starve to death. the extinction of the human species would be a real possibility. everybody's talking about re carrick, but for me, the most important was she leave a meeting in 85 when garbage children. reagan signed an declaration that there will be no winners in the nuclear war. and for nuclear wars cannot be for this recognition on both sides. i think is a tremendous achievement our main interest was how to continue the policy of dialogue, disease and when awakened was re elected in the when the 84 q be
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later chancellor call met to and they signed a common common key. and for the 1st time ever, it both not usual to do that. but 1st, it was absolutely important if you eat it. wigan promised to start the dialogue with somebody junior and again, if possible. and he agreed to start control and obviously burtch's negotiations, union as well if possible. unfortunately, the months later coverage of came into the demo seeking. i finally met with president reagan in geneva in november 985. that was the 1st meeting yet then the leaders of the soviet union and the us hadn't met 6 years, awarded the whole world, an attempt to duration
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a very real threat of nuclear. if anything could have happened. at that time, the 2 countries holding the most nuclear weapons wouldn't people talk to each other over shore breeze. we had to get out of ridiculous dead n situation. it was a healthy relationship. yes. someone had to take the 1st step. they tried to scare us and overwhelm us with the arms race. so a lot of things were miss job. it wasn't working and we offered a different approach to acknowledge the situation that it was dangerous. and to announce to other people that we had to process. and work on piece cooperation and creating a new well on love. that process is it started in geneva. and the 1st thing that happened was i'm sure i've came in and they were taken, i pre arrangement to a special room fireplace. and the 2 of them sat just went on one and they
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went much longer than people. so i remember every white house as a guy whose job is to go and stand obnoxiously, to make clear time with them. they came out of me and he said, sure, i better go and break this up their way over time. listen, stay out of there, the more they sit together, the better offers was you the, it's a low level of though the law, national of the most important thing achieved in geneva is increasingly forgotten about your zip piece. and we'll see what we need to be aware of it. so i'll repeat it, michelle, and you're going to show you when you look in the media in geneva, we agreed to looked at nuclear law. must never happen. i wouldn't know when she has a visa, she jojo lay why, what we want a nuclear arms race, yet if there would only be loses and the whole world was under threat. but he vigil rows of that issue. the geneva declaration was for the whole world. is yet
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we were to be privy. it should have a hugely important result. melissa p sheila that she did after that i relationship with the americans changed get that salary level with the down jail as you can. i was looking in the background. it was we started looking for new opportunities to cooperate ledgers, boys, kings cut region. that always reykjavik and other meetings followed by globally. yeah. but ultimately finally we decided to disarm and destroy nuclear weapons. released the yellow cricketer through g she brought and that sound, my great you, killer disarmament program began full ringing will of is me luck of luck. would you
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love to get there? so those don't ah, don't want to reach the meeting. and reiki was kind of like a meeting between 2 utopians. the u. s. industrial military complex was horrified by reagan rule. they've brought up, we thought there was this side to reagan. even gorbachev was almost obsessed with the idea that his country was on the brink of collapse. he couldn't go on like that . he would have led to disaster. and he fully also all of the way we should know that the general manager, one idea in coming from friendship between the 2 military burges merely rising broadcast with ah, yes, just let me look in yeah, of from the situation in the u. s. i saw had become critical watching
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lazoodo something had to be damaged, bridge the technology gap between the soviet union and developed country legit, worthily. we had to raise our standard of living ridge, the leash fee for his gypsy when we were a huge country to sit on with many resources, lucian loa, brochure brochures, alicia beach, and a well educated population. floyd, who g of rollers to our law. so they're only mutual for me in, at the same time we were facing serious problems in trite or she was real problem with larry q. e. she said, you know, with the fact it found, surprise, i the route and the general attitude in society. nuclear gec don't give a waited in line for hours or days a yearly tobias, for example, some italian stocky guy that young man was a sign that things weren't working over to grammy to, to work scholars,
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regular blue book, something had to be done article to improve living standards, but it will vote for rose, pleasantly energy, dully, which shows himself it started to reform polish. he called close knows to paris talerico and more important. he had the announced during a rush of packed summit that he would not any more interfere in the domestic policy of his allies. and he kept, wert. she'll let political prisoners out over the press, which 1st contested the election took place at that time when the party iraq was just swept aside from the political landscape. and new people came to politics . ah,
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a huge my old. they'll do a while, but they would also of he, well, he's a busy ah, those with
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a ah, ah, he had the opportunity in poland, in waco and hunger, thousands and thousands. and therefore we had to beg, charles, run most good service. you are not so to explain to him what should we do with so many her through cheese and the 2nd spect channel was so cheerful staff of the chancellor. mister sar does. does it show you our government, the crash laws grill they except the people tend to leave to west germany or not.
