phase of this war on ukraine. just today, president putin has made overt nuclear threats against europe. i talk with the president of finland, who knows putin well. i also sat down with the president of south korea to ask about the threat from his neighbor to the north, who just declared itself a nuclear state. also, hijabs burned, protests rage and chants of death to the dictator ring out in iran after a woman dies in police custody there. what will come of the demonstrations? i will ask an expert. but first, here s my take. let s not play down what has happened this week. the leader of the world s largest nuclear power publicly threatened to use nuclear weapons. in an address in moscow on wednesday, vladamir putin declared that russia would use all weapons systems available to us to defend the country. he emphasized it. this is not a bluff. it might be. putin s threat is an add-on of traditional soviet doctrine. now they contemplate scenarios which it could use
zawhahiri is stomach churning.ch he was the ideological master behind behind the turn of al qaeda andnd groups like that toward indiscriminate mass murder of civilians anywhere, including muslims, all in the name of islamic piety and how he got there, we now, looking back at it, it seems like a straight shot, but if he dropped in at any time of his biography, you wouldn t have known, trained as a doctor, as a surgeon, a respected family in egypt, born and raised in cairo. by the time he was 15 years old he was a committed radical who wantedic to impose islamic theecacy by force all of 15 yearsfo old. when islamic militant disassassinate egypt s president anwar sadat at a military parade in 1981, he was one of hundreds ofe islamic radicals who was tried and imprisoned and tortured for years in egyptian prisons. while there he became an informant, supplying information on hisin comrades, and released fromra prison in egypt in 1948 d even more radical than when he had gone in an
this desperate cries from the city s subway victim. nobody wants open borders. and there he is seeking a 2024 bed where she critiqued biden s handling of the border. but we should have been doing is come together the modern candidate. jackson. intercepted. it is good. and it is a game-winner. the bills complete the comeback. steve: ladies and gentlemen, you re looking at the city with a big shoulders as chicago is known. currently 50 degrees. how gorgeous is that they are? the sun is not sneaking out. it is fall out. 50 degrees right now going for a daytime highs. the camera walks up to the mezzanine level right now. 63 is going to be a high. if you re out in the windy city, your highs this week s are going to be in the 60s and 70s. it s going to be beautiful. ainsley: i love fall. brian: now the bad news. if you are in the windy city, the bears lost to the giants, and had no quarterback. 20-12. think about this, both snapping the ball to their quarter
sea. it s expected to be signed on friday. food prices have been soaring since russia invaded ukraine in february. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are yasmin alibhai brown, the author and journalist, and sian griffiths, who s the education editor at the sunday times. hello there. once again, let s have a look through what some of the front page are saying. the mirror leads on the bbc s shameful 1995 princess diana interview which panorama journalist martin bashir secured by making false claims about the ex nanny to princes william and harry. the front pages says cops should charge the culprits . the mail reports on migrant channel crossings, claiming some of those who arrived here came with guns. the times leads with the tory leadership race, as the two remaining candidates trade blows over their differing plans to manage the economy. the guardian reports on the same story, and says mr sunak s opponent liz