tv Headline News RT June 28, 2013 11:00am-11:45am EDT
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relations call over snowden ecuador quits a trade pact with the u.s. labeling it as washington's instrument of blackmail over the political asylum bit of the annus a whistleblower. for the by deep in sin egypt supporters and opponents of president morsi hold a massive rally is fueling fears of street violence as the country's leader is preparing to mark his first year in office and. disturbing and brutal food from syria appears on the web claiming to show rebel fighters beheading supporters of the asa government.
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this is r.t. coming to you live from moscow i'm marina joshing. now admiral snowden's become the centerpiece of a boiling diplomatic route between ecuador and washington the whistleblower who exposed u.s. intelligence operations meanwhile still believed to be stuck in the transit zone of moscow's sheremetyevo airport or it is losing confidence as also they are in the let's get the latest from her now. well you see it seems like a very strong reaction from ackwards washington is trying to get their man. well his reactions actually been rather mixed in terms of internal diplomatic relations there's some information coming out now that indicates that people within the country is sort of trying to figure out exactly how to handle the situation now the president spoke at a press conference yesterday the president of ecuador where he said even though he had previously championed edward snowden. especially for his efforts to shed light
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of a massive u.s. spying efforts he also implied on thursday that the fugitive former intelligence analysts didn't exactly have a clear path to ecuador saying quote the situation of mr snowden is a complex situation and we don't know how we will resolve it that's said however ecuador is not showing any indication that it is willing to bow to u.s. pressure to hand. should he somehow make his way to the country for asylum which is what presumably mr snowden is trying to do in fact when we had several lower please pardon me one u.s. lawmaker threatening to put at stake certain trade deals between the united states and ecuador trade preferences that are beneficial to ecuador in retaliation to potential asylum to mr snowden ecuador actually took the step of preemptively unilaterally renouncing those trade preference as it should be said that those were set to expire next month anyhow but that is certainly a strong the diplomatic indication that even though the country may be still trying
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to figure out what exactly it wants to do with snowden it certainly isn't putting itself in a position to bow to outside pressure to handle that diplomatic situation while there is a rampant speculation that snowden's managed to leave the transit zone is that a real possibility for him. well it's difficult to see how i mean we have to remember how he actually ended up in russia he had a transit flight that was supposedly going to take him to cuba and route to ecuador since there's no direct flights to cuba that's how he ended up in russia you don't need a visa in order to get to become a transit passenger he missed that flights and as a result are stuck in the transit area complicating issues is the fact that the united states has revoked his passport so without a passport he can't necessarily cross the border into russia and our producers in fact had called the airport spokespeople to try to clarify the matter and in fact in order to get in casts of the transit area where snowden is presumably holed up
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although again we have no evidence of that you would officially be crossing into russian territory without a valid passport there's no indication as to how he can actually get the visa to do that without a valid passport there's also no way for him to purchase a ticket to get out of the country so if he is in fact stuck in the airport it's quite unclear how she'd be able to get out of that said there's a lot of journalists here it is a bit. i suppose a bit odd that no one has been able to see him but of course it's a large airport and there's a plenty of places for him to be held as the situation tries to resolve itself so not much more in terms of answers at this point probably more questions but really stickley we don't really have any indication of how he could legally cross the border and leave the airport unless something was really going on behind closed doors there and so far no concrete factual information to indicate that all right lisa thanks for following this for us in a recording from outside the pyramid what airport so far no one has become the
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subject of diplomatic rift between cuba and washington but aqua door isn't the only potential escape destination for the whistleblower and let's take a look at where else he could and up russia he is no don't laugh to for russia from hong kong and many expected to moscow to be only a stopover it was believed the thirty year old would had to cuba and then aqua door but the whistleblower never turned up on that of an about flight but as well as president nicolas maduro said he has countries willing to consider giving safe haven to the man who exposed u.s. intelligence and snowden earlier described iceland as a place which shares his values government officials are considering his asylum there too michael ratner an attorney for doing a song and we can weeks believes more countries should speak up against washington's actions. at the hand of the act we're going to small country of nine million people breaking its trade preferences saying this is not the old latin
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america they used to have radios beat us up with the big stick we don't care about your trade preferences so it gives me more hope that ed snowden may be able to make it to ecuador i know that it's time for every country to speak up that this is not just about american citizens and all our email being looked at in all our phone calls but the us combined with the u.k. which is getting into all the fiber optics and that's really a particularly what i think germany was concerned by going after all of their and germany to its credit has spoken up of course germany at the stasi operating in east germany and i think it's very very concerned that ten percent of their population was under heavy surveillance from the stasi now it's one hundred percent i'm perhaps that is one of the reasons that it's made germany so sensitive on this issue or not so sensitive having the sensitivity that all countries ought to have. a man who was once america's second highest ranking military officials being
