Skip to main content

tv   Documentary  RT  January 26, 2019 9:30pm-10:01pm EST

9:30 pm
practical. but in your eyes. so it's not just in the military use ocean to support it we know william is just one of the old me the only leader i'm not. so it. was a piece of the school board. just him a part of what i get there but in no way but. on the phone fixed amongst the windows me with susie it takes to make. a national system. unless you mean it's not. supposed to be a big if we act we would sort of the response. to me because you knew seemed up and you know the look of clint you just you know and i guess those. years that you play in the in the lead you disappear you know the same so send them. up in the back of the and. get a little nose and when you want to pay for
9:31 pm
a bison you can get on mate and you're sure. i'm concerned about the expansion of nato nato has expanded into thirteen countries up to the borders of russia thirteen countries at that. shit way not. these they do in the midst i mean what she. did early spring of two thousand and fourteen eastern ukraine was also buzzing with protests against the new authorities in kiev this region with a population close to russia geographically and culturally feared that the ultra right leanings of the newly formed government would bring meal nationalism to their lands. and they have their reasons. the status of the russian language in ukraine has been a stumbling block for many years implementing russian as a second stay. language was one of the main campaign promises the president
9:32 pm
recruited in the pulpit in two thousand and twelve the government passed a law making it the second official language in the southern and eastern parts of ukraine the areas where the russian speaking population makes up a majority ukrainian nationalist groups initiated massive protests opposing the law and observing viewer might see some familiar faces there on a five month. part of our last. on february twenty third two thousand and fourteen the very next day after the regime change the new government voted for in a no meant of the official status of the russian language and even though later this decision was vetoed by the acting president alexander turchynov it still sent a message and a powerful one this alarmed the russian speaking cities of eastern ukraine and people took to the streets to show their disagreement was in response on its
9:33 pm
conducted their own demonstrations when the two parties would meet it was always tense and eventually it led to tragedy. one person died and over fifty people were wounded in clashes during a pro russian march protesting the new government in kiev. on april sixth the crimean scenario began repeating eastern ukraine where protesters seized government buildings. and the next day april seventh they proclaimed don't yet see people's republic kiev replied by announcing the beginning of an anti-terrorist operation in eastern ukraine. by that time the international media was screaming about a russian invasion in ukraine russia could now be on the verge of invading ukraine but strong words state only in the media the ukrainian authority. never announced
9:34 pm
a war like situation why i.m.f. cannot give money to countries engaged in ongoing war shango. will go to too much money was already invested in ukraine to stop half way i've invested over five billion dollars to assist ukraine in these and other goals that will ensure a secure and prosperous and democratic train. new democracy just. some of them but obviously the funds had to keep coming and the conflict had to keep going. and more bloody and deadly. earnest. as parties from both sides were using more sophisticated and lethal weapons.
9:35 pm
through a new deal. you know that's really kind of. the world seem to busy welcoming this new democracy in kiev. to notice what was being done as it spread its wings over the country. many in southern ukraine had been viewing the revolution with concern. and an anti mind on movement formed in the city of odessa in early january two thousand and fourteen the protesters set up their camp in front of the trade union house a building which would soon become a monument to a massacre of its own it's difficult to overestimate the importance of odessa it is
9:36 pm
strategically located on the black sea and it's ukraine's largest seaport it's not surprising that ukraine's new authorities were watching the situation unfolding there with growing alarm. more and more of odessa as people were joining the anti my don movement at the same time as events in eastern ukraine were heating up. the new ukrainian government didn't have the power to wage war on too many fronts if odessa were to join the growing uprising in the eastern regions it would seriously complicate the situation. this rebellion had to be extinguished immediately and at any cost and that cost was high. on may second two thousand and fourteen soccer fans flocked to the center of odessa city for the ukrainian championship match surprisingly a great number of these fans who descended into odessa just the night before also turned out to be fighters from the my don self-defense units along with members of
9:37 pm
radical organizations from all parts of ukraine that these. law. these families and asked armed and shouting nationalist mottos began disturbances in the center of the city as they marched to the end time i don tent encampments where they attacked. the end time mind on protesters sought shelter in the trade union house but it was a track mind on supporters started throwing molotov. cocktails into the building until it was engulfed in flames. people burned to death inside or trying to escape. fire station was less than a mile away it took almost half an hour for firefighters to arrive when they finally did the damage had been done. but here's an intriguing fact just a few days before those dreadful events
9:38 pm
a messenger from my don andriy pair o. b. made a visit to odessa it's an interesting coincidence that some of the people he met with in odessa were seen at the scene that fateful day. but not everyone was mourning on the popular political talk show schuster live the news about the people burned alive in odessa was welcomed with a long round of applause for you. to see just to just put it. on its facebook page the right sector announced the events of may second a proud moment in national history an official investigation into this sad event has been going on now for nearly two years and it's yet to reach a conclusion but it seems the experts and all the information they needed from the very beginning. really cute.
