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tv   News  RT  March 28, 2023 9:00am-9:30am EDT

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ah, a powered search engine shots g p t list the 2014 my done uprising and ukraine as one of the many curious around the world that washington has allegedly had its 100 in stock contrast to the u. s. narrative that it doesn't finish a while and cautious grow in the streets of israel, the nation security keith just to push through controversial judicial reforms. prime minister netanyahu postpone the decision until the sun with goldman sachs giving a u. s. recession, odds of 35 percent amid going economic turbulence for countries,
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a dollar in their bilateral trade debates why countries are increasing the choosing . alternative trade current u. s. has shot it up in the put 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. countries must go to the world you're watching out. see international. my name is peter scott here with the top stories for moscow time this tuesday. thanks for joining us. now. the public version of the a i driven chat g p t. when asked about us a legit involvement in crews around the world. it gives an extensive list among or there's a mentions the 2014 might done uprising in ukraine. the
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u. s. government, back to the ousting of ukraine's president victor yanna cooper. she had a coup that brought pro western leaders to power of them all. and this and joining me live now in the studio is all t correspondent, steve sweeney. steve, what's going on here with this? a i will chat g p t is probably the best known of these artificial intelligence box . people have used it to write essays and school children have used it to write their homework. some people have even use it to try and generate new stories for the counter will use a many people will do things, but they've tried to rewrite the plays of shakespeare, the start of yo to the star wars colleagues, and now it was one of these requests which was to write an essay about the u. s. involvement includes around the world that is believed to have generated this embarrassing response that includes ukraine on that list. we have so far been unable to replicate that it's important to say this came from a screenshot posted on twitter by a hawaiian journalist. now,
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of course chart gpc create will give different answers to different questions and different places around the world. now the u. s. allies of course, deny involvement in the overthrow of the cranium government in 2014, and it continues to insist that russia's special military operation was an unprovoked attack, but g p t apparently altered when i lost it. then ukrainian president young co, which was ousted in a qu, that brought pro western leaders to power and being i, this is another one of the, the chart will produce a detailed timeline of us involvement in the coo and ukraine. and essentially said that it's a was to contain and we can russia 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, new ukraine's borders. the. * crisis has also undermine the principles of international law and sovereignty, as well as the norms of corporation and dialogue among major powers. steve, where else has the us allegedly been involved in cruise? well, it's probably easier to list those places where it hasn't been involving coons. i think most notoriously, during the 19 seventy's operation condo, also the u. s. back death, squads and overthrow governments that it deemed that will hostile to us interests argentina of course, where there was a dirty war. and perhaps most famously in chile, the ousting of solid orient day, a self declared marxist and his replacement with gusto finish. and of course, tens of thousands of people were tortured, killed, and disappeared under those regimes. in the middle east, it was involved in the hosting of mohammed, most of that, the iranian leader, after he threatened to nationalize oil, which of course, the us have a vested interest in there and they imposed the show. the pro western probably show
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who was himself house did in 1979. we can look at pakistan, where more recently were run. com says the former prime minister, of course, says that he was ousted in a u. s. backed coo more latterly. again, in the middle east, the u. s. has been involved in cobra operations in syria. the operation timble timber sycamore program, a $1000000000.00 c. i a covert program, the sol, alms, and, and cache diverted to various cb and opposition groups to oust president partial. our last, i bet, not really mentioned africa much. it's all steve, what's happened on the continent? what caused us has a vested interest in, in africa, a huge content. we can look at libya, where the u. s. nato intervention. so the ousting of ma, get back to me then it's recently been accused of all kinds. of course, you've just seen the 24 hour diversity that nato led invasion,
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but it's descended into a co my really. and there's been evidence of sex trafficking, instability in the rise of g, how these groups, but many was operations in africa are perhaps more subtle and little bit more clandestine this talk of a, a secret war in the us, you sing a loophole to bypass a congressional accountability, now you, a soldiers of trains are soldiers that have been involved in at least 7 coups in africa in the last 2 years. but washington insists that it has shared values with many of those leaders. 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? i cannot identify that will, will that guy in the middle with the big red hat, colonel mamma, date and bu. yeah, that, that's him with a bunch of us service members outside of our embassy core values is what we start