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investigated for allegedly leaking secret information about a u.s. cyber attack and its claim x general james cartwright reveal how the stuxnet virus disrupted iranian nuclear facilities three years ago well let's now get all the very latest on this from. so it seems we've got another a whistleblower being investigated and this one a top military officer at one point. that's right maureen in two thousand and ten when the u.s. carried out this cyber attack against iran general cartwright was vice chairman of the joint chiefs of staff and he was reported to be one of the crucial players in this cyber attack he resigned in two thousand and eleven and he is now apparently being investigated as the niekerk of that story as you remember about the obama administration having carried out this cyber attack against iran came before the election last year and the timing raised a lot of questions by them because president obama all but bragged about that operation as he ran for reelection as you remember everybody kind of assumed that
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it was one of those authorized because the administration information all the time to further its own goals but the timing of this particular about the general being investigated is also very interesting he hasn't been charged with any crimes and yet again from an unnamed source that he's being investigated and this is happening at a time when the hunt for edward snowden is in full swing is the administration trying to make a point here trying to sort of say that they're targeting even the sources of those . and it really is not clear at this point not clear whether it's their way of trying to fight the perception that the administration gets all the wants and targets only those whose leaks embarrass the government. as more and more people are revealing scathing information about u.s. government cyber operations what's been washington's reaction to that. official washington's reaction has been has been pretty clear that the
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administration is targeting leakers targeting whistleblowers as spies this administration has prosecuted as charged more whistleblowers with with espionage than all previous administrations combined and this kind of persecution legal persecution as well as the smear campaign is sort of designed to one one of the effects of that is to prevent maybe other whistleblowers future whistleblowers from coming out with more leaks more information and you know we learned that the guardian. this very recent piece of news here we learned that the guardian's recent stories about n.s.a. surveillance have been blocked across the entire u.s. army one of the one of the papers here talked to an army spokesman who confirmed that the guardian's web site had been blocked indeed since the stories first emerged this. spokesman said that the army was meeting out
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some acts that quote here to press coverage and online content about the n.s.a. leaks so that employees would not be able to see classified information. all right thanks so much indeed for the subject. now for more on this story make sure you log onto our t dot com because we've got the latest on and we're snowden and we're tracking the reaction his situation is causing on social media that's all just a click away for you on our dot com. i'm. right. and other active brutal violence reportedly by syrian rebels has appeared on the
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web on verified video shows the beheading of three supposed to government supporters the title of the food which suggest an orthodox christian bishop was among the victims although other claims say had been shot dad in an assault on a modest jury pool of players report contains graphic images. most disturbing and brutal footage has appeared online and what you see is a group of men with what looks to be a kitchen knife in their hands decapitating one by one three men on the ground it's all happening on a small hill and in the distance there is a group of women and children looking on all of this is happening to the cries of akbar god is great the three men purported to be supporters of the syrian president bashar assad now at the same time the video appears under the heading of free syrian army cannibals decapitate an orthodox christian bishop it's not clear whether or not the bishop is one of the three men but what we do know is that a syrian bishop was killed while trying to protect religious sisters in their
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franciscan monastery in the north of syria this video appears some six weeks off similar brutal footage was also captured online and at that time there was the leader of a syrian rebel group known as the fabric brigade showed biting into the heart of a did a syrian soldier all of this highlights the brutality of the syrian opposition and the extremist elements inside it it comes off to meetings of the friends of syria in which the united states pledged support to say end of weapons to this opposition in the u.k. and france indicating that they will model over this or vote indicating they support for such measures all of this is a very warring scenario and that is why countries like russia have indicated their operated weapons being sent to syria saying that it only perpetuates the conflict and benefits at the hands of extremist elements there and more news ahead for you including during tensions in egypt with president morsy supporters and opponents
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taking to the streets in rival rallies a live reports coming your way after a short break. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realize that everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm tom harpur welcome to the big picture. whistleblowers in principle we are told every society needs them to expose the excesses of those in power the reality is very different though if you're someone like bradley manning or edward snowden you literally take your life in your own hands the message is clear obey and be silent or face dire consequences. what
