Thứ Ba, 28 tháng 11, 2017

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Russia warns North Korea and US bound for 'APOCALYPSE'

RUSSIA has warned the US and North Korea are heading for apocalypse in a chilling prediction

for the nuclear crisis.

Moscow diplomat Igor Morgulov warned the growing threat of confrontation could spiral into

a world-ending war.

He called on both sides and the other regional powers to have "common sense" and stand

down.

Russia has called for calm in the region after tensions reached new heights this year as

US President Donald Trump taunts Kim Jong-un.

North Korea has refused to bow to pressure from the US and UN to give up its quest for

nuclear missiles.

Russia shares a border with the rogue state on its eastern frontier, and Vladimir Putin

is believed to back Kim in war with the US.

Mr Morgulov said: "To my regret, I have to say that there is an apocalyptic scenario

for the development of events in this region.

"I hope that the regional community will have enough common sense to prevent this scenario

from becoming a reality."

He was speaking during a meeting in South Korea amid fears of an imminent missile test

by North Korea.

Putin's diplomat Morgulov – Russia's deputy foreign minister – called on the

South and the US to "exhale" and begin talks with the North.

Kim has not fired a missile for more than 70 days, but North Korea is now believed to

be carrying out winter war games.

He added: "If the restraint that Pyongyang has been demonstrating over the past two months

was met with proportionate response steps on the part of the United States and its allies,

it would be possible to start the second stage of our roadmap plan and start direct talks

between the United States and North Korea."

North Korea warned Russia it was ready to launch a nuclear strike on the US in a letter

addressed directly to Putin, it emerged earlier this year.

The rogue state is believed to be building up to firing a nuclear weapon out into the

Pacific – with a missile known as the Juche Bird.

An unannounced missile launch of this kind would be the ultimate provocation and could

spark World War 3.

Russia has urged both sides to stop walking towards war – calling on the US to move

its military might out of the region, and the North to comply with UN nuclear restrictions.

Kim is fighting a power struggle within North Korea at the moment, according to reports,

appointing his close allies to top jobs in the regime.

The US and North Korea have both threatened the other with total destruction amid fears

of war on the Korean Peninsula.

For more infomation >> Russia warns North Korea and United States bound for 'APOCALYPSE' - DAILY NEWS - Duration: 3:16.

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No End to US Involvement in Afghanistan - Duration: 3:00.

PAUL JAY: Welcome to The Real News Network.

I'm Paul Jay, now joining us is Larry Wilkerson.

Thanks for joining us again, Larry.

LARRY WILKERSON: Good to be here, Paul.

PAUL JAY: shultsy100 on YouTube asks, "There appears no end to any ceasefire in Afghanistan."

I'm not sure what he means by no end.

There seems to be no beginning of a ceasefire.

Bin Laden is in the past.

There's no resources there, except opium.

When can we leave that place?

Let me add something to that.

On this television show "<i>Madam Secretary</i>, there's another storyline going, which is

the Russians have hacked into the American embassy in Kabul, and that led to an attack

on a CIA safe-house.

In this television show <i>Madam Secretary</i>, some of the CIA people evacuate.

I think one maybe gets killed.

Then there's some innuendo there that the Russians are collaborating with the Taliban.

They don't give any reason, but I suppose if there's any actuality to any of this, maybe

the Russians would like Afghanistan to do to the Americans what Afghanistan did to the

Russians.

What do you make of the Afghan situation, and particularly the U.S.-Russia rivalry as

it expresses itself in Afghanistan?

LARRY WILKERSON: I think there's legitimate intelligence that reflects Russian and Iranian

support for some elements of those forces we're ostensibly fighting in Afghanistan.

It probably has different reasons than we might think, might even have something to

do with Russia's efforts to infiltrate those organizations and ensure they don't come north.

Let me tell you about Afghanistan.

You know this, Paul.

I've said this before.

Afghanistan is no longer about the Taliban.

It's not even about the stability of Afghanistan, except as it serves the larger purpose.

That larger purpose is now twofold.

One is to keep hard military force in Afghanistan for the next 50 years if necessary, in order

to have hard military force somewhere close to China's one belt, one road across the land.

The second reason is so that we don't have to come back a vast distance and establish

a military force in the area in order to take care of Pakistan's nuclear weapons, should

that country suddenly destabilize.

That's why we're in Afghanistan, not to fight the Taliban, Al Qaeda, ISIS, or anybody else,

and we will be there for another half-century.

For more infomation >> No End to US Involvement in Afghanistan - Duration: 3:00.

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The US Health Care System Needs Immigrants - Duration: 6:37.

