tv Business - News Deutsche Welle June 30, 2023 8:15am-8:31am CEST
8:15 am
new york has announced her return to competition 3 years after retiring. the 32 year old was given for has given birth to 2 children since calling it quits now seems to inspire the kids with for come back. the danish player returns at the us open, where she was a final list in 292014. she was granted a wild card entry. if you're watching dw news from berlin top next, we've got an interview with the outgoing german and buster of to the us. emily compet terry market, thanks for watching the evening was like a stepping points, you know, 5 or 2 into that warranty wants to finish your studies. now you have a significant from the train. you can choose to go back to somewhere else. currently, more people than ever on the world wide in such a base in life categories, something that is coming very very soon. and yeah,
8:16 am
can we learn more about or know when a story info, migraines? imagine how many portions of lots of turn out in the world climate change. the story, this is much less the way from just one week. how much was going to really get we still have time to act. i'm going to like this. the amity harbor has been the german investigator or 2 of us since june 2018 and she's just about to retire from a long career and the german 4 in service of deployments to the west and backgrounds and moscow. mrs. invested the there were no shortages and huge challenges during your time here in washington. that was donald trump in the white house. that was cool with 19 there is the ongoing war and ukraine. but before we
8:17 am
come to that, i would like to ask you a more of a personal question. as you travel this country quite extensively. what kind of surprised you about the american people and what can maybe, germans and europeans learn from the americans? why? what poverty surprised me no stalls. i shouldn't have was the thing and kindness and friendliness of the um, the polite and the way coming attitude that is in the american d. n. a. i think that's something, diamonds, contrib. and he learned from the american. some people say that's fakes here in the united states, the only high testers west. oh, so it was saying it's fake, confounded a confound rudeness with authenticity and an artist is true. so i don't, i don't agree with something that's interesting. so we have to talk about donald
8:18 am
trump, the former president of the united states. um, have you ever been with him in one right? or yes, of course one i handed over my credentials. of course i handed this over to him 5 years ago. and then of a couple of times when i saw him too in bilateral fedex, what kind of puts you out says he's suddenly someone was a very, was very strong vibes and people react to that. you've seen it, and in political meetings, you've seen it at a big packs. it's, i try, he's someone that dominates over there is a chance that he gets re elected. is there any way that germany and europe can prepare for that?
8:19 am
look what i meant by saying at dominating the conversation was we have always been at least over the past 5 years, a very much focusing on personalities on the individual. but the trans atlantic relationship really goes far beyond that, or it is a very intense fastbreak of multiple links relationships from academia to business, to catch up to personal things. i think of all the service men inside as women who have done a tour of service in germany. so all of that exist, think of a and it says the cities and i think of regional contacts. that's, that's, that's such an intense public and it doesn't. it doesn't get weaker of more fee, but simply because politics in washington, this all that i've always felt when traveling that as the conversations we were
8:20 am
having at, within the best way, i really didn't. i didn't participate down to other regions. so, and i thought this was indicative of, of structures and the relationship that exist with it. we disagree you develop no stream to or about at trade deficits. so you would say this is kind of an understanding with this, which is somewhat untouched, but homeless in the white house. it does make a difference if someone isn't administration or is convinced of the relevance of international structure street disagreements at organizations, institutions of my to lateralism, if you with that does make a difference compared to an administration that bilateral lysis of relationship. because in that case, in every single symmetric relationship,
8:21 am
the one that holds no part would be the one able to provision. so there is a difference. but the setting that inside of the transatlantic relationship as a potential to reinforce our collective clout, that has always been recognized a call ca across the ice. and do you see that also like in the jungle generation? that is kind of some concern like that the, the ice, you know, who are really big, kind of and best of those for the past, for the german american transatlantic relationship. when they talked about their experiences, this boy to and that brought to us and what not, we don't have that anymore. so my question i think is to see the translating relationship also important for the younger american generation. look, 1st of all your right and the americans of spring and surface. but women whose been
8:22 am
to germany, came back with a knowledge of germany was, ties was individually friendships with their have neighbors. and in a way, at one of our traffic people would come up to me and said, i, i served, i'm spent all i served in this area and would be saying nice things and sharing the memory. so at that is suddenly decreasing as the numbers have decreased over the past years. but that's only one element of the other element is that for many decades, there was this awesome at all, and shed memories from a village quicker. that is the lift to at kennedy's berlin speech to the fall of the war 2 and martin luther king and brandon, you see, i'm all of these big events that are mentioning now. i think it's now. so what we
