Skip to main content

tv   Cross Talk  RT  July 8, 2019 7:30pm-8:01pm EDT

7:30 pm
different path when it comes to russia some are calling it the new thought also china calls out the u.k. regarding hong kong indeed old colonial habits die hard. cross talking some real news i'm joined by my guest here in moscow and he is a professor of the higher school of economics as well as author of the decay of western civilization and the resurgence of russia and we're also joined by marcus papadopoulos in london he's the editor of politics 1st magazine our gentleman cross-talk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want and i always appreciate let me go to markets in london an interesting phenomenon that's been going on now for a number of months or maybe since the election of donald trump but we have we just recently had blood and we are putin in italy meeting the pope in a tally and leaders of the parliamentary assembly of the council of europe that i'm a big fan of the organization has finally given the russian delegation. voting
7:31 pm
rights back and other. elements that have to do with their membership germany is determined that the north stream too will be finished the gas pipeline we have president mccrone speaking very bluntly that. europe needs a better relationship with russia i mean add this all up it is a thaw of some sorts isn't it go ahead marcus. well peter i believe that there is a distinct possibility that once britain exits the european year then brussels and moscow could improve that relationship now why is that well firstly britain has long been perceived by many in paris and berlin as america's trojan horse brinson relays sensitive information from what is discussed in the european union to washington and secondly it was the
7:32 pm
efforts it was the last being on behalf of america like britain in 2004 same that push that puts enormous enormous stress pressure on the germans and the french to put a new sanctions on russia the germans and the french and the italians have a very good relationships that we've russia and they did not want to place those sanctions because of threats and in part they relented and they placed those sanctions on russia now in 2019 britain is scheduled to leave the it will that is where there will be an opportunity for russia and the european union to improve their relations and it's certainly it's in the interests of the e.u. to include fallacious that russia why because of the message amounts of trade and investment between the you're hearing in it and russia and also the you does not
7:33 pm
want to be on the front line of a potential war because of america animal so it's written and if you're saying this to me earlier here i mean we were in the european union ideals with russia though the british like to always be 1st in line to be have a hard line with pace with breaks that coming right now the french the germans the a town. maybe not necessary like countries like poland or the baltic republics but they're beginning to realize that there's going to be a new page that has to be turned here and they want to take the initiative they want to be able to propose instead of just having to have to deal with ending american sanctions which as marcus pointed out was never really particularly popular on the continent and i think there's also a sentiment now that the sanctions will sooner or later fall apart because there's a growing opposition to it and with the british leaving us well i think there is
7:34 pm
there's an interest now to negotiate how this confrontational and rather than simply be forced to see the sanction fall apart so at least it will use it in some form of negotiations but i think a big part of this is also increasing recognition that sanctions have failed because sanctions you sanctions are a constant european union far more than it has russia very much so and what the sanctions are put in for 2 reasons the 1st will be you want to change the policy behavior of the other side but in this instance what so what tends to be neglected is that the west was active just revisionist power and russia has been the status quo that is it reacted to the toppling in the ukraine so to tell down to the territory well that position it already had a place like hermia it stop the west from toppling governments in syria so by being the status quo power if you want to change the behavior it's going in forest for surrender so it's not stand in the way of western expansionism so russia's. drawn this red line and just try to be patient so you can't really do much in the aspect
7:35 pm
of the 2nd purpose will be simply to punish russia to weaken its economy and it really get into irrelevance but the problem here is it would have worked 20 years ago but now china russia is looking towards china and other partners in the east so it's diversifying its technology this industry is seen as home station core the most important substitution import substitution also developing its own cap us to discover abilities to diversifying its use of currencies transaction systems to. with banks so across the board economic connectivity with the west is broken so now coming to the recognition we constantly have this escalation dominance where we want they can choose to reestablish relations with russia because a lot of this trade a lot of this economic connectivity is ordered lost and it's gone to the chinese so it's there is time to reconsider you know what have we actually done here what are we have achieved and look for a better path so let's go back to london marcus i mean how much is this a reaction to donald trump this is coming into play here i mean the we see the
7:36 pm
united states with donald trump demanding that europe relegate its energy security to the whims of american energy companies which of course. leaders like angela merkel if she goes out the door her the people that will of the woman that will follow her is going to have the same thing because germany is defending its national interest i mean this is some kind of tipping point right now where the europeans are realizing they have to defend their national interests because they're men and their national interest is not being defended by the united states we're actually just the opposite he wrote in their national interest markets in london. well stemming from the ukraine crisis in 2004 saying little ations between the european union and america then became extents even under barack obama but it is absolutely true to say that since donald trump answer at the white house that tense relationship between brussels and washington