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and the soviet union to do our and shows the way to has to agree. unfortunately, they did. 5 0, with
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ah a dead di working inside crumbling walls. you heard the sounds of men full of history which was going at that
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tongue settle with the world and changing a world bakersfield, the personality of garbage for me. gorbachev was a man no veil. let me say he is not religious, but internally is driven by christian morality. and whenever a jewel sink about the decisions are very hard decisions like he had to pick. i thing that this course, this campus was always prompting him the decisions. i also think gorbachev was one of the great heroes of the 20th century, in the sense that he wanted to reduce the tensions and tempo of the cold war. and when things did become difficult and began to fall apart, he could have unleashed war. and he did, and i think he deserves great credit for that.
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main concern 8990 was all the time to go so that was his problem. his car deal so was union was not so easy for him. he was not absolutely free and what to do was philip bullet bill. there were 2 things for quality of the party was filled with army. therefore, it was not for sure that he was a lot bye with
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ah why you're here with bill about a to has taken place. this anti institutional action is based on a tremendous lie with the coven failed. when the soviet president had an effect returned to
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a different country, much had changed during those 3 days in august. you know, i defended the soviet union to the last bullet. that's what i did. but i failed now how did you tell me to bam, the party as a criminal organization? i can't agree. if you decide allow me to sign this degree. nobody knew suspending the communist party of russia, but he's a guy, a guy, but he's the guy. so yell to back include, well, at least i have the russian federation with could just declare independence from the soviet union for desert by f, who was a communist leader of the unit,
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which was cas expand once. she also that said what, i'm going to be the president of russia. who yeah, be the president transit started. who's scanning google shinkel leaves i'll grade will do roller c, bella, visual chords were signed in 1991 by the leaders of belarus, russia the formerly dissolved the soviet union and established the c i s 6 months. and because of the formulation of a community of independent states, i have decided to resign my duties as president of the soviet union. my principal's guide, my decision open on the train to disintegration of the country alone has prevailed . and i cannot agree to it, nor can i accepted. in general, i leave my office with concern. but i also have hope. i have faith in you the
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people of russia, in your spirit, and in your wisdom. and i must say that for this process is far from being finished. she started she had to live from bower, may be remember. but joseph goldbright, galbraith once said that it pulled up dix. sometimes you have to take the right side and loose. so gorbachev took the roadside, she lost power, but she had won historical battle and you're one cause of personality. ah,
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after the war him, no people felt the problem. nuclear baldwin has ended. so they went back to sleep. 0 so i could say no, come out again, wake up. the problem still going loom into was oh, to purchase a mirror with brushes, oh, don't choke shelter in place. oh, eat ice process and packed it. the hallmark regular smoke, anything was possible through law or rachel, for a tragedy. just visa, one of the things that happened was the collapse of the soviet union. so there was no way for using e v. could you reserve you alliances were formed? lolia knew for she's entered, well, politics were here, sir. rich?