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happened to the arab spring dream does egypt's first freely elected president bring any change fear poverty economic failure and violence remain to egypt's attempts to escape chaos leaves wallowing in deeper. egypt a year in chaos. while the mac this is our team and the growing threat of terrorism is appearing at the top of the a channel of the u.k. government as the intelligence agencies and armed forces come out as winners in the spending review because just over a month since the brutal machete murder of a british soldier in london which the killers said it was revenge for the u.k.'s military campaigns as artie's point boy those been finding out there are mounting doubts over whether the war on terror is actually making brits a. they're accused of hacking
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a soldier to death on the streets of london and now preparing to stand trial until the debris not spread so we don't even see the problems that he described this is the chilling message an indication of what drove the attack but the politicians say it's nonsense it's because it will lead to police to the legions of these police say equally. twenty to eighty elite between this media and produce for you to see all the actions of british forces who are risking their lives in a good for the sake of freedom but there are those who took part in those military campaigns fast hand who disagree jerry says he was disillusioned by the reality of what fighting for freedom in the name of britain's safety and volved compared to some of the excesses in afghanistan and iraq. which is a very serious called cost of college the lie but it's absolutely true and we're
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very lucky to have already been so few attacks like this one of the banners we went to afghanistan under was peace peacekeeping and in our peacekeeping operation we ran out of explosive artillery ammunition that gulf between how the war is presented and the bleak reality is all too evident for many in britain's vast muslim community we are in contact with our friends friends and family or back home in reno what exactly is going on over there while we see. some of the media reports from the u.k. or the u.k. politicians there are speeches in parliament it's not reflecting the realities for afghanistan the war and yet there's been almost no public or political discussion about the western wars that drove the attack in which is because they obviously want to prosecute the wars the wars in afghanistan or iraq in the project and have a look at the projects in the middle east is very longstanding it pre-dates not elaborate in the their public policy documents which side that hopefully because they want to keep. doing these things there are plans for syria iran is on the is
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on the horizon as well they need to keep growing up this kind of audiological barrier and continue to attempt dealing with the killing killings law they say from the real world our mission in afghanistan does remain vital to our national security was to prevent that country from being a safe haven to al qaeda from where they might plan attacks only u.k. allies and i think you have to be particularly stupid as a prime minister not to see if you invade other people's countries and you're like do you care about the list of terror plots for oiled by m i five on you case soil makes the frightening reading since the religion attack a number of people who believe that a clash of the civilizations between white persons and muslims is inevitable has gone out to almost two thirds of the population far right movements such as the english defense league have been using the incident to fan the flames and islamophobia in the u.k. creating tensions that make it harder for ordinary british muslims to speak out
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about u.k. foreign policy many muslims are afraid for on the. extremist terrorist but so what if you speak to most of them sympathetic to the message of the attacker but not. to his actions because they are against any kind of terrorism any kind of terrorist. here or in any other country including afghanistan iraq or anywhere else the war on terror has always been sold as keeping britain safe but to those who object to the ukase involvement overseas the savage attack and well it merely serves as an example that it may be doing the exact opposite. london. now fresh clashes have erupted in egypt between president morsi backers and his opponents with reports saying a protester has been shot dead in the city of alexandria rival groups are staging
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rallies they have a massive opposition demonstration on sunday marking the gyptian leader's first year in office the country's politics is currently in deadlock with the opposition refusing islamic leaders call for compromise or us now gets the details from artie's bill troop. so ballots a rapidly developing story here tonight what more can you tells. well basically what we've seen is what normally happens during the kind of attire. support the president. the president. already had dead. i mean these civilian countries are very chaotic people brain works in korea to protest but this is something with things happening increasingly which is making as these kinds of clashes very gritty and very very thorough with security people trying to trying to contain it as they get to get
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what is happening right now in the capital. of the city and right here. is limited action called the islamist coalition a party can support the president creating an american brotherhood freedom and justice party there except. the people here saying that they are quoting from it because you see. the president he was democratically elected if you want to change . that but it means what i just. got going around. calling for him to step down. all right thanks very much indeed for the subject now the first year in office of the egyptian meter it was marred by ongoing political unrest in the middle east aspirant and author tariq ali believes despite the results that brought morsi to power the country is still deeply divided. i see it goes without saying and morsi
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himself as partially admitted it that he's disappointed as far as those who helped to bring mubarak don't know him said or a sizable section of them he's changed absolutely nothing since he's come to these protests so to show that the democratic figleaves is not enough so what will help them on sunday i think will be quite decisive it's not the case that to use the restroom support it's just that the country is very very sharply divided between those who want some meaningful change and the government which is maintaining continue to do with the previous regime and in some instances getting worse are these online team have lined out the best stories and pictures for you today so let's tasted just a handful of what we've got for you there. iran marks that.