as a recent eight-nation bracket tournament in the new york times showed

and i've discussed that a lot many people think the united states

healthcare system has a lot of problems so it seems reasonable to think of

policy changes that make things better not worse making it harder for

immigrants to come here to practice medicine would fail that test that's the

topic of this week's healthcare triage

by any objective standard the United States trains far too few physicians to

care for all the patients who need them we rank towards the bottom of developed

nations with respect to medical graduates per population when physicians

graduate from medical school they spend a number of years in a residency program

I did not enjoy mine although they have their degrees we still require them to

train further in the clinical environment to hone their skills

residents are more than learners though they're doctors they fill a vital role

in caring for patients in many hospitals across the country we don't have enough

graduates even to fill residency slots this means that we're reliant on

physicians trained outside the country to fill the gap a 2015 study found that

almost a quarter of residents across all fields were foreign medical graduates

and more than a third of residents and sub specialist programs were even

training aside foreign medical graduates are also responsible for a considerable

share of physicians practicing independently today about a quarter of

all doctors in the United States are foreign medical graduates as in many

other fields foreign medical graduates work in many of the areas that other

doctors find less appealing more than 40% of the American primary care

workforce is made up of people who trained in other countries and moved

here more than half of all the people who focus on caring for older people or

geriatricians are foreign medical graduates as well as if this weren't

enough foreign medical graduates are more likely to practice in geographic

areas of the country where there are physician shortages like non urban areas

and they're more likely to treat Medicaid patients - as a physician who

graduated from a domestic medical school I've often heard others disparaging

doctors who went to medical school outside this country as if they were

inferior those complaints are not supported by data study from health

Fair's in 2010 found that patients with congestive heart failure or myocardial

infarction had lower mortality rates when treated by doctors who were foreign

medical graduates another from earlier this year in the BMJ found that older

patients who were treated by foreign medical graduates had lower mortality as

well even though they seemed to be in general in other words foreign

medical graduates take care of patients who appear to be more ill but seem to

achieve better outcomes a recent study in annals of internal medicine shows

that these graduates are also responsible for a significant amount of

teaching of the 80,000 or so academic physicians in this country more than 18%

were foreign medical graduates more than 15% of full professors and medical

schools in the u.s. were educated elsewhere most often in Asia Western

Europe the Middle East Latin America and the Caribbean foreign medical graduates

also do a lot of research although they are ineligible for some NIH funding

which is granted only to citizens of this country they still manage through

collaboration to be primary investigators on 12 and 1/2 percent of

grants they led more than 18% of clinical trials in the US and were

responsible for about 18% of publications in the medical literature I

spoke to the lead author of the study Dhruv cooler who's a physician at New

York Presbyterian Hospital and a researcher at Weill Cornell he said and

I'm quoting our findings suggest that by some metrics these doctors account for

almost one-fifth of academic scholarship in the United States the diversity of

American medicine and the conversations ideas and breakthroughs this diversity

sparks may be one reason for our competitiveness as a global leader in

biomedical research and innovation the United States is not the only country

that relies on doctors trained or educated in other countries we're not

even the country with the highest percentage of such physician according

to data from the OECD almost 58 percent of physicians practicing in Israel are

foreign medical graduates about 40 percent of doctors in New Zealand and

Ireland we're also trained outside those country

because of the sizes of those nations even though the percentages of foreign

medical graduates are higher there the total numbers aren't as high as in the

u.s. though in 2015 the OECD estimated that the United States had more than two

hundred and thirteen thousand foreign trained doctors and no other country

comes close Britain had about 48,000 Germany about thirty-five thousand and

Australia France and Canada had between 22 and 27 thousand I've listened to

people tell me stories of physicians who leave Canada because they were

dissatisfied about working in a single-payer health care system that

might have been true debt to go but in the last 10 years that

number has dropped precipitously the number of Canadians returning to their

country to practice may actually be higher than the number leaving and

although many feared the coverage expansions from the Affordable Care Act

might lead to an overwhelmed physician workforce that didn't happen that

doesn't mean that America doesn't have a shortage of physician services as we've

discussed in previous episodes especially when it comes to the care of

the oldest the poorest and the most geographically isolated among us even

though we know foreign medical graduates care for these patients just

proportionally we make it very difficult for many born and trained elsewhere to

practice here some Americans need those doctors desperately all the evidence

seems to suggest that policies should be made to attract them not deter them

sometimes talking about drugs and sex education and health insurance aren't

advertising friendly and making those important videos could actually hurt our

bottom line healthcare triage is made possible in part therefore by our

supporters at patreon the support we receive from our patrons at patreon

allows us to keep making those kinds of videos without worrying about ad revenue

so thanks to all of them and particularly thanks to our surgeon

Admiral Sam and Research Associates Joe sevens and Joshua Crowe if you'd like to

support the show we'd really appreciate it you can go to patreon.com/scishow

there tree up while we're asking you to do stuff please consider subscribing to

the show consider buying some healthcare triage

merch as the holidays come up at HCT merch calm and I've got a book coming

out in November 7th the bad food Bible available anywhere you'd buy books and

I'd really appreciate your picking up a copy

you

For more infomation >> The US Health Care System Needs Immigrants - Duration: 6:37.

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The C I A Literally Controls EVERYTHING … Even Deep State - Duration: 9:27.

The C.I.A. Literally Controls EVERYTHING � Even Deep State

The C.I.A. is likewise controlled by much more secretive levels of command and control

State of the Nation

The following perceptive comment was sent by email to SOTN. It simply states the obvious

about the Central Intelligence Agency and its complete control of the United States

of America, and beyond.

It also shows just how extensive Deep State really is. Every publicly traded corporation,

for example, within the Anglo-American Axis is controlled, either directly or indirectly,

by the C.I.A. That�s why the U.S. Intelligence Community refers to it as The Company.

The Global Control Matrix (GCM) is actually the backbone of the New World Order, and functions

as a de facto One World Government. Deep State is just one critical piece of the GCM puzzle.

Just because the current World Shadow Government operates in total secrecy doesn�t mean it

doesn�t exist. The globalist New World Order has actually been here for well over a hundred

years.

The practical reality is that the World Shadow Government (WSG) rules over every square inch

of planet Earth � to varying degrees, of course. (Russia, for instance, has left the

reservation in many ways, but still has to play the game in many ways.)

The bottom line is that the C.I.A. is primarily the enforcement agency for the WSG. It was

recently written that the C.I.A. is the �enforcement agency for the Council on Foreign Relations�.

And that�s entirely true. However, the C.I.A. is also the enforcement agency for every other

entity within Deep State, both public and private, covert and overt.

Only with this correct understanding can the true magnitude of humanity�s problematic

predicament be comprehended. Essentially, a thoroughly rogue intelligence agency � the

largest in the world � has taken control of every sphere of life. In fact, the C.I.A.

acts with absolute impunity, whenever and wherever it so chooses to. As follows:

JFK Assassination Plot Was Coordinated and Conducted by the C.I.A.

And all the C.I.A. ever has to do to justify their never-ending criminal conspiracies is

claim that they are being implemented in the interest of �N A T I O N A L S E C U R I

T Y�. As if publicly executing a POTUS was carried out to make the nation more safe and

secure.

What a place!

State of the Nation November 26, 2017

N.B. What is remarkable is that the post below only represents the tip of the CIA-controlled

Deep State iceberg. It also illustrates why The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Must

Be Shut Down before it shuts US down.

What Does the CIA Control?

Submitted by GA

The Mainstream Media is CIA (all TV, Radio, Newspapers & News Magazines).

Hollywood is CIA (all Motion Pictures and TV programs).

Google is CIA. Facebook is CIA.

Twitter is CIA. Microsoft is CIA.

Apple is CIA. IBM is CIA.

Intel is CIA. Hewlett Packard is CIA�..the list here is

endless, let�s just say all of Silicon Valley is CIA!

All Defense Contractors are CIA, like: Lockheed Martin is CIA.

General Dynamics is CIA. Northrup Grumman is CIA.

Raytheon is CIA. Boeing is CIA.

Halliburton is CIA. United Technologies is CIA.

Bechtel is CIA.

ISIS is CIA. Al Qaeda is CIA.

Al-Nusra is CIA The Bin Laden Family is CIA.

Saddam Hussein was CIA, who went rogue on the CIA. (There were no weapons of mass destruction,

as we know, Daddy Bush was pissed off at his rogue CIA Agent, Saddam, and THAT is why so

many U.S. soldiers had to die and get wounded in Iran.)

Noriega was CIA, who went rogue on the CIA. Castro was CIA, who went rogue on the CIA.

Soros is CIA & MI6.

Bush Family is CIA. Clinton Crime Family is CIA, especially the

Clinton Foundation. Obama Family is CIA.

The White House has been CIA for over 25 years.

The FBI is CIA. (obviously, or else the FBI would have shut down the Mafia years ago.

But they don�t do they? Because the CIA and the Mafia are joined at the hip. They

are partners in crime as the JFK assassination clearly demonstrated.

Monsanto is CIA.

The Las Vegas Massacre was CIA. Northern California UNnatural Fires were CIA.

9/11 was CIA/MI6/Mossad. Oklahoma City Bombing was CIA.

Aurora Movie Theater Massacre was CIA. Sandy Hook was CIA��this list too is endless.

Agenda 21 Depopulation Goals are CIA.

When I say CIA, I mean CIA/Deep State controlled.

Insiders call the CIA �The Company�. That makes sense now, doesn�t it?

6 Million people work for the CIA.

CIA/MI6 have their tentacles into EVERYTHING of value, GLOBALLY.

SERCO is CIA � and MI6 � and Mossad.

The CIA sets the AGENDA and Controls the Narrative.

Big Brother is CIA. They are everywhere: in your phone, on your PC, in your TV, in your

car, in your fridge, your smart meters, and in all surveillance cameras and spying devices

which are now everywhere. Even if these items are turned off, and you don�t pay the bill

and shut down services, they can still turn it on whenever they want to and listen and

watch you.

That was step one for total control. Next is step 2:

Agenda 21, Big Brother (CIA) wants you dead, either through deadly vaccines that injest

you with cancer and then cancer treatments that don�t work.

Agenda 21/Big Brother/Deep State/ CIA wants to decrease the global population through

disease, wars, pestilence, famine, weather modification (droughts and deluges, mudslides

and floods, earthquakes and volcanoes, massive hurricanes, ice storms, blizzards, tsunamis,

sink holes, you name it).

And, of course, through the promotion of rampant homosexuality (homos can�t reproduce).

Christian Western Civilization is being destroyed on purpose by importing Islam which never

assimilates and only brings division and civil wars. Just ask Gandhi. It got so bad in India,

they had to divide their land, and all Hindus and Christians staying in India, and the Muslims

went to Pakistan��.because militant Islam (Wahhabis) NEVER lives peacefully with anyone

else. So you have to ask, why is the CIA/Deep State flooding the USA with Muslims? To promote

Peace? No, to promote DIVISION and CONFLICT.

These are just some of the TRUTHS the CIA/Deep State does NOT want you to know about, and

that is why they HAVE TO CONTROL all media: TV, radio, newsprint, and now they are going

after the Internet with censorship.

You are supposed to remain in the dark, dumbed down, and swallow hook, line and sinker whatever

Big Brother CIA spoon feeds you from TV, radio, newsprint�.and the Internet. Everything

else if �fake news�, remember?

What has upset the status quo is a groundswell of truth getting out via the Internet and

Alternative Radio, YouTube and Instagram. A tipping point was reached last year, and

in spite of MASSIVE Vote Rigging on all levels, Trump still WON!. Trump is NOT CIA, thus the

nonstop smears from Mainstream Media!

