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Jan 11, 2017
01/17
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israeli settlers who live in the west bank live under israeli civil law, and what has been happening is, increasingly, there's been a reverse of the oslo process. palestinian homes in the west bank built illegally, i grant you that, but built because they can't get permits, only one permit was granted for construction of a palestinian entity in 2014 and 2015, so those have been demolished. >> rose: how much aid did we give israel last year? >> 3.1 billion, approximately. >> rose: largest donor of american aid in the world. >> israel receives more than 50% of all the foreign military sales support of the united states and, yes, we give them a lot of aid. i'm not bashful about that. i think we should. i'm glad we give israel a lot of aid. israel is our friend and ally and has been under siege and israel does need to be able to have the security to protect itself. part of the guiding principle of how we approached this process was to absolutely make sure israel could defend itself by itself. >> rose: you know what the israelis will say. they will say to you and have said it a thousand t
israeli settlers who live in the west bank live under israeli civil law, and what has been happening is, increasingly, there's been a reverse of the oslo process. palestinian homes in the west bank built illegally, i grant you that, but built because they can't get permits, only one permit was granted for construction of a palestinian entity in 2014 and 2015, so those have been demolished. >> rose: how much aid did we give israel last year? >> 3.1 billion, approximately. >>...
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Jan 12, 2017
01/17
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israeli settlers who live in the west bank live under israeli civil law. what has been happening is increasingly there has been a reverse of the oslo process. palestinian homes in the west bank, built illegally i grant you that, but only because they can't get permits. only one permit was granted for construction in 2014 and 2015. those have been demolished. charlie: how much aid did we give israel last year? how many billions of dollars? secretary kerry: it was $3.1 billion, somewhere approximately. charlie: largest donor in the world. secretary kerry: israel receives more than 50% of all of the foreign military sales support of the united states. and yes, we give them a lot of aid. i am not bashful about that, i think we should. i am glad we give israel a lot of aid. israel's our ally, our friend, and israel has been under siege. and israel does need to have the security to protect itself great -- itself. part of the guiding principle how we approach this process was to absolutely make certain israel could defend itself by itself. that is a premise -- ch
israeli settlers who live in the west bank live under israeli civil law. what has been happening is increasingly there has been a reverse of the oslo process. palestinian homes in the west bank, built illegally i grant you that, but only because they can't get permits. only one permit was granted for construction in 2014 and 2015. those have been demolished. charlie: how much aid did we give israel last year? how many billions of dollars? secretary kerry: it was $3.1 billion, somewhere...
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Jan 11, 2017
01/17
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israeli settlers who live in the west bank live under israeli cilvvil law. increasingly there has been a reverse of the oslo process. palestinian homes in the west bank, built illegally, only one permit was granted for construction in 2014 and 2015. those have been demolished. charlie: how much aid did we give israel last year? secretary kerry: $3.1 billion. than 50% ofves more all of the foreign military sales support of the united states. and yes, we give them a lot of aid. i think we should. israel's our ally, our friend, and israel has been under siege. israel does need to have the security to protect itself great part of the guiding principle how we approach this process was to absolutely make certain israel could defend itself by itself. you know what the israelis say. say to you, will the u.n. is not the way to go. the way to go is negotiations between israel and the palestinians. secretary kerry: you are correct. we affirmed that in the resolution. we've affirmed say to you, the u.n.that every step of the way. cannotal status issues be imposed by the
israeli settlers who live in the west bank live under israeli cilvvil law. increasingly there has been a reverse of the oslo process. palestinian homes in the west bank, built illegally, only one permit was granted for construction in 2014 and 2015. those have been demolished. charlie: how much aid did we give israel last year? secretary kerry: $3.1 billion. than 50% ofves more all of the foreign military sales support of the united states. and yes, we give them a lot of aid. i think we should....
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Jan 18, 2017
01/17
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. >> rose: john kerry made a strong effort to do something and to bring israelis and palestinians together and, in the end, he could not do it. there is also iran. that agreement has held. >> the nuclear agreement. >> rose: the nuclear agreement. >> 1 year old today. >> rose: you believe it will continue to hold, that -- or can the administration that's coming to power do away with it? >> it could do away with it. >> rose: what are the consequence ifs they do away with it. >> well, let me outline them. first of all, let's step back and, as you said, this nuclear deal that was agreed and negotiated with iran a long with the european union, france, britain, germany, russia and china, as well as iran itself -- >> rose: the p5+1. the p5+1 plus iran has endured and been adhered to in all of its sellments by the iranian side. in contrast to where we were before the agreement a few years ago, iran has removed two-thirds of its centrifuges and disabled them, shipped out 98% of its enriched yiew uranium, poured concrete in the reactor -- >> rose: so much farther away to produce the materials for a
. >> rose: john kerry made a strong effort to do something and to bring israelis and palestinians together and, in the end, he could not do it. there is also iran. that agreement has held. >> the nuclear agreement. >> rose: the nuclear agreement. >> 1 year old today. >> rose: you believe it will continue to hold, that -- or can the administration that's coming to power do away with it? >> it could do away with it. >> rose: what are the consequence ifs...
