Skip to main content

tv   The Bottom Line  Al Jazeera  April 11, 2024 7:30pm-8:01pm AST

7:30 pm
to join 5 non casita for a summit focused on defense. molly's military gentle, his band, all political activities st. it's needed to maintain public order. earlier this month for the 80 parties and civic groups called on the military leadership to hold presidential elections as soon as possible. molly has been under military rule since a coo, nearly 3 years ago. more than a 100 people have died during a record breaking sheet wave in molly, in west africa, temperatures and one town reached 48.5 degrees celsius. mita urologist say that's the hardest ever recorded. on the continent furnace with reports. there's not much access to electricity and model. so using funds or i condition is to get released from extreme heat is nearly impossible. that means heat stroke can kill let's get it based on view of the qc you have a caught on. if someone comes with a fever at $42.00 degrees vent to break,
7:31 pm
if you have to put ice on them or put them under air conditioning or situated, you've got to do this within 40 minutes. otherwise, people get lesions on the vital organs. when that happens, even if he was beaten to organ damage can result in where we have been receiving patients and these conditions. and it's too late to do anything for them. at least a 100 people have died in the capital bama code. the figure it could be much higher elsewhere in molly meteorologist measure the temperature of 48.5 degrees celsius in one town on april, the full that's the highest ever recorded on the african continent. our parent died a week ago because of the heat. when we came in to pray, the cemetery, god told us the what 15 to 20 barrels a day of people who died from the heat. the heat wave is being claimed on the l nino where the problem a man made the climate change. according to the world meter, a logical organization, temperatures in most land areas worldwide,
7:32 pm
will be above normal until at least may, when i mean you start to read. but it's me, i'll just say, got them. all those presidents has issued a natural disaster declaration to mobilize more crews to tackle large forest fires . more than 40 fires are burning. one of them close to the capital president, bernardo arevalo says that they're investigating the source of the fires, of the former american football star o. j. simpson has died at the age of 76. in a statement on social media. as finally said, he died of cancer. some center was accused of killing his ex wife, nicole brown, and her friends. in 1994, he was acquitted. a later found liable in a separate civil trial. thanks for watching. coming up next. it's the bottom line, the growing up in greece means taking action. welcome to generation change
7:33 pm
a playful series that seem to understand since holland, the idea is mobilizing, use around the world. we need to a political party that we'll talk about our problems, know how come from a generation because 0 is being seen in the groups. the size of the system has no per month. the interest of working class people, there is a difference between being able to participate in the system and actually being represented in the system. generation change on al jazeera hire and steve clements . and i have a question, despite the changing views in america and even inside his own administration. why does binding insist on 0 consequences for israel in its war on gaza? let's get to the bottom line. the, the contradiction is obvious. talk about the need to protect civilians and aid workers, but make sure is real faces, no consequences for its actions, and then keep the weapons flowing. wash rinse, repeat that sums up the biden ministrations approach to israel's war and gaza,
7:34 pm
even as it carries out work crimes and uses food as a weapon of war. after is really forces killed 7 humanitarian workers for world central kitchen. us president joe biden put out of state and critical of israel, but then the white house for us to declare its unconditional support of israel, no change in policy. so despite the theatrical protests is the weight of setting up a new forever war in the middle east. and what's the effect on the united states? it's else without policy, is clearly visible to a lot of voters, particularly younger voters who don't buy this equation. today we're talking with an l. she line who quit her job at the state department in protest of the binding ministration support for israel's war and gaza and holiday again, the a former adviser to the policy needing authority and now a senior fellow at the middle east institute. and now you just resigned from the state department, you put out a statement about why you resigned your contract. you're not the assistant secretary state, you're not the deputy secretary state, you're not the secretary of state. you're in the woodwork of the state department, and yet you're using this moment to focus attention on this crisis. tell us about
7:35 pm
your decision. so 1st, thanks so much for having me. and for drawing attention to this issue, and i had thought about resigning earlier, i was at state as a foreign affairs officer working in the bureau of democracy, human rights and labor near eastern affairs, trying to promote human rights in the middle east. and it had just become so difficult to try to do that in the aftermath of october 7th. and i, it just, it felt that it had gotten to the point where i had tried to raise objections internally to the extent that i was able to like through descent cables, for example. um, but eventually it just got to the point that it seemed that resignation was really the only option left. and then when i was speaking with colleagues, they encouraged me to do so publicly in order to draw more attention to the. so i decided that i would, i would go ahead and go public and to,
