Transcripts For WUSA 60 Minutes 20151102 : comparemela.com

Transcripts For WUSA 60 Minutes 20151102



them, and in the united states, there's a lot of tradition involved firearms. people like guns of the old west, they like them the way davie crockett used them, they like them the way they were used years ago. >> stahl: that was the case a decade and a half ago, as jonathan mossberg found out. he had left his family's gun making business, mossberg and sons, and invented a smart gun that works in conjunction with a ring. do i get... get my own, right? >> jonathan mossberg: yeah, you get your own ring. >> stahl: the ring has a tiny computer chip inside a black stone which transmits a signal. when it's close to the trigger, it unlocks the gun. >> mossberg: alternatively, if i were to grab it, you know, nothing happens. >> stahl: mossberg's gun was ready to sell 13 years ago, but... >> mossberg: people weren't really... there was some market, but not enough, so we decided not to sell it. >> stahl: and has something changed? >> mossberg: yes. we all started living with these evil things, and so we became comfortable trusting it. they guide us to our destinations. they make sure we're okay for meetings, and they're extremely reliable. >> stahl: he thinks that today's young parents, comfortable with technology, are a ripe market. and silicon valley agrees. >> ron conway: this is going to happen outside the gun industry. why they aren't doing research and investing in this baffles me. >> stahl: ron conway, one of the early investors in facebook and google, is now looking for, he says, the mark zuckerberg of guns. he has funded at least 15 smart gun inventors, including those involved in the two guns we tested. are you thinking that, if the gun manufacturers don't come along, that they're going to be like kodak? >> conway: absolutely. >> stahl: this is what you're saying. >> conway: yes-- kodak and polaroid all wrapped in one. you cannot stop innovation. and this is an area where innovation is taking over. >> stahl: are you not worried about the politics of this whole issue? >> conway: i think, for technology and innovation, we have to ignore politics. >> stahl: can you? >> conway: of course you can. >> stahl: but when it comes to guns, it's all about politics. just ask andy raymond. >> raymond: i got caught up in the middle of something that was way beyond me, way beyond my capabilities, and got caught between two sides that... i mean, it was just... i will never, ever, ever touch anything else like that ever, ever again. >> stahl: as of today, you cannot find a smart gun to buy in the united states. senator loretta weinberg told us that she plans to ask the new jersey state legislature to repeal the mandate, but replace it with a demand that dealers display at least one smart gun in their stores. question is, will dealers be too gun-shy? if this gun does take off, would you sell it? >> raymond: absolutely not. >> stahl: ever? >> raymond: i would rather be shot by a smart gun than sell one. >> this cbs sports update is brought to you by ford. i'm james brown with scores from the nfl today. cincinnati improved to 7-0 for the first time ever. carson palmer throws four touchdowns and arizona scores 20 unanswered. the saints win. minnesota wins its third straight on blair walsh's 36-yard game-winning field goal. and derek carr throws four scores. for more sports news and information, go to cbssports.com. and crack, and storm. but mother nature can't stop us. the new 2016 ford explorer. be unstoppable. ♪ when it comes to helping you reach your financial goals,t taking small, manageable steps can be an effective... and enjoyable approach... compared to the alternatives. push! i am pushing! sfx: pants ripping how you doing eddie? almost there. small steps. at axa, we'll help you take the next steps, with more confidence. for advice, retirement and insurance, talk to axa today. has anyone seen steve? oh, there he is, at the top of the christmas power rankings. because when you enter best buy, it means you're gifting on all cylinders. it means you're not elfin' around. it means you're buying gifts people really want. all with the guru-like guidance of our helpful blue shirts. because when you give tech, people won't just love it, they'll love you. win the holidays, at best buy. you tuck here... you tuck there. if you're a toe tucker... because of toenail fungus, ask your doctor now about prescription kerydin. used daily, kerydin drops may kill the fungus at the site of infection and get to the root of your toe tucking. kerydin may cause irritation at the treated site. most common side effects include skin peeling... ...ingrown toenail, redness, itching, and swelling. tell your doctor if you have any side effect that bothers you or does not go away. stop toe tucking... and get the drop on toenail fungus. ask your doctor today about kerydin. >> pelley: 200 years ago, a ship named for st. joseph sank in a terrible storm. half the passengers survived, but the sea closed over more than 200 men, women and children who were locked below the deck. you would think a disaster like that would be legendary. but the "st. joseph" was