Skip to main content

tv   DW News  Deutsche Welle  May 31, 2023 8:00pm-8:15pm CEST

8:00 pm
is this the whole truth? what else is behind the young keeps the change. in 15 minutes on d w, the, this is david with the news line from finding a germany orders the closure of full russian. com. so that's only the above and, and the 2nd one general. com. so that will remain the most in response to rushes announcement. but it both kept the number of german officials in its country posts on the program. north korea's attempt to send the spice of life into or brit sparks
8:01 pm
alarm and neighboring countries. the file load sense of ad, right, and that's in japan and south korea the, i'm for ok. welcome to the program specialist as it will respond to german, this decision to severely limits it russian diplomatic presence on it. so the german foreign ministry has revoked the license is a full out of 5 russian calling to the country. it says that it's up to russia to decide which of the confidence to close. and this is in response to moscow and then between the number of a job and officials in russia to 350 relations between the 2 countries have been strange since russia's invasion of ukraine or political correspondence signed, many young told me how these tensions began. as well,
8:02 pm
fellows you said this decision to close russian calling students in germany is a response to a russian decision because uh, just recently uh, the russian foreign ministry announce, that'd be a silly on the number of people who states employees, jim and state employees working at in russia, that number would be limited to a 350 people from the beginning of june. and the unusual thing about that is that it applies not just to diplomatic stuff, working at the embassy or in the country. let's consider officials and so on. yeah, but also to people with a more sort of culture will focus, including the people working at the gym and schools in russia. or as you mentioned that the good to institute, which promotes interesting german culture and language. so uh, you know, i think as this is a, a retaliated 3 step, no doubt at, in response to germany's support for ukraine in the war. and so what are the
8:03 pm
unlikely consequences of these tit for top moves? yeah, well just decided to close con sealants here in order to sort of achieve that kind of parity in the number of official stuff working in these to in these can see that it's anyway and can see us in closer administrative offices. so what the effect it will have is on uh, you know, people maintaining links between the 2 countries. people trying to get their certificates of the marriage of marriages in depth and so on. people who need that kind of official documentation. they'll just made life a little bit more difficult for them. is it that some of that may be true in, in, in russia are as well as far as the people wanting a gym and documents a concern. in addition to these impacts on the cultural offices,
8:04 pm
go to institution and schools, and it's about it now. we've had a tape on the top. do we now just states or does it does eva side try to deescalate the diplomatic tensions? well, i mean, this is, this is if you like, uh, an escalation that we've seen it, as i say, in, in the, to russia to this and somewhat on usual staff and germany has moved to somehow match it certainly as far as the political reaction here in germany is concerned, politicians of will colors are giving this move a support. they say it was necessary to react it to in response to a russian publication. time, simon simon, the yeah. let's take a look now. it's the most doors making headlines around the world. police in germany have rest is 7 elect supporters of the circle this lot makes states the anti terrorism operation involve rights across 10 german states. suspects are being investigated for being part of
8:05 pm
a network that sort donations with the islamist header group in syria. driven course has sent us a 28 year old woman to more than 5 years in prison, taking part through a series of attacks on neo nazis. student lien and he was also, i couldn't wait for the form in criminal organizations through email, co defendants that also receive jail sentences fall back to groups. punter valley games, the verdict but it starts to become the 23rd. is us states and legalize kind of hist for recreational use. democratic, a governor, a tim was assigned to fail, making it that legal to possess, grow, and to use for over 20 ones from oldest economist remains illegal at the federal level. a drug attack on an oil refinery and southern russia has ignited the fire, the facility security camera force. it shows the flames, which reportedly broke out to the installation makers, some dollar range and east of the crime. being provincial russians accused of ukraine. the bank behind several german attacks on russian territory in recent days,
8:06 pm
including on the capital of moscow chief has denied being behind the attacks off of holland, michelle is a research and journalist who specializes in a i unmanned systems and surveillance and other emerging security technologist. i asked him if ukraine is behind these drug attacks in russia and what are they getting the drugs from? so that's a great question. uh, there are a number of different sources um, some of which have very much domestic. you know, nowadays it's not so hard to actually buy the components for a drone in various different market places and assemble them yourself. of course, the key difference from, say, of military and a hobbyist doing it is that a military is then able to put up, you know, a new nation, a bomb on that drone potentially and have better communication systems. and with that, using not that much money, not too many resources, you can actually build up a pretty sophisticated weapon system that can travel
8:07 pm
a deep potentially st enemy territory. and it's costa, a big fact of people will wonder. well, why would you use a drone rather than a conventional miss file? cost is a huge factor. you know, some of these drones only cost a few $1000.00 zeros compared to ms file systems which are, you know, much, much more expensive orders of magnitude more expensive. another factor is just the accessibility of the technology. you know, if you want missiles unless you produce them yourself, which is an easy, you're gonna have to have allies who are going to be willing to send them to. you will sell them to you, which isn't always easy. drones. on the other hand, you know, you can buy the components and then assemble the technology yourself. and that can be a key factor if you want the domestic production capability. and in terms of targeting a talk to us about a comparison between drones, precision and missiles. well, you know, it is said the drones can be more precise. that is often because