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off with. and i am a programs do a static 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 in particular has been extremely volatile. it's been played with a g had his. busy insurgencies and tribal disputes, especially in his border area since 2005, the u. s. has pumped millions of dollars as a items to bring stability in those regions. and since the to thousands, of course, is deployed commanders who have trained, assisted and supported in the even led into battle, some of those local forties. but obviously not, strategy has failed. and many of those countries in africa now looking towards russia for security, president putin has said that the, the content is a priority for moscow, which perhaps explains washington's recent interest in the,
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in the content continent story of africa in this respect that they've just sent kamala harris on a, on a to and she's visiting there. now let's listen to what you said. i'm very excited about the future. ah, i'm very excited about the impact of the future of africa on the rest of the world, including the united states of america. now caught within the impact and we've just discussed the impact of u. s. interventions in africa and around the world. it we interesting to see how the, how restrict pans out, but the indications often now that africa is turning further away from the west. and d, thanks very much for breaking that down for stay. thank you. ah, you know now these really prime ministers decisions you postpone a controversial legal reform has failed to quell the ongoing unrest. rocking the country police resulted. she was kind of uncertain grenades to disperse,
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angry crowds. ah, ah, the processor up that late on monday with demonstrates as lighting bonfires, walking rhodes, unchanging, antique governments, slogans. dozens of people were reportedly arrested in this comes just hours after benjamin netanyahu confirmed for the ruling coalition would postpone the reforms which triggered political division. and the biggest protests in yes, you don't know, it's only nor if 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 knesset to give time to reach white agreements and discuss
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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 . no one will succeed in changing the people's decision. la pittsville commentator and attorney says that israeli society faces a deepening national splits over the judicial crisis, which has reached a balling 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 have their thing know 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 lease is not doing enough, but that's again, it's a matter of opinion. how do you understand the reality in israel?
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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 am not a mind reading reader, but i would assume that he did not expect such a clash. i don't think anyone participated this is going to be in this boiling point where both sides of the israeli public or it's a boiling point for, you know, that's the way i see a boiling point in the israel society or meanwhile division is adding fuel to rising tensions inside is really society as local media has reported an increase of hate crimes carried out by israeli jews against our christians. lottie spoke to the 1st female pastor in the old city of jerusalem. sally, as are you shut her opinion on religions role in politics, women's rights issues, as well as israel and its relationship with palestine. the time it's been long years before this decision has been taken or has been implemented
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because the decision has been taken like 12 years ago from the church to ordain women. and it hasn't come until now that someone came back and got her didn't. and in this case, it was made, they weren't aware of it until the act of ordination. and since then of course, a lot of people have refused to talk to me or have refused to talk to the church. and they're still saying no, this is something wrong that she did. and i feel like the world just has woken up to him and ordination and the whole world not only look away as far as i know, you have been away out of jerusalem for around 8 years for your studies. what struck you the most about the holy city after you returned from germany, a lot of things have changed and the side here, like, has improved in many sense and they are bit more open, i would say, but are more interactions between israelis and palestinians than i remember, but also what struck me the most as the patient and how much it,
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how much it spreads more like there are more subtle months. the wall is getting longer, land is being taken more away and i do think it is happening. why do singers and, and live here on the ground is moving this direction. and that's obviously with the whole new also now with the parliament and the decisions that it takes historically, jerusalem was a city of 3 religions. do you feel that there is any threat to day to the historical state of affairs? honestly it's, i mean, religiously, we're all, it's important for, for all 3 religions. and it's not about who, who has the right to be here because it's, this is not the issue in this land. that issue is more of a political political sense. and it is more of a human rights sense. so, because you know, we, there are a lot of dialogues outside. i mean, i mean, i've been in germany for a few years as well. and i see that there are great christian jewish dialogues,