a slave ship, and the screams bursting from the hold were the cries of cargo. today, the silence of those lost voices is unbearable to lonnie bunch. he's the founding director of the smithsonian national museum of african-american history and culture, now under construction in washington. bunch found that, to tell history, the smithsonian would have to make history. and so began a quest for the remains of a shipwreck in a land so unchanged that an 18th- century slave would recognize it today as the last shore he called home. mozambique island defies the erosion of time. the portuguese colonists who claimed it 500 years ago would still find the cut of the cloth that borrows the wind as familiar as the cut of the stone that framed their city. ♪ ♪ lonnie bunch came to this capital of the slave trade because he was determined to launch america's new national museum on the remains of a ship. >> lonnie bunch: i thought it wouldn't be hard, so i called museums around the world and said, "okay, look, you must have some things. you must know where i can get some material." and everybody said, "nope." and they said to me, "well, lonnie, almost every slave ship was at the end of its life, so it's probably at the ocean floor." and then i got scared. then i thought, "well, i'm not going to be able to find this." >> pelley: mozambique island rises from the indian ocean, south of the equator. it was one of the points in what was called the "triangular trade"--goods from europe to africa, slaves to the new world, and cotton, gold and tobacco back to the old. in the 1400s, the portuguese were the first europeans to trade in slaves, and they became the largest, followed by the english, french, spanish and dutch. on mozambique island, the portuguese built a fortress that they called st. sebastian for the christian martyr who was captured, chained, and murdered in rome in the year 288. the irony of that name was the only thing here the portuguese failed to grasp. you know, when you look at the enormous effort that went into building this fort, they were protecting something that was hugely valuable to them. >> bunch: they recognized that the key to their future as nations with economic prosperity was the slave trade. >> pelley: the fort oversaw the trafficking of more than 400,000 slaves. bunch was certain there had to be evidence of a ship, and he soon discovered he wasn't the only one looking. >> decio muianga: give me a hand. >> pelley: he found a group of researchers calling themselves the slave wrecks project, and they were following a promising lead. what do we find down here? >> muianga: a very interesting thing. >> pelley: decio muianga is a mozambican archeologist helping the slave wrecks project locate the beginning of the story. >> muianga: this is a tunnel that was used to put slaves inside the island, or put them out of the island, as well. >> pelley: under the old portuguese town, tunnels connected holding pens to the sea. the devout portuguese preferred to keep slaves in transit out of sight. how were these slaves captured? >> muianga: some individuals, african individuals, specialize in capturing slaves. so, they'll go and raid villages far, far from here. and they walked, chained, all the way from there to here. and of course, lots of them died on the way. >> pelley: so these were africans... >> muianga: yes. >> pelley: ...capturing africans? >> muianga: yes. yes, it was not only a business for the portuguese-- the europeans in this case-- but also for the some of the local chiefs, as well. >> pelley: those local chiefs came to this auction house to sell captives to european clients. >> bunch: a male in the late 18th century, early 19th century would go anywhere from $600 to $1,500, which is probably about, oh, $9,000 to $15,000 today. >> pelley: this was incredibly lucrative. >> bunch: in the years before the civil war, the amount of money invested in slaves was more than the amount of money invested in railroads, banks, and businesses combined. this was the economic engine of europe and the united states. by the time you got here.... >> pelley: the enslaved marched from the auction house down this ramp and on to the ships. >> bunch: what you probably had was almost an assembly line. you'd bring people, you'd sell people. then, you would move them onto the boats and off to the new world. >> pelley: what does black america need to hear, in your estimation, from the echoes off these steps? >> bunch: i think all americans need to recognize that, as tragic and horrible as slavery was, as big an economic shadow as it cast, the one thing it didn't do was strip people of their humanity. and i wish that all of us were as strong as the people that walked down those steps and got on those boats. >> steve lubkemann: we're wading out into the tidal flats... >> pelley: if lonnie bunch was to find his slave ship, he would need steve lubkemann, co-founder of the slave wrecks project. he's an anthropologist from george washington university who believes that slavery is the greatest story in maritime archaeology. >> lubkemann: think about the way in which computers nowadays affect all of our lives. it's not