For more infomation >> The C I A Literally Controls EVERYTHING … Even Deep State - Duration: 9:27.

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Secretary Tillerson Delivers Remarks on the U.S.-European Relationship - Duration: 51:28.

SECRETARY TILLERSON: Well, good morning, and thank you, Jane, for that very kind introduction,

and also thanks to the Wilson Center for this opportunity to address you today.

The Wilson Center has made many important contributions to public policy over the years,

and therefore it's a very fitting venue for our discussion today on Europe, considering

that 100 years ago this year the United States entered World War I under the leadership of

President Wilson.

While we tend to associate Wilson with spearheading America's first major involvement in European

affairs, I think it's worth remembering that our commitment to Europe was earlier

championed by a predecessor of his, Theodore Roosevelt.

When Roosevelt died in 1919, just as Wilson was striving for peace in Europe, European

leaders joined the American people in an outpouring of grief and praise.

British Prime Minister David Lloyd George remembered him as an "inspiring figure far

beyond the country's shores."

Another British politician said he had been "the greatest of all Americans in a moment

of dire stress."

And a French senator said he had been "the apostle of the cause of right on the other

side of the Atlantic."

President Roosevelt was beloved in Europe because of his vigorous commitment to the

continent in the years before and during World War I.

While President Wilson steadfastly adhered to a neutrality policy, Roosevelt felt a responsibility

to come to Europe's defense.

It was reported he even once asked President Wilson for permission to personally lead an

Army division into Europe, and he had even written to a British army officer, saying,

"If we had done what we ought to have done after the sinking of the Lusitania, I and

my four boys would now be in the Army getting ready to serve with you in Flanders."

What motivated Theodore Roosevelt's rejection of neutrality and an ardent commitment to

the defense of Europe?

We can see the answer in something Roosevelt told the U.S. Congress in 1904, and I quote,

"A great free people owes it to itself and to all mankind not to sink into helplessness

before the powers of evil."

Roosevelt knew that the defense of freedom demanded action from free nations, confident

in their strength and protective of their sovereignty.

Roosevelt also knew that the United States and Europe, then as we are now, are bound

by shared principles.

Our nations live according to a self-evident truth on which Western civilization is built:

Liberty, equality, and human dignity.

These foundational principles are protected by the construct of our institutions dedicated

to the rule of law, separation of powers, and representative government.

Our principles are also protected from external threats by our collective determination, action,

and sacrifice in the face of security challenges.

World War I was the first great test in the 20th century of whether the United States

would pay the high cost of liberty.

Theodore Roosevelt never participated in that war, but he did pay that high cost: His son

Quentin, a fighter pilot, was killed in the skies over France.

In past decades, our way of life – and by extension, our core Western principles – have

been tested by the totalitarian threat of Nazism, by Soviet power and its communist

ideology, by ethnic and sectarian conflicts, and by internal political pressures.

Together, the U.S. and Europe have passed these tests, but we know that the United States

and Europe are again tested today and we will be tested again.

Under President Trump, the United States remains committed to our enduring relationship with

Europe.

Our security commitments to European allies are ironclad.

If we are to sustain the shared security commitments that ensure stability in the region, the Trump

administration views it as necessary for our allies to be strong, sovereign, prosperous,

and committed to the defense of shared Western ideals.

Over the past 10 months, we have embarked on a new strategic policy that bolsters European

and American security: namely, a recommitment to Europe in the wake of the failed "Russia

reset;" a new effort to adapt security institutions to combating emerging threats like terrorism,

cyberattacks, and nuclear proliferation; and an expectation that European nations accept

they are more secure when they contribute more toward their own defense.

These new policy directions will better position the United States and Europe to confront the

challenges that threaten our prosperity, the actors that seek to sow chaos and instill

doubt in our laws and institutions, and the enemies that threaten our security and oppose

our way of life.

This is a message I will repeat in my meetings with NATO and OSCE leaders, and in bilateral

meetings in a trip to Europe next week.

The preservation of our liberty begins with guaranteeing that our people can live in safety.

To that end, the United States places the highest importance on security relationships

with European allies, including NATO.

Alliances are meaningless if their members are unwilling or unable to honor their commitments.

Earlier this year, President Trump reaffirmed the United States commitment to Article 5

of the NATO treaty because it is the best mechanism we have to deter aggression.

And as the text of Article 5 reads, "The Parties agree that an armed attack against

one or more of them in Europe or North America shall be considered an attack against them

all."

Any attack by any actor on a NATO member-state will trigger Article 5, and the United States

will be the first to honor the commitment we have made.

We will never forget how NATO members came quickly to stand with us after the September

11th attack, and we will do the same for them if they are attacked.

While the West continues to seek a productive new relationship with post-Soviet Russia,

thus far it has proved elusive, as both attempts by the prior administration to reset the Russia

and U.S.-Europe relationships have been followed by Russia invading its neighbor Georgia in

2008 and Ukraine in 2014.

Russia continues aggressive behavior toward other regional neighbors by interfering in

election processes and promoting non-democratic ideals.

We, together with our friends in Europe, recognize the active threat of a recently resurgent

Russia.

That is why the United States has strengthened its deterrence and defense commitments in

Europe through the European Deterrence Initiative, or EDI.

Earlier this year, the administration requested $4.8 billion in its budget towards the EDI.

This increase of $1.4 billion over the previous year will enhance the U.S. military's deterrence

and defense capabilities and improve the readiness of our forces in Europe.

The EDI facilitates training and exercises with our European allies and partners to better

integrate our militaries and provide security for Europe.

And it will bolster the capacities of our Army, Navy, Air Force, and Marine Corps to

deploy assets and support NATO joint exercises.

In view of Russia's Zapad military exercises conducted near the borders of Baltic States

in September, our ability to respond to an attack in concert with our allies is more

important than ever.

The EDI also includes $150 million to help Ukraine build its capacity for defending its

territorial integrity.

The United States recognizes that the war in Ukraine – in which people are still dying

every day – must come to an end.

We have repeatedly urged Russia to begin the path to peace by honoring its commitments

under the Minsk agreements.

Any resolution of the war that does not entail a fully independent, sovereign, and territorially

whole Ukraine is unacceptable.

Russia chose to violate the sovereignty of the largest country in Europe.

The United States and Europe have stood shoulder-to-shoulder since 2014 in confronting this Russian aggression

with a coordinated sanctions policy.

Our transatlantic unity is meant to convey to the Russian Government that we will not

stand for this flagrant violation of international norms.

We hope Russia will take steps to restore Ukraine's full sovereignty and territorial

integrity and fully implement its Minsk commitments, allowing us to begin then the process of restoring

normal relations.

But let me be clear, Minsk-related sanctions will remain in place until Russia reverses

the actions that triggered them.

We are committed to the success of an independent and whole Ukraine.

However, Ukraine's future depends also on winning its internal struggle to implement

a broad range of economic, justice, security, and social sector reforms.

We encourage Ukraine to continue building capable, trustworthy institutions that will

reduce and eventually eliminate corruption, strengthen their judicial system, and deliver

economic prosperity to their citizens.

The Ukraine crisis also made clear how energy supplies can be wielded as a political weapon.

Enhancing European energy security by ensuring access to affordable, reliable, diverse, and

secure supplies of energy is fundamental to national security objectives.

The United States is liberalizing rules governing the export of liquefied natural gas and U.S.-produced

crude, and we're eager to work with European allies to ensure the development of needed

infrastructure like import terminals and interconnecting pipelines to promote the diversity of supply

to Europe.

In July, President Trump announced at the Three Seas Summit that the United States will

provide technical support for Croatia's Krk Island project.

The United States will continue to support European infrastructure projects, such as

LNG-receiving facilities in Poland and the Interconnector Greece Bulgaria pipeline, to

ensure that no country from outside Europe's Energy Union can use its resources or its

position in the global energy market to extort other nations.

We continue to view the development of pipelines like the Nord Stream 2 and the multiline TurkStream

as unwise, as they only increase market dominance from a single supplier to Europe.

The United States recognizes the fragility of the Balkans and will continue to work with

partners in the EU to bring stability, prosperity, and democracy to the region.