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oh sure, yes, go thing in the west, they were secretly celebrating the collapse of the soviet union bull nose, even if they didn't admit it up. i da were happy. the u. s. s. i was breaking up together, others below any bookstore to put your on the videos you people picked up on that. yeah, a lot other issues but this and it caused issues. we're still dealing with to day, better, zulus, genius alone. first the yields discipline 3. we have to revive cooperation between the homeless soviet countries. but who is your local? which live together within one state? it's a decade so salary. the 332 was renew mr. logan was above
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nor do you want to the sense of triumph among western politicians. football gwen, but he knew especially in america, virginia, but he was premature, but he's you shall see. you'll have shuttle immediately. you do a british, if the newsletter a big america, you asked saw the demise of the ussr that we as the disappearance of an enemy, we should immediately boys or something. you weaken. shortage, go, things are better still. yes, lady said piazza lucy, brewing his dollar. no what you wish. dollar laura laura, that's how i disappear, was abruptly shake. we'll just old was a celebration by now that you have to understand what that lead to
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a best law. we have an arms race again today. but she'll still continue. literally, a lady looked ah the good. cuz yeah, i will 3. but the gorbachev has called to the coming to your pin hawks. everybody has the same security. everybody, including russia. we started with the yearly confines of the funds and contracts for more than 20 years. nothing really happened. we decided to
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establish a santa to prevent conflict and you know, you never heard anything. and then it was present to, he came forward in the speech berlin. thank you. let's try to agree on the treaty for an all european peace and security, or he didn't get any ons. and by the best therefore, be mr. how lot of paternity and put in total events personally, party came as president of the pin commission to moscow proposing. and all european economic free trade area from respond to the talk put in said to me, that's a great idea and favor. but nothing happens. question was disappointed many times by
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any book, 991. there was a g 7 major, a quarter called me to all and a lot of copper trough needed economic support. they decided to expand the g 7 and she also had gorbachev. much of it always, it was the beginning of the g 8 in london called the law and meter we had to help gorbachev because it was in their interest. stop the ussr becoming completely destabilized, they had to help with a transition in the americans, english and canadian said nothing, but a big idea came from church hills, a b graph in the beginning of his volume on the 2nd world war. and he says, in victory magnanimity. so the concept was, if you, when you then still have a world history should go on. and
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a magnanimous engagement can produce it entirely different world than what happened after one with foresight and an onerous piece which then left a sort of receiving germany which then was ready for something like a hitler and then log home we were to. so the window of opportunity was the product of a study group. you've lensky and i had gotten together in the fall of 90 and we would work day and night on this project. so call grand bargain. and the proposition was, if the west will be magnanimous, including providing $30000000000.00, the soviet union will undertake a very ambitious economic and political reform, pro and security broke 1st economically, market economy politically on to participatory government and we call democracy. and then insecurity terms. the securing of all the nuclear weapons and materials
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and the withdrawal of soviet forces from all of the occupied territories. always a pretty, pretty grand package. and i never quite figured this out, but partly the wish administration was so preoccupied. i walk. well, the push never was never seized, it looks not daunted, the west was arrogant at the end of the cold walk with all going we one that was damage again, they told their ideas and christy in the market economy would catch on every way she can do that does she, westerners were celebrating themselves and the russians felt that was very strongly a proof of the mobile salty body was the position of chancellor him a call from the very beginning. because he has security and you have a result, russia against russia. and therefore, we tied hard to bring russia as close as possible to get up
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they toe and russia signed an agreement, and this agreement, russia declares nato is not an enemy to russia and him. and later on, we stablish to nato russia council. in some respect, it was the 1st step to putting russia into natal, not into the military organization, but in the political organization. i think this was the right. it's not easy, but nevertheless was the right direction and a lot of confidence building, masha now we have to, i've had the opportunity to escape this century cycle of aggression and instability in europe, in the bill, something that has literally never existed before on undivided, peaceful,