just... it doesn't affect just the computing industry. everything is inter-linked and depends on this. and the slave trade, in its time, was truly the equivalent. it reached into and influenced and created the modern world. >> pelley: even so, it's not likely much has survived centuries under the sea. we're not talking about a hull that you're going to find down there, and masts, and all of that, that you would imagine in your mind's eye? >> lubkemann: we don't find intact ships. we find parts of ships, you have to go underneath the water, add some difficulty to this, find the pieces, try to put them back together. and put together the story that you can. >> pelley: the story lubkemann was searching for wasn't discovered underneath the water. his ship was lost in the dry official records of cape town, south africa, which reach back to the 1600s. the slave wrecks project had been diving into these binders for months when they discovered the "st. joseph," known in portuguese as the "sao jose." the "sao jose" arrived at mozambique island in 1794. the cargo manifest records 1,500 iron bars for ballast and more than 400 slaves bound for brazil. this is a cargo sketch from a different, but typical, ship. paul gardullo is a historian of slavery and curator of the smithsonian museum. >> paul gardullo: bodies and souls laid side by side with no room to move, no sanitation. many people on these voyages died. >> pelley: how long was that journey? >> gardullo: a journey like the one the "sao jose" took would... could take up to four or more months. >> pelley: this is slavery on a global industrial scale. >> gardullo: from about 1500 through the 19th century, through the late 1800s, we're talking about at least 12 million people who were taken from their homelands across the sea. many, many hundreds of thousands more untold people were lost during that trade. >> pelley: off cape town, south africa, the captain of the "sao jose" was caught between a violent storm and a nautical chart spiked with warnings-- whittle rock, bellow's rock, rocky bank. the "sao jose" crashed, 212 slaves were killed. and because money had been lost, there was an investigation. interviews with survivors have survived. >> lubkemann: this is the crew's account, and right here, we have the captain's account. and he signed his name here, 220 years ago. >> pelley: incredible. >> lubkemann: he said he decided "to save the slaves and the people." the "people" are the crew; the slaves are just cargo. >> pelley: the 200-year-old investigation pinpointed the site. and in 2010, divers, responding to a metal detector, discovered bars of iron. one of those divers is jaco boshoff, an archaeologist with south africa's iziko museum, and lubkemann's partner in founding the slave wrecks project. boshoff says these are the iron bars we mentioned a moment ago on the "sao jose" manifest, the ballast for the ship. so you actually were excavating the sand on the sea bottom, this stuff was under the sand. >> jaco boshoff: under the sand. >> pelley: so you're in how much water? >> boshoff: about five meters of water. >> pelley: about 15 to 20 feet of water? >> boshoff: that's correct. >> pelley: and then these are two feet under the sand below that. >> boshoff: that's right. >> pelley: turns out shallow water only makes the work harder. surf tosses the divers. and sand, vacuumed away, settles back within hours. but, after more than 300 dives, this is what they've recovered so far. these are nails that pinned sheets of copper over the hull for protection. what looks like a lump of concrete is marine growth on a wooden pulley block, similar to this one used to hoist sails and cargo. this x-ray shows the two white spaces where rope was threaded around the wheel. the divers discovered wood that a lab would later trace back to mozambique. and this may be the most revealing artifact of all-- masked by two centuries under the sea, x-rays show a shackle, similar to this, used to bind slaves. >> boshoff: so there's a long bar running through. and shackles had... often were on a long bar, the leg shackles especially. >> pelley: so a long iron bar with a round metal ring? >> boshoff: that sort of thing, yes. and in this particular case, leg shackles. >> pelley: leg shackles? >> boshoff: that's right. >> pelley: have you found everything that's down there now? >> boshoff: no, not at all. not even close. we've got a lot more to do. we've only scratched the surface at this stage. >> pelley: how can you be sure that the wreck you found off cape town is, in fact, the "sao jose"? >> lubkemann: there are certain types of artifacts that are found on this wreck that put us within a particular time bracket-- ceramics, for example. but then there are other things that i think are very important. we have an account that gives enormous specificity, in terms of geographic location, and it tells us the bay in which it was located. finally, we find a document in lisbon that says the "sao jose's" manifest when it left lisbon, and the first item on that said, "1,500 bars of iron ballast." you put all of those different lines of evidence together, it's almost statistically impossible that it could