7:36 pm
to try to contribute to these efforts to push the administration to adopt a different let me push you a little bit further. october 7th, was a trigger for a lot of different players in this drama. right clearly is real, felt assaulted in a way and you saw a consensus of opinion inside is real about a response that you haven't seen in a very long time. so it was across from left to right about, about reacting on. do use think that the us at that moment took the right policy course in the way it supported israel in that moment. should it have anticipated the, what we now see is a kind of overreach and an incredible impact on victims casualties among civilian civilian kids. women, even man, i mean i, i have to tell people, i keep seeing white flags go up, and that's almost assigned to be shot. so what, tell us about that dynamic i, i think the fact that president biden came out in his response, warning israel to not react the way the us did after 911 was really
7:37 pm
wise on his part. i think unfortunately, there was no effort to actually try to ensure that that didn't happen. the sort of over reaction we saw from the united states in the aftermath of 911 and the, this over reaction from israel. you know, we know that there is really military is capable of carrying out very precise surgical strikes and that is not the approach that they've taken in gaza. i mean, based on my understanding of what we're observing, this is a policy of collective punishment that they are trying to and engage in an ethnic cleansing, to try to remove the population of gaza and to, to make life so unlivable there that people cannot survive or are forced to leave and, and to take over that territory. and i think another important thing to keep in mind here is that, you know, prime minister netanyahu, whose political future depends on this violence continuing. and he has no incentive
7:38 pm
to either get his own hostages back or to end the violence. so i do think the us administration is just being somewhat naive or you know, will fully blind to the political incentives on netanyahu's side when they keep pushing, you know, they, they keep talking about their efforts to push for a cease fire, but are not using american leverage to get their college candy. i've been reading your work intensely for now, almost half a year. it's almost half a year of this crisis going on. and the gap between what we hear about the president biden talking about the fact that we need to minimize casualties, we may not need new israel needs to minimize impact on civilians, etc. and then the lack of conditionality on this, i'm just interested both from your own perspective as someone who knows the middle east well. but also the hop hopper see that americans are watching and,
7:39 pm
and election year. and how that gap is going to play out. the reality is that not only is the american public, not there, and specifically democratic party constituencies have, i think, are increasingly vocal and angry at where this administration is. but even inside the washington policy establishment itself, you know, we hear very mainstream voices of both democrat and occasionally also, a republican voice is saying that the president looks week at the president is being led to by an extremist, a prime minister with his own survival. busy in mind and who is himself beholden to a band of extremist in his coalition. and the president is constantly being humiliated with by these re lease or something, their nose as the president and secretary blinking at every opportunity. well it, let me, let me to interrupt you there just for a 2nd. how it and ask you is prime minister is really prime minister netanyahu's
7:40 pm
political survival undermining president biden's political survival. yeah, it seems so it's pretty remarkable to me and it really shows, i think the extent to which this president is blinker is wilfully blind up to certain realities. and i do think that it is kind of caught up in the person of joe biden. i think most people in the administration has probably moved on in their thinking, but the real kind of you, it's, it's a person of joe biden, who is the reason that we are stuck where we are. well, this takes us back to a nail. she line in her resignation from the state department. i think a lot of us are struggling with whether you are a boutique actor or you represent many others who share this perspective. whispers in the hallways, discomfort with the direction of the administration. we've seen letters from donors, we've seen anonymous letters written by whitehouse,
7:41 pm
staff and others. they're very few who have stepped forward a now and done what you did and resigned your job and position. and as you wrote in your eloquent essay and cnn, this may foreclose a future for you and foreign service. and so you, you, you put this. so how, how unique are you in this environment right now? are there others out there that share your perspectives? many people share this perspective, the people inside state. many of them want to do that work because they believe in what the united states says it's supposed to stand for and they believe in the work they're doing. many people are doing extremely important work on gaza and on accountability measures for israel, but those won't come into effect unless spite and wants them to. so they're there. there are efforts sort of waiting in the wings, but until they get a sign off from the president, they're not going to be put in place. so, you know, i think for many people who work at the state they,
7:42 pm