The people of the Balkan countries, to them we say: Abandon your old animosities so that

peace may become permanent.

You have a chance to direct a new course of history.

Bloodlines should no longer be battle lines.

The United States and the world long to see a new generation of Serbs, Croatians, Albanians,

Bosnians, Kosovars, and others who will forgive the past, even if they can never forget it.

A testament to America's shared values with Europe is our cooperation on issues beyond

the borders of Europe, which affect us all.

The United States and our European allies have partnered to hold Bashar al-Assad accountable

through sanctions for his crimes against his own people.

Since the beginning of the Syrian crisis, the EU and its member states have pledged

over 9.5 billion Euros in humanitarian, stabilization, resilience assistance, and those efforts are

continuing as the Global Coalition to Defeat ISIS stabilizes liberated areas.

As the last pockets of ISIS are defeated in Syria and international focus turns to resolving

the Syrian civil conflict, our European partners must continue to be strong advocates for the

UN-led Geneva process under UN Security Council Resolution 2254.

That alone can be the basis for rebuilding the country and implementing a political solution

that leaves no role for the Assad regime or his family in Syria's government.

Our European partners have also been strong supporters of our diplomatic and economic

pressure campaign against North Korea.

In addition to enthusiastically supporting UN Security Council resolutions, countries

have taken unilateral steps to maximize pressure on the regime in Pyongyang.

Portugal froze all diplomatic relations with the DPRK in July.

Spain and Italy have expelled North Korean ambassadors.

Latvia has fined banks who have violated the sanctions.

Our European allies know North Korea is a threat to all responsible nations and requires

a coordinated response.

We commend our allies for increasing pressure on the regime in Pyongyang in order to achieve

the complete, permanent, and verifiable denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula.

The partnership that the United States and European nations have forged are critical

– are a critical basis for confronting the threats of today and tomorrow, both in Europe

and outside of Europe.

The United States and Europe face many challenges and threats that – unlike in the past – are

simultaneously dispersed among many geographic frontlines and across multiple domains, whether

non-state terrorist actors, threats of a more conventional nature, cyber threats, or nuclear

threats.

Because we know we are stronger in confronting these challenges when we are working together,

we will pursue even greater cooperation from and with the nations of Europe, our best partners.

History has shown that when we are united, we succeed in the face of shared challenges.

As I remarked earlier, one of these challenges is Russia.

Europe and the United States seek a normalized relationship with Russia.

However, Russia has shown it seeks to define a new post-Soviet global balance of power,

one in which Russia, by virtue of its nuclear arsenal, seeks to impose its will on others

by force or by partnering with regimes who show a disregard for their own citizens, as

is the case with Bashar al-Assad's continuous use of chemical weapons against his own people.

The dissolution of the Soviet Union liberalized Russian society and created new trade opportunities

that benefit Russians, Europeans, and Americans.

But Russia has often employed malicious tactics against the U.S. and Europe to drive us apart,

weaken our confidence, and undermine the political and economic successes that we have achieved

together since the end of the Cold War.

Playing politics with energy supplies, launching cyber attacks and disinformation campaigns

to undermine free elections, and serially harassing and intimidating diplomats are not

the behaviors of a responsible nation.

Attacking a neighboring country and threatening others does nothing to improve the lives of

Russians or enhance Russia's standing in the world.

We want Russia to be a constructive neighbor of Europe and of the larger transatlantic

community.

But that is Russia's choice to make.

Russia can continue to isolate and impoverish itself by sowing disorder abroad and impeding

liberty at home, or it can become a force that will advance the freedom of Russians

and the stability of Eurasia.

Following the President's recent decision regarding our policy toward Iran, there is

actually much more that binds the United States and Europe together than drives us apart.

The JCPOA is no longer the only point of U.S. policy toward Iran; we are committed to addressing

the totality of the Iranian threat.

We ask our European partners to join us in standing up to all of Iran's malign behavior.

The Iranian regime is antithetical to Western principles in its totalitarian suppression

of individual, political, and religious freedom.

Neither the United States nor Europe wants another type of North Korea nuclear threat

on its hands, nor are any of our nations at ease with Iran's attempts at hegemony in

the Middle East through support for terrorist organizations, militias on the ground in Iraq

and Syria, and an active ballistic missile development program.

At Europe's intersection in the region, we know Turkey cannot ignore Iran because

of geographic proximity and cultural ties.

But we ask Turkey, as a NATO ally, to prioritize the common defense of its treaty allies.

Iran – and Russia – cannot offer Turkish people the economic and political benefits

that membership in the Western community of nations can provide.

We recognize the important contributions of our NATO allies that have been made in Afghanistan,

and we ask them to maintain their commitment to the mission.

The end state of the United States' new South Asia strategy is to destroy terrorist

safe havens and deny their re-establishment while the Afghan Government continues to strengthen

its own capacity to maintain security and create the conditions for reconciliation with

the Taliban and an inclusive government that accounts for the ethnic diversity of all Afghans.

We know this will take time.

But if we fail to exercise vigilance and undertake action against the terrorist threat, wherever

it is found, we risk re-creating the safe havens from which the 9/11 plot was hatched

and carried out.

We urge proportionate contributions of troops, funds, and other forms of assistance as we

seek to eradicate a terrorist threat that will not be confined to the place where it

was born.

NATO's Resolute Support mission is essential to our shared goal of ensuring that Afghanistan

develops the capability to contribute to regional stability and prevail over terrorist threats,

including al-Qaida and ISIS.

Even though ISIS is on the brink of complete extinction in Iraq and Syria, the threat of

ISIS and associated terror networks will persist in our own country and in others.

ISIS is looking for new footholds wherever they can find them, including the Sahel region

of West Africa.

We must take action so that areas like the Sahel or the Maghreb do not become the next

breeding ground for ISIS, al-Qaida, or other terrorist groups.

When these groups are able to occupy territory without disruption, their strategists, their

bomb makers, and online propagandists have an easier time encouraging, plotting, and

executing attacks elsewhere in the world.

This was for many months the case in Raqqa.

In support of our African and European partners, particularly France, the United States recently

committed up to $60 million to assist the G5 Sahel Joint Force to combat terrorism and

the potential rise of ISIS in the African Sahel region.

The emergence of ISIS in the Sahel is just one indication that threats to the safety

and well-being of our people will continue to have new and unexpected origins.

The evolving and unpredictable nature of the threats we face is already clear to the residents

of Paris, Brussels, Orlando, Nice, Berlin, Istanbul, London, Manchester, Barcelona, New

York, and many other places where our people have suffered at the hands of Islamist terrorists,

many of whom were radicalized in front of a computer screen inside their own homes inside

their own countries.

And the threats we face are clear to countries like Turkey, Greece, Italy, and Germany, who

have confronted the destabilizing impact of waves of irregular migration from North Africa

and the Middle East.

In the darkest hour of World War II, Winston Churchill declared that the British people

would fight on the fields, in the beaches, and in the streets to protect their country.

Today, our fight is increasingly located on the internet, at passport checkpoints, and

in the hearts and minds of young people in Europe and around the globe.

European security institutions, including NATO, must be properly adapted to address

internal and external threats such as radical Islamic terrorism to address cyberattacks

and to address unchecked migration.

Though we know these are the threats of the future, too many headlines have already declared

these are the threats of today.

New threats to the United States and Europe are long-term, unpredictable in timing, and

localized in many different places.

Properly anticipating and combating these threats require a greater European commitment

to security, because local responders are the most effective deterrent.

While the United States will continue to maintain our guarantees against a catastrophic failure

of security in the region, and will continue to expend resources to maintain our protective

umbrella, the nations of Europe must accept greater responsibility for their own security

challenges.

Our alliances must be made stronger in the current strategic environment; a lack of diligence

and duty will only invite greater risk.

President Trump said in Warsaw, and I quote, "We have to remember that our defense is

not just a commitment of money, it's a commitment of will."

Our expenditures are in some ways a reflection of how much we seek to protect peace and freedom.

We once again urge European partners who have not done so already to meet the 2 percent

of GDP target for defense spending.

This year, Albania, Croatia, France, Hungary, and Romania have newly committed to attaining

the 2 percent benchmark.

