u. s. u k and germany have thrown the full support behind israel won't have had that holds disuse, presidency is taking a more cautious approach for administer. you'll come mcculla condemned moss, his actions on october 7th as terrorism. but it's also urgent israel to agree to where he met a terry and pause ethics kind of the improvement of the humanitarian situation in the gaza strip is the highest priority to that end, humanitarian support and humanitarian poses, and ensuring humanitarian access is necessary. canadian and french officials have shed similar sentiments on his way from to keep us secretary of state at any blinking mentioned different priorities. we remain very focused on hostages held by a mazda, including americans, and making sure we're doing everything possible to bring them home. the split as a departure from the united front, the g 7 presented on rushes invasion of ukraine. and what the group described as china is economic coersion. you'll come a color recently. we're time for the middle east where she met is really palestinian and joe damien officials. japan imports 90 percent of its crude oil from our country's is worried any escalation of conflict in the region could spock and energy crisis at home is also concerned tokyo's reputation among those who support pallets like suffering reversible damage. this g 7 foreign ministers meeting is not only a test of unity for the grouping. it's also a test for tokyo, its ability to get the members on the same page to call for a humanitarian pause. this will reveal the power of its leadership or its limits. katrina, you out a 0 tokyo below the rice bay to why allows they are the c o. m gauge a mostly american civic engagement organization. he explains why president buttons of waving support the israel risks. his trans 3 election of the american public has grown weary of wars, especially in the middle east, after the experiences of a rack and to some degree of us time. and many did not imagine that for us to abide and we'll be dealing with yet another me lease and conflict that i think there's been a lot of disappointment, particularly among young voters. but also, as you mentioned, air voters, muslim voters, progressive voters, black voters, of the handling of the situation. many, according to polls, i think about 66 percent of americans and 80 percent of democrats have expressed support for a ceasefire. they want the escalation, know, an increase and the blood shed and the killing specially of civilians and children . and they want the president and they want his administration. they want congress to be supportive of that and they are deeply disappointed that has not happened yet . can i just focus it on the demographics that you've just been talking about? i mean, how does this topic resonate with you might say very strong, is right in the lobby and a young go, well educated, growing population that we've seen sort of demonstrates the universities and colleges impacting all the this schools that we're hearing all, both through the media online and on television, across the us as well. you mentioned the democratic party, the democratic party is a diverse big tent party and it's been evolving. it has been including younger people, latinos, blacks, also more recently, members of the mid recent community, the or community, the muslim community, the indian community, and many of those communities bring more diverse approaches to this conflict. sure, i think the pro israel sentiment is still very strong in the democratic party. it is clearly very strong in the, by the administration. but it's beacon tested in this moment, this is the tension that you're seeing right now within the democratic party and the broader society. but i think things are changing here. the question is, how quickly and at what cost will it lead to a more representative, a democratic party of all of its basis or a fracturing of it? and i do have concerns that we might be seeing the latter, at least in 2024. and we were saying, rushing to, to leave the speak very passionately about the situation in the house. how do you think this is going to play out a more generally in the base with the voters in michigan? i think michigan is also, as i say, the swing state has republicans. it has democrats as margaret and i think her message in her please. and her position will resonate with significant members of the michigan electorate, especially in her district. she has last year as air of she has white. well they'll be others who will feel differently about it. right, because michigan is pretty complicated, but it definitely originally resonate with those communities i mentioned as well as with young voters there mobilizing on the street. but the reality of the matter right now is the rest of the democratic party has not moved sufficiently, you know, with her in support of this. and that's really where it needs to happen is the rest of the democratic party, or at least the majority of it, the centrist democrats, as we call them, and not just the progressive need to start moving. and using a little bit of that with in, on the senate side with. so, durbin center, teen and others starting to speak in support of cease fires are positive. so there is a shift, but how quickly would happen and it's not soon enough for, you know, all these people, all these kids are being targeted and really suffering great to me in the interest of just finally, just briefly, if we can solve that away from, goes away from the war right now, but so slightly related is a generational device leaving us. we sort of had tools that presidential election by those candidates who really have no idea about what is warranted by those. and so it is well born in the 19 ninety's on what's the, you know, the been that millennials as a often known as well later on from the politicians of today and what they really want some degree and beyond just the presidential age situation. whether it's trouble or binding, the average age in the said is quite high as well. the us senate is very disconnected from the rest of america in many ways. and you see in congress also those members have been serving for 2030 years in a way you are seeing that divide really manifested so on, in the fact that both parties in congress