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tv   News  RT  March 28, 2023 8:00am-8:30am EDT

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ah ah, halogens breaks down us narrative on its non involvement in crews around the world . in fact, presenting well elaborated lists of washington's merits brought in classes growing the streets of israel, the nation security chief pledges to push through controversial judicial reforms while prime minister netanyahu postpone them the decision until the summer and with goldman sachs giving the u. s. recession of 35 percent amid growing economic turbulence,
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countries seek to ditch the dollar in their bilateral trade. we debates why countries are increasingly choosing alternative trade currency. u. s. has shot itself in the foot. it has created the situation where countries are in revulsion to american foreign policy and want to get as far away as possible from the u. s. normal people will be attracted to the alternatives being created by china, russia, and the brakes done with go to the world you're watching. the international mine is peter scott here with the top stories when it passed to be 8 pm this tuesday. thanks for joining us. now the public version of the a i driven chat g p t. when asked about us involvement in crews around the world gives an impressive list. among this mentioning the 2014 my done uprising in ukraine,
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the u. s. government. back to the ousting of ukraine's president victor yanna cove is shanna coo, that bra pro western leaders to power autonomy live. now in the studio, is archie correspondence an residence? a i expert, steve sweeney and steve, what's going on? well, peter chap, g, p t is perhaps the best known of the artificial intelligence boards around at the moment. and people have used it to write serious essays, some of even used it to generate new stories and others use animal casual white homework. i've had homework has also been done by it. yes, indeed, it has. and some of used to rewrite shakespeare's plays in the style of yoda, the star wars character. but of course it was one of these requests to write an essay about the u. s. involvement in coups around the world that generated this embarrassing. and these embarrassing for the west response about the u. s. involvement in the in ukraine in 2014. now the u. s. on its allies of course, deny this, this turn of events and they insisted roch's special military operation was an
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unprovoked attack. but at chat gpc when asked, they answered that, but then president of ukraine, yellow cove, which was i was did in a cood brought pro western leaders at to power. now this turn of events came off to he refused, or he backed down from an agreement which would have seen closer integration with the european union and the west. and that provoked fall like forces on the streets . and perhaps most famously thought the u. s. official. victorian newton dishing out cookie, saying, we are with you, bottom, bing, i, i another artificial intelligence bought. and this also produce a detailed timeline of the use involvement in the coon essentially said that his aim was to contain, and we can russia is what they said. the coolness aftermath have also effected the security and stability of the water region, as well as the global order. the crisis has increased the risk of a wider war or a nuclear confrontation between the united states and russia,
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which both have troops and weapons deployed near ukraine's borders. the. * crisis has also undermined the principles of international law and sovereignty, as well as the norms of corporation and dialogue among major powers. so see where else has the us involving cuz well, perhaps it's easier to lift those places where it hasn't been involving in. cuz i think perhaps most famously and the u. s. was involved in operation condo which saw the packing of a death squads and the overthrowing of regimes that would being hostile to us interests across latin america, particularly places like argentina where there was a dirty war that saw tens of thousands of dissidents and trade unionists disappeared and killed often here in a brutal fashion dropped into the sea. and of course, many were tortured him. or we can look over again at chile, where salvador allende a self declared marxist and his progressive government was overthrown again as a seen as a threat to us interest. and we saw the imposition of august
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a pinch i had dictates under again whom tens of thousands disappeared. of course, in the initial stages of that qu, the chilean singer a victor gerra was one of those who was tortured. he had his fingers broken on his tongue, cuts out before he was killed in the football stadium in santiago and in the middle east. of course, it's been involved there with the ousting of the m. a rainy leader mohammed motto deck, who was going to nationalize oil, which of course generated a lot of concern amongst the west of the c. i am along with britain of course were a baton his overthrown and they the pro western, the pro u. s. shaw was installed until he was in turn overthrown in the 979 revolutionary war. luckily the u. s. has been involved in a covert operations in syria, the operations to timber sick of always the paps, the biggest c i a covert program in history. $1000000000.00 us dollars was spent arming and training cb and rebels to overthrow, but i'll outside that. let you not really mentioned africa. steve, what about?