9:39 pm
it looks like a desa really is a very important piece of real estate as it was on with a very special new governor appointed on may thirtieth of two thousand and fifteen . old friend of the united states and born and raised in ukraine. neighboring country georgia down there in georgia a quick look at his biography gives one an understanding that he's been groomed for a special mission. mr saakashvili received a u.s. state department scholarship and he worked for a new york law firm which represented the organization commodity a group that appeared earlier when we learned about the color revolutions and we're dealing with democratic bloodless revolution this is the revolution of roses and
9:40 pm
this is me kyle saakashvili with camara busy overthrowing the legitimately elected president eduard shevardnadze. but. soon after the rose revolution blossomed foley georgia announced its intentions to join nato and plant fresh nato military bases in the fertile soil right on russia's border never ever will give our freedom and independence never ever will give any piece of our territory saakashvili is mission was accomplished at least with his friends and nato the georgian populace wasn't quite as happy though in two thousand and seven they took to the streets to voice discontent and mr saakashvili responded with force. the people's discontent. saakashvili party lost parliamentary elections and the opposition took control he
9:41 pm
sat this means that the parliamentary majority and new government the president. decided not to wait for the results of the president's election and fled the country in october two thousand and thirteen. you know world a big part of the new lot and conspiracy it's time to wake. to dig deeper to hit the stories that made history media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door. and shouting past each other it's tolerance for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now we're watching closely watching the hawks. you are you know more than fifty percent of the day his test your screen and your
9:42 pm
screen is controlling you through this little incentives and hey you know robot on the shelf you know play my favorite song and i left feel so good oh so warm inside you know meanwhile your bank accounts being drained by wall street and you know you know your net worth is collapsing in your money's being destroyed and all the relationships are hardly dysfunctional and you're living in a frickin president you have no right to assemble no rights of free speech but you're feeling good about it because this is extraordinarily. it's subversive it's hull ations it's the state gone amok. it's. in the united states we proactively require brominated flame retardants to be put into furniture and carpeting among other things and that's resulted in extremely higher levels of those flame retardants in the human bodies of americans
9:43 pm
as opposed to europeans and that ultimately has affected the cognitive outcomes of literally a generation of american children. i happened to be interviewed and there for me to understand what happened here the p.m.c. to a media or small contractor to win the award the p.m.'s he took aim here was a contract to train a unit and to create a from scratch and then to go into combat and the g.p. limited the stick. in two thousand and fourteen saakashvili refused summons to appear in court as a witness in several criminal cases later that same year he was accused of misuse of power and investment. saakashvili wound up in the u.s. and soon his friends in washington found him
9:44 pm
a new assignment. mikail actively supported my down and very soon was rewarded with a high position in the new ukrainian government first as the president's counselor and then as the governor of odessa the day before taking this position he renounced his citizenship to georgia the country of the birth and became a ukrainian citizen. on the scene that asked others gordon downie in the exhorted. who are them to have done in the way exhorting that road. as they say the battle is worth the blood both literally and figuratively. now do i not somebody affordable by the us out. last thought on my. chest but i have. geoffrey pyatt the u.s. ambassador to ukraine paid a visit to saakashvili just a month after he took office in odessa it is law and the old last administration is
9:45 pm
delivering results and you raise your voice to see a steady flow of embassy in washington visitors coming here the meeting was fruitful and geoffrey generous. no matter how well saakashvili is job goes it looks like he shouldn't be worried about his own finances on his facebook page he posted an official document showing that the new governor of odessa gets a pretty penny from washington almost two hundred thousand dollars a year for comparison the governor of maine gets seventy thousand dollars a year. so if odessa became a new u.s. state it would be at the top of the list mr saakashvili should feel right at home in his newly adopted country he is best of friends with fellow color revolutionary leader viktor yuschenko who is the godfather of his son.