are supporting the, the policies of benjamin netanyahu and refusing support a ceasefire. there supporting also a lot of other things that are maintaining the status quo and american, whether it's regarding health care, education, environment, the gun control issues. now the democrats have been a little bit more in tune with the rest of america on these issues. but even they have a disconnect because of the age of the lived experiences and the income differences . and then versus the street, you're seeing hundreds of thousands of young people protesting saying that they want to cease fire. they want to add to the military occupation of palestinians, and i think you are going to see that come to head next year. but at the end of the day, the us is still a 2 party system. and those of us who are trying to see this change has to work within that system. i'm seeing costs for supporting 3rd party candidates. that might be a viable alternative for 2028. before 2024. there's only going to be 2 choices for americans to the stations. policy, a full support as well as come under attack from some us diplomats. so the state department and it leads to member obtained by american new site politic in different months voice, the opposition for the us government unconditional support. israel violations of international humanitarian law. through his rounds, failure to identify what he calls legitimate military targets. also raised the member also highlights the us government supports the legal caesars of land belonging to palestinians. and how this goes against american values by encouraging israel is impunity. the diplomats say the us should immediately support international calls for ceasefire and gaza. citing is really military tactics and the treatment of palestinians. well anyway, i spoke to him on her arm and he's a fellow at the middle east council bluff as i began by asking him if this could impact the by the administration's approach on the goals, will we are seeing a lot of criticism within it within the state department from these officials who know the region well and know the implications of biden's policy in terms of american interest in the region and are trying to voice that in any way they can. but from what we're hearing, you know, the policy that has been implemented in this particular case, a 6 since october 7th, is coming from the very top, coming from biting. perhaps blinking and other political appointees who are, you'll have the kind of in the trends, conviction when it comes to israel in abiding, is it, in about opens zionist. and so his, his opinions are shaping his policy. and you're starting to see the kind of split happening within his own administration and elsewhere, obviously with the public views as quite differently human rights organizations. so indeed, looking at what they've said, speaking to all right, and a senior political analyst, he described these politicians are these state deposits. officials as certainly the storage allies in some respects to israel, but won't see him puts us behind the being. so vocal is it, as you just mentioned, the way the public cut her into us has reacted to what this does seeing on the tv screens doing that right. research about what's going on and how us the us agenda or. ready the us support as well as impacted on their lives for decades. yes, i think you know, it's hard to watch what's on folded in the gaza strip over the past month and not feel at the very least that american policy in terms of enabling and offering blankets for to these really is problematic both morally speaking and in terms of the implications for the united states in terms of its credibility regionally and elsewhere. and so these state department officials, you are often mid level or lower level officials from what i've, what i've heard read, i have a voice their concern, but they feel that they're being ignored, that they're not able to shape policy, that they're alienated from the decision making structure and so they've sought other avenues like the design channel and these kind of open letters to voice their opinions and make it known that this is not unanimous and unanimously viewed within, within the state department. but of course, democratic politicians as well as civil servants, like that, the state department have some tough choices to make that they either get behind the us president and the policy that's being executed. as we said, well as the policies will potentially lose your seats. so your job pops so the next election. yes, i mean, i think we're seeing, you know, which is happening obviously, within the state department. i mean the, the dissent channel is supposed to be some place where you can voice your opinion without rep percussion. so we'll ultimately see what comes out of that within congress itself and know congress has a different set of decisions it makes or different um calculus, that it makes congressional leaders in, in that, in that arena, in the world. you know, the pro israel lobby has wheeled a tremendous influence for a number of decades shaping the narrative there. and influencing how a politicians react when it comes to middle east policy. and so, you know, you're seeing are overwhelming support really for these really position both on the republican side and on the democratic side with a few holdouts mostly in the progressive wing. but for the most part, you know, those leaders are, are, or making decisions based on their own political calculus. well still head, hey all now to 0 cycle of floods followed by drowns in somalia. climate change is affecting one of the wells chorus nations. the . the book about the portuguese pine minnes centennial costa has resign just hours of to prosecute, has detained his chief of staff and an investigation into alleged corruption. the inquiry is looking into his administration's handling of lithium mining and hydrogen projects. the 62 year old made the announcement in a ton of his statement. after meeting the president much of a battle desousa cost assess his conscience is clear, and that he wouldn't stand as a candidate for full time as premier. at least 10 people have died and mold and a 100 thousands of being falls from the haze by flooding in somalia, the heavy rains come after a long period of drought, the regions west in decades of malcolm web explains. 