they would like to still believe in the work that they're doing or especially if they're working on this issue, they are doing everything they can to try to shift us. let's see here. but again, those kinds of decisions get made at the very top. but what i was struck by was how you felt that no one was returning your calls, that america doesn't have voice on this anymore. tell us what the implications of that are. so, i mean, just to be clear, i was working on, you know, human rights issues, not, you know, israel palestine was not one of the countries in my portfolio, right. but my work was impacted, you know, very significantly by the conflict. and partly because the civil society in the middle east and north africa in the week of october 7th and the, the us response didn't want to have anything to do with the us government. the us had lost all credibility as an entity working to promote human rights. in addition, it just became that much more difficult for the us government to criticize any of
7:43 pm
these middle eastern governments about their own human rights record. such that there's, there's a meeting with a for an official for example. usually our office would try to emphasize a particular case or concerns around, you know, freedom of expression of freedom of association, you know, political prisoners. but in this context, that doesn't get emphasized as much. it's not a priority or, you know, the immediate reaction from the government is who are you to lecture us about human rights and to your question of how wide spread is the sentiment. i mean, people are devastated. there are there, the state department has held listening sessions for people to talk about this. but there has been multiple defense cables i co authored one they signed 2 more. i don't know how many there have been total, but my understanding of their new people are very concerned and they are trying to
7:44 pm
speak up. and i do think that the overall, the, the broader question here for people inside state, although they try to remain a political, there are a lot of concerns about what this means for us politics and me. and trump administration really undermine the state department. and people welcome this administration's pledges to reestablish us more leadership to emphasize human rights to engage in international institutions like un and in the week of october 7th, it's become clear that those things are, are not in fact the priority. and what is the priority is this unconditional u. s. military support for israel and political support like in the u. n. so i think many, many people just feel very betrayed. i know there are more people who have resigned quietly. we haven't seen many public resignations. i think in part just because it's part of the culture of the state department to not sort of, you know,
7:45 pm
seek the spotlight or you know, the, so much of that work is done quietly and out of the public eyes. so i think for many people, they're just not really accustomed to that you know, to coming out publicly like this. right. well, i want to get your reactions to a sound bite. we have from national security council spokesperson, john kirby responding to the aftermath of the death of 7 world central kitchen aid workers. we continue to look at incidents as they occur. the state department has a process in place and to date, as you and i are speaking, they have not found any incidents where these rallies have violated international humanitarian law. unless you think we don't take it seriously, i can assure you that we do. we look at this in real time, and now i want to ask you to respond to john kirby's comments that specifically mentioned, the state department. to me sound a bit orwellian,
7:46 pm
how do they sound to you? it's and i would just counter that. the reality is fairly clear here. we have other governments and other international institutions, bodies around the world that have demonstrated very clearly the ways in which israel is, is committing gross violations of human rights for crimes. and in, in this, and, you know, as you mentioned, directly targeting journalists targeting aid workers targeting hospitals and health care workers on top of just nasa occurring civilians. the state department is not yet ready to acknowledge that because that would necessitate a different course of action. israel is violating us laws here. so for example, the way he laws are not being applied or section 620 i of the, for an assistance act. these and other laws would require the us to change his
7:47 pm
behavior. but until the white house is ready to take a different approach here, the state department is not going to acknowledge that. and so we are going to continue to see, as you said, this sort of orwellian disregard for the truth. which again, gets back to some of my concerns about this all the starting to sound very trump in or just the ways in which reality is denied. people can see with their own eyes what's happening. they have direct accounts from social media, from people inside gaza. and, and yet this administration doesn't seem to have caught up to the fact that they've lost the narrative here. they can't continue to just treat this as a p r issue to be managed, that they have to take a different approach or they do risk. not only, you know, losing the, this election, but sort of the, the credibility of the united states on the world stage writ large. i mean, this visit ministration likes to talk about great power competition with china,
7:48 pm
with russia. we have the obviously ongoing ukraine conflict and the, and there's a lot more at stake here as, as father had mentioned. i mean it's devastating for the people in gaza, but it's, it's much bigger than that as well. when you listen to the perspective we just heard from the white house on the, by the administration versus some of the other voices that are also very st. senior and parts of the us government. what do you make of it? i think there's something going on here that a lot of people don't know about it. you know, when it's in, in the, in the minds of israeli military and political leaders, they are not committing war crimes. they genuinely believe that they are biding by at least a version of international humanitarian law. but they have a very different standard as to who is a legitimate target and who is it? then we do here in the united states or that most western nations do. how they don't talk a yeah, what will that standard look like? if rafa is attacked in a full scale attack by israel,
