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tv   Going Underground  RT  July 4, 2018 8:30pm-9:01pm EDT

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q. q. q a in emotional game we played well with our lucky to concede in the last minute we carried on you know we stuck together and it was emotion for fear and so. it's always difficult with emotions highs and lows so just proud of the t. and proud of each other and proud for the fads here and back home as well as if we made a great effort well now it's time to raise our heads and prepare for what's next but you know it's painful we did all we could for colombia as the caps an advocate was saying a whole range of emotions jubilation for the england fans figured finally a man easing to break that penalty which is haunted now for several tournament sort
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of course heartbreak for colombia who gave it their all but it wasn't quite enough punit joseph was also what's in the game in which is going players brigade should everything for one hundred twenty minutes they should be exhausted after a while or such and medicare should be more from our point of view because we're going motions warned. by doing at least point of view the more comportment thing you wrote could be in the quarterfinals great job and people are happy you can foreclose on the quality. you shoot for the long form and. write an artful. welcome beaching beach to serve the completions or to even get in. in the quarter finals and having for the finals there we are. we share
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a bear in fair share should be all eyes of course on england caps and. football's hottest property right now the best striker at least according to many he's called that crucial penalty there was always a tension knowing that might just blow it all but that goal number six for pushed him to the top of the race for the golden boot as the world cups top score and fans are wrapped into the victory last night as you might expect scenes of relief and of course to polish. the i. i. now as things heat up here in russia the intrigue only gets deeper pundit jersey is taking a break from his crystal ball predicts it will most football results most the more
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bob talked so far to some young budding football stars of the future here is that report. yes i would think it was the exception called philip marston of the truth which last question if you do not clear to me i do not slip in last year's you must have known better. but i have some who are least able. to trust. my leaving my command that much mr knightley being with ring of others and already winning a chilly continue in all chelsea. one zero need to own this is a ring at the. ocean all the more so so so commanding he or she just has to play here and there on your. tactic you the trust to sleep because you have a shelf in the conscious moving your position move. ok
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so i was told that's one of the good talents. that you are the kids with with good potential so i come to give a look your coach is ian i just failed sides i'm looking at you with all my attention but don't feel any pressure just feel happy and and free ok he will. go. one thing is. and another think it's. possible to be the right speed and control bus is reasonable if i control the ball here he's one thing and then i need one want and i need one more second another thing is it passes me the ball and lead my control. my control i can give
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immediately speed to the game so little things little good makes the game much much better than you for it look for example to. use his name your version of if they looked to him the first the first control the speed of the of the bus polish always got it. right i'm. positively surprised with what i see what i see in these little sessions and i hope the coach should be easy for me i also see in my my players being professional players. she is. they enjoy
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more of the period where they are playing in the period where they have the practice but this is as important exercises that they can do outside the little little game what's your secret in achieving that much trophies the secret is what i was asking you. to enjoy but at the same time if you says if you want to reach a certain level. has to be a serious serious thing every minute of the day we're. working with my players i take it very very serious always of the smile always happy to do something that i really like to do but always read to you the great cause and be the grit and be sure to have fun every minute throughout on the pitch take it seriously what's your favorite muchas tonight for if i answer to you or the the other ones to go away is
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like when you got a father and you have more of them than ones then one son which one is the favorite son i have a son the daughter i cannot say which one is my favorite. my favorite was the difference in training russian players. players i think in the one of the secrets is the competitiveness of the league every club has probably eighteen twenty twenty peaches like this one. only for the academies i hope. with kids like you coaches like him we've facilities like like that with the passion of the russian. people as for football with what the world cup can change in terms of that. have that mentality in. united states mexico canada can be a target for. the russian national team to to improve let's make
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a challenge and sometimes challenge is all dreams they become. reality one day so let's see in the next twelve years. i coach the russian national team and some of them they play for me they will. go i guess. and i was might see some those youngsters in russia's next up world cup squad oh down now of course the last eight and fans across the world have been on a roller coaster ride from the very start to some though there seems to be a bit of a year that needs it but one of motional support they've got their four legged friends with them for comfort.