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iran marks the international day of ganz drug abuse by burning around a hundred tons of narcotics officials and gas watched by didn't inhale at the ceremony in tehran but media is available to watch on our lead to huge now. and another click away online for you today want your future child to be a whiz kid despite your own lack of skills and talent well the u.k.'s considering whether to allow the creation of babies using d.n.a. from three people on our team dot com learn more on why some fear the consequences of a designer baby market. are less than a decade is left for germany to keep its promise to say a permanent goodbye to nuclear an edgy but the ambitious shift towards renewables will burn a deep hole in taxpayers' pockets artie's peter all of our reports on the weeds germans may file along the path to a green future. a wind of change is sweeping through german energy production the
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cost of a change is ruffling more than a few feathers. it's an acceptable to give energy producers taxpayer handouts the government has decided that renewables will get this money all driven by climate change hysteria. the german government has set the and bases target of producing eighty percent of the country's power from renewable sources over the next forty years heavily subsidizing wind and solar environment minister peter says that's going to cost germany around one trillion euro despite the vast amounts of cash being spent in subsidies to keep things like this spending consumers say the benefits all big passed on to them i mean to a single mother living in berlin struggling to make ends meet she's been left shocked after huge rises in energy prices bill after bill after bill happened on my
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. one day i saw it almost doubled it wasn't possible for me to be we don't force much t.v. and use washing machine once in a while so i can understand why this bill can be so expensive for two people. she's clear who she blames for the price rises and the effect it's had on her life so in some buy she fights to responsibility for these lies with the government and the power companies they are why it is so expensive i would love to take a trip with my son not flying off anywhere just somewhere nearby to the countryside but i just can't afford it. germany received huge praise from environmentalists when i found the country would stop using nuclear powered by twenty twenty two however that decision has seen new coal fired power plants having to be built to take up the slack be honest answer is great now remember if you will just cannot support the majority need for reliable energy in the world it's too expensive
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and most of it is intermittent that is we don't know what to do with the sockets in china or the wind is blowing there's also a case that economic interests outweigh the environmental right now. slow growth in the third quarter of twenty thirty according to the cologne institute for economic research its energy costs for industry forty percent higher than those in neighbors friends the netherlands is from the at the visa nation our industry is suffering and the minimum production the car industry are losing competitiveness the big companies may decide that is just too expensive and look to relocate. with elections in the old some rising power prices could become an issue as chancellor merkel refuses to let the sun go down on her renewable revolution whatever the cost these are all over germany and next pulitzer prize winning journalist mark mazetti talks to r.t. about america's so-called shadow wars. sigrid
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i. i. with me today is pulitzer price winning new york times reporter mark mazetti the author of the way of the knife we're going to talk about the cia and how it turned from a spy agency into a killing agency and the drones the ultimate weapon of its secret wars thank you so much for coming thank you for having me on in your book you're writing about how covert operations sometimes blow up in serious face how often he said if we can in islam they tipped the balance in the other direction i'm sure there are lots of smart people in the cia who also understand that but why is it still happening well
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there's a lot there's probably several reasons if you look at sort of as a described in the book sometimes the cia just gets relied on because presidents like secrecy presidents like using the cia to do things so for instance in somalia in two thousand and six no one really knew what to do there is there is no strategy so the cia comes forward with this plan to arm of a bunch of warlords and take on islamists and the reverse happens to the islamists end up being strengthened. why the other problem is that the cia is set up to do operations and analysis so in some ways the operate the analysts are grading the work of the operations people that's very difficult for the cia when if the analysts are really doing their job they're examining the drone strikes and they're saying are they radicalizing more people than they're killing. is there a real downside so they're basically giving a review to their own the road to their own work and that i think that for a good period of time there was not enough really serious scrutiny among not only