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well yeah, africa again is a new this is where you at the u. s. is said to be involved in what they call a secret war, many of its operations, there are carried out under the guise of anti terror operations and operations era, perhaps more subtle than other than those we've just heard about. but i pops interesting. the u. s. trained soldiers have been involved in at least a 7 a coups in, in africa, in the last 2 years. and in history, this is seen a cruise or attempted coups 3 times in became a fast, so 3 times in marty. and once each in guinea, in motor tain human gambia, but washington claims that it has shared values with many of these cute cute eaters what percentage of the people we've trained, end up participating in insurrections or coups against their own government? very small number. this is a kernel, mama de dom boucher and this is a photo of of him. did we train and equip him by name?
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i cannot identify that will. will that guy in the middle with the big red hat, colonel mamma, date and bu yet that, that's him with a bunch of us service members outside of our embassy core values. is what we start off with in higher make programs. do we shape or values with kernel demilia, core values? i'll repeat that for values i know spectrum man who we do. we share those values with kernel. absolutely. in our core, in our curriculum, he let it go. we do. okay, that's a very telling answer. now west africa has been particularly volatile. it's been plagued by jihadist insurgency. these are also seen a lot of border disputes and tribal disputes, or am i in those particular volatile volatile areas to saw how region and since 2005, the u. s. has pump billions of dollars in security assistance into the region. i'm claiming, or aiming, as it says, to bring
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a stability there. and it's also deployed small teams of commanders up in, in africa. since the 2000 saved, often joined with local forces to advise and assist and, but sometimes also to lead them into battle. now obviously that strategy has failed many of these companies. and now we're looking increasingly toward russia for security assistance. and of course, vladimir putin, his stress that africa, the continent, remains of vital importance in a top priority for moscow. so perhaps washington's recent interest in the continent is unsurprising. in this respect, of course, the vice president of the united states come on harris is in coming out a tour of african. now, i am very excited about the impact of the future of africa on the rest of the world, including the united states of america. what we've seen, how the impact of
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u. s. intervention across the world. and it will be interesting to see how the harris trip pans out, but the indications are at the moment that africa is moving further and further away from the west. we're fascinating stuff. stephen. they will be in the settlement. so secure, daniel ask, art is the landscape of the small town of pesky, really speaks for itself when any questions are raised about the intensity of the fighting. here it is the dominating height on this part of the front, and it is surrounded by open fields. so that's why it was so difficult for the russian troops to capture it. but now, every disadvantage that the russian army had to endure here well has turned into benefits. it doesn't mean that the russian army is in for a smooth sailing here. they have to carve open fortifications that ukraine had 8 years to plan out and dig in. almost with the enemy, seize us,
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so they shoot at us with multiple rocket launchers. 152 and 155 millimeter howitzers and need to supplied excalibur missiles. that's why we're trying to squeeze the enemy out of residential areas with our artillery. constantly pressuring them liberate in street, off to st citizens of neighboring denotes a yearning for victory on this part of the front. their hometown is battered by shells and rockets. ukraine launches from here. the advance of the russian forces as already pushed the enemy back. but key of soldiers aren't leaving the peaceful city alone. willingly. russia special troops from the viking unit used guided anti tank missiles to snipe enemy positions. ah
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ah keith command to have drawn reinforcements which on turn smashed by multiple launch rockets. systems fire for soldiers here know who they are spilling the blood for. it's the women of the nets who don't know if their children are safe at the playground. it's the elderly who are killed and maimed on the way to the local grocery store. all of them are valid and routine targets for ukraine's artillery. so reluctant to leave the peaceful city b, unforgiving of its choice to divorce key. if i'm against done of reporting from the
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dumbass oxy. well, i'm joined live now in the studio by the senior editor of issue insights on political analyst john coverlet to discuss recent events in the war in ukraine. john grates have you in the studio. thank you. now i believe you've been to your crane yourself. could you tell me about your recent experiences that we spent over a month i arrived before the one year anniversary and then from kia to clark. if where it all began? i was there a year ago when it did start. so was sort of filling in the, in the gaps. i've been going back quite a bit during the last year. i guess the most interesting way to, to describe ukraine today is the, the contradictions and what's challenging for the zalinski administration. is that projecting to the world? they're under attack. the country is at war g, d p down 30 percent. they need everything. for 1000000 people have left. so we have
