today on the program, we ll get the latest live on the israel-hamas war. plus, the world watching as two major wars are fought, one minute middle east, and the other in europe. in each war one side is heavily funded by uncle sam. and it is ukraine s fight against russia that is about to run out of american funding. what does the gop have to do with it? i will talk to aie s kori schake and ann applebaum of the atlantic. and also bernard henri levy on anti-semitism rearing its very ugly head again. and former harvard president drew faust on racism in america. but first here is my take. when one thinks of america s great efts strengths, the kind of strengths with admiration and envy, american s elite universities would have long been at top of the list. but the american public has been losing faith in these universities for good reason. three university presidents came under fire this week for their vague and indecisive answers when calling for the genocide of jews would v
government in london, but not really thinking of the broader picture. one element worth mentioning for viewers wondering, the glaring question of scotland, northern ireland and wales, this inquiry will move to devolved nations later on, early next year. this is very much about the devolved power to the english cities. we ve heard from those two mayors. what comes next? we will hear from steve rotherham, mayors. what comes next? we will hearfrom steve rotherham, the metro mayor for liverpool, another picture of how he felt and possibly similar anecdotes. sadly khan and andy burnham and steve rotherham are all labour mayors, but they kept party politics out of bed. it was a sense of pulling together. we will hear from him. laterthis of pulling together. we will hear from him. later this week we will hearfrom more ministers, the accusations may be answered by them. we have michael gove tomorrow, the cabinet minister, so to some extent his role is to bring what everyone was sayin
all right, that s going to do it for us tonight. in europe, the generations old fear of the far right appears to be slipping. that is the top line from this week s eu elections. setting to retain power and radical right parties will now make up the second biggest block in the european parliament. in germany, a blow to u.s. ally after the anti-immigration and anti-muslim party alternative for germany beat his social democratic party in last week s vote. that was after the parties lead candidate sparked a major scandal saying last month that the members were not necessarily criminals. in france, right wing s national party delivered a defeat the french leader responded by calling for a stop election. a risky move that could inflict further losses. both personally and for the president s party. the news overseas, mainly sparked headlines here at home speculate over what the far right victory could mean for our elections in november. theorizing that the blocked success could fo
The Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) aims to expand participation in peacekeeping initiatives beyond the organization’s area of responsibility, CSTO Secretary General Imangali Tasmagambetov said.
NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg welcomed European allies' efforts to strengthen their own defense capabilities but said that this policy "is not an alternative to NATO" when commenting on Donald Trump's recent anti-NATO comments.