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cia analysts but other american intelligence analysts about the impact that the drones were having we knew that they were killing certain people they were killing some al qaeda figures some low level figures but in terms of radicalization so immediately a harder thing to figure out but there was not enough of that serious work being done let's zoom into pakistan in what way did the cia's covert operations benefit forces there which are very much anti-american. well you know you've seen the the growth of a number of groups in in pakistan for instance the pakistani taliban is really for the most part a creation of sort of post nine eleven it was reacting to pakistan's support for the united states and they've been in a lot of attacks inside pakistan against pakistani government forces you have seen strengthening of various groups whether it's a direct result of the drone strikes are a direct result of american operations for instance across the border in
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afghanistan it's sometimes hard to tell but the there's no question that various groups have both come about and been strengthened in the years since nine eleven as a reaction to american and pakistani government operations in the region i think that what we're what we're just beginning to see is is perhaps you know the radicalization of the self radicalization of people it's a term to basically mean that people sort of see what is happening in pakistan and elsewhere and then carry out operations on their own for instance may two thousand and ten the person who tried to blow up a truck in times square an american citizen of pakistani descent was not successful he was brought into an american courtroom and he sort of famously said that the reason he carried out these attacks was because of the drone strikes in pakistan and elsewhere it's a question about whether you know we're going to start seeing more of these types of things in the future and there is quite
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a bit of coverage on civilians dying in those strikes and i remember reading and high i believe it was in the new york times they cited a source an unnamed u.s. official who said that those reports are helping terrorists do you see it the same way to you do you feel like when you were poured on innocent people dying in those strikes you were helping terrorists do i feel like that no i think that we cover war if we write about war you have to write about war in all of its. aspects and you know it's a i think it's a very thin argument to make the case that us reporting on strikes that may have gone bad or may have killed civilians is it's the reporters who are strengthening the other side i mean i think that these things have these calculations have to be built in built into any kind of decision when you decide to prosecute a war a specific example abdul heidi
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a shining i'm sure you've heard about him the journalist who's in prison in yemen he reported extensively on the drone strikes there and he shot the footage of children killed in one of those strikes he was jailed he was about to be pardoned by the yemeni president and then there was a phone call from president obama who reportedly insisted that they keep him in jail what do you make of that you know i don't i know the story i don't know. in depth sort of i know others have reported extensively on this story i mean i think that there is a there's no question that there's been a crackdown by the administration disintegration on information as a whole and reporting on various secret programs i mean you see it overseas you see it in the united states there's been more leak prosecutions of the obama administration than there was under the bush administration and it makes it an incredibly hard for reporters whether they be american reporters or foreign reporters to get at the basics of these shadow wars that are going on because
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although it is all classified in the past it has been easier to sort of find the basics of things is now now it's quite hard have you felt that crackdown in your own work on your own skin yeah certainly the it materializes in different ways in the very basic way is that. people who you once spoke to and we're we're we're free to meet with you don't call you back or tell you i can't meet you anymore because there's this fear of of implications for that now these are people who in the past it felt you know it was important to talk to journalists to sort of try to get as much of of the basics the truth out as possible now they basically feel well it's not it's not worth me going to jail to talk to you the question that you can't get an answer to but would very much like to from the cia what is it i'd like to know much more about these so-called signature strikes that
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are carried out in pakistan where the cia does not know the identities of the people that they are firing at it there but they're based on who patterns of activity so if they see people doing missed suspicious things that they suspect is a militant activity they're authorized to carry out a drone strike used to be they only had to know they could only carry out a strike specifically when they knew who's down there that's how they end up targeting weddings. and so when they don't have specific intelligence you're sort of basing it on to some degree assumptions and there have been strikes that have gone bad there's a concern that the cia could be targeting not just suspected terrorists but also the the competition of the governments that the u.s. supports in other words political opponents that the targets could be politically motivated is that a concern that he would share well i think what tends to happen i mean is that when you are reliant on foreign governments and their intelligence services to carry out
