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tv   News  RT  November 18, 2018 3:00am-3:31am EST

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the week's biggest stories from artsy may's ministerial melt on the british prime minister to save her and her own government and resignations recriminations a second. piece to consider the national interest and get it back in the withdrawal agreement represents a huge and damaging five year deal that is already dead in the water. newly declassified documents reveal about the cia experimented with a so-called truth serum on the prisoners who resisted all the. interrogation
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techniques also ahead this hour. is really warplanes only. in response to hundreds of missiles being fired from the enclave. live from moscow with the review of the big stories these past seven days this is the weekly n r t international unwelcome. it was a tense week for the british prime minister to resign may be forced to weather a break that storm marked by cabinet resignations and growing calls for a vote of no confidence the party meltdown happened after she unveiled her edu divorced rough plans on whedon's they threatening it would be her deal or no deal
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the choice before us is clear this deal all leave with no deal only all no bricks it. well within hours of revealing her draft brings a plan to cabinet stance oblique to secure its full backing to members or probably quit including the break that secretary that was just the start in total seven members of trees amaze government resigned she also had to face a three hour mauling by m.p.'s. does the prime minister's still intend to put a false choice to parliament between her botched jail or no jail she and the labor party have only one intention that is to frustrate the trade. you are not delivering the brakes people voted for and today you will lose the support of many conservative m.p. . millions of voters across the country we can choose to leave we know to you we
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can risk no breaks it all or we can choose. i. or or we can choose to unite and support the best deal that can be negotiated this deal prime minister comes before us today trying to sell us a deal that is already dead in the water the reason why the people of this country are so fed up he's because they've been made so many promises none of which have been delivered to our own because they cohen's be delivered tomorrow yes difficult and sometimes uncomfortable decisions have had to be made i understand fully that there is some who are unhappy with those compromises but this deal delivers what people voted for in the national interest and we can only secure it if we unite behind the agreement reached in cabinet yesterday it's very hard to see her staying
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perhaps even beyond the weekend it's been a series of cabinet resignation and government minister resignations and parliamentary private secretary resignations even the vice chairman of the conservative party itself has resigned saw it's very hard to see how someone who is dug in behind grex a deal which seems to be almost friendless they say that failure is an orphan and sick. says has your thousand parents world this deal looked very much like an orphan to me today she's come up with this withdrawal agreement that nobody wants it doesn't satisfy the remain as you don't want to leave anyway and it doesn't satisfy the leavers because under it we don't really leave so no one's going to be happy about this i don't believe she can get it through parliament and of course it also has to come through the european parliament ukip any piece will vote against
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it i think other groups will vote against it here so i'd be surprised if it actually got through this parliament either people are deserted the tory party i've seen on twitter people tearing up their cards and taking photographs so this deal doesn't actually satisfy any body or really enlist drama in a row in parliament this week during may's briggs it millstream and now in our tease online series in case you missed it polly boyko takes an alternative look at events at westminster. there was something quick on this bread video if you read it because i have the. chaos in westminster as the cradle of britain's parliamentary democracy tries to get to grips with something to do with rights it. now this time the thing to do with drugs it is very serious and we know this because important ministers to do with
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gregg's it which they should all be including someone in charge of their exit plan is practically a display of confidence in himself. that it is. illegal to look at anyone even when they sleep with. looking. at museums to limit the number of sick. people to. the moment you leave the backstop is. basically a good group of children. to go with we've given the e.u. a backstop. shovel zero seven eight eight seven. there are five hundred pages of something to do with bags that were
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written for elected representatives are hearing inside this called a masterpiece. of political work isn't it strange. that. these guys. have of course tending to know all about it in fact they're talking about what's happening in that we're not watching it it's fair to say that right now. everyone's talking about it without having read it a little bit like the bible. or in peter's. c.z. once the facts don't oh i'm not sure. what's the mike stone. scuse me what's not an either. or what is it you could only read you think that my job to ask the questions. on
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a book i'm browse we should just point out what the backstop is it is to prevent a hard border between the republic of ireland where they're not and you can read more about thoughts on r.t. dot com. now newly declassified documents have revealed a cia program to develop a so-called truth serum it involved drugging prisoners who were able to withstand interrogation techniques project medication was previously undisclosed element of this program in which in addition to the physical and psychological torture that the cia was engaged in several doctors decided to try to figure out whether they could also find some kind of truth serum that they would use against people's will to inject them with and make them talk well morocco's dia of the homes been delving a little deeper into the cia interrogation program and out of all. it wasn't an isolated case or to an accident or oversight was government sanctioned
