president of united states his appointed attorney general, the director of fbi, the u.s. attorney, also appointed by president of the united states and special counsel appointed by the attorney general of the united states, what to we do as a country if they stonewall the house of representatives, majority of whom are republicans? what to we do if the national archives, also part of the executive branch is also stonewalling the republicans? what do we do if separation of powers is being violated by the economyi the executive branch, and only body that we think that can enforce the law. this is what i want to talk to but. we have reach a reached a points, with the most dangerous fbi today since history of the fbi. most dangerous department of justice since it was founded by grant in 1870. and we have most dangerous attorney general since george washington hand-picked an attorney general in 1795. attorney general did not become a person who would be confirmed by senate and head
speak as a country, and say there is no place, no place, for voter intimidation and political violence in america. and with three weeks to go until the world cup kicks off critics deny the tournmanet will be carbon neutral. live from our studio in singapore, this is bbc news. it s newsday. welcome to the programme. north korea has launched three ballistic missiles, according to the south korean military. warnings were issued in some regions ofjapan, but the missile didn t cross their territory. the news comes after wednesday s launch of around 20 missiles, including one that landed less than 60 kilometres from the south korean city of sokcho. those launches were described by us secretary of state antony blinken as dangerous and escalatory . north korea appears to be retaliating for the joint military drills that the south koreans and the us have been carrying out. stanton senior fellow in the nuclear policy program at the carnegie endowment for international peace. he s
recovery and the dramatic new message she has for her constituents. we want to welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. i m wolf blitzerment you re in the situation room. first the battle for the white house. the issue is national security on cnn. i ll be moderating a debate tuesday night right here in washington with the republican presidential contenders. and with the spotlight getting brighter on those at the front of the pack, they could have the potential to the potential to be a game changer. joining us now for a preview, danielle pletka. she is with the american enterprise institute. james carafano, director for foreign policy at the heritage foundation and norm orenstein. he also writes a weekly column for roll call. i want to point out the debate will be co-sponsored by the american enterprise institute and heritage foundation. thanks to both of your organizations for helping us with that as well. let s get to what you re looking for, dani
he had that big of an effect on you? he s a wonderful man. he would give you anything. plus, we go on a tour of his private office full of personal memorabilia and his paintings. it s all ahead on this larry king special, johnny depp. we re sitting here in johnny depp s office, an office like i ve never seen. he is one of the most celebrated and versatile actors of his generation. he s also director, producer, accomplished musician. his new movie rum diary will open october 28th. the only novel ever written by hunter s. thompson. we ll talk about that later. you don t do many things like this. why do you not like to be interviewed? no. i m just not very good at it. why not? you know, there s a strange thing. i m okay when i m a character. if i m playing a character, i can do virtually anything in front of a camera. but if i m just me, i feel, you know, exposed. sort of, you know, feels awkward. we won t expose you. okay. do you like being other people?