These nations know they must invest in security to preserve liberty.

Every NATO member has previously agreed to the Wales Pledge on Defense Investment.

It's time for each of us to honor that agreement.

We also urge greater security integration, provided that the relationships are efficient

and serve shared interest.

These commitments are necessary because our freedom and security is at stake.

The United States and all nations of Europe – especially those who once lived under

the weight of communist dictatorships – value our freedoms as nations who can act on our

own authority.

If we do not exercise responsibility, we will not have sovereignty; and if we do not have

sovereignty, we will not have freedom.

Maintaining sovereignty also entails cultivating the virtues that make it possible.

Free nations must exercise vigilant protection of civil societies and the groups, families,

and individuals that compose them.

Rule of law and representative governments are empty shells when detached from a vibrant

civil society and a deep respect for certain self-evident truths.

We can win every great geopolitical struggle, but if we are not perennially vigilant of

our own behavior, our own people may lose in the long run.

The preservation of Western ideals depends on how willing we are to protect the core

truths upon which our political and economic freedoms are based.

We know the people and leaders of Europe are having many conversations about their future.

America will not attempt to impose answers to those questions.

We recognize that Europe is composed of free nations who, in the great tradition of Western

democracy, must be able to choose their own paths forward.

As in the past, the United States is committed to working with Europe's institutional arms,

and while we also recognize that our allies are independent and democratic nations with

their own history, perspective, and right to determine their future.

This position has a particular relevance for what is transpiring in the UK over the Brexit.

The United States will maintain our longstanding special relationship with the United Kingdom,

and at the same time maintain a strong relationship with the EU, regardless of the outcome of

Brexit.

We will not attempt to influence the negotiations, but we urge the EU and UK to move this process

forward swiftly and without unnecessary acrimony.

We offer an impartial hand of friendship to both parties.

The next chapter of European history must be written in Europe's own words.

As I mentioned at the beginning, 2017 marks the 100th anniversary of America's entry

into World War I.

But this November also marks the centennial of another event in world history: the beginning

of the Russian Revolution.

Though the Soviet Union collapsed 26 years ago, a few symbols and phrases associated

with decades of Soviet rule endure in the English language: the Gulag, the five-year

plan, the Iron Curtain, the Berlin Wall.

These few words, almost universally understood, capture the bitter and brutal history of communist

rule in Europe and Russia.

And they remind us of what can happen if we fail to defend the core principles of liberty

and sovereignty in the Western tradition.

In our time, forces like authoritarian nation-states, radical Islamist terrorists, and hackers with

a lust for chaos are attempting to erode our principles of freedom, equality, human dignity,

the rule of law, and representative government.

We cannot fail to take on the sovereign responsibility of protecting those freedoms.

As Theodore Roosevelt also said, "Every nation, whether in America or anywhere else,

which desires to maintain its freedom, its independence, must ultimately realize that

the right of such independence cannot be separated from the responsibility of making good use

of it."

Aware of this responsibility, the U.S. will remain firmly committed to peace, stability

and prosperity, and liberty for Europe.

As we reflect on how our ties with Europe have endured over the past 100 years, the

United States stands by our European allies and partners, so that our free societies will

be standing strong together another 100 years from now.

Thank you.

(Applause.)

MS HARMAN: Thank you, Mr. Secretary, for a speech that I think is worthy of many of the

leaders you cited – Woodrow Wilson, who served us as president a hundred years ago;

Theodore Roosevelt; Franklin Roosevelt; Winston Churchill.

You linked all parts of the world, and that is why we honor people like you with our public

and business awards over the years.

So let me focus just a bit more on Europe since that was your topic and you're going

to Europe next week.

Bob Dickie and I were recently at NATO visiting with our extremely able ambassador, Kay Bailey

Hutchison, and she convened a lunch of eight foreign ambassadors to NATO.

And what came through is – to me, is a view they have that this is a zero-sum game.

As the United States focuses on problems around the world like – urgent problems, and you

cited many of them – like North Korea and Iran, it will pay less attention to Europe.

I thought that your speech made the point that this is not a zero-sum game, that if

a strong Europe stands with us, we are stronger together to face the tough problems around

the world that are also developing blowback to Europe.

And am I right?

Is that – was that the elevator pitch?

SECRETARY TILLERSON: Well, that – yeah, that is the message that I'll be taking

next week, that just as the last 100 years I think have proven, we view the current times

we're in similarly, that the United States cannot alone confront all of these threats.

They are so widespread, and they are also so interconnected.

You can pick any one of the threats that I went through and you will find points of connection

between every one of them, in some form or fashion, whether it's a Russian involvement,

a China involvement, an Iranian involvement, Islamist terrorism involvement.

But we are confronted with a particularly complex time in our world of dealing with

threats to our civil society.

And we're only going to prevail against those threats with continuing to use our allies,

the strength of our allies.

And one of the things the United States is blessed in our foreign policy and in our national

security posture is we have many, many allies, many allies, all over the world, and those

alliances were forged in shared blood and shared sacrifice, unlike many of our adversaries

who can count their allies on less than all the fingers on one hand, because they didn't

forge those alliances through those shared sacrifices, nor are they forged through shared

ideals.

So I think what we're recognizing and promoting is the strength of these historic alliances,

which I think over some period of time, perhaps since the end of the Cold War, we lost our

way a bit in some of these relationships, maybe a view in particular in Europe that

with the end of the Cold War, the imminent threat that everyone faced for that 70-year

period was now diminishing, and what we now realize is it didn't.

It didn't diminish.

It's still defining itself; it's still searching for its role in the name of Russia.

But these threats that are emanating out of the Middle East, which now have brought themselves

right to the shores and to the borders of our European allies, whether it be through

the mass migration but also with the mass migration comes the transport of those who

would kill others and sacrifice themselves in doing it, that these are threats that we

can only confront with a very strong network of the alliances.

And so it is really – in some respects, it's a recommitment, but it's also a redefinition

of what this alliance means.

And I think the message President Trump carried early on when he went to Europe – and received

a lot of criticism for it – was to demand of our allies that you care as much about

your freedom and you care as much about the security of your people as we care about you.

And when you looked at the commitments that the U.S. – the sacrifice that the U.S. makes

in terms of not just the taxpayers' dollars but our own men and women in uniform, the

commitment we made seemed to be a little out of balance.

And I think the President was just sending the message that we're committed to this

alliance.

You have to get committed – you need to get as committed to it as we are.

And I think what I've heard in my – and I've had a lot of dialogue with European

counterparts – that message has resonated.

And we're seeing it in the commitments to NATO, commitments to defense spending, a recommitment

of personnel.

And this is really what was needed at this time, where we are under these enormous threats,

and we have to strengthen the alliances; we have to strengthen NATO's capability to

deal with what are now new and changing threats.

And that was really the purpose of the President's message early in his presidency, which we've

now followed through on in crafting these stronger relationships.

We have more work to do, but I think our message to Europe is nothing has changed in terms

of our commitment to you.

Nothing from that time we made that decision 100 years ago to enter World War I in your

defense – nothing has changed fundamentally.

The same values that bind us are still there.

MS HARMAN: Thank you.

SECRETARY TILLERSON: Let's keep that strong.

MS HARMAN: Mindful of your time, I just want to get in a few questions about other topics,

including questions from the audience.

But I would note that an interesting point you made in your talk was about Turkey, that

Turkey now has a choice: It can become more connected to Europe, which is a huge advantage,

and to us, or not.

And I heard that loud and clear.

I want to turn to the question of State Department funding and organization, something that many

people are interested in.

Every organization needs renewal.

The Wilson Center needs renewal.

And surely, everyone here, including long-serving Foreign Service officers, think the State

Department needs renewal.

However, questions have arisen about the steep cuts in your budget proposed by the Office

of Management and Budget – that doesn't mean that's what Congress will enact – and

what some claim is a hollowing out of your department.

Most recently today, two valued friends of the Wilson Center, Nick Burns and Ryan Crocker,

both of them enormously experienced Foreign Service officers and ambassadors, wrote a

piece in The New York Times with a lot of information about who's leaving and what

its implications are.