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systematic ordered there were manuals instructions on how to inflict pain that's not a secret in the immediate aftermath of nine eleven we tortured some folks see torture isn't only frowned upon because it's evil vile it's also ineffective problem number one imagine the cia's surprise when those people that they were putting through hell resisted grew used to it enhanced interrogation techniques were begun within six hours these progress from attention flaps and walling to confinement in both large about five hours and small about one hour book says and finally to the waterboard a z. seems amazingly resistant to waterboard what happened was that the victims and this is problem number two adapted to suffering cia's own words the prisoners began to
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see certain torture procedures as escape a break from other harsher measures what a conundrum here having slapped beaten confined and water boarded these people they were getting results so they opted for something new something like a truth serum problem was problem number three seriously illegal there were at least two legal obstacles approved bush and his medical experimentation on prisoners and a ban on interrogation or use of mind altering drugs the question became moot since the legal department did not want to raise another issue with the department of justice problem number four revulsion cia tortures according to the torturers themselves the doctors others who were present were horrendous to watch the whole. experienced responsible medical officer did was visually and psychologically very
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uncomfortable for all those witnessing it the problem was so widespread and so serious that employees had to be counseled and then checked to make sure they were still all right in the head after everything they had seen and done and they began only hiring people who had a stomach for torture let me be clear on what the cia doctors role was here when the cia tortures were torturing a prisoner for example by bought by waterboarding him say doctors would medically resuscitate the prisoner when he would become unconscious from too much torture what they did was allow the cia to continue torturing people over and over problem number five a lot of problems here journalists activists and juice they kept prying kept sniffing around digging up details and publicizing everything over the government the cia they resisted see for example how the document that revealed all of these
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looked initially when released under the freedom of information act in two thousand and sixteen or a lot of information in it it's almost like two fingers to the press sometimes these court battles took years but they got it out eventually. ancient history you might say we knew most of this plus it happened in the early two thousand lessons have been learned and this torture will never happen again. you think they said what do you think about waterboarding i said i like it a lot don't think it's tough enough. talking of the donald it seems the brawl months between donald trump. is hitting this after the u.s.
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president a lot start out his french counterpart on twitter on tuesday they'd have been or chord meeting in paris during commemorations marking this and tenor of the first world war armistice drum turned over his intentions to create a europe wide army. but it was germany in world wars one and two how did that work out for france. they was starting to learn german in paris before the us came along pay for nato no. thanks makes it very hard for the us to send its winds into france and challenges big tariffs not fact must change the problem is that emanuel suffers from a very low approval rating in france twenty six percent and the employment rate of almost ten percent. make france great to get.
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one petition out but is it will be we need to use whom you can defend it so long moreover with no depending only on the us you know we did exhibits greater sovereignty. and we are. losing you really. prefer. well as well as taunting the french president on twitter double trump also threatened our wine war he claimed america's wines are just as good as the gallic ones although left a sour taste for many in france so we have the temple see the test in the french couple. compulsiveness.
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and the road for sale. for now that they're all going to guess who moved to do this with their local state plant with skill was. that if you build you up a bit in your work. think of it. for coming on october set up the group. could be. that close but the other big bird had to do most of it knew where the lives were dizziness don't get very much they started to technical. and i think. that's a little bit old to be. in the wake of. the circle but the bank would sit with it so the verdict is in kind of
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a push to clear the resilience preferred the wine for making us all her well maybe for once the don't rule towns being vindicated as the wind from his country seems to have trumped that from france so on this occasion from paris we admit defeat but nevertheless we will always weighs a gloss and say so and say show that you can ski auti paris plenty still to come in the program an exchange of fire between israel and militants in gaza home bricks of strikes from both sides ukraine's far right parties summer camp where children are taught to kill coming up stay with us.
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manufacture consent to the public well. when. plus as protect themselves. with the final merry go round be the one percent. we can all middle of the room sick. i don't think the democrats very much moved in and go shape with the republicans or president so i think people are going to have to acknowledge that the united states over the next couple years is going to be consumed even more so by our internal hard hurdle bickering in affairs.
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just coming up to eleven eighteen this sunday morning here in moscow welcome back on monday is really fighter jets struck palestinian targets after militants in launch rockets and mortar shells it appears to be the most intense escalation of hostilities in the region since twenty fourteen and at least seven palestinians one is surely were killed many more were wounded.