9:46 pm
but then not that i'm of the school bus and i listen to should be since i should be at the post but you walk us kind of being it's just a d.c. at them the if someone is going to. even though there's a double chooses to show. it when you posted the but the least of those three is if i did it with you but i'd have to stand on the list at this point that business doing this it would get enough of this almost just in the body of the butt of c.n.n. and the special political bonus does we were able to contain such. a war once launched doesn't choose its victims we are just learning at this hour that malaysian airlines has now confirmed that it has lost contact with one of its planes plane was indeed shot down by a missile while flying at a high altitude over eastern ukraine near the russian border two hundred ninety eight revised number of souls on board all feared dead it was a murder it was
9:47 pm
a crime there's been this odd nonchalance about pursuing the answers there was a report a very limited report put out a few months after the event but since then they said the next report will be on the first anniversary of the event but you deal with a criminal investigation before becomes a cold case so there's been this curious element of why is there not greater pressure from both the media and the the western governments to answer these questions but even without any answers the fingers were pointed immediately that's not an accident. that is happening because a russian support evidence indicates that the plane was shot down by a surface to air missile that was launched from an area that is controlled by russian backed separatists inside of ukraine usual. to put up a national distaste for. the malaysian boeing wasn't the first plane to play
9:48 pm
a significant part in american russian relationships on september first one nine hundred eighty three korean airlines flight seven from new york to seoul via anchorage was shot down by a soviet interceptor aircraft over the territory of the u.s.s.r. in the sea of japan there was absolutely no justification legal or moral for what the soviets did the tragedy of the korean bowing was considered a perfect occasion to demonstrate the nato military power within dangerous proximity to the soviets on november second one thousand nine hundred eighty three nato launched able archer attend a command post exercise simulating a conflict escalation culminating in a nuclear attack it was followed by placing pershing two nuclear missiles in europe . what reagan didn't take into consideration was the paranoid overreaction of the soviets. a recently declassified us intelligence report shows
9:49 pm
that for the first time since the cuban missile crisis the world was close to nuclear war. just like in one thousand nine hundred three the malaysian boeing crash was leveraged against the enemy. a new wave of sanctions hit russia mediately after the tragedy. the united states is imposing new sanctions in key sectors of the russian economy. year and three months later the dutch safety board published a report that is itself flats m.h. seventy crashed because of. i have three well for em or have they today just outside of the airplane avesta left side of the cockpit the report didn't blame any specific group or person and estimated a very wide area of three hundred twenty kilometers as a zone from which the missiles fired at the same time the russian producer of boog
9:50 pm
missiles day conducted its own independent investigation. that they speeded me up the fullest. lou of the delegates i mean if you like it the nist is up a school during the experiment they blew up a retired airliner with a bouquet missile and came to the conclusion that the malaysian plane was brought down by the older type of missiles not used by russia anymore but still in the possession of ukraine the company claims that the missile was launched from the territory controlled by the ukrainian military. one would expect that these controversial results would again stir up public interest in the investigation but the tragedy of malaysian flight m h seventeen at already played its role in the big geopolitical game therefore it was soon forgotten the goal was achieved after the third wave of sanctions hit russia the tensions between the two countries skyrocketed so the question presents itself are we truly witnessing the
9:51 pm
beginning of cold war two point zero and if so what are the chances to survive at this time. in one thousand nine hundred seven the bulletin of atomic scientists introduce the doomsday clock. it represents a countdown to global nuclear annihilation. in one thousand nine hundred. three during the height of the cold war it came its closest to midnight as the superpowers were creating massive nuclear arsenal spent most our of america's ever expanding atomic weapons program as the world began to grasp the insane danger of nuclear warfare and took measures to control the arms race the situation steadily
9:52 pm
improved. in one thousand nine hundred one the doomsday clock was at its furthest from midnight seventeen minutes. the time of hope was short lived though as the world has become more and more unstable. but in two thousand and fifteen the bulletin of atomic scientists moved the clock to just three minutes to midnight stay on check to climate change in a nuclear arms race resulting from modernization of huge ourselves pose extraordinary and undeniable threats to the continued existence of humanity. the united states and russia have embarked on massive programs to modernize their nuclear arsenals. undermining the existing nuclear weapons treaties. the clock ticks now at just three minutes to midnight because international leaders
9:53 pm
are failing to perform their most important duty ensuring and preserving the health and vitality of human civilization.
9:54 pm
9:55 pm
perfect there someone off moving inside of me by controlling my body.
9:56 pm
the byproduct of that drug is because like severe depression. because it will meet him into a zombie it's crazy. you know we don't have to do anything it's not our father she's crazy and all that. secures connor it's a long time ago. we settled the face up to hear something back in the pits and that if these islands off there but the reality is there may still be a shit and. have it in this fine lair of micro plastics why don't you bury.
9:57 pm
the biggest thing and shut is that we've never had an empty. like the contents of the something of an albatross. people obviously come in they just throw them into the water as disposal it may not be harmful for that little fish that eats one fragment a classic but once it makes its way up to us in the food chain it's getting to levels that are harmful. us veterans who come back from war often tell the same stories. were going after the people who were killing civilians they were not interested in the wellbeing of their own soldiers either there already is several generations of them so i just got this memo from the circulating branches off that says we're going to attack and destroy the government and seven countries in five years americans pay for the wars
9:58 pm
with them money on those with dives if we were willing to go into harm's way and willing to risk being killed for a war surely we can risk some discomfort or uneasiness for. me and i mean i did you go where you know you're. going to. those whom you're most of the best to be in yours and yours are always notable to. but i'm not going to believe him you. know why did the white. people. leave then you know. that's one of those little.
9:59 pm
things will get. you know it's there you know you. join me every day on the alex simon sure and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm show business i'll see you then. the country's gone into a nihilistic fever just want to thank you and we got to hit the road and get out the traveling across america to find what makes america take them to charlotte is the genius of this place especially american hero this is it we've come a point around which element is done something we always are on the margins something. called culture spending forty hours.
10:00 pm
where starting last with is going to headed east into the swamp we're going into the belly of the beast and i think i want to leave now doesn't do anymore no no it may be completely different but the end of this journey. to. washington urges the un to recognize a venezuelan self-proclaimed a leader won that why go but is met with opposition from russia and venezuela. former president illegitimate mafia state how indeed can any self respecting government also believe justifies supporting the poisonous regime if anything goes to present a threat to peace it is the shameless and aggressive actions of the united states and their allies.

35 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on