Why did separatists in southern yemen seize a Remote Island in the arabian sea fighters backed by the United Arab Emirates are accused of carrying out a coup. So what makes the island so valuable to yemen or insights this is a story. Hello and welcome to the program i am wrong on the latest flashpoint in yemens 5 year civil war is a Remote Island in the arabian sea the quarter is sometimes compared to the famous Galapagos Islands in the pacific. The plants and animals on the World Heritage sites are found nowhere else on earth now theyre in a war zone the sudden Transitional Council have deposed the islands governor and declared itself are all the southern yemen fighters are backed by the United Arab Emirates yemens internationally recognized government supported by saudi arabia calls the takeover a coup. Explains how the latest events further complicate efforts to end the war. Celebrating the new military gains forces loyal to the self supplies southern Transitional Council to see too
You can get that. Today, we are kicking off a series called a world transformed. To discuss how the pandemic is changing global leadership. The u. S. Is not the main or center of that order. Other countries, global institutions and global ngos and private sector groups are rising to the occasion. Our guest today is kristalina georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary fund, imf. Please tweet us your question askpolitico. I have had the privilege of getting to know her over the course of 10 years as a colleague and as a journalist and im delighted that she will help us understand what she calls the great lockdown. The imf is pushing emergency liquidity into the market. It is succeeding in getting a debt moratorium. Welcome, kristalina. Dir. Georgieva thank you very much. And hello to the audience. Ryan we have people all over the world. Glad you made it into the office. Ill start with an easy one. Larry summers says we might have unemployment in the double digits for a c
The author of politicos global translations. If you dont get my newsletter, you can get that. Today, we are kicking off a series called a world transformed. To discuss how the pandemic is changing global leadership. The u. S. Is not the main or center of that order. Other countries, global institutions and global ngos and private sector groups are rising to the occasion. Our guest today is kristalina georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary fund, imf. Please tweet us your question askpolitico. I have had the privilege of getting to know her over the course of 10 years as a colleague and as a journalist and im delighted that she will help us understand what she calls the great lockdown. The imf is pushing emergency liquidity into the market. It is succeeding in getting a debt moratorium. Welcome, kristalina. Dir. Georgieva thank you very much. And hello to the audience. Ryan we have people all over the world. Glad you made it into the office. Ill start with an easy one
Good morning. Wherever you are in the world, welcome to this virtual interview from politico. My name is robert heath and i am the author of politicos global translations. If you dont get my newsletter, you can get that. Today, we are kicking off a a worldcalled transformed. To discuss how the pandemic is changing global leadership. Other countries, global ngos andons and Global Private sector groups are rising to the occasion. Our guest today is kristalina georgieva, managing director of the International Monetary fund, imf. I have had the privilege of getting to know her over the course of 10 years as a colleague and as a journalist and im delighted that she will help us understand what she calls the great lockdown. Imf is pushing the emergency liquidity into the market. It is succeeding in getting a debt moratorium. Ina. Ome, kristal dir. Georgieva thank you very much. And hello to the obvious. Ryan we have people all over the world. Glad you made it into the office. Ill start with
After the first u. S. Moon landing. Panelists including designers. The space museum was the host of this event here in washington, d. C. Weve assembled a panel of speakers, a really fantastic. Some of my favorite people i like to talk to when talking about spacesuits, to recount the making of the apollo spacesuits and to inform us on the lessons that we have learned as we are going back to the next spacesuit in the next thing in spacesuit development, be it going back to the moon, going to an asteroid or going on to mars. In order to save time for tonights program, im going to introduce all four speakers and theyre going to come up and tell their stories and then well have time for discussion and questions from the audience at the end. Our speakers tonight in order of appearance are first bill airy, who is a recently retired test engineer at ilc dover, the company that made the apollo spacesuits and the suits that astronauts use to space walk from the iss when they leave via the americ