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all of this going on the green initiative, the challenges with exports go to odessa, go to web breakfast, buffeted a little hotel and they got fresh oysters. and i asked black, see, where are these coming from? and they said no, we get them twice a week from france, and we get 4 different types. and they come through a wholesaler and kia, we also get fresh dorado, we get frozen, octopus, etc. so i okay, you know, i see that then the larger cities, thee, there's curfews, it's changed couple days ago now it's midnight to 5. the night clubs of reopened. the casinos reopened. the casinos when they're in hotel, they can go 247. and the strip clubs reopen so you, you have that your normal see where the government needs to provide this normal environment to which people. but at the same time,
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convince young people to volunteer as opposed to getting drafted, continued to get governments to provide funding and provide military equipment. so you have these optic issues and you know, they're, they're struggling with that. so that's sort of what you have as well as the mass devastation, the mass miss placement of people. fascinating stuff. john. now obviously between those left, 2 tanks from jimmy have arrived in ukraine. what sorts of impact do you think they'll make on the battlefield? or is it more of a token at the moment? i think this is going to be the most fascinating part of the next 6 months. because what you're having is ukraine is now going to have a buffet of equipment provided mostly by natal numbers, and it's not the a plus plus stuff, but it's pretty close. and they've been trained nato training them strategy,
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etc. and the russian federation has thus far held back a lot of its triple a stuff because has a need to use it. what's going to happen now is that the russian federation is going to be required to bring in some of it's heavier and newer equipment facing this equipment. and what you're going to end up having as, as a battle and sort of a bounty hunting battle. where for the ukrainians they're going to want to take out some of this really high tech russian stuff and for the russian federation. what would be more satisfying to a commander in the field than to destroy a leper tank from germany? because you have all that war war 2 element to him and ukrainians is you may know they have been creating the civil theme parks throughout the country with rusted blown up pieces of russian federation armor. and i think president putin would like nothing more to have his theme park in red square with
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a challenge or 2 from the u. k. where the leper to from germany with a striker or bradley from the united states. you know, that's something commander salivate for. at the same time for the koreans, the us and others are going to be saying, particularly if an abrams gets into the field, we don't want on live television, whether it's r t or cnn, or the bbc or whatever it is. but a live shot of a missile launched by the russian federation, destroying a u. s. piece of equipment. be quite soliloquy. it is almost an extinction level event, particularly we're also giving them a patriot system. that's a $1000000000.00 system. the russian farm forces can take out a patriot system. that's a $1000000000.00 tax pair loss. so now you have the governments that are giving this equipment st. ukrainians. try to keep it safe. and if you're the cranium,
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julie, well what the hell is it here for us to look at? so you can say you gave it to us. so i think for the, you know, a the offensives that both countries are going to start looking at the end of may we're going to know the trajectory by october. but i think this is going to be really interesting because we're going to basically see live feeds drones satellite and for the farm force in the russian federation. they're going to go after those trophies, they want those trophies and, and ukrainians are gonna have to try to make certain they don't get them. indeed, this voice is almost live streams on through telegram. you'd see that at any soldier, we're phone selfies. yeah, yeah. and it's, and it can be also difficult to verify a lot of the footage. there is a challenge with sticking with the, the equipment that's being supplied to ukraine. obviously there's another, a debate now about a sixteen's. poland has supplied some eggs which in many ways makes sense because
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the cranes will know how to make just a replacement. yeah. do you think the sixteen's are likely to be supplied or do you think that this would add to the logistical issues of having all these piecemeal bits of equipment requirement different? i don't know, spare parts fuel train in the my price and challenges? do you think f sixteens will be supplied and shape will tend to forgot the wars aren't just about you. fill up the gas tank. you put the rockets or the projectiles in and off. you go. things happen. they need oil changes. they need treads need to be replaced, they need more room, more missiles or rockets or whatever they're doing. i don't think f sixteens are going to be in the picture. at minimum in terms of they'll continue to be discussed . lensky governments going to continue. don't want them continue to demand them, but what october november is going to be this sort of the,
