David Axelrod, former top aide to Pres. Obama, previews Pres. Trump's first speech to Congress. "Yes, there is a disconnect between reality and his rhetoric."
"There will be casualties," says Foreign Minister Perfecto Yasay Jr, but it would be "unfair" to categorize all 6 to 7,000 deaths "as extrajudicial killings."
"The United States should not take for granted my country in terms of, for instance, sharing intelligence," the former Mexican president tells Amanpour.
"You have a small amount of resources that you need to deploy," says Marco Lopez of Arizona. Being "distracted chasing the gardeners" isn't "smart" or "tough."
Many Syrian refugee girls in Jordan are getting married very young, but there's also a movement underway to keep them in school. Christiane Amanpour reports.
After President Trump's attempt to ban Syrian refugees from the U.S., Christiane Amanpour meets an Aleppo family in Jordan preparing to move to Chicago.
"It doesn't make sense to me," says Fmr. White House Deputy National Security Adviser Elliott Abrams. The White House is "distracted, clearly," he says.
Gary Samore, former top nuclear adviser to President Obama, speaks to Paula Newton as North Korea puts Donald Trump to the rest by firing a new nuclear missile.
Donald Trump's "buy American, hire American" slogan goes against what's made the country wealthy, says Anthony Gardner, former U.S. ambassador to the EU.
"I think you're going to see a lot more coal and oil and gas production from the United States," former Trump adviser Myron Ebell tells Christiane Amanpour.
"Conservatively, we're looking at 50,000 Syria civilians tortured and murdered by their own government," says Stephen Rapp, former U.S. war crimes official.
"Secretary Tillerson would be wise" to engage with dissenters in the State Department, says Jonathan Finer, director of policy planning for Secretary Kerry.