7:49 pm
which we know they have an interest in doing and actually us, we're planners are now working with them in some ways on, on rafa where the bulk of the population and gaza has swelled into that. what will that calculation look like then? i guess we take the, the, the open source reporting on this at its face. we know that the deliberations are not going well. these railways presented a plan for moving a 1000000 people, but they had no contingency for how they would be fed or what kind of water source they would have. what kind of sanitation, i mean, these are, these are not specters in, in these really calculation. and we're told that these meetings got quite heated. so my sense is that israel is going to move forward regardless of what the us thinks. because that, because as we already pointed out, right now,
7:50 pm
israel is looking at what the united states is demanding as, as a recommendation, right? they have no reason, you know, they'll take it into consideration, but at the end of the day they will probably discount because there is no or else there is no consequence to completely ignoring what the administration says. and in fact, there's quite a strong incentive to disregard of what the united states wants to do because of these really public opinion, because nothing out was on political survival. right? uh and, and so i don't see that trajectory change it. now i know that you are acting, you have a belief in a political stewardship, if the responsibility you have and you've taken a political act in your resignation. but i want you to put on your mathematician hat for a moment, and we just saw a political primary in the state of wisconsin, and 50000 people voted on, instructed. that is a vote. not for joe biden,
7:51 pm
in that primary, joe biden in the last election against trump, one that state by 20000 votes. we saw similar activities in michigan as you look at this and you kind of look at the political tectonics of people, either voting for someone else or abstaining. do you think that this conflict would you be a 1st time? i think we've seen a, a foreign affairs issue matters so much in election. do you believe given you're young? you're, you're tied with folks, you're talking to them. do you think this will have that much consequence? i absolutely. i, i think 11 thing that i worry about a little bit is that the democratic establishment may assume they've sort of lost those voters. so there's no point changing tack now. and they may have lost some, you know, i've certainly been in touch with, with people who say there's no way they would ever vote for him. but i do think that if this administration took a different tack and again, merely imposed american laws, just follow us law,
7:52 pm
which they are required to do. which would mean cutting off u. s. military assistance to israel and insisting that aid is allowed in and insisting on a ceasefire. many people would be willing to vote for a president who did that because i think, as you said, it is unusual. the extent to which we're seeing a matter of foreign policy playing such a big role here. i do think, you know, it's april. there is time to shift here. there are so many people who could be saved if by didn't just took a different approach, right. i think the concern is, as we get closer and closer to the election and things just get worse. not only this, the coming destination of the people sheltering, trying to seek refuge in the roof. but also israel just bond, the embassy building, the iranian embassy building in damascus, and is threatening to invade lebanon. we know americans are fed up with forever
7:53 pm
where we're wars, if biting doesn't stop israel from expanding this conflict into a region wide conflagration. there's no way he's, you know, americans are so tired of this, of, of these forever wars. so i, i'm, again, we've already said that we're sort of confused by the ways in which this administration is, is acting against american interests against their own electoral interest. and it's, it's just unclear why they're not taking a new approach. so i thank you, holly, i'm going to give you the last word here and, and ask you to answer question that kind of confused as me, where are the rest of the leaders in the middle east at this moment? why aren't they putting conditions on their own relationship with this real jordan egypt? others? where is the, the broader response from the middle east to this? which seems like they've got a foot in and a foot out of consequential decision. we're talking a lot about the united states,
7:54 pm
not putting conditionality on its relationship. why aren't other middle eastern states doing that? we'll have to make this the last word. yeah, i mean it's a, it's a really important question. i think part of it has to do with the the, this is the united states. it's very hard to define united states. i think also we have to look at the nature of these regimes of egypt, saudi u, a. e at jordan. these are authoritarian regimes that have quite, quite atrocious human rights records of their own. their, you know, human rights is not a particular priority for them either for their citizens. much less the citizens of other countries. as so do they are really all about about interest and their own racheal interests. so the survival of the regime. so whatever they think is that it can, can promote that goal, right?
