for you today. with the president of the united states. joseph r. biden. i sat down with the president in the roosevelt room the white house on friday for an exclusive interview. president biden is headed to europe for a trip that will take him to villainous lithuania for the nato annual summit. holding nato together is really critical. it is been 500 days since russia invaded ukraine. is there any sign of an end to this war? and will nato offer ukraine membership? also, is there a foreign relations with china are or we going to see an even more intense rivalry? and, when could netanyahu expect an invitation to the white house. all of this in a special interview with america s 46th president. i think we have enormous opportunities and i just want to finish the job. i ll bring you my take later in the show. but first president biden is headed to europe today for a five-day, three-country tour. the main focus of which will be a stop in villainous lithuania for nato
harvard s laurence tribe and the retired conservative federal judge jay michael luttig, declared that the constitution prohibits trump from ever being president again, based on section three of the 14th amendment. since then, there s been movement in court in multiple states where efforts have sprung up to enforce the 14th amendment. one case, seeking to disqualify trump was dismissed by the minnesota supreme court, but that case was specific to trump being on the primary election ballot for the republican nomination, so the argument could be brought before the court again for the general election ballot. in another case in michigan, a judge ruled that it was a non-justice-able political issue, that should be decided by congress, not by the state. just yesterday, the petitioners appeal that ruling to the michigan supreme court. but this ruling out of colorado is particularly interesting, because the opinion goes further that any of the other judges have been willing to vent
quite a number of protesters were wearing poppies. it s an important day to remember those who died, but amongst them, the 10,000 palestinians whojoined the british army. the atmosphere as the rally began was relaxed and good natured, but from early in the day, police had been concerned about what they categorised as a right wing counterprotest. there were scuffles a short distance from the cenotaph. the met commissioner, sir mark rowley, paid a visit to his command team as riot squads in the field work to keep the two protest groups apart. here in the met police s operations centre, officers are monitoring every aspect of the protest, and they ve got fixed cameras and also they ve got evidence gatherers, offices on the ground, who are taking pictures they can beam back live from the scene so the commanders here can decide where to deploy and went to arrest. we watched as the senior commanders instructed their teams in the field to arrest some of the counter protesters. from
an activist but at my core how could i escape being a journalist. it is what i did for 32 years. but essentially, i mean, we wo we do the same thing. as a journalist, i worked on war crimes, that is my beat. so i m still looking for the same kind of patterns but in a much more legal way. for instance, on my team are two syrians, our chief legal counsel and our data scientist, the three of us have spent a lot of time in syria and then i ve been in chechnya. so these are three putin wars. we look at what i call putin s gruesome playbook. his pattern of indiscriminaty attacking hospitals, which we know we remember from aleppo, the destruction of hospitals and his intent if you kill one doctor, you kill a community, basically. the same kind of targeting of
is a way to break sieges and force civilians to surrender more quickly. the russian playbook from syria we ve seen unfold the attacking hospitals, attacking schools, attacking civilians, because putin wants the civilians to surrender, and breaking their morals is the easiest way to do it. we have seen that in syria. because we have had red lines about the use of chemical weapons. president obama s red line in august 2013 disappeared in a puff of smoke and we did nothing. so i think putin does not think the west will react, and he s in desperate straits. he either retreats back to moscow and, you know, the end of putin, or he does something demonstrative. but what i m doing at the moment, i have been training civilians in ukraine for the last three weeks on how to survive these dreadful chemical and biological attacks. we learnt a lot in syria and thousands of people