be anything else. >> pelley: they are the first artifacts known to be preserved from a ship on a voyage of slavery. and they will anchor the slavery exhibit, next fall, when lonnie bunch opens the national museum of african-american history and culture on the mall in washington. >> bunch: the story of slavery is everybody's story. it is the story about how we're all shaped by, regardless of race, regardless of how long we've been in this country. we hope that we can be a factor to both educate america around this subject, but maybe more importantly, help americans finally wrestle with this, talk about it, debate it, because only through that conversation can we ever find the reconciliation, the healing that i think we all want. >> lonnie bunch has some surprising ideas about how to approach a painful past. go to 60minutesovertime.com. recommend synthetic over cedar? "super food?" is that a real thing? it's a great school, but is it the right one for her? is this really any better than the one you got last year? if we consolidate suppliers, what's the savings there? so should we go with the 467 horsepower? ...or is a 423 enough? good question. you ask a lot of good questions... i think we should move you into our new fund. sure... ok. but are you asking enough about how your wealth is managed? wealth management at charles schwab. and i'm still struggling with my diabetes. i do my best to manage. but it's hard to keep up with it. your body and your diabetes change over time. your treatment plan may to know your options. once-daily toujeo® is a long-acting insulin from the makers of lantus®. it releases slowly to provide consistent insulin levels for a full 24 hours. toujeo® also provides proven full 24-hour blood sugar control and significant a1c reduction. toujeo® is a long-acting, man-made insulin used to control high blood sugar in adults with diabetes. it contains 3 times as much insulin in 1 milliliter as standard insulin. don't use toujeo® to treat diabetic ketoacidosis, during episodes of low blood sugar, or if you're allergic to insulin. allergic reaction may occur and may be life threatening. don't reuse needles or share insulin pens, even if the needle has been changed. the most common side effect is low blood sugar, which can be serious and life threatening. it may cause shaking, sweating, fast heartbeat, and blurred vision. check your blood sugar levels daily while using toujeo®. injection site reactions may occur. don't change your dose or type of insulin without talking to your doctor. tell your doctor if you take other medicines and about all your medical conditions. insulins, including toujeo, in combination with tzds (thiazolidinediones) may cause serious side effects like heart failure that can lead to death, even if you've never had heart failure before. don't dilute or mix toujeo® with other insulins or solutions as it may not work as intended and you may lose blood sugar control, which could be serious. pay no more than $15 per prescription for 12 months. eligibility restrictions apply. learn more at toujeo.com/info or call 800-580-3421. also, 9 out of 10 medicare part d patients can get toujeo® at the lowest branded copay. ask your doctor about the proven full 24-hour blood sugar control of toujeo®. parkeon live television.on and her cameraman were gunned down i know we can't stop all gun violence, but we can save lives if our leaders take action. narrator: but we can't count on hal parrish to act. he gets an "a" from the gun lobby, they fund his candidacy... while fighting against background checks to keep guns out of the hands of dangerous people. parrish will make us less safe. parker: politicians' condolences aren't enough. it's time for them to act. feinblatt: everytown for gun safety action fund sponsored this ad. i'm jill mccabe, candidate for state senate, and i sponsored this ad. all the mouthwash in the world won't help dick black. because what comes out of his mouth is just offensive. black said gays and lesbians lead "lifestyles that are harmful to the culture of this state." he dismissed rape in the military, calling it "as predictable as human nature." black opposes the use of birth control and voted to force women seeking abortions to have intrusive transvaginal ultrasounds. dick black. so extreme, it's dangerous. >> pelley: now, an update on a story we called "the storm after the storm." last march, sharyn alfonsi reported that, following superstorm sandy, engineering reports on damaged houses were altered to reduce insurance pay- outs. the insurance program was backed by fema, the federal emergency management agency. and the flood program's head pledged to make the storm victims whole. >> alfonsi: so, are you going to make it right? >> i'm doing everything i can in the midst of negotiations to try to make that right. >> pelley: immediately after our story aired, fema agreed to settle 101 cases for $11 million. but now, seven months later, not one of those families has received a check. i'm scott pelley. we'll be back next week with another edition of "60 minutes." tomorrow, be sure to watch "cbs this morning," and i'll see you on the "cbs evening news." booked. locked