tv Documentary RT September 6, 2023 12:30pm-1:00pm EDT
12:30 pm
restoring the deal, but only after all, restrictions on russian agricultural exports are listed in the united. so when we will consider the possibility of reviving the grain deal, and we will do this as soon as all the agreements on lifting restrictions on the export of russian agricultural products are from filled. we are close to concluding agreements with 6 african states where we intend to supply food free of charge, including logistics. we will start deliveries in the next couple of weeks. the blocks, the initiative expired on july 17th with russia withdrawing from the deal due to unfulfilled, at the mountains. the deal was broken by turkey with the participation of the un russia and ukraine. moscow had previously pro long that the agreement several times always spoke to political and economic analyst will car diaz, who says in 4 states don't benefit from the grand deal, but rather western countries. are there any fees? the renew is the congress, not the 4 countries in particular,
12:31 pm
i think because you see then do the number. so this is the single dollars in inside all of the day. exploitation of the green deals we haven't heard for. it's lighter than said the site fargo for the western countries. they don't have access to all of troy this. so this is the really dangerous sometimes to get information on. you must to come to the most to receive a did that for the just use my disease particularly. and you can kind of see, this is not to sort of not being benefits boy to the congress, to a german a is a foreign minister. and elaina. burbank has criticized russia for quote, to plain cynical games when it comes to the grain deal. she made those comments during a news conference with her romanian counterpart addressing food supplies in the black sea region. but the event has also garnered attention because of
12:32 pm
a confusing slip up by the german top diplomat. she accidentally called ukraine cocaine and that's not the 1st time she's done that. it is based on communion. does you know all the info i spoke to a pretty old patients really did a tips covered over by or you know, if i to, i was found on the explored car parts of teeth who kindly put in this is good side to kindly put in this is good side south africa's cost of freedom has been a basin of hope, has been a basin of hope. is there any chance of ukraine being safe and the long term? it's bloody me. uproot is still needing a rush if he doesn't change. if i want 360 degrees, nope. can change. if i want $360.00 degrees, nope,
12:33 pm
12:34 pm
the 1972. when i 1st met fairly back to and we sat down on a bench like this and i had the 1st conversation with man that i was to follow for for many years. and that past change my life, the in 1976 feeling better to hear that. and once i got on banded together with others, fighting for independence and formed, lost much of those are the cane cutters. the context was that vietnam had won the cuban revolution at that time was like a beacon to a lot of land americans. the type of history is on the side of anti colonialism.
12:35 pm
we should be able to to prevail. the one of the 1st things you have to have is fake id. so i visited a number of graveyards and picked you know, someone who had died. you know, as a child wasn't likely to have the social security number or any other type of id and then applied for, for that birth certificate. and then applied for drivers license and social security number and developed a number of ideas that i then used to buy weapons with the as a full time member of the organization. my re doing was after i did my household
12:36 pm
obligation of taking the kids to school, i would then start working on whatever we had on the schedule. we're going to do a check off the back take dynamite from construction . people go to that. there was a strike on against the power company checking out the transmission towers to see where we're going and not one of them on the we sabotage the, the power plant at the beginning of canada lagoon as a protest against the government men for cutting off power to the residence of the waters, residents of the settlement called v. a senior village without fear, had tapped into the local power lines. and now the government threatened forcible
12:37 pm
eviction the so when they had their power cut off, so all right, well tit for tat. the turns out that the radiators and so all we had to do was bring in some of these spray long sharp to just bit bit bit, you know, hit the, the radiator rains on this thing and then oil would come off. pretty simple little operation. the, the operation took out the power in one of the most affluent areas of the island. tens of thousands of hotel this website launched into darkness. last much of status
12:38 pm
leave a communicate nailed to a tree in san one claiming responsibility. we felt that we could generate more of a spirit of resistance rather than of submissive acceptance of reality that we felt slice shockingly unfair. despite operating on the violent fringe of the independence movement, their actions gained visibility and lead others to resist the since 1898. the us had used as a military strong in the caribbean. eventually building dozens of faith. in the 1940s, the navy took over most of the island for military exercises. the
12:39 pm
ad room just called in and said look, we're going to be bombing on the x days. and then this fisherman said, you know, was old fishing traps, the struggle across were the navy ships are going to come through and our powers will get tangled and they'll be done in the water. the people who live here sites, they've had enough of the navy and it's shelly and there was some, like mrs. hilda logo did very, she brought our children because she said, by setting up camp there, they would learn not to be afraid to defend their country. the, the protests lead to hundreds of arrests but some members of last, much of those feel that the protests aren't working and called for something more than civil disobedience.
