Exclusive: Foreign Minister Taro Kono, who recently met with his North Korean counterpart, says that the international community should not "budge" from pressuring Pyongyang.
It's a "very jolting" thing to come to grips with, says Jeffrey Lewis of the Middlebury Institute of Intl. Studies at Monterey, but "we need to start to look at this situation realistically."
Was he wrong for not specifically mentioning the Rohingya? What should Aung San Suu Kyi be doing to right the crisis? Amanpour speaks with a former ambassador and Amnesty's Crisis Response Director.
"There is no greater honor than defending your people." Christiane Amanpour asked Bosnian Serb Commander Ratko Mladic just a year into the war what he thought about being prosecuted as a war criminal.
"Never before have I been more proud to be Zimbabwean...never again will there be a dictatorship in Zimbabwe," says Roy Bennett, an exiled opposition politician.
While admitting some fault of the Obama Administration, the former Defense Secretary says he doesn't think the US has "ever really given a sustained try to what I'm calling 'coercive diplomacy.'"
William Lacy Swing, director general of the International Organization for Migration, reacts to reporting by CNN's Nima Elbagir from a slave auction in Libya.
In what he describes as an "unprecedented" situation, the Lebanese foreign minister says the country is waiting for its prime minister return from Saudi Arabia.
After an independence referendum that appeared to backfire, the outgoing leader of Iraqi Kurdistan says "I'm very calm, but for sure I was disappointed."
Seoul and Washington aren't interested in regime change in North Korea, Lim Sung-nam, South Korean Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs, tells Christiane Amanpour.
"I have a message for America," says Russian presidential candidate Ksenia Sobchak, the international community should embrace Russia instead of shunning it.
John Kerry says "invective," whether from "Kim Jong-un or our President, is not going to advance the ball here." Plus his thoughts on climate change, Iran, and Saudi Arabia.
Former Special Agent Ali Soufan lends his insight on how he would approach interrogating Sayfullo Saipov, and explains why jihadism is on the rise among Central Asians.