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tv   Documentary  RT  November 4, 2013 11:29am-12:01pm EST

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just burn books or forbid them from being printed but in the age of the internet all you need is a scanner and an internet connection and the information that's found in a book cannot be destroyed because it is out there on the magical ether of the internet so basically the near future any person with even half a brain and some patients can start making guns in their basement which means the gun control laws will basically become pointless because they'll never be able to catch all the people doing it no one will be able to take the guns not even obama or the hardest of hardcore liberals this technology could be the best thing to happen to the second amendment ever fascist my opinion.
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hello and welcome to cross talk or all things considered i'm peter lavelle shifting sands and alliances advances and reversals outside military interventions and stalemate these are among some of the descriptions that apply to the middle east since the start of the arab spring what are we experiencing in this region the end of the west neocolonial order to be drawing of the map or merely instability and violence with no end in sight. to cross talk to developments in the middle east i'm joined by our son in washington he's a visiting scholar at the carnegie endowment for international peace and in london we crossed his aida least he is a political analyst and writer i'm jamming cross talk rules and i think that means you can jump in any to. anyone and i very much encourage it if i go to you first in
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washington it's been a long two years in the greater middle east and then all started out by saying by calling it the arab awakening. do you like terms like that anymore does it does it have it does that resonate with you considering what's happened in so many different countries in this very volatile region. well i think the first thing to say is that it i've never really considered it actually a useful term from the beginning and one of the things about the arab spring the way people refer to it is that they sort of understood it as a transitional process that would lead to democracy but ultimately we had no idea whether that would be the case from the very beginning so if you talk to people down on the ground in karo in tunis except for what you find is that they refer to their individual revolutions as the tunisian revolution the egyptian revolution the syrian civil war and i think that's my a much better way of referring to it ok so how do you how do you feel about using
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the term arab spring arab awakening two years on because as we just heard i mean in each individual country circumstances are different but i think one could make the claim that a lot of the there are a lot of other issues that they have in common in common particularly west a dictatorship supported by western powers i mean this is one commonality almost all of them avandia. well i mean this is absolutely true i mean we mustn't lose sight of the fact that what happened in the arab region which started off in tunisia and then rapidly spread and swept the arab region particularly going through egypt which is one of the most and staunchest and closest ally of the united states was people actually. standing up to. dictatorship which where whole heartedly and in fact by the usa the majority of the regimes were actually true supporters and allies of the united states and the people in those
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countries where fed up to their back teeth and were sick and tired of this board and the unlimited unwavering support to those dictatorships by the united states we've seen it happening in tunisia and then the popular uprising popular uprising spread to egypt and we see in the united states the obama taken a back and after a lot of posturing. and did that ring he withheld support to his name which actually upset one of the other most reliable irreplaceable allies of the united states. which thought that was the ultimate betrayal of another ally one of the. one of the closest allies of the united states and we've seen. actually forgave the usa for turning its back on more bartok
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but in the long and the long run a new thought that todt the support of the army so it had a safety net it had an insurance policy in both egypt and. was that was one of the major reasons that actually the obama pulled the rug from under their feet. off mubarak knowing fully well that supporting this important pivotal point with to actually win over the conflict win over their support of their people to the army which actually took over power and diffused to relinquish power and it was only after protests further. up we had what i think that talks more about indecision and the lack of strategery even understanding what's going on on the ground on how would you how would you look at how the western powers particularly the united states has dealt with events in the greater middle east over the last two years because you know we can look at each individual country in their specifics there but the bomber administration seems to be very
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unclear on what direction it needs to pursue because is that democracy is it security can you have both but i think the obama administration has demonstrated that actually the overall strategy of the united states is towards the middle east is ultimately flawed it's been flawed. we saw that with nine eleven the bush administration changed its mind decided to democracy was the way forward in the region and then olmert leave that was that was roughly where the bomber administration ended up but by the end of two thousand and ten when it done the policy planning review but now what we see is the arab spring funmi turned all of that on its head and we've just seen susan rice released a new policy planning review that says that security comes first and ultimately i think that that's the united states say strategy in the region but security comes first not democracy it'll look ok i think we've come full circle haven't we it's amazing so we have mubarak back in power under a different name ok we can i don't know what the arabic version of tuna shay is but