8:08 pm
a drone has the capacity to circle over a target to collect intelligence and then allow for a more informed decision compared to a miss solve. it just flies right into it. another factor is the drones will often have smaller wall heads on them, the same missiles of cruise missiles or bones which can allow from all sort of precise targeting. the issue though is that when you are launching drones of a very great distances and when your enemy is potentially trying to jam the drones or disrupt the drugs, the case of the russian defenses, but also ukrainian defenses. these drones can go, of course, you know, if they do get into set, did their, their, you know, their components can fall to the ground. and in those cases that precision is drastically reduced. right? and, you know, you're reading an interesting and important distinction that between the surveillance trends and the type of drugs so which ones are most important for russia and you tried to have at the moment. you know,
8:09 pm
i will often argue that it's actually the surveillance drones that are more sort of technically in the glee significant. and that is because those drones are providing surveillance and intelligence too much big are much more significant weapon systems . these drugs can, for example, provide the location of a target to a, an artillery unit which is able to create much more sort of weapons effects on the ground. and also there is more of those on um, drones compared to the relatively small number of drones that are used by both countries. so the surveillance side is not to be dismissed in this conflict. so with this, how it talk to us about how this technology is developing, then can you say is relying more heavily on an unmanned flying vehicles and more conventional missile technologies. absolutely. this, this war is a sign of the future that the military is looking at only rely more and more and
8:10 pm
unmanned technology. well, we're not going to see yet is, you know, fully autonomous lethal weapon systems where a commodity just presses a button and then releases the drones and doesn't really know where they going or what they're going to hit. what we will see though is artificial intelligence emerging in small or more incremental ways in the way military's conduct, sions, right? you know, for things like planning and intelligence and identifying targets. and that will, of course, increase the gap between the combined are and the things that they are ultimately shooting fast. i think thank you so much for sharing your insights with us on month systems research and john, this the off a whole and michelle thank start to uh, as a south korean capital sol, whether it was a law firm after a satellite launch in north korea. so that's off on emergency, a lot of japan holes, so issued warnings, 2 messages in the south of the country. they attempt to send the satellite into a bit failed, but it could provide an intelligence winful for south korea,
8:11 pm
which says it has retrieved parts of the wreckage from the ocean. this is believe to be part of north korea's 1st spice. most of our child, we were in the process of recovering the debris. in the 80 hours emergency, simon sounded across south korea's capital sold. it caused confusion along with mobile phone and lots which cooled on residents to evacuate level. it was saturday morning, so i understand that there may be a misunderstanding between us all a change in an emergency situation. however, it's not right to tell people to just evacuate without any explanation who sells. matt was forced to apologize for the confusion, but you defended the decision to raise the alarm that you're going to go with john . hey, imagine c message could be a working level officials over reaction box. it was not
8:12 pm
a mistake. our principle is to respond in a motto that can be seen as excessive, and there can be no compromise on safety. once the miss on the alarm system was also briefly activated in japan's ok. now why region of the country's prime minister was taking no chances? most of the expenses, the north korea launched what is believed to be a ballistic miss. i am so sorry, my stuff. this was north korea's 6 satellite launch attempt. and the 1st in 7 years, it was supposed to put the new, clear on states for us to spice satellites, into obits, be on young was quick to admit the launch had failed, but did so reggie promise to carry out another test. as soon as possible. i came young's and a as a south korean jim list who specializes in defense issues. i should told us more
8:13 pm
about what it was like when the evacuation a lot sounds in so well. citizens woke up in other confusion. i feel like maybe we are completely just fine for time to be kind of emergency last we get whether black all the time we covered 90. wow. but a emergency or any of this nature, especially ones that were able to have a more trying emergency alert that somebody got me now who's the 4 even people who have been living there will like that page. and so i've never seen a number is the lie, that's nature as we have been. so used to create the latest, probably since the middle firing. so when they, when we woke up to this, this morning, this morning, it was a complete confusion to be to know how to fuel people didn't know where to buy. so actually neighbor, which in the fifty's tons of their search engine, their server went down for a few minutes after the emergency. why?
8:14 pm
because people were just rushing to the internet, looking for answers and a better charity on the situation in stimulus. and in this task career and finally sunset in new york twice a year. there is something particularly special about the new york sunsets on those days. the sun, a lines exactly with the streets, with the cities, the street grid, looking towards the west space thinking sun is perfectly framed by skyscrapers reminding people, a stone faced out exciting penguin with huge drops framed the sun. special days of the new york is cool. this phenomena manhattan hand gives the city an extra dose that sets you up today. it's nicole phillips. you will have more world views at the top of the out of next here on the w adult. filled with a look at
8:15 pm
a mother that shopped slough. i have a good day, the loudest voice, my a, my ceiling is out. she's the face of a protest movement. she's there motivator and she won't give up no matter what, no matter where she is not make her probably took my brother.

22 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on