up. case closed? you don't know "aarp." because the aarp fraud watch network means everyone can protect themselves and their families from scams and identity theft. with local alerts, tips from law enforcement, and the inside scoop from former con artists. real possibilities to stay ahead of the bad guys. if you don't think beat con men at their own game, when you think aarp, then you don't know "aarp". find more surprising possibilities and get to know us at aarp.org/possibilities. breaking from the norm is never easy. doing your own thing, making your own way can be pretty, well, bold. rickie fowler is redefining what it means to be a golfer. quicken loans is doing the same for mortgages. quicken loans. home buy. refi. power. official mortgage sponsor of the pga tour. (man speaking russian) (call hangs up) elizabeth: was that your publisher? yeah. apparently, my book is a best seller. congratulations! hey, you think they'll make it into a movie? okay, let me clarify what "best seller" means in the religious nonfiction market. 700 copies sold. just over 1,000, baby. (laughs) i guess my sales shot up when my rant on c-span went viral. nothing like a well-placed tantrum to spike your popularity. i prefer trenchant social commentary. oh, whatever, kanye mccord. but i take him every day. i know, and i would, but i have an early class. can you drop jason off this morning? mm-hmm, sure. thanks. i have to be at school early today. i joined the school paper. really? that's great news. oh, that's awesome. elizabeth: you're a reporter? what's your beat? that's, you know, journalist talk. i'm writing a weekly column. henry: about what? alison: fashion. but your school has uniforms. all the more reason to obsess about the weekend looks. i'll write about trends, what's in, what's out. some of it's psychological, too. like, why do we keep giving block heels a chance? right? nobody look good in those. hey, hey, hey. i wear block heels. you walked right into that one, dad. i thought i might contrast expensive looks with affordable alternatives. (phone buzzing) then i can write about makeup, too. oh, that's a good idea. maybe we could go to the mall this weekend and check out the higher-end makeup lines. then i can find similar shades in the drugstore brands. compare and contrast, you know? mom. hang on one second. anton gorev wants to speak to me. last i heard, he was holed up in london. mom. just... baby, give me a minute. forget it. i have to go. is she mad? i heard mall, makeup, and then i kind of went out. she wants you to take her to the mall. oh, i can do that. i gotta make this call, though. okay. and, for the record, i think you look great in block heels. nice try. i... gorev: i'm sure you know that prime minister rozovsky is stepping down as acting president of russia, and that maria ostrov asked for a special election, to be held in 30 days. a blatant power grab on her part. yeah. she's asking for an open and vigorous debate, but given the amount of influence she's amassed in the last month, i doubt anyone's going to step up to challenge her. i will challenge her. and i will win. i'm listening. mrs. ostrov may have the generals in her pocket, but the tensions she is fomenting with ukraine are bad for business. russia's highest-ranking officials and billionaires want peace, not war. they want me. but to mount a campaign, i need my money. when pavel ostrov died, you said you hoped i would succeed him. and i meant it. well, elizabeth, the wheel is still turning. jay: good morning, "a" team. daisy: reading your memo. more like battle plan. but thanks. you up to speed? skimmed it. so, no. essentially, russia is waging an "information war" in eastern europe. the russian television network broadcasts these cheesy game shows that can be picked up in the eastern part of ukraine and the baltic states. where a lot of ethnic russians live. just read that part. right. the shows are popular with those folks, and when they're over, the kremlin airs a "news hour." otherwise known as state-controlled propaganda. exactly. false reports that ethnic russians are being murdered in the west. estonian nuclear plants are melting down. that ukraine is secretly planning to invade russia. without any truth to counter it, people believe the lies. and every day, u.s. security interests in europe are undermined. so what's your battle plan? public diplomacy thinks that if we could license a popular american program, we could air it opposite the russian game shows. steal those viewers away. baywatch or let's make a dealski? i mean, it's... it's no contest. and then we follow our show with a real news hour. i talked it over with the secretary and she feels strongly that we need to fight russian aggression on all fronts, and that means implementing a long-term media strategy. game on. what's our budget? nothing hollywood would be interested in. as we know, an extremely malicious piece of malware allowed our bad actor to hack into air force one's computer system and shut down communication. it took 100 software engineers a month of decoding millions of lines of encrypted code, but they were finally able to uncover this plc rootkit