7:55 pm
and, and conversely, if they see the power steering issue as possibly opposing a threat to their routine, we see a little bit of that in jordan, the jordanians have been the most of vocal probably that of, of eric states in opposing what israel is, is doing. and cause a large part because they are that they have a population that is mostly palestinian and, and the, you know, the, the monarchy there is doesn't feel all that stable so. so this is a factor i think for, for eric public opinion. but there's quite a lot of, there's quite a lot of hesitation, people are not able to, to go out into the streets. the way they did to say during the spring more than a decade ago, there's fear of from their own resumes. and there are major crackdowns on, on anyone trying to organize. so all of these i think are, are mitigating factors. well,
7:56 pm
we'll have to leave it there. thank you so much for your candor. former state department officer and l. she line at holiday again. the at the middle east institute. thank you so much for being with us today. so what's the bottom line? what happened to world central kitchen is telling. here you have an organization that was getting significant amounts of food to palestinians in gaza, while the united states government talks about building a seaport by summer time to get aiden as israel continues to use for vision as a weapon of war. jose andres, the chef that started world central kitchen, says israel targeted his 8 convoy, systematically, car by car, killing 7 of those he calls angels. but what happened to those innocent workers is exactly what we've seen happen to thousands of innocent palestinian children, women, and men. now more than $33000.00 killed by israel waving a white flag does nothing to stop a tank gun or a drone operator or a sniper's deadly bullet. despite the reports of anger in the white house of israel's actions, nothing has changed in the unconditional us support for israel's attacks on gaza.
7:57 pm
the hypocrisy is obvious. widespread famine is immune and the death and destruction just go on. given all of this. sadly, it would just be wrong to believe that there will be a fairy tale and, and that's the bottom line, the for a week to look at the world's top business stories. how much is the rebuilding going to cost and who pays from global markets? and economies of small businesses have just started seeing and station come down and how it affects the lives? how big a problem is global food insecurity? counting the cost? oh no, just the challenges here.
7:58 pm
so how is your vacation and this is shows the chest. wow. the the biggest over the next and yet in history, the world's biggest democracy, both its own epic showdown. in this final episode of speaking gather port. i'll be off the prime minister in the movie elevated in the global business. i look forward to moving to take a long room under the microscope with them and how much is facts and how much is the picture to be in the port box for?
7:59 pm
oh no, does he does we know what's happening in our region. we know how to get to places that others can know. as far as i said, i'm going all the way that you tell the story is what can make a difference. the news, [000:00:00;00]
8:00 pm
the no pause in israel's bombardment of gauze of 6 palestinians are killed and it is really a task that targeted a market in garza city. the light from headquarters and del fine, 30 navigates also a heads, aid workers and guys come under a time. once again. unicef says one of fits vehicles was fired on while trying to
8:01 pm
enter the north of the strength. ukraine struggles to protect its energy facilities in the car. keep region officer relentless russian air strikes. and parts of south

6 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on