Many americans, for the first time, are starting to think a lot harder about north korea, the potential threat, and what it means for them. Everybody in washington is thinking about it. I am glad you are here and im glad to be part of this. I am joined by four panelists to bring a wide range of perspective on north korea. First is our host, frank, who is the u. S. Institute of pieces expert focusing on issues from 2001 until this year. He served as the Senior Adviser for north korea in the office of secretary of defense. Welcome. [applause] he is your host, after all. Jean lee is here. The First American granted access to north korea. She became the chief of the pyongyang bureau. [applause] she is a colleague in the press. Former reporter. Todd anthony is a senior fellow at the foundation. He is a former government expert on targeted financial measures, sanctions against hostile regimes. He is here to guide us through some of the questions of sanctions. It is good to have you, anthony.
Group, Alliance Defending freedom. And, dna Testing Services, and how genetic data could be used against consumers. Sure to watch cspans washington journal beginning life at 7 00 eastern saturday morning three joined the discussion. [captions Copyright National cable satellite corp. 2016] [captioning performed by the national captioning institute, which is responsible for its caption content and accuracy. Visit ncicap. Org] join us on cspan3 this weekend for American History tv for highlights saturday at three clock p. M. Eastern, in honor of the 50th anniversary of the 1957 public broadcasting act. The library of congress hosted a discussion about the history of news and Public Affairs programming. It 00 p. M. Eastern on lectures in history, university of kansas professor on the role of africanamerican ministers and politics, and how churches helped members gain experiences with organizing and running for political office. Sunday 8 00 a. M. Eastern, midway from world war ii, from vete
He was 13 years old and living in nagasaki. He lived about two miles from ground zero and somehow survived even though the bomb devastated his neighborhood. Thats just amazing. Two days later he and his mother visited the epicenter searching for their family members who live nearby. Heres how he described the scene. Im going to translate this one as well. Translator he says houses were gone. Only the steel bars of concrete buildings stood bare and hollow. Steel bars of factories were entirely bent. Everything else was a burnt field. On the way to my aunts house we saw blackened bodies all over the place. They probably burned underneath houses that burned down. People who died from severe injuries and burns they were left on the ground without being collected. Those who were gravelly injured and alive were left to writhe in pain without rescue. Today, mr. Tanaka is a Nuclear Engineer himts and hes an activist against Nuclear Weapons. He feels things are going in the wrong direction. Lis
US-North Korea Relations: Nuclear Deterrence & Diplomacy eastwestcenter.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eastwestcenter.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The United States is incredibly concerned over Russia s veto last week of a U.N. Security Council (UNSC) resolution meant to extend the mandate of an expert panel monitoring the enforcement of sanctions against North Korea, a State Department spokesperson said Monday.