code sequence. which is what, exactly? if hackers today think of themselves as brands, this sequence is a digital autograph. it's unique to a legendary black hat who goes by the handle dash. legendary, huh? oliver: in the last decade, this guy has executed offensives for china, north korea, russia and iran. if you've got the cash, he's your go-to guy for cyber terror. so who hired him this time? working on that. do we have an id? allegedly, this... is dash. i pulled the photo off the darknet, sent it to interpol. so far, nothing. here's the bad news. according to the chatter i've been listening to, he's planning another attack. how do you top hacking air force one? hit the white house. elizabeth: pentagon. our missile systems. we've shored up our firewalls, but since the best defense is a good offense, we're also setting a few honeypots. dummy servers with false software and decoy information to lure him in. and once he's on the hook? then we can hack back. maybe locate his actual server. then, boom. he's ours. this is our top priority. get into it with cybercom. that's the next stop on my whirlwind tour. thank you, mr. president. i got an interesting call from anton gorev this morning, saying he wants to return home to run against maria ostrov next month. is anyone else experiencing déjà vu? we went down this road, elizabeth, and we crashed and burned. this election is another opportunity to get a moderate in the kremlin. election. do we really think maria ostrov has any respect for the democratic process? about as much respect as she has for ukraine's border. at least with our lethal aid package we can deal with that situation directly. the ukrainian president is at the pentagon as we speak. but here's the thing. if gorev was in power, ukraine wouldn't need aid. that whole situation could be dialed back. maybe. but has he got a shot? gorev's numbers have been steadily rising, particularly with disaffected young russians. he still has influential friends, and if he can lure one or two generals over to his side, that moves the needle. so what does he want from us? he needs cash. the sanctions in the uk have frozen his accounts. they want our okay to lift them. i can reach out to the british ambassador, see if there's a deal to be made. all right. keep me informed. okay. henry: i understand your commander's in town. general doroshevich. dmitri: i've been invited to a luncheon for the general at the embassy this afternoon. you have instructions? just keep an ear out. especially if there's any talk of ukraine. you okay with that? if i say "no, i won't spy on my country," your people will refuse care to my sister. maybe beat me with a phone book again. so, yes, i'm okay with that. is that all? okay, listen to me, dmitri. i know that you don't like this. i don't much like it, either. but i'm here, doing the work, because russia is heading down a path that could be disastrous... i don't need to hear about russia. i know-- then stop behaving like a child and help me. have you ever heard of lieutenant colonel stanislav petrov? i'm assuming he's not a relative. petrov is a common name. no, i've never heard of him. he's a russian hero, although your government doesn't like to acknowledge that. i don't understand. one night in 1983, petrov was at his post at the missile attack early warning system when suddenly, all the alarms went off. there was a "high reliabilit"" that the united states had launched icbms into the soviet union. petrov's training dictated that he launch russian missiles as a retaliatory strike against the united states. but his gut... told him that it had to be a false alarm. so he called his superiors and he told them not to launch. and then he waited for 23 long minutes, and when no missiles fell, he knew he was right. stanislav petrov saved the world, because he trusted his instincts. i think your instincts are telling you to work with me, because you know it's best for russia and for the rest of the world. blake: i will talk to the secretary. well... stall him. the british ambassador's already here? no, ma'am. it's ukrainian president mikhail bozek. his motorcade just drove up. what? he's requesting a meeting with you. so he's done picking up weapons at the pentagon and he doesn't have any lunch plans? it's highly unusual, ma'am. what would you like to do? mikhail, what a surprise. thank you for seeing me. of course. uh, this is nadine tolliver, my chief of staff, and jay whitman, my chief policy advisor. pleasure to meet you both. i hope everything was satisfactory with our aid package. it is all very much appreciated. i want to assure you that our support of ukraine extends beyond military aid. um, jay... i... sit, please. jay is working to counteract the propaganda that's been coming out of russia lately. russian news anchors say my government is illegal. that i'm a usurper. we're doing everything we can to fight that message. unfortunately, the situation is approaching a crisis point, which is why i am here. ukraine must become a full nato member, immediately. well, applying for nato membership is a years-long process. yes, but the situation has drastically changed. you have influence