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and that's it from me now from our studio in st petersburg full speed. spittles as
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well. as it rumbles on this some also called. on the old school to get underway here in russia on friday now it is independence day today in the u.s. but a majority of americans for the first time in at least eighteen say they are no longer extremely proud of their country at least that's the finding of a poll by gallup which tallies with a number of other recent to you that also reflect a downward trend. as more the fourth of july american independence day time for barbecue fireworks and celebrating the old stars and stripes.
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see. what is the patriotic impulse dying among americans a new poll shows that not all americans are swelling with national pride the poll indicates that less than half of americans actually say that they're extremely proud of their country and that's what donald trump playing up us exceptionalism we're going to make america you make america great again are you planning to celebrate the fourth of july this year actually i'll be working. every day. all came out this year and when asked if they were proud of their country extremely proud of their country only forty seven percent of americans said yes that's less than half what do you make of that poll. i saw that. i don't understand
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i'm in the other category i'm extremely proud and now we look so bad for towards other countries who are looking towards us and think that we look so separated now instead of being united i suppose it's about trump mainly really it's just just simply the president. white house i think you get it that there is not a lot of call. happening just faith and leadership to really come down to what i think deep numbers probably higher people may feel a grudge about certain political you know swings these days used to be that once a year americans put aside their political differences and march behind the american flag is one on independence day however this year it seems that partisan political differences are impacting our americans feel about the festivities table mop and archie new york. of course in ecuador has issued an arrest warrant for
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former president rafael correa over claims he masterminded the kidnap of a political opponent back in twenty twelve the judge wants interpol to exit from belgium where he now lives in finance was briefly abducted in colombia but police intervened i'm afraid him a few hours afterwards bulger had fled from the temp to twenty twenty ten. for a year for conspiring against the ecuadorian government well the former leader denies having anything to do with boulders kidnapping and says he's the one being persecuted for political reasons. they cannot defeat us in elections so they try to defeat us use in the judicial system so we have to stop that this is not democracy they are inventing whatever they want because they are controlling everything they really are the system in the national assembly etc in order to. pursuit. especially less leftist leaders but in the
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case of equal myself and my. government team show all this is. very plentiful a strategy in order to prevent myself to return to my contrie so we can do that again even more to. for instance they stop the process of security the security before the for me they stop i don't have any more security from the state so they want me also that. now another new use the pentagon chief is apparently threatening to drop the u.k.'s america's main military ally james mattis is written to british defense secretary gavin williamson saying that britain would be dropped for france the letters being leaked to the media ahead of next week's nato summit in brussels where donald trump is expected to push u.s. partners to boost their defense spending. as global act says france and the us have concluded that now is the time to significantly increase our investment in defense
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of our allies are following suit i am concerned that your ability to continue to provide this critical military foundation is at risk of erosion well the us which pays three and a half percent of its g.d.p. to nato has repeatedly pressured its allies to pay at least two percent of their pay in twenty forty nato greed to increase defense spending accordingly within ten years and while the u.k. does meet the criteria masses has noted in the letter that more is required in britain but at the same time stress that france is boosting its spending despite not meeting the two percent threshold the pentagon is demanding and is left on the trump again saying that washington's nato partners just expect the u.s. to foot the bill with the piggyback that they like to take from whether it's military protection you look at nato nato we're spending ninety percent of their dough now it's all wonderful and we like to help out but it helps them there in
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europe helps them a lot more than it helps us we're very far away so we have this incredible germany is paying one percent of a much smaller g.d.p. we're paying close to four percent of a much larger g.d.p. so that doesn't work folks but we did ask political analyst chris bambery whether he thinks that the u.k. will give in to washington and boost the fence spending. british annoy in this so-called special relationship between america and britain it's always the united states is called the shots and britain's put a trail along like a poodle saw i suspect that bricks that britain facing in you know worries about where its future lies the temptation is going to be yes we need to hold course the united states even if they're not that interested interested as a more even it's pointed out that donald trump is fed up with the reason i'm in our way of operating the brits are still likely to tag along behind and probably
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already know the defense chiefs are saying to the british commonwealth this is what we said we have to increase spending so i suspect actually the brits will give in to the americans of push comes to shove and they're looking over at friends and friendship to trump suppose it has a manual mccraw very worried that this special relationship as i said the brits could somehow be supplanted by the french so in london they'll be desperation to cooling to the coattails the united states. your show is international thanks for company tonight we're going to have more news for you in thirty five.