My understanding is there is another side to this story.

And so I would like to ask you to tell your side of this story and give us your vision

for what the State Department should become.

SECRETARY TILLERSON: Well, let me start quickly with the budget, because it's – I think

it's the easier – actually easier question to address.

The budget that the State Department was given in 2016 was a record-high budget – almost

$55 billion.

This was above what traditionally has been a budget that runs kind of the mid-30 billion

level.

And this was ramping up over the last few years, in many respects for some good reasons.

But as we look at that spending level, quite frankly, it's just not sustainable.

It is very difficult to execute a $55 billion budget and execute it well.

That's a lot of spending and deployment of resources, and I take our stewardship of

those dollars very seriously, and I take the congressional oversight obligations on us

very seriously and am not going to brush them aside light handedly.

So part of this was just a reality check: Can we really keep this up?

And the truth of the matter is, it'd be very difficult to keep it up and do it well.

And secondly though, part of this bringing the budget numbers back down is reflective

of an expectation that we're going to have success in some of these conflict areas of

getting these conflicts resolved and moving to a different place in terms of the kind

of support that we have to give them.

So it's a combination of things – that sustainability, a recognition that those numbers

are really the outliers.

The numbers we're moving to are not the outliers; they're more historic in terms

of the levels of spending.

As to the State Department redesign – and I use the word "redesign" because it would

have been really easy to come in on day one and do a reorg.

A "reorg," when I use that word, is moving the boxes around on the org chart.

When I showed up in the State Department, I was stunned when I got the organization

chart out and I had 82 direct reports to the Office of the Secretary, to me – 82.

Now, almost 70 of those are special envoys, special ambassadors, positions that have been

created.

So we immediately undertook an examination of just what's a reasonable way to run the

place, and that isn't it.

Having run a large global organization – and I have been through three major reorganizations

in my history and actually enjoy doing it – it's always focused on how do we help

the people be more effective, how do we get the obstacles out of their way.

So we undertook a different approach, and since I don't know the department and didn't

know its culture, we had a massive listening exercise.

We had 35,000 people respond and we had over 300 face-to-face interviews, and we continue

an active dialogue with people today about what is it – if I could do one thing for

you that would make you more effective and make you – make your work more satisfying,

what would that be.

And we got hundreds of ideas.

We've actually selected about 170 of those ideas that we are now perfecting.

The reason we call it a redesign is most of these have to do with work processes internally

and work processes with inter-agencies that we should be able to improve the way people

get their work done.

Some of it is tools and enablement, so things like – we have a really antiquated IT system.

I was shocked when I went down to spend an afternoon with the A Bureau, and I said, "What's

the one thing I could do?"

And they said, "Get us into the cloud."

And I looked at them.

I said, "What do you mean?

We're not in the cloud?"

And they said, "No, no.

We're still on all these servers."

Well, that's a big cyber risk, first.

But it really made it very cumbersome for people, and when I started using my own computer

I started realizing just how cumbersome it was.

So a lot of the projects that have been identified out of the redesign are process redesigns

and some enablement for people, and it's all directed at allowing the people of the

State Department to get their work done more effectively, more efficiently, and have a

much more satisfying career.

We have a lot of processes in the HR function that have not been updated in decades, and

they need to be updated.

How we put people out on assignment – we invest enormous amounts of money in people

that we deploy to missions overseas, and I was stunned to find out in a lot of the missions

these are one-year assignments.

So we invested all this money; we send them out to the mission.

They're there for one year, and about the time they're starting to figure it out and

have an impact, we take them out and we move them somewhere else.

Well, a lot of people have said to me, "I would really like to stay another year and

start contributing."

So it's a lot of things like that that came out of the listening exercise.

So the – so we have five large teams.

They're all employee-led.

I've brought in some consultants to help us facilitate, but the redesign is all led

by the employees in the State Department.

The issue of the hollowing out – I think all of you appreciate that every time you

have a change of government you have a lot of senior Foreign Service officers and others

who decide they want to move on and do other things.

We've had a – our numbers of retirements are almost exactly what they were in 2016

at this point.

We have the exact same number of Foreign Service officers today – we're off by 10 – that

we had at this time in 2016.

There is a hiring freeze that I've kept in place, because as we redesign the organization

we're probably going to have people that need to be redeployed to other assignments.

I don't want to have a layoff; I don't want to have to fire a bunch of people.

So I said, "Let's manage some of our staffing targets with just normal attrition."

Having said that, I have signed over 2,300 hiring exceptions, because I've told every

post if you have a critical position and you really need that filled, just send it in.

And I think I have out of 2,300 requests I think I've denied eight positions that I

decided we really didn't need.

So we're keeping the organization fully staffed.

We've had over – we're still running our Foreign Service officer school; we've

hired over 300 this year.

So there is no hollowing out.

These numbers that people are throwing around are just false; they're wrong.

There was a story about a 60 percent reduction in career diplomats.

The post career diplomat was created by the Congress in 1955 to recognize an elite few.

The number of career diplomats in the State Department have ranged from as low as one

at any given time to as many as seven.

When I took over the State Department we had six.

Four of those people have retired.

These are your most senior – they were – they reached 65, they retired, they moved on.

We have a review process – we're very selective in replacing those, but we actually

have a review process underway and we're evaluating a handful of people who might be

worthy of that designation.

But we still have two.

But we went from six to two; it was a 60 percent reduction.

It sounded like the sky was falling.

The other comment I would make is while the confirmation process has been excruciatingly

slow for many of our nominees, I have been so proud of the acting assistant secretaries

and people who've stepped into acting under secretary roles.

And when the – I read these articles that there's this hollowing out, I take offense

to that on their behalf because the people that are serving in those roles are doing

extraordinary work, and they know they're not going to get the job permanently.

They already know we have a nominee, but they come in every day, they work hard, they travel

with me around the world, and that's – it's that group of people that have helped me put

in place and helped the President put in place the North Korean strategy with the international

sanctions; a Syrian approach to the peace process that we think we're about to get

on the right track; an approach to negotiating with the Russians on Ukraine; an approach

to the Defeat ISIS campaign; the Iran policy, the South Asia policy in Afghanistan, our

new posture towards Pakistan; the open – free and open Indo – all of that's been done

with the people that are working there today, and I'm very proud.

I'm very proud of what they've done.

They're working hard and I'm offended on their behalf.

I'm offended on their behalf when people say somehow we don't have a State Department

that functions.

But I can tell you it's functioning very well from my perspective.

Have we got more we want to do?

Yes, we got more we want to do.

And my only objective in the organization redesign is to help these people who are – who

have chosen this as a career – because I'll come and go, and there will be other politicals

that will come and go – what can I do to help them?

Because they've decided they want to spend their life doing this and they should be allowed

to do it as effectively and efficiently and without a lot of grief and obstacles.

And if I can remove some of that for them, that's what I want to do.

MS HARMAN: Let me tell you, that message will resonate around the world.

A lot of people wanted to hear that.

Your time is very short.

I just would like to group, briefly, three questions from the audience into one.

Molly Cole who works for Representative Gerry Connolly, and I'm sure was one of our vaunted

stars in our foreign policy programs, asks, "Do you think support for democracy and

human rights abroad is an important part of the State Department's mission?"

That's one.

Matt Rojansky who heads our Kennan Institute – George Kennan literally was a scholar

here at one point – asks, "Where do you think progress with Russia is possible?"

And finally, Mike Sfraga, whom you met, who heads our Polar Initiative, asks, "In light

of the increased interest and activity in the Arctic, is the Arctic and Alaska of strategic

importance to the United States and to its European Arctic allies?"

SECRETARY TILLERSON: Well, as to human rights and human dignity, of course they are priorities.

What I have said about those elements of our foreign policy is those are values, and those

are values that are enduring and they never change.

Now, when you're constructing foreign policy and strategies and approaches, you have to

prioritize, and you can't de-prioritize human rights.

It's with you, it's part of every policy decision you make.

The question is how do you want to affect it?

And if you make – if you say, well, it's a priority, priorities can change.

Well, this can never change.

This is enduring and it's a part of every foreign policy construct that we develop.