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the date that everyone's watching. because if ukraine begins, it may offensive and, and the date on that is looking toward the end of may. but it's basically dependent upon them getting all the equipment that's been promised, but if they get it, they need to make some absolute firm gains come october, where the perception globally, particularly by the countries that are helping them in the taxpayers that are borrowing that it can't just be we've now locked in where it is. i don't think it can be, we've pushed them back to february 23rd of last year. i think there's gonna have to be more than that. i don't know how much more. but in order for the amount of funding and the amount of political support, this can't look into 2024. when 5 count for countries in the european
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union have their elections it's just gonna have to be some permanence to what the ukrainians do. so f sixteens, they'll continue to be talked about if the ukrainians do really well in may and they start making some, some broad muscular gains that sort of lessons the pressure. but i think that, you know, it's optics, you know, f sixteens are sex scene, they mean something. but at the moment, i think every nato and other countries that are providing equipment are content with you've asked for this stuff. yes, we delayed it. we're giving a to now, we've trained you, we've also given you the tactics. we've done war games. so this is proxy. the only difference is that nato people are driving the tanks. ukrainians are other than that. they're following a scenario. wait and see what happens. indeed. well,
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from living on from, from ukraine now, some old dover, there's also a tense situation where the west accusing of destabilizing moldova, the russian ministry of defense. make an extraordinary claim that ukraine was about to invade the parts of moldova. well, she'll take on what's going on there. a lot of misinformation being just spewed into the atmosphere by all parties that have any interest. you know, i'm a maybe old school, but i look at the goal on heights part of syria. trump administration told israel you. yeah, you can sort of keep it even by demonstration. doesn't want to go anywhere near, you know, why is that? ok. you know more dover trans niecy of the it isn't a russian federation creation. it has a long history that pre dates, $991.00. so it,
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it predates the u. s. s. are not being the us are i hope that they can, they can reconcile but you know, model of the government, the majority of their population seems to certainly want to engage more firmly with the european union. and they talk about nato and that, but you know that i think that it's going to continue to be just a lot of stirring it up. deflecting reflecting, who's is there were right and wrong. the russian federation, right on it strategies are that is the u. s. and other countries right or wrong. i don't think we're there yet. but when you know, when should be dying? no one should be getting hurt. protests. go to the ballot box, do whatever you're going to, you know, whatever you want to do. but i think this one's going to, going to be a while. it does serve a purpose for the russian federation because it's,
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it's one more area that can sort of distract when need be. but i don't think we're going to be seeing nuclear weapons in any part of moreover, and he's got some good news. well, john, i'm afraid we are not to time. we've not even such a bond. the, the downing of the u. s. v. padrona, the supplies of depleted uranium, but not to save that for another time. but if you know, fascinates in talking today. thank you. thank you very much for your time. not yet of issue insights of this on the stuff which thank you. thanks or another news. the israeli prime minister decision to postpone a controversial legal reform has failed to quote, the ongoing unrest walking the country. police results that was kind of unstrung grenades to disperse, angry crowds. ah ah
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the process, a ruptured late on monday with demonstrators lighting bonfires, knocking roads, and chanting, antique dorman slogans. dozens of people were reportedly arrested in this comes just hours after benjamin netanyahu confirmed that the ruling coalition would postpone the reforms which triggered political division. and the biggest protests in, yes, daughter, william, nor the cuba due to the responsibility to the nation and the desire to prevent a rift between the people. i have decided to postpone further legislation in the current sitting of the candidate to give time to reach white agreements and discuss the legislation in the next session. the reform will pass, the national guard will be established. the budget i have demanded for from the ministry of national security will be passed in its entirety. no one will scare us