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years. on. my. life for pleasure and delude is when the interest on the debt is greater than your taxes taxable base then you have to throw down all pretenses of quantitative easing and just admit your monetizing debt such a bank is just printing and buying back its own debt in a deliberate place then you get into what's called a banana republic named after a countries in latin america that typically are in the but out of business who end up doing this monetization of their own debt and have collapsed their car to venezuela argentina come to life this is now going to be contagious and going into america.
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hello and welcome to cross talk where all things are considered peter lavelle donald trump will soon visit europe has a very busy agenda and it's unclear what kind of reception he will get topping his i ten or where he will be trade relations nato and russia never before has an american president been expected with so much apprehension the trump juggernaut continues.
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cross talking a strange da lies i'm joined by my guest marcus papadopoulos in london he's the editor of politics first magazine in oxford we have ted see he is a senior policy consultant at british american security information council and in oslo we have glenn these and he is a visiting scholar at the higher school of economics all right gentlemen crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want i always appreciate marcus let me go to you first in london with the advent of donald trump and i'm not even saying the administration of donald trump but donald trump is his vision of america first compatible with the mission that we were told by the think tanks and the four thousand nato bureaucrats. the two compatible nato mission and donald trump go ahead mark. yes i do believe that and i believe that one and
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a half years into donald trump's presidency he has clearly and categorically demonstrated that he's light kids predecessors i said on cross talk during his election campaign in two thousand and sixteen and afterwards that there would be no changes to american foreign policy under trump presidency and that there would be no changes to nato and a trump presidency i think a lot of people would live in cloud cuckoo land or there were ideological reasons for why people really for mr trump was going to try to change american foreign policy and of course he hasn't done anything like that under him he has increased nato presence on the western borders or the russian federation and of course he has now directly involved america in syria twice he has attacked syria we've cruise missiles on the first occasion in april two thousand and
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seventeen that cruise missile attack resulted in the deaths of twenty syrian soldiers and nato under mr trump is strong and it's got inch stronger last year mr trump agreed to the accession to nato of montenegro some people laughed at that but these people don't understand the significance of that now that montenegro is in nato is in nato that means nato is now this so moscow of the atria to see and soon macedonia will apply and then ukraine will apply. to the markets let me go let me go to ted in oxford but there'd have been what you just said there are other a lot of other people are saying that he wants to tweak the nato alliance not dismantle it i mean you know and glimmer. for example the relationship that trump has with angela merkel not very good we know that there is a he wants
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a review of the number of american troops that are in germany and finding it that way you know it's seventy plus years after the end of the second world war there is what thirty five thousand troops there you're saying the same thing about south south korea and we have you know it's not about nato it's also about trade relations and it seems to me that i can i guess i'm kind of answer my own question is that i don't think america first is compatible with the traditional american foreign policy at least the pillars of it not to say that those pillars are going to disappear go ahead your take on it ted in oxford thank you very much peter i think we have to look at the multiplicity of trump policies across the board and not just try and narrowly focused on what we usually call foreign policy because i think that's a huge mistake i would argue in the first place that i tend to agree with you that trump is a subversive element when it comes to the traditional nato alliance because he's
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questioning its integrity and its existence in a backhanded manner but more importantly by focusing on trade and by starting what some people are regarded as the tariff war but i don't personally he's challenging the w t o in the fundamentals of international political and economic discourse since the end of world war two and then beyond that he's also very much against open borders he's very much interested in limiting migration and refugee movements into the us and i think he's sending a signal to europeans that that kind of politician can be very popular as we've already discovered in italy and other places that's a good point and let's go to also glenn trump's real mantra when it comes to nato he's not interested in tanks and planes and what not he's interested in money ok and he has not let this go he keeps pounding away at it i mean you know he said a few news cycles ago is that the e.u. is just as bad as china. ok i mean he wants people to pay their way i mean if you