7:37 pm
has been activated all the more so and you know but surely way donald trump has actually pushed the european union at close to the european union that really shot itself in the foot by place and i sanctions on russia in $6006.00 i helped you then and i still hold. that there is a use such sanctions would cool short term pain for. russia and they did. it gave an opportunity to the best so the rest. which was an old sense but for the rest well it's in the us union they are still suffering some won't be know yet so you ask ask the polish ask all farmers ask them what happened to them ok exactly you know you know and. glenn i mean i have been in a bizarre way actually been a supporter of the of the saying sions because of the reasons that mark has just told us i mean how they lived here for so long and up to 2014 i heard
7:38 pm
successive governments saying we need reform we need to modernize we need to do so many things in 2014 the gauntlet was thrown down they had to do all of those things that marcus just told us this is made russia stronger and russia's position musician is stronger and interesting lee as marcus pointed out u.s. policy is driving china and russia together and now as we say in this program here it's pushing europe to be closer to russia this is a net feel for the united states of play wanted to take on china and russia and the european union all at the same time and strong said bolton we want to fight wars all simultaneously all over the world ok that's a losing proposition yeah but you know also. in 2014 when the us i was able to put pressure and come in syrup to it but that was by their own words by the way to twist europe's arm in order to accept sanctions on russia this was under the
7:39 pm
obama administration which was more measured now since then what has happened while americans are pushing their principle trying to twist their arm again to go against a trade war against the chinese they're pushing them to target the iranians to break the treaty they also helped try to get aboard with the venezuela which hasn't really panned out to a rival so and also now of course putting sanctions against european some self or at least raising tire of so. so there's all this new frontline so i think for the appeals to keep all keep open the front line against the russia you know in unity with united states it's i think it's correct to point out i think it is less appealing now than it was in the past and then in regards to the to the benefits of russia i tend to agree with that as well like it's been painful for russia as well the sanctions a lot of investment the should have been making a has been made but you know the silver lining would be that. russia is kind of the
7:40 pm
industrialized us became too dependent on exports of natural resources and simply became too convenient to import to manufacture goods develop technology instantly there was a lot of complacency is very much so and you see that russia has been forced to to reverse this to develop its own industries to modernize so. so a large extent this is been quite beneficial in that it was very hard to get the business community on board to do these painful reforms but now thanks to the you know the europeans and americans these reforms for essentially forced upon russia and a lot of good has been achieved now a lot of. industries didn't have in the past are now growing so we give 30 seconds to the markets from a dish it out. there is whilst there is a distinct possibility of an encouragement in relations between the e.u. and russia one must never underestimate the and american late retreat that the euro
7:41 pm
yeah it's an economic and security so the americans have the have the potential to scott any charts and improvements in relations between the e.u. and russia well i'm not so not and i'm not in that pessimistic here i think there's a lot of things in play here all right we've run out of time here we're going to go to a short break and after that short break we'll continue our discussion on some real news staying with our team. during the great depression which i'm old enough to remember there was most of my family were working. there wasn't it was bed you know much worse objective listen today but there was an expectation of the things were going to get better. of there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the 10
7:42 pm
principles of concentration of wealth and power. reduced democracy at tax holiday out engineer elections manufacture consent and other principles according to know on. one set of rules for the rich opposite set of rules for poor . that's what happens when you put her into the hands of a narrow sector of will which will is dedicated to increasing power virtue of just as you'd expect one of the most influential intellectuals of our time speaks about the modern civilization of america. welcome to max kaiser financial survival guide. looking forward to your pension account. yanks this is what happens to pensions in britain.
7:43 pm
you watch kaiser report. what a whole existence to do something to. put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. or somehow want to. have to go right to the press this is what the 43 in the morning can't be good. interested always in the waters about how. they said. this is a story about what happens auster a stray bullet kills a young girl in the streets. what happens to her family daughters in florida another mother daughter is very innocent and terry is meaning this is with your head what happens to the community the public was screaming for
7:44 pm
a scapegoat the police needed a scapegoat so why not choose a 19 year old black kid with a criminal record who better to pin this on than him and what happens in court be. shocked shocked as far as i feel. we don't know still just for the. end of this unfortunately you. will still not know what childress. welcome back to crossfire where all things are considered i'm peter lavelle to remind you we're discussing some real names.