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Jan 19, 2017
01/17
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charlie: the israelis will say they get more support militarily from this administration than any previous administration. speaker ryan: we just renegotiated a new m.o.u. i am not going to argue with that. i think the obama and menstruation undercut our -- obama administration undercut our ally out of the door. a two state solution works if both sides want a to stay solution. that doesn't work if one side doesn't think you should exist. they don't think israel has the right to exist. how can you have a two state solution when the people on the other side of the states-- charlie: that is not everybody, come on. that is hamas. speaker ryan: it is in their charter, and they are part of this coalition government. you need a respect to a right to resist. charlie: you said paul ryan is neocon.il -- not a what are you? speaker ryan: in the old days, a neocon used to mean a lot of things about foreign policy. i am less of an interventionist subscribeyou would as that. we need a moral in principle-based foreign policy. we need to defend our values and views, but have to be cautious and judicious in
charlie: the israelis will say they get more support militarily from this administration than any previous administration. speaker ryan: we just renegotiated a new m.o.u. i am not going to argue with that. i think the obama and menstruation undercut our -- obama administration undercut our ally out of the door. a two state solution works if both sides want a to stay solution. that doesn't work if one side doesn't think you should exist. they don't think israel has the right to exist. how can...
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Jan 3, 2017
01/17
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of dealing with the foreign affairs of my country entering the very difficult negotiations with the israelis, we concluded the peace treaty in camp david. i was attracted by the job because at the end of the cold war and the possibility to do something through this first year, ithe was very optimistic because i have a summit meeting in january of 1992 and asked me to prepare a paper on peacemaking. it was a success. the second year, i discovered the fatigue of the united states and the excitement was flagging and they were less interested in peacekeeping operations and less interesting -- they don't want to get involved in peacekeeping operations all over the world. the setback in somalia can be one of the reasons. the setback in the formal -- the former yugoslavia. but the simple explanation is fatigue. charlie: how do you overcome that? guest: this is what you are trying to do. that we will be confronted by global problems and for the time being, there's only one form that can help the international committee to solve the global problems. a problem cannot be solved by one or two countries.
of dealing with the foreign affairs of my country entering the very difficult negotiations with the israelis, we concluded the peace treaty in camp david. i was attracted by the job because at the end of the cold war and the possibility to do something through this first year, ithe was very optimistic because i have a summit meeting in january of 1992 and asked me to prepare a paper on peacemaking. it was a success. the second year, i discovered the fatigue of the united states and the...
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Jan 18, 2017
01/17
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we've also heard the leadership in the israeli military and intelligence community say it's working. it serves their interests. if you ask the saudi's and the emirates for their view, if you ask them what they think, they will tell you, they acknowledge that this deal has extended a breakout time and reduced a nuclear threat. the problem is for the region, and was particularly talk about the gulf states, their principal concern is not only the nuclear programs, it's other iranian nefarious behavior which we share a serious concern about. charlie: it's fair to say anything about it. susan: i wouldn't say we have not done anything about. the nuclear deal was not about terrorism and ballistic missiles and a lot of other things that concerned us greatly about iranian behavior. our view is, and if you press them, they would acknowledge as bad, that given iran's behavior, better that it not have a nuclear weapons capacity. better that it have a constraint, small, verified, monitored civilian program, and it not have the power to threaten israel or our partners in the region with a nuclear
we've also heard the leadership in the israeli military and intelligence community say it's working. it serves their interests. if you ask the saudi's and the emirates for their view, if you ask them what they think, they will tell you, they acknowledge that this deal has extended a breakout time and reduced a nuclear threat. the problem is for the region, and was particularly talk about the gulf states, their principal concern is not only the nuclear programs, it's other iranian nefarious...
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Jan 3, 2017
01/17
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and during the very difficult negotiation with the israeli and we conclude the peace treaty. >> rose: in camp david. >> in camp david. so but i was attracted by the job because of the end. cold war. and the possibility to do something through this organization. the first year i was very optimistic because i was able to-- first of all i was lucky to have a summit meeting january '92 and they asked me to prepare a position paper on peace keeping, peace making, preventive diplomacy. and it was a success. but the second year i discovered that there was a fatigue of the member states, and their action was a kind of cycle. there was less interested in peace keeping operation. there was less interesting to provide the equipment. they don't want to get involved in different peace keeping operations all over the world. the setback in somalia can be one of the reasons. the setback in certain parts of former yugoslavia. but i believe the simplest explanation is a fatigue. >> a fatigue. >> yes. >> how do you overcome that. >> this is what you are trying to do. you are trying to show that we will
and during the very difficult negotiation with the israeli and we conclude the peace treaty. >> rose: in camp david. >> in camp david. so but i was attracted by the job because of the end. cold war. and the possibility to do something through this organization. the first year i was very optimistic because i was able to-- first of all i was lucky to have a summit meeting january '92 and they asked me to prepare a position paper on peace keeping, peace making, preventive diplomacy....
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Jan 27, 2017
01/17
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countries like iran or turkey or israeli, lusha germany and europe, a world of local powers but more than anything, it's a world of growing disarray or worst yet as we see in the middle east also at times a world of chaos. >> what does the world need? >> what the world needs is a united states that is willing to play something of a traditional leadership role. the world also needs a new what i call-- . >> rose: traditional leadership world is not a defined president trump. >> not at all. in just a few short days but also over the campaign and transition, he has contributed to the disarray by raising fundamental questions about whether the united states is any longer reliable. whether we're prepared to support our allies. we're obviously not prepared to support free trade. there are real questions in also the whole america first characterization. it sends out a signal that we're simply in it for ourselves. what i am worried about is a lot of other countries are going to say hold it, if the united states is no longer in it for us, we have to take care of ourselves, on some issues that
countries like iran or turkey or israeli, lusha germany and europe, a world of local powers but more than anything, it's a world of growing disarray or worst yet as we see in the middle east also at times a world of chaos. >> what does the world need? >> what the world needs is a united states that is willing to play something of a traditional leadership role. the world also needs a new what i call-- . >> rose: traditional leadership world is not a defined president trump....