tv DW News Deutsche Welle January 9, 2024 4:00am-4:16am CET
4:00 am
the the, this is dw news line from berlin. tonight's a legend of german football ponds back empower, has died. you ranked is one of the footfalls best players ever when you to come for germany, both as a player and the manager will have a look at his life and legacy. also coming up in the program, we have shuttle diplomacy in the middle east, secretary of state anthony blinking arrives in israel as it continues, has been to prevent war in gaza from spreading into a wider regional conflict. the
4:01 am
i'm here until berlin. thank you very much for joining us. the world of sports this morning, the passing of a german football icon. ponds back in bower has died at the age of 78. back and bower was one of the most successful soccer players. helping clinch the world cup for germany, both as a player and then as a coach. later in life, back in bower was accused of bringing corruption to the beautiful game. there's a look at the life of the man, germany called the kaiser, or the emperor. he was one of the most famous germans in the world, france, beckon's, iowa, everywhere he went successful to attend his entire life in. so i can do, for example, i was born of, i go, people say that vote goes up punctual voted, anticipating the thing that i have all of these characteristics dogged, easy category. good. second valid was a paste war child born in munich in 1945. he began playing football as an end of
4:02 am
the age. he started his professional career. that's fine. munich at the age of 19 fans gave him the nickname the kaiser. due to his commanding the start of play. with the club he went every major trophy that was as captain. he let the german national team, they became european champions and then wilts champions didn't 1974, dec invalid is considered the occupied v throw style of play. always the free man on the fields. i'm just leaving based on the was my whole life has been defined by football the by soon as i could walk, i began kissing a bone the vision. and then i managed to the fact that to listen to the and this is how he was marketed. second about was also a world class business man. he was the 1st gen and play with his a manager and own brand. me top quality. the only thing he wasn't good,
4:03 am
i was thinking never the less he managed to get in the gym in music shots the in 1977, his career took him to new york cause most of the kaiser played alongside footballs through the stop penny. and he became the, the celebrity jim and football the and he will hold himself k did back in that was portrayed he ended his career on the pitch at the age of 38 and then became manager of the german team leading into world cup success in 1990 his career led him to many patients including jobs that by munich, and a deep uh, football is will governing body. it was back in bass, hardwood, one jimmy, the rights to host the 2006. well the top. it starts on the thinking about what kind of vision does these event. most of this world cup will be
4:04 am
an example of friendliness of organizational talent. and when the games over, people will say germany organized a great $12.00 cost per page, but then it goes out to give in foxtrot the 2006 will come. they came as some of the times that retails for the heights as they've driven self confidence . it also helps send a positive image of the country, a broad transforming of those ideas of what gen and was a spot in 2015. the corruption navigations to do with the 2006 will come. the spotlight fell on back and by and his reputation suffered badly. he withdrew from the public high personal struggles, followed with the loss of his son and some health problems including 2 hospital preparations. second valid, denied the corruption allegations against him, right till the very end. he was without doubts, germany's football the of the century. bure lubarski is
4:05 am
a former german footballer who played for the 1990 woke up champions. if you knew friends back in bower, better than most, we asked them what made back in bowers so special who was standing to nbc, what the football eh, gives us fun. taishan inc. hot muck, success and beauty for pluses and leadership on the pitch. and also also pitch she was, it's a great guy in the, in the, in the promotions. and she was actually also a val, expected in the foot boulevard, off those curve. yeah. you got us a voice company, 2006. so altogether and he was living from the football and he gave germany so much and he changed also a little bit, maybe the view about germany during the world cup. so we have also some really kind parts as we turn to the middle east. now we're in is really
4:06 am
drones try can southern lebanon has reportedly killed a senior commander of the husband of milton group. as below pro, the statement confirming one of his commanders was from us on the i'll tell will was killed in a strike on monday, provided no further details of any security sources said he was a member of hezbollah as a lead rod one force and died in an attack on a vehicle in the southern village of kid about some of the border with israel. this is the 2nd type profile, healing and side 11 on this here. last week and lost his deputy leader. so la rotary was killed in a blast and a barrel supper. and this comes as us secretary of state anthony blinking is in israel as part of a week long diplomatic tour and been trying to prevent the worn concept from spreading to other countries. a landed and television laid on monday after holding taunts with arab leaders from across the region. lincoln says the meetings are aimed at combing tensions there. washington has repeatedly rejecting calls for a truce, but blinking is expected to emphasize the need to protect civilians and increase.