7:45 pm
group are going to what's going on in hong kong just refresh our memory here what was democracy like in hong kong when it was a colony of the u.k. go ahead. well the response of the british governments to the violent protests in hong kong is a reminder that the british imperial mindsets did not die with the british empire and watson invests it well we live in sedate where britain which committed some of the worst genocides in living history such as the native american such as the irish such as the out originate and politicians and journalists today of consider both conservative and liberal alike a genocide denies op lecturing china about human rights in hong kong hong
7:46 pm
kong is an intake part busy of china but it was once a china it was once a british colony and let's just remember how the british acquired its hong kong yeah they acquired this chinese region through the 1st opium war in which the british empire went to war against china in order to achieve 2 objectives name relating to floods the chinese markets we've o.p.m. and to steal chinese territories so there is no reason why and he went in china should take any lectures about human rights from british politicians and british journalists and let's just look at what those protesters in hong kong ok protest a big issue which would say people who have committed crimes in hong kong sent to the mainland for trial but there's nothing wrong with that if someone commits a crime in jersey or england say then they could be sent to the british mainland
7:47 pm
for trial you know the channel islands are parts of britain hong kong is possible china what happens in hong kong is an internal chinese matter and has nothing to do with anyone well there it is if it would break british politicians seem to feel differently and claim it when i find you not. i'm all for peaceful protest absolutely ok and i'd like to point out at the protests of the yellow vests are treated much more harshly then the protesters in hong kong maybe a topic for another program here but you have these protesters breaking in to parliament violently and then they hoisted colonial flag what is going on with that . well it's. obvious that goes beyond what you would call peaceful protests. i guess that's where some of this apocrypha comes in you mentioned france but they're also the incident that catalonia where they actually if people had their heads cracked open to the point brutal for wanting to vote so so in europe we have
7:48 pm
our own issues as well and all of this start of course with the extradition bill that citizens can be extradited to mainland china but in the european union you have similar extradition and these are you know between actual states while this happens internally with. your within china so. there is obviously some hypocrisy there but it also goes back to the way you frame the language because when we talk about what happened in france we talk about the rioters when we talk about hong kong they're protesters but obviously the 2nd they broke in and the storm parliament. the protester what about the flag thing that's what i don't get ok i mean they it is universally internationally recognized as a one country we have these 2 systems one country is this a call to return to colonial rule well i guess that made it more inappropriate for the british to respond because by hosting the british colonial flag obviously
7:49 pm
that's a challenge to the return of britain's colonial possession and returning it back to china so for the british for he didn't have to mark you see they were a colony no ok i think. let me go back to markets here i mean this is what you know i find what will during here i mean they there are these protesters some of them very violent are are calling for a modicum of democracy or rule of law everything that you know you and i could agree on here but they what they want to look back to the colonial period will explain to me how democratic was under the british i think our viewers would like to know. well in terms of how democratic concomitant was when it was a british imperial possession it's quite simple the people in china in hong kong with dictates it to buy london yes of course the british they built an interest and
7:50 pm
economic infrastructure in hong kong they introduced the civil service but that was only that was only to a paid people in hong kong who was in the british was long wanted at the end of the day was always implemented at the end of the day in hong kong but hong kong is a chinese territory and it was savagely taken away by the british so in china and these politicians and journalists in britain who are coming to the eights all those violent protests this well i have a question for them how do they responds if a protest has entered forcibly entered the house of commons and ransacked it i don't think they would be showing any symptoms feats of better there is no difference whatsoever what happens in hong kong and i actually said peter i'm all in favor of peaceful protests but those protests were violent they showed no
7:51 pm
respect for chinese law they showed no respect for the parliament spilled in and also as you rightly said i thought it was very telling how those violent protests this unveil to the rest of the well hong kong's british colonial era fleck you know clinton but this is really a function of the domestic british politics here ok and looking back to a different era ok of. british rule in colonial rule i mean in their harkening back to this i mean and they i mean this is we is this an internal political affair for the conservative party. i think for 2 reasons one is you have that the internal power battle now for who's going to. next prime minister and i think the fact that jeremy hunt is the one who went forward. it's quite telling because he doesn't really have a chance against boris johnson so. really stands out as this great statesman so i
7:52 pm
think for him to kind of elevate britain up there putting china in his british imperialism ok is that a winner and i guess the other 2nd appeal which would be in britain at the moment there is this sense of relative decline the do have. they are trying to find their new place in the world especially with working with bricks it's so are they going to be. relevant in the years to come so i guess bringing britain back to greatness what better example take them back to the opium or when they essentially could tell china what to do and assert their sovereignty over chinese territory so i would agree this probably some colonial mindset they're still ruling i would agree that the that they do have this treaty in terms of the transition china in the 50 years that they should gradually transition us they were supposed to have a certain autonomy obviously china wants to speed this up to bring them into