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some these operations as the u.s. has sometimes they are in yemen and pakistan is the u.s. getting fed intelligence by the government to take out people who are not. affiliates or the like their opponents or or rivals of the government i think it's very difficult to know and i think there have been cases if you just look at yemen . where the united states has had very poor intelligence they've been very reliant on the government of yemen for these strikes and in one case there was a deputy governor of a province and yet he was killed i believe in may of two thousand and ten and is now believe that the united states was fed intelligence by this person's rivals in order to kill this person so it's this murkiness of how these wars are carried out i think that can lead to these types of situations you mentioned the u.s. is setting up new drone bases they need targets to keep them operating right could this business of killing suspected terrorists turning into a self generating them to price sort of the cia would have to come up with targets
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to keep them running well i think that you know i think the cia is these days a conservative organization in the sense that they have seen their past and they've seen all of the controversies of the past they would at least want the white house to sign off on whatever they did now they can of course present cases like west africa new threats and it's not just the cia it's the pentagon it's it's parts of the national security apparatus that do may legitimately see threats but there is an interest too to perpetuate some of these operations a concern about scaling them back you can certainly look at places in the world that look very dangerous and see opportunities for carrying out more of these shadow wars that doesn't necessarily mean it will happen but you can certainly for instance look at mali other places west africa as quote unquote the next front without really seriously examining well are there costs and consequences of the
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u.s. getting involved in these places as opposed to handling it in different ways will there only be more problems for the u.s. to get involved then if they just step back and let it handle be handled in different ways what do you make of the administration's attempts to come up with legal opinions on why it is justified and legal to execute people without due process without a trial. you know they they have basically examined the. did what the bush administration did in terms of of say of defining the world as a worldwide battlefield and say if we find people on that battlefield they are not they are they are they are they are soldiers and their enemy soldiers and they need to be need to need an enemy combatant they need they need to be killed i mean there's very in that sense there's very little difference between what president bush authorized and what president obama authorized i'm sure you know that the
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majority of americans support drone strikes. as long as there is no threat to u.s. troops they seem to be fine with the strikes. does this surprise you this culture of acceptance i think it's surprising the extent that the public see it seems to embrace it without without too much controversy or too much sort of discussion i think that the the sort of the ministration is gauge the mood of the american public which is partly this wariness about these long costly wars of occupation like iraq and afghanistan and people see drones and drone operations as a cleaner. more secret something that's out of the public view. as something that's acceptable whether that's going to change or not i don't know i mean i am surprised that that neither in the public or even in congress there is a whole lot of of intense scrutiny and for instance in the john brennan
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confirmation hearings it was amazing that they did find out that they didn't even have the the legal opinions that were justifying the drone strikes and they tried to hold up brennan's here nomination in order to get them and they didn't get them and they still approved brennan i'm sure you read the report about the cia bribing karzai his office with cashing backpacks plastic bags and whatnot unnamed u.s. officials told the new york times that much of the more money goes to paying off world lords and politicians many of whom have ties to the drug trade and in some cases the taliban the result of this appears to be that the agency empowers the same networks that american diplomats and law enforcement agents say they're trying to dismantle they're trying to fight how do you explain what seems like conflicting priorities of different parts of the u.s. government you know this one is hard to explain exactly what the cia money goes for how it's distributed what the purposes other than to sort of gain influence in
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cars in the circle i mean i helped on that story and it was very difficult to. i mean we still don't know and karzai has come out the cover of it confirmed it right so how much of this acts at cross purposes with. you know the work of as you said law enforcement officials or diplomats i mean there is a lot of angry people in the united states government that this goes on but it still goes on and it is approved i mean the cia has been giving large amounts of money to karzai and other warlords since nine eleven it's their argument that this is how afghanistan operates this is our afghanistan works with large bags of cash and also the stated objective is to help afghanistan get rid of corruption when in the same time if you are feeling it yeah thank you thanks very much.
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