with president dalton. you can convince him that ukraine requires this protection. but it's more than protection. if russia invaded ukraine, the nato response force would be required to challenge russia militarily. we're talking about a global conflict. even if the president was willing to fast track your admission, the nato members will never agree to admit your country while there are tensions with russia. tensions? the moment maria ostrov is elected, she will launch an invasion into western ukraine. will you just sit by and watch? i'll let the president know that we spoke. please. also let him know that ukraine's fate is in your hands. the next time you see me, i may be strung up in mykhailivska square. thank you for your time, elizabeth. of course. i'll see you out, mr. president. (indistinct chatter) see, the truth is whether or not ukraine is a member of nato, i don't believe that we'll let russia attack the west without launching a military strike back of our own. blake: ma'am? uh, british ambassador graham shenton is on his way up. right. i hope shenton is in an accommodating mood. (chuckles) we really need the u.k. to lift those sanctions on gorev's cash. you... you think he can beat maria ostrov? i hope so. anton gorev becoming president of russia might mean the difference between peace and world war iii. might mean the difference between peace whatever life throws your way, you've got it in the bag. you've got t.j. maxx! keep your standards high, and your spending low. maxx life! elizabeth: mr. ambassador, anton gorev is under the impression that the u.k. is willing to lift the sanctions on his accounts. uh, given u.s. approval. well, that's what we told him. but we assumed it be a non-issue, because you would refuse. well, the president is considering his request. so, what's the real problem? the 138 oligarchs whose sanctions won't be lifted. ah, so if you release the sanctions on gorev, the rest will beat a path to your door. there should be some way to get the man back his own money. elizabeth: wait a minute. didn't i read an op-ed...? by, um, sir richard edgemont in, it was in the sunday times. he was... he was complaining that-that the londoners had sold too much of their property to the russians? he said his hometown was beginning to look like "londongrad." uh, yes, the gentry made millions off the oligarchs. now they're complaining there's too much coffee and vatrushka on the corner shops. not enough tea and scones. anton gorev owns at least three properties in england. they've got to be worth close to a 100 million total. what if we could convince sir richard to buy them from him for cash? well, that would certainly fill gorev's coffers. uh, but would it trigger the sanctions? it shouldn't, if he used an offshore bank. and i could make sure the finance ministry doesn't throw up any red flags. mr. ambassador, thank you so much for coming in. i really appreciate it. madam secretary. great. (short laugh) (door closes) oliver shaw sent over a hardcopy of his report on the air force one cyber-attack. any news on his hacker trap? no, not yet. oh, uh, your studio executives are on their way up. show time. think i'm ready for my close-up. daisy: and this is the conference room. where many important deals have been struck. well, thanks for the tour. there is so much history here. i've always wanted to develop some kind of historical political drama. like johnadams, but as a series. well, i've tried it. and, uh, it's cost prohibitive. man: and boring. unless they're all sleeping together. that's very washington. not in this office. so i gave you a rough outline of what we're hoping to achieve in the e-mail i sent. right, so you want to air our shows in eastern europe, and then follow them with pro-western news. i'm sure you've heard about russia's recent aggression. i can't get into the classified details, but in the next few months, we could be on the brink of war in europe. daisy: altering the negative perceptions of the u.s. in the minds of ethnic russians could literally change the course of our future. well, i-i just want to say that, uh, it-it's an honor to be asked to contribute to the cause. "contribute." now, that's an excellent word. we're asking you to make a contribution to your country, in the name of patriotism. okay. so, our studio produces television shows at a deficit. and we make our money back over time through license fees. so, um, what were you thinking in terms of a fee? actually, i was using the word "contribute" literally. mm. (imitates explosion) you should not be on your own. people will say you keep secrets. they can say what they like. i will stand with you. we'll look like we are being social together. you're a good friend, ivan. and a good russian. sometimes i find it is not so easy to be both. (buttons beeping) (line ringing) (cell phone ringing) hello? it's dmitri. yeah, what's up? sir, i can't do this. where are you? i'm-i'm, uh, i'm in the embassy. i drank too much. okay, listen to me. you got to get yourself together and get out of there. do you understand? no, you don't understand. now, dmitri. we can talk later. (door opens, closes) dalton: did bozek