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democratic europe in the clinton administration, which i served him and which i was proud to serve and we are. so i think began making big mistakes, which were continued in should ministration. will the expansion of nato towards russia. we kept saying was not threatening to us, but the threat is to the person who perceives a threat, not to the person who tells you i'm not threatening you. but any case expansion of nato for the russian national security establishment was a big, big, big item remains a big item. was in that video. this was invited to the nato summit to moderate. and she was promised establishing a missile defense system. russia will be involved there that the americans never did. that's a problem of the history of disappointments of promises on the one side and
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disappoint. and no, you can't deal with russia in such way. ah, no matter what we sent to our american partners to cab the production of weaponry, they refused to cooperate with us. they rejected our office and continue to do their own thing. dishes, people do some things. i cannot tell you right now publicly, but can you get it? i think that would be rude of me. and whether or not you believe me, we offered solutions to stop this arms race. and they rejected everything we had to offer. so here we are today it in that said with ah, the most
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important to do is to work for the intellectuals, the people of culture and prevent from the creation of the perception of the enemy on both sides. i think change will happen. that's a matter of realism and it can change very quickly. me, we, we would like to see russia, which is an integrated into your poetry. mm. mm. i know it sounds like ancient history to you, but i'm still alive and i'm able to tell you what i so that program is continuing. this beautiful planet must continue which and not destroy them. we cannot commit that for
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a tough move of with is you don't see, then you must have changed. your brother cast him was the greatest. and what is the point of making plans to attack and lie late or other countries, but your li doors love to both feet, someone will get it when it is of sure, i will only people with no morals you that bristles too shabby. mariah generals probably the right history of today, right? books. but soldiers do not. they pay with their lives for right or wrong decision, something just today. and the people that were soldiers at the time should be around link. that's already too little to your left. i let me tell you an incident happened to
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me and which i heard about quite a lot after it happened when i was secretary of treasury, one of my jobs was trying to develop and manage the economic relationship between us and the soviet union. in my office that number was across the whole time in his name patrol, which i've got to know each other reasonably well. so he suggested after one of our sessions at marsh, kinda that we go for the weekend and grad now st. petersburg. so to my surprise, he took a ride on my plane, we're writing there and he says, what would you like to see? i'd like to see the same thing. everybody else when i say when she died, when it's summer, he said no. first we go to the cemetery. so we go to the cemetery, it's a big piece of peg ridge and there's a big platform to work out on your see before you rows and rows of mass graves inge graves. so we go, we walk down the center aisle,
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reef at the end, and the shade ariel music playing and the challenge office showing me about the battle of land and grad tears streaming down his face. interpreted we had. and i look around, she's totally broken down weeping. and until you have to say to me, every family, the soviet union was touched, another ground. and it was, it was very moving and sad. showing came back to the platform. i said to him, i have a sense of community with these people here because i also for world war 2, also had conrad shot down beside me. and furthermore, after all, these are the people who stopped. i worked the friend of this platform in h. s bearing i could isn't no marine gave a long salute. and when i came back,
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patasha said thank you george. that shows respect. ah, i, i a, generating a lot of high the members working in virtual world shopping in our digital doppelganger is the avatars are having fun. but is our data
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safe? and how do companies benefit we put on our goggles and dive into the members. made injured with 30 minute d, w, and the conflict with sebastian as rushing forward is advancing east of ukraine. here is warding alive massively out gum. my guess is we come home on his record for bar, i'm with a member of the european problem flows pressing for a quick response, a 90 minute d w with hello guys. this is the 77 percent the platform for
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africa. you beat issues and share ideas you know, or this. i know we are not afraid to happen delicate topic because population is growing fast. and young people clearly have the solution. the future belongs to the 77 percent every weekend on d w lou . this is dw news, and these are our top stories. united nations nuclear experts have arrived in the ukranian city of zap reesha ahead of their inspection of the russian occupied power plant. the 14 strong team will.

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