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christian muslim dialogues, and here we go. focus surely have christian somebody that are also great, but at the same time the jewish, the jewish christian or the jewish muslim dialogues, they don't work together just because of politics. and when that comes in, then that makes things harder. so we take away religion from the politics that it's easier. but in the city itself, i would say that it is more more just we also as religions, there is nothing in our 3 religions that i would say that supports violence. so why are we using our own religion as an excuse for violence? the news, iran's foreign ministry spokesman has criticized washington for its military presence in syria. that's just days of the u. s. can go to the tax on syrian soil. the reportedly killed 900 people the u. s. claims that is present in syria to 5
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days. that itself had the major role in creating is just an excuse to continue situ patient and luc, serious national wealth, including its energy resources and the wheat or former united states. national security advisor john bolton says that the us should not leave the resource which middle east and named one particular region where washington should take hold. the middle east is critically important to the united states. we have friends and allies there and the world's going to run on oil and natural gas for a long time, no matter what policies are put in place. now at one point we had a clear policy, much of north eastern turkey, the triangle, east of the euphrates river. but south of the turkish border and west of the iraqi border was a liberated zone. and that, along with the tanf enclave along the jordanian border, was held by american forces their kurdish allies and others. i would never have moved from that arrangement for possibly shortly after the recent us attack in
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syria, a convoy with 148 vehicles, including 18 crude oil tankers, and 60 vehicles containing refrigerators and trucks added to northern iraq. earlier global powers, including china, repeatedly accused us of illegally stealing oil from syria, calling the us to stop plundering natural resources in the country. vanessa bailey investigative journalist. it says the u. s. is responsible for multiple major issues in the middle east, as well as the emergence of global service groups. us is responsible for virtually or global terrorist organization, including and africa in theory or in yemen, in iraq. and libby or the list is very long. and isis obviously are also partnering the us in syria, alongside the current or separatist. we have reports now that the us is effectively
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increasing the supply of hardware to isis brigade. so now forming brigades numbering around $300.00 fighters to carry out attacks against syria and our bomb positions and russian military positions are inside the northeast, but also entering syrian government protect the territory. for example, a, some homes are seen at least 3 isis attacks since the earthquake and the u. s. is effectively that to, to steal syrian oil, 80 percent of syrian oil is being taken by the us on its proxies. and what a lot of people don't realize is that the oil is also being transported, not only outside syria, but to create a group in the northwest where they are processing. but oils under the auspices of a company called what they have monopoly over the oil processing and then trading that into turkey. so it's
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a double. why mean for the us say that providing revenue for isis? the current or separate us, but also for you though, voices of concern over the looming and america's global financial dominance are growing louder over in the u. s. there's some news channels. usually the polar end of the political divide in a rush of unity in anxiety about the reckoning like never before. the fed has saw the series of financial crises by massively expanding its balance sheet almost 12 full. this only works because of the dollars unique status. if that would, a wayne america will face a reckoning like none before the also it's been back to find 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 us dollar. while the wave of panic is beginning to
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grip politicians as well, the us republican congresswoman and marjorie taylor green ones. if the dollar falls, americans will face economic problems never seen before. i want to 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 guns ukraine. war is going to plunge. americans seem to economic woes never seen before in our entire history. if the dollar falls, they will be to blame and america will never recover. lolia, my colleague, nicky, are in spoke to a panel of guests about the possible 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 heads of ship units because of the build up an american debt to the rest of the world. due to the large american trade deficit,
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we can see the 2 things working, the abuse of the dollar as the war reserve currency and the continuing american trade services. 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 this development for the global economy? i think it is historic moment. some of us have been pointing out that with the illegal seizure, all foreign exchange is as a sovereign nation within that dollar system. that was a big warning to the other sovereign nation. to be careful and not keep their precious wealth stored up through export and hard work in us dollars. and that of cause ultimately what is likely to damage the u. s.