12:40 pm
the in puerto rico today are united states. navy bus was ambushed by political terrorist firing, rifle, shot guns and customs. 18 on our navy technicians were going to work and the school bus on the terrace ambush, them just outside san juan to were killed and 10 were wounded, including 3 women. 3 groups leave a joint communicate in a nearby phone booth claiming responsibility. one of them is low, so much of those they state that the attack was in retaliation for a protester at vegas, who was killed while in police custody. and that the actions will continue until the guest is returned to the point, though he can people the at the moment, held the navy accountable. if you kill
12:41 pm
a prisoner claim its suicide when cleared forensic evidence showing that he had caches and bruises all over his mind. you have to pay a price if they think they're going to drive us out of the i guess with acts like this. they better think again people have already but don't support this type of activity in the country. they reject it very, very, very, very vociferously and very strongly repudiate this type question. and we think that think of these people, as our enemies are enemies of the people that are in the after the attack. there is internal descent within the symmetric date of the many members choose to leave the on
12:42 pm
the schedule here on the, on the lady at the magazine here. busy would that be a good point in the text though, on the, on it so as on buys instead of any of media that i'm in, tulsa, and i leave that allows you and i've been meet the levels for only sales 0 job for solely. but i feel the kind of my, sorry that, that i told on the monster that i, you know, from my stand, my, sorry, that i decided to fight fight for my country. no, i'm not. i mean i could have done things differently. yes, absolutely. do i now think that violence is not the means to achieve anything? absolutely. yeah. that's
12:43 pm
a lesson learned and life for me. the nice air national guard base was built in 1956 by the us military. the plains based there had been used to project us military power throughout latin america. in 1981 doesn't much of data disguise to fishermen infiltrate the base and begin reconnaissance operation. the at 1st blush it looks like, well, can this be done? and then upon closer examination, you realize it's not a piece of cake, but it's, it's definitely doable. i made a mistake of not including truly right. so where, where's my position?
12:44 pm
and i said here that participating 0 and is a for years i think it was more aware than in the rest of us of how significant this was going to be in terms of historical importance. and then the final gift was one of the national guard had an open house on the base. so i brought my kids and look at upstairs where the right of the blades don't printers. and that help does the scale exactly where the the explosives is going to be located. before dawn, today in puerto rico terrace, blew up a number of air national guard jet fighters at an american base near san juan. at least a jet fighters were destroyed. the coursera just flew up one after the other. damage
12:45 pm
was estimated at $45000000.00. no one was hurt. left, his group, which has at once the united states, out of puerto rico, is claim responsibility for the attack. air force spokesman, say this is one of the most serious attacks ever against an american military base here or in the united states. the so i didn't get back home until a couple hours later. and lucy thought that that i had been killed once the plane started to blow up the they were loaded with the machine guns. so the machine the morning after the attack b s. b, i find so much it is stuck in the ground within yards of one of the air base security guards. a message that knows much of those were close enough to take the guard's life. but unlike the boss attacked this time, they ensured that no one was hurt of an internal. most
12:46 pm
much of those documents celebrates the attack. we were able to revive the spirit of our people. since this was the most overwhelming blow given to the yankee since pearl harbor, our organizations for stage was greatly increased. it's made us known all around the world. and i was surprised by how much tacit support there was. and how many people were like, almost like secretly problem and of course you can call it on a simple, it's a tooth is saying people are commenting about that. and i said, okay, the word of point to he can resist and spreads beyond the island. leaders including pope john paul, the 2nd, robert kennedy junior,
12:47 pm
12:48 pm
the, [000:00:00;00] the, the magic, the movement is nearly broke. the feeling better to have the rights we are in need of huge economical resources. and those on hand have a balance of 0. so we must expropriate resources. for the 1st robbery that i participated in, i was sure we were going to get caught, and i'd seen so many tv programs in the face of others. you know that we weren't gonna get away with it. and this elderly lady came in and she started to hyper until 8 and was about ready to scream. and i'm
12:49 pm
going ma'am, come down. nothing's gonna happen or what do i do? i really didn't know how to handle the situation and then feeling where to adjust. he saw that you walked over and said, shut up. what, what was the end of it as well. okay. so that's how it's done. and do you know, so that was my my trial by fire there's a erroneous view of. busy much of it was that it was mostly about armed action, which is absolutely not the case. it was mostly about political action. and uh, you know, people were doing good work around women's issues, doing good work. you know, i'm try to get the navy vegas in on all of that. so most of the robberies were credential fund. that type of work. you know that rather than wait for proposals
12:50 pm
for grants to be approved and so can go get our own function. the a guy approached me and he says he's working on the armored truck and transports between $7.00 to $10000000.00 every monday and he wants to donate it to the struggle is like, well, it's almost too good to be true. the beach where he met so did the final vetting of him as a come back somewhere. it's not a wells fargo guard and acts. wells fargo guard is on the run with $7000000.00 in cash. he got away with the last night when he robbed his partner and a wells fargo manager in west hartford connecticut. so when,
12:51 pm