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ok we've gone full circle haven't we but have the people on the ground benefited from any of this. i mean the trick is what the americans have done in going full circle they refused actually to back up the army which was what the sit with these demanded to back up hosni mubarak by actually unleashing against the people who rose up to defy mubarak but by actually allowing that muslim brotherhood to take on power and pursue misguided policies that are actually convince the people that they are after accumulating and monopolizing power and the muslim brotherhood actually being forced to shift from its want to teaching to islam in order to apply this. position and vehement oppositions by this these are actually of pursuing more radical what i do all that you have fallen out of favor by the egyptian people who
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actually turned around and supported the army so what the americans have achieved it having the army back in power and sisi actually attempting to go and put his name forward to. the elections and actually going full circle what happened also in the. in yemen and bahrain was actually americans giving. it to tweet those two countries out there to back away. it was a joke having a lot of traffic here at once i want to talk about today will be in a secular ok i kind of echo words i had to say which i think is really very interesting here is that it looks like under the guise of democracy or security whatever what flavor you prefer again it's rejigging the middle east the united states still maintains a hedge of monica role this is what their ultimate goal is they don't really. care
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about the coloration of the regime as long as it plays into a security arrangement washington can feel comfortable with and let's not forget tel aviv and riyadh. yeah i think that's true i think ultimately the security having a hedge money over the region so the instability whether that comes through democracy or through with or tearing regimes is ultimately the end game plan because the united states has too many interests in the region to allow it to fundamentally opposed to those interests so when the united states acts it always does with the view of you know what what how can how does this inform our counterterrorism policy how does its inform our counter-proliferation policy how does this inform our energy policy it's this police of issues that comes to the fore with the united states there's and ultimately there's a massive conflict of interest problem that the united states has to deal with when it formulates its middle east policy or as if i can stay with you i guess been
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ghazi is where everything collides isn't it with the assassination of an american ambassador by a country that was liberated by nato. yeah i think that's true i mean the issue of the security situation in libya as it stands right now is fundamentally problematic what you have is al qaeda in the maghreb and various other terrorist organizations who are actually able to free flow throughout the region because of a lack of security a border security and what it does is it adds a whole level of new strategic importance so if you look at the way in which the united states has tried to deal with the region it was all positive for about democracy up until the benghazi attacks and the and obviously the summertime use attacks in tunisia the embassy engine is here and it's at that point the united states really steps back and says actually we're going to downgrade our presence in the region and we're going to start to look towards making sure that the stability and these interests are secured rather than promoting democracy came out the
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realized it was nothing but they've got actually i think they have decided to stay in the region so if i go to you in london they've decided to stay in the region just more low profile through militaries working with dictatorships where they feel very comfortable work working with dictatorships we have decades of experience working with dictatorships like in saudi arabia it works for washington actually if you look at what happened on the ground if you look at what happened on the ground they are teaching their people that a lesson who those people who dared to rise up and defy their dictators where supported by that america are not now facing two options if you want a state security and limited economy progress then the have to stick with their dictators if you turn against those dictators stand up to them challenging them and defy them then what are you going to get is insecurity in state more prominence and more and more. a great role for the al
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qaeda and a greater influence and prowess and also influence. so that people are going to pick a stable. and security but if we look at what happened in benghazi it was actually the relentless intervention by the americans it was this relentless intervention which stripped the popular uprising of legitimacy and deprived it and deny did its authenticity we've seen the american ten and also nato air force into an air force which was specifically backing up the rebels they tended to do it their own of their own force which followed the qaddafi to set and to bet me what the weather was absolutely ok now you know that you've been here gentlemen gentlemen i have to go to a short break and after that short break we'll continue our discussion on events in the middle east state with our team.