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dollar. but you need an alternative, 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, the break countries and more countries are joining the bricks, countries, the alternatives are now becoming very concrete and pragmatic. at what extent do you think the actions of the us and some of our lines like sanctions, for example, i've actually contributed to this 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, why would you want to invest in the us and might say best, i mean, like, you know,
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we'll work with the american currency or by american treasury. why that isn't investment in the u. s. economy, why would you want to do it? it's a bad investment. again, the us, the very destructive job 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 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 hopeless case and i welcome the rise of new blocks across the will be great for the global economy. where the u. s. house of representatives has unanimously passed a bill on monday that aims at stripping china of its developing country classification as washington claims of beijing is using. the state says which benefit the people's republic of china as the world's 2nd largest economy,
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accounting for 18.6 percent of the global economy. however, the p r c is classified as a developing country and they're using this status to gain the system and hurt countries that are truly in need. the legislation would direct to the sex 2 states anthony been can to pursue altering the status of the people's republic of china and propose a mechanism to do so. additionally, it would direct the diplomats to ensure the beijing does not receive preferential treatment or assistance within international organizations. this bill comes amid a cooling of relations with beijing, including a congressional hearing. we think talk to ceo regarding data collection policies. more on this, this call slide. now if you under long, international and independent china specialist under thanks very much for joining us this afternoon. first of all, i just wanted to get your take on this legislation from the u. s. what are your thoughts? first of all is not up to the united states to so they saw it in the
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a w t o in the world trade organization or in the united nations, which country is the developing country and which countries the developed countries . there are a very clear definitions are 1st for in terms of the economy. according to the world bank, of course, the world bank is dominated by the united states. the d m. a country has got to be a g d p per capita of $12275.00 us dollars per person before it can be classified as a developed country. so that's, that's the 1st definition. the 2nd definition. and for example, of having an in mind countries like tall bay rich country and saudi arabia of a rich country. but these are a lot of other countries, even though they're at g, d, p per capita, well exceeds $127275.00 is because there are other criteria, light institutions like comedy accepted,
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lose em all, our government succession and so so now these rules again and the americans using that was standard, accused china for lacking this institutions and then twisting it around and to say that, oh, okay, well, it's fine. it can be now as the developing country as the better country. but then for lack of these institutions, fairly cannot be classified as a developed country in the same way that saudi arabia, as far as of the but of country now are thirdly, i think that the am and the it is very important are of course advantages of being classified as a developing country because the, the rules are the w t o r such that in order to determine whether you are a market economy. and if you are a developing country, then they get different standards,
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even measurements to measure the costs are all producing. so to install, of course, the charter can produce cost more cheap, much more cheaply because the weight is so low, compare would be in the united states, and that's the refraction off the development of a country. because it, because a hard, because you've got the whole this institutions have got all these and social benefits and you can afford it. and so i think that the, and there are food was sanders and i, i think that they, it will go very far. but of course the lot of these with eustace, the continue to double down honest terrace on is a m at it's $360.00 degrees pushed back against char. yeah, well yes, we've actually got he brought mounts. my next question is quite a lot to unpack that under. what do you think motivated this and how do you think the chinese official, the chinese government will react to since this moved by the united states? well, i think the united states as long,
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i'm waking up to the fact that they can't really compete with china. and they thought that china's is and using the status as a developing country to eat americans lunch. but then again, there was a lot of standard. let's because you think americans lunch doesn't mean the competing with united states on nike shoes on t shirts. america does not produce the stuff anymore. well, the thing americans lunch feeds them is china is producing a lot of high tech stuff, you know, computers and high end, you know, mobile phones and so on. but this, it required a great deal more than cheap wages. and when they required a, a high level of education, that they kind of labor force. so i think that the united states once a, once the think taken half at the same time, how do you think china will react? and do you think that the us will manage to persuade organizations like the international monetary fund to change it status of china is it's more of
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a political gesture under i think, i think, of course, as i said, it's not up to the united states to decide who is good, if the better it to the united states, i, which one is that developed country? and of course, the united nations, i formally did part of the better developing countries. and they all, most of them support china. and as of course china would, would of course, criticize this with a post, this kind of move, but it doesn't alter the fact that this is an reflection of the continuing pushback . demonizing china and trying to. ready to use stuff with standards and you can have the same time as part of the u. s. continuing effort to boost on to post it and do the buttressed or failing. and it, well under long independence and international china specialist,
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i'm afraid we have to leave that. but thank you very much for sharing your thoughts today with us. in other news, russia has intercepted an american supplied ground, launched small diameter a bomb for the 1st time in ukraine on choose day that's according to moscow's defense ministry. in addition, 18 hi mas rockets were. busy also struck down by russian at defense as well. the story of the don bus conflicts which is often under reported by western media has been covered by argentinian journalists. sebastian salgado, the 1st episode of a 6 part documentary named tango of freedom in lou guns and his film the documents . the testimonies of those living in the dom bus on the ukrainian attacks since 2014. but a documentary focus is on the life of residence in the dumbass and shows how care decision to take the region has led to casualties among the local population. an interview to r t sebastian sol. dar go said that the people of the dumbass are not been heard
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because of western media. censorship. uncalled for the truth about the ukrainian government's actions will be revealed for people who died in the guns. can we have spoken with the survivors of the gran genocide that they start in, you know, against the dumbass population in 2014, we have in our documentary, which is made of 6 episode of 30 minutes, each one of them. testimonies that they tell us, you know, they weigh it, we've been trying to defend the land, the same way that their fathers or their grandfathers did it before. so we started receiving messages, messages from all over the world that people are very thankful for what we have done because it's m a b that is very.

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