7:53 pm
a unitary state yes you don't want to drift away so you want to integrate the country further faster while britain obviously seeks to possibly slow it down and. even harness some loyalties within hong kong towards british rule as opposed to from beijing so there is. the colonial aspect a definitely you can't deny. it go back to markets in london i mean it seems to me that you know the a lot of the reaction particularly in the media is that. the legitimacy of chinese sovereignty is in question which is unthinkable for beijing that their sovereignty is of less value somehow then western sovereignty in the u.k. for example marcus. well let me make an observation. i have long felt a few that this sense of anglo-saxon superiority is not just imbedded in the
7:54 pm
conservative can't imprison it is also imbedded in the liberal camp in britain the conservative party its politicians and its members hold very dear to the british empire the liberal camp of course it's likes to criticise the british empire in some respects but when it comes to a country like china they will always play out what they think is the best form of rule for the former british colony of hong kong and that is a british system so that just reinforces a lot of help feels like that this sense of anglo-saxon superiority luns through the book that runs through the brains of liberals and conservatives alike in britain you know in the end where you know it's going to say the human advocating for common human rights a common humanity if you want the irrespective of national borders there's some
7:55 pm
virtue to this obviously to stand up for the democracy and you know civil rights of others but the problem is it it's also very instrumental to undermine the sovereignty of other states and forget that in china sri just like to bet you know the cia was operating there for 2 decades and they'll check them out so i don't elaine is brother on the cia's payroll the common knowledge that there was to uphold autonomy and even push for independence this also because their love for tibetan culture and thing it was because they use a tool to weaken and adversary so this is their own end that this incentive to win . it when they were resetting relations with china under it kissing or for using against the soviet union so so like all this claim calls for the markets they obviously have that underlying power interest driving at the time of them saw. it. over the other that the reason why we would criticise chinese transgressions so much more easily than the western ones is you should not because the extent of the
7:56 pm
violation of human rights rather will be more the power interest that is. and i think that's definitely one of the driving this is going to go back to london marcus 40 seconds go to you will finish it off go ahead. well there are a number of areas in china about that but if the americans and the british see as an achilles heel the country and the whole want is peace change and close friends which is a mainly. which has a problem with islamists terrorists and chinese officials i've spoken to are quite aware that the americans and the british all supporting yes separatist islamist groups in that region as a way of trying to wait at the chinese economy and thereby weaken the hold on its own seat in china ok we ended up on that note there that's all the time we have here many thanks to my guests i'm thanks to our viewers for watching us here on to see you next time remember cross-talk rules.
7:57 pm
will not obey the voice of the lord your god will be careful to do all these commandments and the statutes which i come on here this day in all these courses shall come upon you and overtake you want to lead and then the white people list only property and therefore it must be returned to black people if they get rid of whites only problems will go away. we can be the president of the fleet the. wide farmers in south africa every single day. people being tortured to death expression the elderly people in the. mania somebody. like bin and that nice white horse will find themselves affected by credit then we are. going to win the playing fields and greens out all
7:58 pm
blacks and a lot of them. what are you going to have for dinner. trudi be doing it they need to be asking for miami bad seeds both things to grow civil war in south africa using never to. one good profit from one wars or any chong not be in the job of your end to get to. eat. between a. the problem of the financial system costs from wall street throughout the rest of the world was so big that not just one central bank could make money cheap enough could create enough artificial money by itself and so the fed did collude did work together with the european central bank with the bank of england with the people's
7:59 pm
bank of china later that was kind of separate story with the bank of japan and so forth to create enough money to put into the financial system to keep it safe for itself and ultimately what that did is a transferred all of that money into the banks into financial assets into burgeoning stock markets like like a ton of sort of crack into an attic up and up and i never took it away and that meant someone else was going to pay on the other side and the people that paid on the other side was everyone else in. the 11 and. the the. the a. i mean what do we. really want to see them be the same.
8:00 pm
the u.s. president says he'll no longer deal with the british ambassador in washington. described as. dysfunctional. protesters gather for a 2nd day in the georgian capital tbilisi to vent their anger over a local t.v. host. of the russian president. u.s. launches a new strategy to counter what it calls the kremlin supply line influence. of the initiative and to russian propaganda. your. 7 year old boy in the u.s. state of texas is caught up in a bitter custody battle between.

41 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on