really ask to join nato? that lethal aid package he got from us must've included a pair of brass ones. okay, he's right to be concerned. the situation is growing worse by the day. we need somebody who can deescalate it. i know you think that someone is anton gorev. but he doesn't have the money to run. it's true that the british refuse to lift the sanctions, but-- but you have a backup plan. i just spoke to sir richard edgemont. and he is willing to purchase gorev's two london townhouses and his country home in wiltshire for 80 million cash. it's a great deal for everyone. craig: except us. with all the hoops we're jumping through on his behalf, anton gorev should be required to work withour intel. when pavel ostrov was president, gorev was his right-hand man for god's sake. he has information we could use. he will never go for it. he's not gonna betray his country for money. even if that money was the difference between a return to power and a lifetime in exile? for one minute, let's think of gorev as an asset. not just the answer to our russian problem. and i'm afraid that if we push him too hard and he walks away, we'll be handing maria ostrov the presidency. i'm not convinced he will walk away. he's a loyalist. he's a desperate man... in need of money. (sighs) hold the cash. let's turn the screws. (car engine starts up) i can make parts of the state department and white house available for film shoots. oh, that's a nice offer, jay. but it's pretty easy to shoot in l.a. or new york and make it look like d.c. and even if we did agree to forgo our profits, someone still has to pay residuals to the actors in the show, the writers and directors. we can negotiate waivers. with the talent unions? i mean, maybe you should try something easier, like a, uh, middle east peace accord. now, jay, you want an expensive product for virtually nothing. just because you have a special interest, it doesn't meant that-- i-i'm sorry. helping to prevent world war iii is a "special interest"? 'cause... that's what's at stake here. what the hell are you doing? what? i'm walking down the street. this is a free country, right? not for you. not right now. you have got to stay sharp, dmitri! you make one stupid mistake, and you can get yourself killed. yeah, what doesn't matter as long as i do my job? it matters to me. it matters to your sister. go get sober, then call me. wait. is anton gorev gonna run against maria ostrov for the presidency? why do you ask? well, i overheard some intelligence officers say that they were bringing gorev's daughter to the embassy. olga? yeah. they said she would stay for a month. then i thought maybe she's some kind of leverage. but maybe this is at her request. go back to your dorm. lehane: i know this is disappointing, but in many ways, the entertainment industry is like the federal government, right? it's large, somewhat inefficient, and it's very resistant to change. if you would just agree to keep working with me, i... much as i hate to do it, i can't. it's-it's just not feasible. i have to pass. i can get you ten minutes with the president. i already met him-- fundraiser at gwen stefani's house. matt: it's nice to meet you. daisy: great meeting you, thank you so much. it was so nice to meet you. (elevator dings) thank you. okay, appreciate it. okay, nice to see you. nice to see you. okay, let's go. listen, you're right, okay? i don't... i don't have anything to trade with you. come on. ten years ago, i was stationed at a consulate in herat, afghanistan. it was dangerous, but we'd been there for months, no problems. we let our guard down. one of our suvs hit a roadside bomb, and three foreign service officers were killed. friends of mine. i'm so sorry. i'm-i'm not done. we were evacuated the next day. i was getting on a h... i was literally getting on a helicopter. when the consul came up, he wanted me to stay with him and-and handle the arrangements for the bodies. we needed to get them back to the states, to their families. i said, "no. let someone else do it." i was young and scared, and i wa... i wanted to go home. but the next morning, i regretted it, and every day since, i regret it, because when it was my turn to help, i... i said no. this is your turn. and if you say no, if you say, "let someone else do it," i promise you, you'll wake up tomorrow morning... ...and you'll... you'll regret it. (elevator dings) i'm sorry, jay. i, uh, i really am. (buzzing) professor mccord. is everything all right? olga, i think it would be a good idea if you came to stay with elizabeth and me for a couple of days. do i have time to pack a bag? i'm gonna say no. olga gorev, come with us. hey, guys, what can i do for you? this is not your business, mister. her father send us. oh, it must be some kind of mistake, 'cause just got off the phone with her father. anton and i are old friends. i'll have him give you a call, let you know that everything's okay. my only makeup? true match. [ male announcer ] only true match has l'oreal's technology to match your skin's unique tone and undertone. 100% guaranteed. [ freida ] my skin. my story. my true match. 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