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well this really defense minister avigdor lieberman he quits on whedon's stay in protest at the gal's a ceasefire which he described as a capitulation to terror the u.n. security council held an emergency meeting on conflict the. the day before in which these really representative palestinian observer longer heads. security council must only. we condemn in the strongest possible terms this aggression by is that there is no such a thing both sides. that's in the files but is of the splot good which is immoral illegal and inhumane and we will continue to take any measures measure necessary to put the people this round of violence was created as a result of a botched. does that are really military operation in the gaza strip it's very
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interesting for me to hear the israeli ambassador speak about the gaza collision all of the victims except one of this round of escalation where palestinian all of the victims were inside gaza and not outside of the gaza strip israel bombed a t.v. station it bombed residential buildings it leveled them to the ground those are acts that are acts of terror because they did terrorize two million palestinians the latest round of escalation started because of a botched israeli undercover operation three kilometers deep inside gaza that's how the escalation started with the israeli forces killing seven palestinians. to bring attention to another story in ukraine's far right freedom party has organized the children summer camp of zero to some it might seem like more of a boot camp journalist from the associated press news agency visited the site where
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youngsters live under strict rules on learn how to be combat ready to train go explains. now that's what i call a legit summer camp. oh you know about early morning wakeup calls. oh yes right my off. chance that kids will remember for the rest of their lives. was catching march. welcome to the temper of will summer camp and western ukraine it's pretty much a boot camp hidden in the forest the people who set it up are from the national socialist svoboda or freedom party so who can get enrolled officially it's for
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teens but a.p. journalists who went there say they saw children as young as eight here they're being taught how to kill did you do this you know they think you still live. you call then out of system but it's just in the what i was. supposed to call fun things when one of them only two of his more sleep but not only do they get to learn how to take down those who adults are calling russian invaders the kids are also taught to stand up to what the instructors see as degrading trends in the west see that it. is young. you should make use of the. welcome you will feel. such as the. west that was. your should have but. what may seem as an ugly display of far right shaw the
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brainwashing appears to get full support from the local administration well earlier this year kiev splashed some of its bug. on youth projects the goal is to prop up what they call a national patriotic education some of these projects are run by the stream far right. even the nato backed atlantic council think tank tried to raise international wariness with this article and indeed we didn't write that amnesty international's pointing out the issues more than just critical ukraine is sinking into a kill sort of uncontrolled violence posed by radical groups and the total impunity principally no one in the country can feel safe under these conditions and if you're wondering if any of this could actually spill beyond ukraine well just
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lately and f.b.i. agents criminal complaint said ukrainian neo nazis were believed to have trained white supremacists in america just wait till some of these youngsters grow up. some of the background to all of january ukraine passed along recognizing russia as quote an aggressor state and last week the ukrainian vice prime minister said his country is trying to build a strong democracy whereas the kremlin supports populists nationalist movements but journalist brian macconnell who has been monitoring the coverage of the ukraine conflict since it erupted four years ago believes we may have reached a turning point. in reported in the west i mean associated press have gone in there obviously a syndication agency so obviously that you know their copy then has to be reported
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in other mediums but i'm pleasantly surprised that you know outfits like the washington post notably have covered it although some of the usual suspects you know the guardian and outlets i doubt. ignored the story once again but that's not surprising but it's good that for the first time you know many readers and western countries are finally learning something about what's really going on in western ukraine particular with these nationalist groups the way things work in the west is that you need pressure groups you know think tanks to kind of get on these bandwagons and kind of you know almost force the agenda and what's very interesting is here we've got children you know schoolchildren minors being trained to hate being trained to kill being trained to fight and where is amnesty international where is human rights watch i mean they're not interested i mean where is the american embassy what it's supposed moral leadership you know lashing out against this where the british embassy. more of the stories that shipped this week in thirty minutes time but fear not skip it right here in our to international war great program starting in moments stay with us.
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i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter the u.s. has over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime stamped each day. eighty five percent of global wealth you long for the rich eight point six
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percent market saw thirty percent rise last year some with four hundred to five hundred three per second per second and bitcoin rose to twenty thousand dollars. china is building a two point one billion dollar a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only numbers you need to remember is one one does not show you can afford to miss the one and only boom but. nobody could see coming that false confessions would be that prevalent in this place before the conviction . had any interrogations out there what you'll see is promise threat promise threat lie a lie a lie the process of the turkish mr. to put people in just that frame of mind make the most comfortable makes them want to get out and don't take no for an answer don't accept their denials she said if i were poor barry said i stayed there i
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would be home by that time the next day there's a culture of odd accountability and police officers know that they can engage in misconduct that has nothing to do with all the crap. so i walk into. my own body i have a good body. in law found in self in the public limelight and he became this crowd into a spokesman for the handicapped children. over the years elton would make appearances on telephones across the country.
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not better than other people. because i'm not a handicapped person. or people get it wrong. they look at alvin loni thank god it's tremendous how you can do things with this. well i suppose if you look at your feet it's tremendous but these are my feet these are my hands too and i have been doing it forever these are not tremendous feet is the only thing i've got so when i pick up a cup and i have a drink you know. wow what a thrill what it is i do think. i thought and i was going to have to be a nine i didn't think that i was going to go on dates i didn't know what was going to happen and that that's not how it happened i had
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a great high school run i mean you know i had a lot of fun and i fancy i had too much fun and if you're like me and my friends you drive around and look for course and you go skinny and that's both we did for entertainment not have a problem with girls i could always get very nice girls beautiful girls intelligent girls but they couldn't get the stupid one. and i wanted the stupid. one night stand but that i'd never had the cheapest she was wearing glasses i didn't notice. but i found my know why when she was sixteen and. maybe you call it a lack of opportunity but i'm still whether. she was long and not stupid.

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