Marco Rubio y Kristi Noem, funcionarios del gobierno de Donald Trump, respondieron a cuestionamientos de senadores de EU con deslices que llamaron la atención.
00:00El secretario de Estado Marco Rubio y senadores demócratas discutieron sobre las políticas de relaciones exteriores de la administración Trump
00:06que van desde Ucrania y Rusia hasta el Medio Oriente.
00:09Le preguntaron cuántas visas se han revocado hasta de enero a la fecha.
00:14Por otro lado, la secretaria de Seguridad, Cristina Oum, también tuvo una comparecencia.
00:18Dijo erróneamente que el habeas corpus permite expulsar a personas justo cuando la Casa Blanca se plantea suspender este derecho para aumentar las deportaciones.
00:30¿Cómo se han revocatado?
00:31No, no, no, no, no. They're related, but we can't conflate them because they're two different.
00:48One is the one you've decided, National Interest of the United States.
00:51Some of the visa revocations are happening because somebody violated the terms of their visa.
00:56They dropped out of school or they got convicted of a crime or some criminal investigation.
00:59Those are separate from what you've said.
01:01On the issue of Ukraine, here's what we can all agree on.
01:03There is no military solution to this crisis.
01:05It will have to end in a negotiated settlement.
01:08And the fundamental challenge we have in Ukraine is this.
01:11Russia wants what they do not currently have and are not entitled to.
01:14And Ukraine wants what they cannot regain militarily.
01:17And that's been the crux of the challenge.
01:19In fact, it is our assessment that, frankly, the transitional authority, given the challenges they're facing,
01:24are maybe weeks, not many months, away from potential collapse and a full-scale civil war of epic proportions.
01:33Basically, the country's splitting up.
01:34The good news is that there is a Syrian national identity.
01:37Well, habeas corpus is a constitutional right that the president has to be able to remove people from this country.
01:44No, let me stop you, ma'am.
01:46Habeas corpus, excuse me, that's incorrect.
01:49President Lincoln used it.
01:51Excuse me.
01:52Habeas corpus is the legal principle that requires that the government provide a public reason for detaining and imprisoning people.
02:01If not for that protection, the government could simply arrest people, including American citizens,
02:06and hold them indefinitely for no reason.
02:08So, Secretary Noem, do you support the core protection that habeas corpus provides,
02:14that the government must provide a public reason in order to detain and imprison someone?
02:20Yeah, I support habeas corpus.
02:22I also recognize that the president of the United States has the authority under the Constitution to decide if it should be suspended or not.
02:29It has never been done.
02:30Let us be clear, though, that this president—
02:32It has never been done without approval of Congress.
02:34Even Abraham Lincoln got retroactive approval from Congress.
02:39되게 fingerprints.
02:41une quantity
02:44They have never been done without approval of Congress.