4:07 am
ain't the garza lincoln spoke to reporters and saudi arabia right before boring his plane to israel will have an opportunity to share with his rarely views everything i've heard just far on this trip. and also to talk to them about the future direction of the military campaign. and gaza i will press on the absolute imperative to do more to protect civilians and to do more to make sure that you mandatory the system is getting into the hands of those who need a deputy janelle do milan has on more on what secretary of state anthony blinking hopes to achieve and his latest visit well, broadly speaking, he has a 2 fronted emission there. the 1st is that he wants to remind is really government of the american viewpoint in terms of how to conduct this war in gaza. it is new
4:08 am
and that washington is pushing israel for lower intensity operations involving fewer a troops instead of the mass of aerial bombardment that israel is currently conducted . the idea there being that a few of our troops could lead to fewer civilian casualties, or at the very least could enable more ease in terms of a distribution, humanitarian aid. the 2nd priority for blinking would be that he's trying to, of course, head off on a wider escalation of the israel, a gaza conflict into a regional war. i made clashes with iran about proxies in lebanon, and in the red sea. it's worth noting that this is 5th visit to israel. it is just one country on a 9, a country tour of the region. and it clearly underscores just how concerned washington is at the prospect of this turning into a wider regional conflicts that could pull the us into yet another drawn out in
4:09 am
middle east or something, of course that the u. s. has some experience of right. and you were saying that this is lincoln's 5th visit to the region. are there any signs that has mediation is actually achieved anything in the last 3 months? a well 5th, a visit to israel, 4th, visit to the region. but uh, with the death toll in gauze reaching $22000.00 according to the home us run, health ministry. i don't think that success is really the word that anyone is reaching for here. now, us officials of course, are always very careful to say that although they consult closely with israel, they cannot in fact tell israel what to do and it is on israel to decide how to prosecute this war. but of course, this is the point of diplomacy, right? like talking is better than not talking, also worth imagining how this would look like without us involvement. arguably, it is us pressure that has forced israel to allow in more humanitarian aid,
4:10 am
even though it's still far below the level of what is in fact required for the affected palestinians. it's us carriers that are reacting to the threats in the red sea, and it is us pressure again, that is prompting israel to say now that it is prepared to transition to lower intensity operations involving fewer air strikes and fewer troops. even though the timeline on thought of is of course, open. now, of course, a given the mass of devastation at the moment. it is fair to say that even though the us is expanding massive diplomatic resources, it is having trouble selling the fruits of its diplomatic labor not just to the region but to the wider world. all right, i'm afraid we'd have to leave it there. that was dw janelle dum allow one in washington reporting for us. thank you very much for joining us. there's been a snag in america's attempt to return to the moon owner lender that was launched
4:11 am
into space earlier today has unfortunately run into technical difficulties. astro by otic technologies. peregrine lender was launched a board, a rocket from cape canaveral in florida. it separate the successfully from the rocket, but then the spacecraft experience an anomaly but stopped it from the pointing it solar panels up a sun without the ability to charge batteries and maintain a power supply. the mission goes nowhere. this was the 1st lunar lander to be sent to the moon by the us since the apollo missions of the 1970s. so what's the status of the lender? now? that's a question that i put to keep calling a former now as a rocket scientist and editor of nasa watch dot com. well, it's a little bit beyond what you just mentioned. they did have a problem with the solar panels after the space crap separated from the rock. i just the only space graphite around it to start directing. but what happened was, it's separated from the rocket, but it didn't point towards the sun and it needed sun charged battery. they got it
4:12 am
pointing at the sun and it's charged as batteries with the propulsion system seems to have a problem. so the spacecraft is alive and talking to earth, but it may not. gland on the moon, it may just sail by the moon and going to orbit around the sun. look good. alright, but the bank, so the question commission still be useful. you can't land directly on the moon itself. yeah, i'm, i'm sure somebody thought of the worst case scenario is here. first of all, the instruments you're working. it's gonna fly by the moon. some of the instruments can measure pretty much anything that they look at. they were designed to look at the loaner surface and you know, they're going to be practice on how the spacecraft works in case they want us to enter another one. so it's not a total loss, it's close to that but not a total loss. but if nothing else to create or star trek and his wife, their ashes will now go by the moon and in orbit forever around the sun. so, slight cancellation. yeah, i mean it's a great tractor if anything else. now this isn't the 1st major failure of
4:13 am
a lunar emission in recent months of russian mission also failed. why is it so difficult to land on the moon if we've already been there? well, you know, i'm 68 and when i was a kid we did all the moon things for the 1st time and the spacecraft barely had computers. so it's not, it's not easy, but it's not hard. the thing is you have to keep doing it. and the spacecraft is far more complex than anything that america has ever waited a little before. that said, this is a commercial spacecraft the as a but surfaces on it's not an as the spacecraft. so it's the 1st time this spacecraft is flown and a lot of new rocket which by the way, work perfectly. so if you're bound to have these problems happen, the flip side is that it was a lot cheaper to play a distribution. then if nasa did it by itself, so you decide which risk you want. you want us risk a lot of money on $1.00 spacecraft or try a new model is cheaper, maybe lose one, be get another. but we're going to watch another one to the moon or the couple of
4:14 am
weeks. so, you know, we'll try again. all right, and briefly zip code. does this affect nasa as goal of wash and crude missions to the moon in the coming years? as not doc directly? it provided it will provide you this mission and others will provide additional information that helps nasa, you know, brought me exactly what they're going to do. with humans there, but this is not directly related to humans landing on the moon. all right, thanks calling. thank you very much for joining us. that was keith colleen, the editor of nasa. watch. com. thank you for joining us. my pleasure. you're watching the w newsom. here's a quick reminder of the top story we're following for you at this hour. a legend of german football funds of packing of our has died. you're ranked as one of the most best players ever went in the world, come for germany, both as a player and as a manager the you're up to date, but to stick around coming up next is heard our series looking at the lives of
4:15 am
women in asia, and remember this much more news you can always find on our website that. com or you can check us out on social media for a handle as, as the w news, i'm here until overland. thank you very much for joining us. the prices got any issues or thoughts see who the fateful encounter. in the late 19 seventy's former concentration camp inmates, shlomo smiles, not met the man who had to maintain him. go stop fog now. 2 years later,
16 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on