What I would say is that – but if you're dealing with a place like Syria or Iraq was

in under ISIS occupation, the most important thing was saving people's lives.

How can we keep people from getting killed?

Because the ultimate human right is the right to live.

The right to live first.

If I can live, then I can begin to take care of my family, then I can begin to fight for

my human rights, then I can begin to fight for my human – but if I'm being killed

every day, I'm being bombed, I'm being gassed – our priority was save lives.

So we want to save lives first, and if we do that, we stabilize areas and then we can

start creating the conditions to ensure people's human rights and dignity are respected.

With respect to Russia, there are areas of mutual cooperation.

We're working hard in Syria to defeat ISIS and we are on the cusp of having ISIS once

and for all defeated in Syria.

We got work yet to do.

We are working together with Russia on how to prevent the civil war from re-erupting,

and so we've had a lot of conversations over what does Russia see as the end state

of Syria, what do we see as the end state, and there's a lot of commonality there.

Tactically, how we get to those to peace talks, we're working very closely with one another

on.

We have our ups and downs.

If you saw – I think it was a very important joint statement was issued by President Trump

and President Putin from Da Nang, Vietnam on the margins of the APEC meeting.

That was an important alignment of how we see the Syria peace process going forward,

and it was an important statement to have Russia confirm that they see it the same way

we do.

We'll use that and we'll build on it.

I think there are other areas of counterterrorism.

Russia has great fear of migration out of the Central Asian regions and terrorism inside

of Russia.

We think there's areas of greater cooperation on counterterrorism with Russia.

There may be opportunities for cooperation in Afghanistan.

We've not yet come to what that might be, but we're talking about it.

In Ukraine, what I've said to the Russians is we're never going to get this relationship

back to normal until we solve Ukraine.

It just sits there as an enduring obstacle, and we've got to address it.

So, as you know, I appointed a special representative, former ambassador to NATO Kurt Volker, to

focus on nothing but working with his Russian counterpart which Putin appointed to see if

we can find a way forward – not marginalizing the Normandy process, but working with it

to see if we can break the logjam.

We've had some very substantive discussions.

We're pursuing the possibility of a peacekeeping force in Ukraine to stop the ongoing – every

day people are killed, civilians are killed.

We want to stop that first and save the lives first, and then let's start working toward

the process.

So there are many areas of cooperation with Russia, and they have many others they'd

like to work with us on.

We just don't think it's time to do that.

Now, with respect to the Arctic, the Arctic is going – is important today.

It's going to be increasingly important in the future, particularly as those waterways

have opened up.

What I can tell you is the United States is behind.

We're behind all the other Arctic nations.

They are – they have dealt with this.

They've gotten way ahead of us.

The Russians made it a strategic priority.

Even the Chinese are building icebreaking tankers.

Now, why are they building icebreakers?

They're not an Arctic nation.

Because they see the value of these passages.

So we're late to the game.

I think we have one functioning icebreaker today.

The Coast Guard's very proud of it – (laughter) – as crummy as it is.

MS HARMAN: Yeah.

Yeah.

SECRETARY TILLERSON: And I know in the budget – there is money in the budget for us to

-- MS HARMAN: For one more.

SECRETARY TILLERSON: -- to make – to build another icebreaker.

But the whole Arctic region, because of what's happened with the opening of the Arctic passageways

from an economic and trade standpoint, but certainly from a national security standpoint,

is vitally important to our interest.

And so our engagement through not just the Arctic Council but through other mechanisms

is important to working with the Arctic countries on international norms, what are the rules

of the game going to be, because these are areas that have not been addressed in the

past, so very important.

MS HARMAN: So time is up.

I was going to ask you what you want your legacy to be, but listening to you, I don't

know that that question can be answered yet.

You're all over the world, you're focused deeply on the tough questions.

You're headed to Europe next week.

You have to come back and answer all the other questions we couldn't ask today.

(Laughter.)

Was that a yes?

SECRETARY TILLERSON: Yes, I'll be back.

(Laughter.)

MS HARMAN: Thank you, Mr. Secretary

For more infomation >> Secretary Tillerson Delivers Remarks on the U.S.-European Relationship - Duration: 51:28.

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180+ Woman Reported Assault At Massage Envy Locations Across U.S. - Duration: 2:32.

For more infomation >> 180+ Woman Reported Assault At Massage Envy Locations Across U.S. - Duration: 2:32.

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Regions of the United States Digital Story - Duration: 4:00.

The US can be categorized into four different geographic regions.

These four regions are the Northeast, the Southeast, the Great Plains, the Southwest,

and the Pacific Northwest.

Each region can be described by its climate and physical geography.

First, we are going to discuss the Northeast region of the United States.

This region includes Maine, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New Hampshire,

Vermont, New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland.

The climate in this region is a humid, continental climate.

In the northernmost areas, the summers are cool.

In the winter, temperatures are frequently below freezing, and snow is common.

Physical geography in this region includes the Appalachian Mountains.

The region borders the Atlantic Ocean to the East and Canada to the North.

The population of this region is 63 million people.

Next, let's talk about the Southeast region of the United States.

This region includes West Virginia, Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, South

Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, Louisiana, and Florida.

The climate in this region is a humid subtropical climate.

The summers are hot.

Hurricanes and tropical storms can be common during the summer and fall months.

This region borders the Gulf of Mexico to the south.

A notable geographic feature is the Mississippi River.

Like the Northeast, this region also contains parts of the Appalachian Mountains, and borders

the Atlantic ocean to the East.

The population of this region is 82 million.

Moving Westward, we reach the Great Plains region of the United States.

This region includes Ohio, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois, Missouri, Wisconsin, Minnesota,

Iowa, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, and North Dakota.

There is a humid continental climate in this region.

Snow is common in the winter, especially in the northern areas.

The Great Lakes are in this region, as well as the great plains.

The Mississippi River also flows through this part of the US.

The region borders Canada to the North.

The population of the Great Plains region is 67 million.

Next is the Southwest region.

This region includes Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arizona.

This region has an interesting climate, with a semiarid steppe climate in the West and

a humid climate to the East.

Some areas could even be called alpine or desert.

Physical features of this region are the Rocky Mountains, the Colorado River, and the Grand

Canyon.

The region borders the Gulf of Mexico, and Mexico itself to the South.

The population of this region is 40 million.

Finally, we have reached the Pacific Northwest region of the United States.

This region includes Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, Utah, Nevada, and

California.

Some would also include Alaska and Hawaii in this category.

This region is large, and therefore the climate varies greatly.

Climates in this region include semiarid, alpine, mediterranean along California's

coast, and desert in Nevada and southern California.

Physical features of this region are the Mojave Desert and the Rocky Mountains.

The region borders the Pacific Ocean to the West, Canada to the North, and Mexico to the

South.

The population of this region is 67 million people.

The US is a large country, and there are many different characteristics of the regions within

it.

Can you think of some similarities and differences between the Southeast, Northeast, Great Plains,

Southwest, and Pacific Northwest regions of the US?

For more infomation >> Regions of the United States Digital Story - Duration: 4:00.

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'Wreaths Across America,' Wreath Laying Ceremonies All Across the United States of America - Duration: 4:54.

>>> WE MADE THE COMMENT EARLIER

THIS MONTH, I THINK YOU SAID

IT, JIMMY, THAT HONORING OUR

VETERANS SHOULD NOT BE LIMITED

TO ONE DAY BUT IS SOMETHING WE

SHOULD DO ALL THE TIME WHICH IS

WHY IT BRINGS US GREAT JOY TO

BRING YOU THE NEXT STORY.

>> WE ARE TALKING ABOUT

VETERANS WHO MADE THE ULTIMATE

SACRIFICE, THOSE WHO DIED FOR

THE COUNTRY.

NEXT MONTH INCREDIBLE CONVOY

WILL ROLL QUITE LITERALLY INTO

SALISBURY TO PAY HOMAGE TO OUR

FALLEN VETERANS AS PART OF

WREATHS ACROSS AMERICA.

JOINING US THIS AFTERNOON IS

THE PRODUCER AND DIRECTOR OF

TRANSPORTATION, TIM AND DEPUTY

TRUCK DRIVER KEITH CLARK.