3 years of droughts have forced more than a 1000000 people from their homes in somalia. many of them into camps like this one in the capital of mogadishu. now the shelter is being washed away by slugs. off the days of 2 rental reins prob got on the corner some while it's raining for us, it's d l a make shift shelters were washed away. the children are missing. now we don't know way that they are data or alive. we replace the 8 agencies to agency help us. most of the people in the accounts what a hood is until the past has became too dry. and more than a 1000000 lives still died of the others, the farmers who could no longer correct crops now sways of the country side on the water of the you ends inter continental panel on climate change. well, i pcc says the horn of africa is one of the places in the world the most vulnerable to the effects of climate change. there is quite so big i or any around people fleeing for the fact that they don't have water. and now fling because they have too much water. and so it's a real di kautz meal problem there was saying and the pc report quite clearly says that this cycle of flooding and drowned is going to continue. and we're going to see this more, more or less, we really do something on a global scale. let's try to reduce these and try to stay on this power as 1.5, alignment decades of on conflict, as well as increased food prices, exacerbated by ross's invasion of ukraine, has made the crisis was. the un says more than 40000 people died last year because of the trials bounce off of them children these floods and no kidding, even more welcome web houses to the chinese and the american officials of men in washington dc to discuss the challenges both countries space as china is nuclear weapons also continues to grow and is there is defense editor, and this could talk less as little. china has around $500.00 nuclear weapons and it's also on a variety of ways to deliver them for low range, intercontinental ballistic missiles, icbm capable of reaching anywhere in the united states. so hypotonic weapons that can fly up to 10 times the speed of sound. and we saw counting submarines that can finally deliver nuclear missiles anywhere in the world. china is one of the few new can nations to formally adhere to a policy of no 1st use symptoms the united states has so far rejected. but there's growing evidence that china is rapidly expanding. it's also satellite imagery from 2 years ago shows the construction of expensive fields of icbm, silos. the 3 locations across the china. china is not bound by the treaty limiting nuclear weapons production. and it's not estimated that it will have at least a 1000 of these weapons by 2030 putting on a par with russia. and the united states, or today is, will be returning to the polls next month. take those all the new draft constitution. it's 6 to replace the current law, which is written under a military dictatorship. but the proposals are already facing strong opposition. lots of america, to tennessee and even reports from the capital santiago for the 2nd time in just over a year to into being presented with the text for a new constitution. difficulty president of the body to try to mask his disappointment with the right leading draft. might yeah, whatever utility and people's find those words that way we can say that our mechanisms inform us exactly. it looks like nobody will continue to be essentially institutional and democratic. the new and september last year, chileans rejected draft charts, ro, written primarily by left wing delegates, guaranteed social rights gender parity, abortion environmental protection, and much more. but for the majority, it went too far. this time the pendulum has swung to the extreme political right. which controlled the process was veto power. that was to this new constitution eliminates political debate. 4 years ago, millions of chileans took to the streets to demand a new constitution to replace their current dictatorship era charter. then as now better public health, education and pensions were at the top of their demands. yep. the new convention couldn't resolve these fundamental issues. the issues that we, we have been trying to put this kind of decision advocacy to charlotte. and it shouldn't be probably a good contact to charlotte, many a frustration and even embarrassed in 6 weeks to me as well. again, both in a referendum that, according to polls, is likely to reject this. they just attempt to give chilly a constitution that can unite the country. and if that is the case, there won't be another chance for a very, very long time to top. seeing human al jazeera santiago, the schools being shows in new delhi and the use of private vehicles restricted for a week because a blanket of smoke continues to come to india's capital. the quality decline to hundreds of those levels of the city have tools, and 13000000 people knew that he is regularly vines as one of those pollutants in the world. that pollution causes hundreds of thousands of premature deaths each year. so it was a day of pomp and ceremony in london for king charles the 3rd. the king speech laid out the pre election agenda full. the conservative government formerly opening the u. k. parliament. the 1st one for 72 years by mail bullock to speech proposed a little fronting new licenses for oil and gas projects in the middle seat emulate . hurry full, as it has moved on a bright autumn day, a familiar yearly journey to the british, monique. but in one place, positive backdrop has an t mail to keep protest the answer, the 1st time, and move in 7 to use. it would be a king speech, but a queen speech at the heart of parliament state opening. it is mindful of a legacy of service and devotion to this country is set by my beloved mother, late queen died deliver this the 1st king speech, you know, but 70 is there was interested how a king, who as prince campaigned on environmental causes would handle announcing the watering down and pots of the government's a common net 0 program. this bill will support the future licensing of new oil and gas fields, helping the country to transition to net 0 by 2050, without adding onto buttons on her. so, as among the $21.00 bills se