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. no one will succeed in changing the people's decision. bella political commentator and attorney says that israeli society faces a deepening national split over the judges judicial crisis, excuse me, which has reached a boiling point. but there's a big, they caught me between both sides. and i think both sides are in pain interfering for the future to set a visual. and i have my own opinion, but what i'm looking at is really public. i can see it's a split. half of them are saying, yes, the president should tell him what to do, and half of them are saying, no, the present or never tell you what to do. and all of this is because we never had our equivalent to the federalist papers. we've never agreed on how do we decide when we have a disagreement? i think one of the main concerns is actually the police is not doing enough, but that's again, it's a matter of opinion. how do you understand real in israel? but the issue is this for many israeli citizens, they're feeling like 2nd class citizens because they're saying we have the majority in the parliament, but we are unable to fulfill our policies. so i, i am not
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a mind reading reader, but i would assume that he did not expect such a clash. i don't think anyone participated that is going to be in this boiling point, where both sides of these early public are at boiling point 3. know that's the way i see a boiling point in the israel society. voices of concern of the looming and to america's global financial dominance are growing louder in the u. s. the still news channels usually at the polar end of the pits, could divide in a rush of unity and the anxiety about a reckoning light never before. the fed has saw the series of financial crises by massively expanding its balance sheet, almost 12 fold. this only works because of the dollars unique status. if that would a, when america will face a reckoning like none before the also it's been backed up by the strength and economic power of the united states. and the fact that oil has always been traded in dollars. if that were to end, that would mean the end of the u. s. dollar,
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where the wave of panic is beginning to grip politicians to with the outspoken us republican congress, one at marjorie taylor green warning that's if the dollar falls, americans will face economic problems like never before. i want a dollar would be replaced with you on the year ago when washington decided to wage a proxy war with russia. ukraine. and now it's happening. the woman's ukraine war is going to plunge. americans seem to economic was never seen before in our entire history. if the dollar falls, they will be to blame and america will never recover. ellia my colleague, karen spoke to a bundle of guests about the consequences of the fall of america's global financial dominance. well, the sanctions gave it a big boost forward. i think the idea. ready was already in the hands of certain units because of the build up an american debt to the
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rest of the world. due to the large american trade deficit, we can see the 2 things working, the abuse of the dollar as the world reserve currency and continuing american trade deficits. she campaign was recently in moscow for meeting with the russian leader, they told extensively about strengthening the economic ties between china and russia. how much of a big deal is the developments for the global economy? i think it is historic moment. some of us have been pointing out that with the illegal seizure on foreign exchange reserves of sovereign nations within the dollars. that was a big warning to, to other sovereign nation, to be careful and not to keep their precious wealth stored up through exports and hard work in us dollars. and that of cause ultimately what is likely to damage the u. s. dollar. but you need an alternative,
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and that's where the us for a long time is still quite confident. there is no alternative. well, currency is the us dollar. well, you can create alternatives. and of course, that's what a lot of countries have done initially starting with the core group of countries. and you've mentioned russia, china, of course, that corporation is crucial. but there is, you know, the, the big group that breaks countries and more countries are joining the bricks, countries, the alternatives are now becoming very concrete and pragmatic. that's what extent do you think the actions of the us and some of its lines like sanctions for example, i've actually contributed to the global dollarization. we have to be very clear that the u. s. has shot itself into foot. it has created the situation where countries are in revulsion to american foreign policy and want to get as far away as possible from the us directly from a business point of view. like,
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why would you want to invest in the us and might say best, i mean, like, you know, we work with the american currency or by american treasury's what that is an investment in the u. s. economy. why would you want to do it? it's a bad investment. again, the u. s. is a very destructive geo political active, and it's a very carefree one ton licentious financial actors. so it's actually actually a horrible, horrible bit the us we see that the us as an repentance, absolutely unrepentant. you know, i had this hope, this naive hope that after we pulled up, get us them, that maybe we're going to be finally a constructive actor in the international arena. and then of course, what do they do? they start the war and ukraine. the u. s. is hopeless, i'm set, i started say that but pretty much the hope with k.

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