>> THANK YOU.

>> THANK YOU.

>> KEITH, RIGHT OFF THE BAT,

THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR YOUR

SERVICE.

>> THANK YOU.

THANK YOU .

>> WHAT DID YOU DO, KEITH?

>> IN THE AIR FORCE?

>> YES.

FOR THE F-16S, THE AVIONICS

SHOP.

>> REALLY?

>> WOW.

>> WE COULD CHANGE THE WHOLE

INTERVIEW!

[LAUGHTER]

>> IS RIGHT THERE WE COULD!

>> BUT WE WANT TO TALK ABOUT

443-880-9116.

WHAT IS THAT?

>> NO, IN 1992, THE WORCESTER

WREATH COMPANY UP INHERENT IN

MAINE DECIDED TO TAKESOME

LEFTOVER WREATHS THEY HAD AND

DONATE THEM TO ARLINGTON .

IN THE FOLLOWING YEAR THEY DID

IT AGAIN.

AND IT WAS LIKE A SNOWBALL

EFFECT.

IT JUST GOT BIGGER AND BIGGER

AND BIGGER.

>> AND FOR YEARS YOU BEEN PART

OF THE DRIVE TO GET THE RACE TO

ARLINGTON?

>> UH-HUH.

>> ONLY THIS YEAR THEY WILL

MAKE A STOP ON THE WAY HERE IN

SALISBURY?

>> YES.

CONVOY WILL BE IN AROUND 2:30

IN THE AFTERNOON.

WE ARE HOPING EVERYONE WILL

COME OUT FOR THAT.

AND THE CEREMONY BEGINS AT

3:00.

>> SO, KEITH, IS A DRIVER, WHAT

IS YOUR ROLE IN 443-880-9116?

>> WELL, THIS ROLE I WILL

PARTICIPATE IN THE WREATHLAYING

CEREMONY AT THE WAR VETERANS

MEMORIAL AND ON THE 16TH I WILL

DELIVER A LOAD OF WREATHS INTO

ARLINGTON CEMETERY FOR THE

NATIONAL EVENT THERE AT 8:00.

>> GOODNESS.

>> YES.

>> NOW, TIM, THIS IS NOT THE

FIRST TIME YOU GUYS HAVE

PARTICIPATED IN THIS EVENT?

>> NO, IT IS THE 11TH YEAR.

WE'VE ACTUALLY DELIVERED ABOUT

150,000 RATES IN THE LAST 11

YEARS IT CONTINUES TO GROW.

OUR DRIVERS LOVE TO DO IT.

PURDUE GLOVES SPONSOR THEM AS

WELL.

>> WHY?

>> IT IS JUST A WAY TO GET BACK

TO THE COMMUNITY AND OUR

VETERANS.

WE HAVE A LOT OF VETERANS AT

PURDUE AND A LOT OF OUR DRIVERS

ARE VETERANS.

AND IT IS JUST A GREAT WAY TO,

YOU KNOW, PAY HOMAGE TO OUR

FALLEN AND GIVE THEM THE

RESPECT.

I COME FROM A MILITARY

BACKGROUND AND I UNDERSTAND

WHETHER SACRIFICE WAS.

>> RIGHT.

>> AND IT IS JUST THE RIGHT

THING TO DO.

>> AND THIS REALLY MEANS A LOT

TO THE FAMILIES AS WELL,

DOESN'T IT?

>> ABSOLUTELY.

LAST YEAR WAS HER VIRGINITY DO

I WICOMICO COUNTY WAR MEMORIAL

AND THE DRIVER DID ALL OF THE

TALKING, THE FAMILIES WERE

INVITED, A GREAT EVENT.

>> NOW, IS THERE ANYTHING THAT

THE COMMUNITY CAN DO

PARTICIPATE AND CONTRIBUTE AND

HELP?

>> ESPECIALLY AS HE SAID, THE

CONVOY WILL BE THERE AT 2:30

AND WE WOULD LOVE TO HAVE THE

COMMUNITY AND PUBLISHER OF

THEIR BEFORE THE CEREMONY

HAPPENS TO SUPPORT THE EVENT

AND ALSO, THEY CAN VOLUNTEER AS

WELL AT THE CEMETERY TO A RACE

ON THE FALLEN CEMETERIES.

AT ANY ARLINGTON NATIONAL

CEMETERY AROUND THE COUNTRY.

>> IN HERE IS THE INFORMATION.

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15 AT THE

WICOMICO COUNTY WAR VETERANS

MEMORIAL IT OF COURSE, THE

PUBLIC IS INVITED.

IN THE WICOMICO COUNTY WAR

MEMORIAL FOR THOSE WHO ARE NOT

FAMILIAR, WHAT IS IT?

>> THERE IS 191 HEROES ON THE

WALL THERE FROM HERE ON

DELMARVA.

SO WE HAVE SOME GOLDSTAR

FAMILIES HERE ON DELMARVA.

WE HOPE THAT THEY SHOW UP AT

THE WHOLE COMMUNITY COMES OUT

TO SUPPORT THEM AND REMEMBERS

HER LOVED ONE.

>> AND AS YOU WERE SAYING, IT

STARTS AT THREE.

GET THERE EARLY?

>> YES, THE CONVOY WILL COME

INTO: 30, 2:45.

THEY WILL GET THERE A LITTLE

EARLY.

THE GOLD STAR MOMS WILL BE

THERE TRAVELING IN THE CONVOY,

SO IT WILL BE NICE.

>> AND, WHAT A WONDERFUL

OPPORTUNITY TO ACTUALLY TALK TO

THE FAMILY MEMBERS, THE

GOLDSTAR FAMILIES.

>> ABSOLUTELY.

A FEW YEARS AGO I TRAVELED FROM

THE CONVOY FROM HARRINGTON INTO

ARLINGTON AND I SPENT THE WHOLE

TIME WITH THE GOLD STAR MOMS

AND WHEN YOU HEAR THOSE

FAMILIES YOU KNOW WHAT IT IS

ABOUT.

>> AND WE DO TALK ABOUT

For more infomation >> 'Wreaths Across America,' Wreath Laying Ceremonies All Across the United States of America - Duration: 4:54.

-------------------------------------------

U.S. Hospitals Face IV Bag Shortage - Monday, Nov. 27, 2017 - 6 p.m. - Duration: 1:43.

For more infomation >> U.S. Hospitals Face IV Bag Shortage - Monday, Nov. 27, 2017 - 6 p.m. - Duration: 1:43.

-------------------------------------------

US Police Secretly Tracking Citizens Using Illegal Military Devices - Duration: 2:21.

Dozens of police departments across the US are secretly using military devices to track

innocent Americans on the streets without warrants.

The International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) catchers mimic cell phone towers.

They trick phones into routing signals through them, allowing police to track a suspect's

location.

Rt.com reports: The machines even allow police to get the location of a phone without the

user making a call or sending a text.

The most common of these devices is called a "StingRay."

Such devices can also collect the phone numbers a person has been calling and texting and

even intercept the content of communications.

At least 72 state and local law enforcement departments in 24 states and 13 federal agencies

use the devices, according to a new report from AP.

The report notes that further details are hard to come by because the departments that

use IMSI catchers must take the unusual step of signing non-disclosure agreements overseen

by the FBI.

An FBI spokeswoman told the news agency that the agreements, which regularly involve the

defense contractor that makes the machines, are intended to prevent the release of sensitive

law enforcement information to the general public.

Last year, the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee released a report that found

the Justice Department and the Department of Homeland Security had spent a combined

$95 million on 434 cell-site simulators between 2010 and 2014.

Civil liberties unions such as the NYCLU say the devices are extremely invasive because

they operate in such a wide range, around two city blocks, that they don't just grab

up the target's data but also information from other people in the area.

Law enforcement agencies have also gone to great lengths to conceal StingRay usage, in

some instances even offering plea deals rather than divulging details on the machine.

In several states, courts are beginning to grapple with the issue.

Earlier this month, a Brooklyn judge ruled that the police need an eavesdropping warrant

to use a StingRay.

In September, a federal court ruled use of the device without a warrant violated the

US Constitution, specifically the Fourth Amendment.

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