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have the numbers right here germany only pays one point one percent of its g.d.p. of three point eight trillion dollars that's a year ok supposed to pay two percent and if nato is all about facing off russia well germany's g.d.p. is three times russia's ok so i mean we'll get to the russian angle soon but basically he wants everybody to pay their bills and that's how he's being the disrupter go ahead. you know i don't agree with that assessment because he is quite militaristic. to a certain extent more aggressive than obama in both ukraine in syria however i think he's still contributes to a crisis in the alliance simply because he expresses these extreme hostility towards paying for the security of our allies. but more importantly trump has often questioned about nato and so. the cold war has been over for some time. i mean. it's coming from terrorism and china so i actually see trump's lack of commitment
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to this cold war security architecture being that his strength could make him more prepared to strike a deal as a multiple world emerges and this effectively undermines nato however i don't think it comes to russia bearing gifts i think it's more a different priorities. i see with trade the w t o. and of the day it's all about money and i guess his main concern is. this how empires and when will this not heard from the court to have heard the court begins to crumble ok well you know markets i think i actually think this is part of trying strategy because this is the achilles heels of the nato alliance they don't want to pay their way they want the americans to do it and trump is saying no more of that and we have the prospect and i think it's actually kind. genius in a way you know he's going to meet with putin afterwards in helsinki and everyone is
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trembling in their boots we might make a deal we might make a deal what deal would that be i mean i find watching what western mainstream to be this hysterical ok because usually don't know what they're talking about but he's using this as making a deal but he's meeting with the nato allies first and i can to think my own reading of this is so you saying what are you going to offer me nato i already told you what i'm interested in oh and by by the way i'm going to be meeting vlad later i think it kind of prompts the europeans to get their act together and how to deal with donald trump because obviously if you read the mainstream press there's a lot of antipathy towards the american president go ahead mark. well i agree in that donald trump is first and foremost a businessman i believe that he ran for president to further his own personal business interests and to expand his business empire let's not forget for many decades he has had long personal ties to both saudi arabia and israel in the first
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six months of his presidency he signed defense contracts of saudi arabia total in hundreds of billions of dollars now that demonstrates he's not going to change american foreign policy but he's going to enhance it if it benefits him now in regard to nato what donald trump has raised the issue about how much nato member states are contributing to the defense budget each year yes but also the british prime minister has done that and other leaders within nato have done that as well but that does not mean he doesn't believe in the objectives of the nato or the remit of the nato when in the last year and a half as i said earlier nato has increased its presence on russia's western borders who gave permission so that it wasn't a reserve money it wasn't stoltenberg nato is america donald trump put his signature on paper to consents to a nato buildup and increased nato buildup on russia's western borders we mustn't be
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under an illusion about donald trump you know ok but i think i'm going to tell here but i think you can make the argument that that is essentially being forced upon the trumpet ministration because of the laughable hysterical illusion called russia yes but actually really outside of our new administration it's not going to get if you are really not getting an argument out of me on that but i tend to think that there are extraneous things going on here ted i think also what trump is doing when it comes to budgets is it well if russia is such a threat to you well then why don't you pay up to mean you know know you. if you're afraid why don't you all month you pay more i mean then if you're not afraid then you know then you have to rethink about the whole nature of nato ok i think we all know all our viewers know that trump ran a campaign with better it having better relations with russia he's he's fulfilling his his campaign promise ok where it will go is anyone's guess go ahead ted.
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thank you. the business about building up the presence on russia's border that's a nato process that requires consensus among all the allies and that's been in play for a lot longer than donald trump's presidency that's the culmination of plans that started about ten or twelve years ago quite frankly even before the incidents in georgia and ukraine and now that has come to fruition but it didn't cost america anything so it's a concession that president trump could easily make because it's not adding to his bottom line very much at all only really fractionally on the margins but here's the thing he's log rolling he's making a concession on that point but he's going to expect logs to be rolled in his direction in turn i think you're exactly right i think he's pushing the two percent of g.d.p. defense spending by everyone across the board in nato on a very serious basis because if countries in nato don't agree to it it's going to add to the republican vote in twenty eighteen and it's going to add to the republican vote in two thousand and twenty when president.

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