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i almost told you my language a whole but i will only react to situations i have read the reports and let me know what is the know i will leave them to the state department to comment on your letter play like the muslims say it's six am
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a car is on the docket. no more weasel words when you have a need a direct question be prepared for a chase when you have a bunch be ready for a battle freedom of speech and a little bit on the freedoms of costs. more than four hundred cities around the globe are hosting mass rallies for shared justice freedom. follow million mask march on r t and r t v dot com. torch is on its epic journey to show. one hundred twenty three days. through two hundred cities of russia. really fourteen thousand people or sixty
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thousand coming. in a record setting trip. there. olympic torch relay. on our. welcome back to cross talk where all things considered i'm peter lavelle to remind you that we're discussing the turbulent middle east. but also want to go back to you in washington it was mentioned earlier in the program about saudi arabia and we see a possible reset some kind of reset with washington or maybe going on its own that
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could be just all bluster nonetheless saudi arabia is a power broker right now we saw with egypt and we're seeing it with syria was the talk about syria in a second but you know is this the kind of country that is going to be the beacon of american democracy for the region saudi arabia really. well i think. the the u.s. saudi relationship has always been built on security it always has been built on security since its founding and i think you know ultimately the relationship between security energy come to come together what this means is the u.s. saudi relationship is not a point of divorce there's a lot of tensions the saudis have for being far more vocal than they usually are disagreeing with the united states you know you could fighting for a position on the u.n. security council and then turning down the position is a clear demonstration effect of how saudi arabia is upset but these two powers on
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a point of divorce are tall and i think that yes there are problems that the united states has dealing with a regime of this sort but let's not forget all the relationships that the united states has throughout the region and various areas where it has been pushing so for example tunisia has been a successful looks to be a successful version of transition of nonviolent transition in the united states does seem to at least be back in that unity regime. as it steps forward with this transition process and it's the same with the european union as well we're. going to talk about iraq afghanistan libya i my goodness i mean tony. go ahead jump in i could jump in we could see in tunisia is it exactly exactly i repeat. here on what happened in egypt where the listener not brotherhood is called another and we've seen actually the same forces which are the secular forces
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the x. . day dictatorship so poor it is gathering got up and actually opposing and standing steadfastly determined to topple the party or the government which is led by party so what we're witnessing in tunisia is a. in egypt but going back to what had been the set with the idea of the i don't understand agree these are you can see what what this it would these have done that is invade and occupy another country which is the home of the fifth fleet could have taken place without the full consent of the americans and what we've actually seen any emend this is backed up by the americans come up with their own initiative which ostensibly is called the gulf cooperate cult cooperation council initiative which is there as. the initiative to replace one dictator that is easy to end in a place and by another dictator which is
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a staunch ally. that is to protect its own backyard garden and the invasion of about rain and the occupation against the overwhelming majority of the people who stood up to the bad rainy dictatorship which is by the way the family where the prime minister has been that as long as what america has been there is still supported emphatically and have it by ok as i said. i mean let me let ours react react to that that was a mouthful there go ahead us. well i think that ultimately if we if you look at what's going on you if you take a short term analysis and look at the events as they're happening on the ground you can pick a lot of things that look as if these transitions are. undergoing a trauma but actually you know there are more positive steps there's constitutions being negotiated there's national dialogue being undertaken these are all positive things they are new things in the region and ultimately they point towards a more democratic transition for the region let's not forget that the arab spring
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is a crisis moment in national politics it is the moment in which you can't put the genie back in the bottle because the people on the ground in those countries where the right now in prigs on point agent there is a nationalist swing towards general sisi but do we really think that sisi is going to be able to install. become an old story terry and without the people rising up again i don't think i don't think that's going to happen i don't think it's possible i think we need to get past the fact that the united states and the european union are intervening in the region in whatever way and start looking down on the ground where civil society movements political movements are beginning to rise up there because. what we do see illusion is what we see is a return to. from a western perspective hang on guys from a western perspective people vote the wrong way sometimes you know what i mean they're not all jeffersonian ok go ahead because democracy is a tricky thing you can vote for things people of the west don't like like i do
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believe that the change which is taking place is actually inside saudi arabia now saudi arabia have backed up and emphatically supported the radical regime as the bastion of dictatorship but in doing that what has been laid bare to its own people they have discovered that this is not what it has betrayed itself or depicted this for decades that it is they've got the end the indisputable protector of sunni islam because they're so with the regime has thrown its weight it's thrown its support behind dictatorship and it has been spearheading at the forefront of actually supporting dictatorship which are against the sunni people who rose up in egypt and tunisia which have exposed this to these. people and that's why we see that it is going out of their way now to try to stand up and form an a sectarian war in syria and also it's ok i want to talk about syria the second as
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i did not talk about syria in a second here are you going to go if you're going to go back to arms and watching i mean we've this is a very interesting point do you think that the western powers understands the significance of the different the sunni shia divide because again you know you can have western powers interested in security how they define it but you know riyadh looks at things in a very different way they have a very different perspective and it is have to do with their religious faith what is them in that case and it's something that it actively exports we'll talk about syria in a second i mean is that a collision there that cannot be resolved. i think the only what we need to say is that the saudi regime is actually in trouble the saudi regime isn't going to have the sort of money that it has now to stop. stop a populist uprising taking place so i think that means that what we need to do was keep an eye a close eye on what's happening in saudi politics there is still a popular movement going on there now to go directly to your question i think that