8:23 am
would have to get used to is that we'd have to reframe the trans atlantic relationship and it would have to adjust to the realities of all time. and i think in hindsight we were at, we would come to the conclusion that crushed us a question against your crane and our capacity for resolve and determination and perseverance. but in responding to that, the question at aggression will turn out to be an engine for how we want to for the place we want the transplanted relationship to be in the future. and best. what are you also have been here during co with 19? and what you think we should learn from this pandemic from this world crisis regarding our vulnerabilities. and i think
8:24 am
there's a lot to learn. the 1st one is from mistakes we've made. and i'm not just talking about the driver's side, or if it took us a moment or 2 until we were capable to actually contribute to a collect of europe in response during that crisis. we also found that not only is it risk, but it's at this risk is uncertified by the potential of individuals, actors trying to recognize these dependencies for political objectives. and basically you have been here um, when the new chancellor took office that came in a moment just right before the one you crate and started, there was a lot of reporting in germany and other countries that the relationship between the white house and the german chancellor chancellor, re, sorry, wasn't so great in the beginning. i don't agree with the premise of your question.
8:25 am
i don't think it is true at all a fact. the relationship was on distress when the chancellor arrived here at what i have seen when ever since the new administration took over, there was a substantial and significant grant, broad agreement between, between germany and american, whether disagreements, yes, the word disagreements to always a new offices and or different vantage points or even different views on issues. so the weather, but i always think that it is not at the nature of disagreements on, you know, says that define the quantity and the state of her relationship. it's the way you manage and times of them. and in that case, both sides, the american administration and the german federal government and x,
8:26 am
and at what united in trying to find solutions for problems in a way that would benefit and not disrupt the relationship. so guess the disagreements are, but they did not effect at the nature or the direction and what the sense of purpose and unity are a 1st governments what would be the biggest challenges for both of our countries for the s and germany of working together over the next months and 2 years. and obviously what comes to mind 1st is, are dealing with rushes, the question against ukraine. because of the outcome of thoughtful with largely defined and shape the international at geopolitical enter your economic landscape. the landscape of
8:27 am
incidence, if you with many countries across the board with closely watch out or whether we are capable to add to sustain at the level of support we have provided for ukraine at what we are able to sustain our perseverance at whether we're able to continue it, that's hugely important and we've defined our credibility and it would have defined the legitimacy of our costs, which is the defense of international law. and the defense of sunday tional principles of the i talked to mrs. investors are this my last one. that's a tough one for you. um your time comes to an end here. um what do you miss most about the united states in everyday life and i'm not talking about the blog was here at the reception's at the gym and embassy. what is that?
8:28 am
what was you missed most? okay, 2 things. one i've mentioned already, and that is the genuine kindness, openness. and by coming attitude of americans across the country, i've always deeply respected that. the 2nd thing i miss is the sense of individual responsibility that, that is also so much in the american doing a, by which i mean a sense of individual responsibility and an individual initiative. when ever confronted with a problem or a challenge. i think your opinions very often turn to the state and expect at the state to deliver the solutions or remedies in a specific challenging situation. what's americans are looking pretty much towards them sense and how to remedy the situation. i'm not saying that
8:29 am
it's and i do realize that can be a problem if the state takes no responsibility at all. but i think for the individual responsibility for making the world a better place for simply making a difference. if you with that is something that i've always smiled here. and as i, i, i really miss a message that i really have a thank you so very much and all the best. thank you. thank you. of the, a special edition of comfort zone weeks. tim, sebastian, this is the border crossing point from moldova into ukraine. to me respond to the car moment between ukraine and russia, is roughly a 100 kilometers away. the big question dominates here,
8:30 am
is where the mold dover is. mr. clinton next target on dw, we've got some hot tips for your bucket list, the magic corner chat, hot spot, and some great cultural memorials to w travel off we go the good peaceful as it appears. both of us sits right next door to ukraine and the searing, devastating conflict with no end in sight since february last year, the country of just 2 and a half 1000000.
20 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on