when victor grabbed a supervisor from behind it and put them in a headlock and took a supervisor's own gun out of his whole store and put it to his head and told them, you know, i'm not working for anybody else anymore. you know, i'm not playing the supervisor head, you know, heard the tone in victor's voice. so that me and as he testified and tries that, victor spoke to me in a tone of voice, had rather heard before i was waiting for him outside. it was the longest hour or whatever of my entire life. it was a $7100000.00 according to to the press. i know it weighed by the 1000 and some odd pounds. the car was riding low. we've had so much money to steal from here that they couldn't even haul it all away. police estimate that he left about
12:52 pm
a $1000000.00 behind. i felt we had pulled off a great job. nobody has a car. nobody was hurt. yeah, i would, i was our again, my friend loaned me his pickup truck and camper. we were on the turnpike in, in pennsylvania, going down this pretty steep hill and all this semi blue past us and we ended up flipped over, facing in the opposite direction on the right hand lane of the money that was hidden in the wall behind the walls. of the of the trailer and the panels burst. one of us jumped in the trailer and started throwing in the morning and bags and, and stashing it back before the state police arrived. and we got pass that
12:53 pm
one. the special agent must realize that on the federal bureau of investigation i collected solved and closed on the go, they are being put on the end of the f. b. i arrived in point of equal half a century earlier, but rather than merely pursuing criminals agents were tasked with squelching the voices of those who were working to gain independence. soon, the mission grows with agents, compiling dossiers on over one 100000 persons of interest. generating nearly 2000000 pages of documents, agents gather details of political affiliation, employment religious practices, and sexual partners the but despite
12:54 pm
massive surveillance, truly better to have that. and once they got to continue to evade the f, b i for over a decade in the year that they are in the, in 1983 just much if they don't use funds from the wells fargo robbery to purchase a shoulder mounted rocket launcher. their plan is to attack the f b i offices in san juan the instead of hitting the f b, i offices the mess,
12:55 pm
damaging the department of agriculture being directly fired on invigorates the f. b. i's hunt for lost much of those. and within weeks, they have a new list of surveillance targets. and the fact that it was an attack to the f b i office, of course, made them feels very personally committed to that investigation. and so through an all of their resources into the, the, the f b i gather, is enough evidence to get a quarter and start stopping phone conversations and planting microphones and homes and vehicles buried in the miles of audio troops f, b. i. agents, our son, to hear conversations about $7000000.00, they soon come to the conclusion that the grenade attack and the wells fargo robbery were both done by those much of data. by 1985 via b, i has gathered reams of evidence leaking,
12:56 pm
say got to the wells fargo robbery barnett. b, i raid rounds of 11. what cisneros? charging them with conspiracy in the wells fargo robbers say god, grant and heather, yours are jails without bond. initially, the government plans to charge the group with suspicious conspiracy. planning to over throw the us government the actually back to. and i were in this facility for about a year during the free trial here and they have like. busy list of pictures of like 10 inmates that you need to be on the look out for, for correctional officers. so that takes their curiosity. and so with dog and it's, it's not too hard, you know, for an american understand independence sit there. so there's understand that,
12:57 pm
you know, if somebody invaded your country, what would you do? you know, how would you feel if you'd lost the war against the japanese? every law that was passed here in the united states had to be approved by the japanese congress. it's not fair. yeah. tell me about it. you know guys would get it and the americans don't have a problem with violence at all. i mean, if anything were to do drone to violence. so the fact that we had resorted to violence for that, you know, and, and in favor of independence or the freedom of our partner or whatever is, is like the guy and feeling better to hear that along with the other defendants are held in pre trial detention for 2 years, confined to their cells for up to 23 hours a day. so much i don't haven't been lisa
12:58 pm
know where he will the, the, the i'm going to do. but when i'm in the seventy's of the 07, that is of and about with that i can send nothing. i hope i can label stuff and we'll talk later, but i'm in pennsylvania with underneath. and so my mom i take, i don't know, child for independent pennsylvania for the case worker in lexington. i am on the line, so i lo sorted out over the dining room table manos man. does he say? yeah, i wonder if i go back to the scene on the massachusetts thing i get in bouncing campbell got on that as well. oh, is that even on my that on the, on the line as i don't know or the i'm in the that. hm. but when i came in in for the a laptop for the only one set up, that's the only appeal because i only got 2 of us. but i also have the phone says,
12:59 pm
you have a basketball, said they, they want to see other than really well, it's all, it's same phone number, but see they go up, there we go. all the stuff off the whole thing when you're free the by the answers and see them. i don't see, i don't know the after 2 years of imprisonment, a judge rules that the pre trial detention was unconstitutional and the defendants are released on bail. the feeling better to have ice fitted with a gps tracking ankle bracelet to ensure that he doesn't escape on september 23rd 1990 facing a potential 130 year sentence freely by the door here that cuts his bracelets. and once again goes underground,
1:00 pm
the, [000:00:00;00] the, i'm sorry this our a full, the ukrainian security chief, confesses the key killed dissidence because prisoners were not doing the job. but the west of the media white watches the official was changing. eliminate people live in a terrorist for us. so the effect of the need is the mon, the financial institution reforms. and that's released to come back to global
7 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=380308914)