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no i don't think the divisions and understanding of the different types of islam of fully understood in washington but i think it's something that over the last ten years is becoming better understood i think the way it's seen here is you know saudi arabia and iran have tensions with each other and there's a global sort of a global a regional game going on ok let's change gears and talk about syria here and again you know we it's move on to syria how would you how does syria fit in to what's been happening in the greater middle east last two years in exception or is something very different and some people would say that it is this is a block to western influence a penetration into the middle east finally it is a game changer of one so sword or another do you agree or disagree with that yeah what i think is a major point that we need to be acutely aware of is that this it would be a regime with the lies heavy on the one harvey sellafield religious establishments
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that is that there will have. to there will be ideology and it is one of the main points of deception which i think the bait and deceptive myth has been under rubble now and it's falling apart that the sunnis have discovered that there are trying to stir up a sectarian war in both iraq and syria in order to demonstrate that they do this in the people that it is in gauged in a in an existential engaged in combating and confronting an extension that a threat from that she has namely from iran in order to stave off an internal uprising and the banks are. it's far easier for them to pull the rug from under the feet of those people who are standing up to this regime and that's why we've seen their so does throw this help or to behind what is what they perceive as a sunni movement in syria but in doing so according that is to the new york times and according to even. that of iraq all the funding the majority of the
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funding arming logistical support and even paying salaries which have been exposed by the guardians have went to propping up shoring up and adding influence to job had to nuss where they actually have created which according to a backload but that is part and parcel of merely an extension for the walk that's why they play the game into all major all in reviving and ultimately each of one thing and al qaeda in iraq and that's why we've seen that tremendous influence and prowess of iraq which have actually you don't attack on a daily basis against a lot of iranian kate's living let me go let me go to hear about is money in iraq in syria is this in america's interest in western powers interest to get involved in such a conflict because it's an existential conflict between saudi arabia and iran why don't we just kind of stand back from this one because we're getting sucked in or
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trying to get sucked in into syria people criticize obama but i think he was smart to take putin's idea and back off because western outside influences are not going to resolve this issue in syria and this is why i'm asking because it is it again. i think you have to sort of understand it is multiple levels what the diplomatic route if we can get the geneva two process on the way that is a positive step in the right direction and therefore you know where western intervention should come is the level of diplomacy we have to get these people around the table to solve this problem this is the greatest humanitarian crisis that we. now face going back to your question about whether syria is exceptional or not i think what you need to understand is why syria and in fact libya turned out to be violent revolutions in the way that they were and thirty's has to do with the nature of the state the state the why in which the security operators of those two countries was tied to the regime's itself meant that ultimately if the regime way
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and the security apparatus of those countries went as well so when when asked people to fire upon civilians and protest a peaceful protest as they will do it in tunisia and egypt that was not the care i generally wanted to jump in here with me and more time many thanks to my guests today in washington and in london and thanks to our viewers for watching us here at r.g.p. see you next time and remember. wealthy british style. ties.
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with the. markets finance scandal find out what's really happening to the global economy for a no holds barred look at the global financial headlines tuning in to cause a report on. what you're dealing with here is that you did a few years time but there are children who will just be doing commerce on the internet but electronic media that that's the future if you don't have a safe environment to do that. we're going to face big problems. that's all i want to. pick up something that is quite simply. was no way. clearly they were just at the wrong place at the wrong time. and
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sold to the u.s. and turned over to the u.s. for. the soul that could be buried alive. was saved with great effort. into it wanted to turn me into a terrorist so it was they wanted me to admit that i was a member of al qaeda or taliban or that i fought with them. not about time i didn't even know what al qaeda is nevertheless there are people all. brave enough to start a fight. something's going to be done that's going to be done by me and it's been a short amount of time to do it but it's going to impact me i'd be prosecuted but it's going to impact. the wife my daughter. the one time a trap. monarchy. exactly what happened there i don't know but a woman got killed. piers later is when i got arrested for. for
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a crime i did not do. we have numerous cases where police officers lie about polygraph results. people to confess to police officers don't beat people anymore i mean it just doesn't happen really. in the course of interrogation why because there's been this is lightman know because the psychological techniques are more effective in obtaining confessions than physical abuse they were they could get what they wanted they can say what they wanted and there was no evidence of what they did or what they said.
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egypt's ousted leader mohamed morsi and forces the court to adjourn on the first day of his trial on charges of inciting violence but i agree crowds rally in his support. activists from across the globe appealed to the u.k. prime minister an open letter saying national security shouldn't be used to justify wrongdoing human rights organizations period out the government's response to revelations that must the bailiff thank their actions i rating fundamental human rights in the country and to run its biggest anti american rally in years thousands demonstrate against president rouhani outreach to washington we found out why radiance is so in bridge.

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