"We have more people dying of accidental opioid deaths in the U.S. than died at height of the AIDS crisis of HIV," says CNN political commentator Van Jones.
Exclusive: Pravin Gordhan, the South African finance minister recently fired by Pres. Zuma, says the African National Congress must find the "boldness" to change direction.
Chinese Ambassador to the US Cui Tiankai says it's in the "common interest" to find a diplomatic solution to North Korea's nuclear and missile ambitions.
The crisis in Venezuela are is "driven by policy decisions by the government of Venezuela," says U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Michael Fitzpatrick.
The president of the European Parliament Antonio Tajani says it would be impossible to vote on a Brexit deal that doesn't protect the rights of EU citizens.
Michael Hayden says that the USS Carl Vinson incident shows that the "family and friends" in the White House are "disconnected from the broader government."
UK Member of Parliament Nick Clegg, former deputy prime minister and Liberal Democrat, speaks with Christiane Amanpour about the country's upcoming election.
Former British Foreign Secretary Malcolm Rifkind tells Christiane Amanpour that the general election will give her with a much stronger hand in Brexit talks.
Diplomatic talks don't seems like a natural subject for the stage, but "Olso" dramatizes just that. Amanpour speaks with the playwright and one of the real participants.
The fallback deal to remove chemical weapons from Syria in 2013 clearly did not live up to its goal, the former US defense secretary under President Obama says.
There is 1.4 million children in South Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Nigeria "who are close to death," says the Deputy Executive Director of UNICEF Justin Forsyth.
"Who is conducting foreign policy," asks Sergey Markov of the Institute of Political Studies. "Tillerson? Or maybe Mike Pence? Or maybe Kushner? Or maybe Ivanka Trump?"
"I felt hope again," Kassem Eid, who survived a 2013 Sarin attack, says of President Trump's statement on Wednesday. "I hope I won't get my hear broken again."
Doctor Feras al-Jundi speaks to Christiane Amanpour about treating victims of what is suspected to be one of the deadliest chemical attacks in Syria in years.