Democratic Congresswoman Carolyn Maloney and author of "The Most Dangerous Branch" David Kaplan discuss Brett Kavanaugh's nomination and the allegations he faces.
Gretchen Carlson, who blew the whistle on sexual harassment at Fox News, weighs-in on what Brett Kavanugh's confirmation hearing means for the #MeToo movement.
If the nuclear deal's remaining signatories, without the US, aren't "living up to their commitments," then Iran will reevaluate, President Hassan Rouhani tells Christiane Amanpour.
"We do not have anyone who can take the courage to say 'the war in Syria has to stop,' to say 'it's unacceptable what's happening in Yemen," says Graça Machel.
Zimbabwe's President tells Amanpour that he will accept whatever recommendations are made by an inquiry into a 1983 massacre that occurred while he was the country's security chief.
"I think we're over-estimating our ability to renew the kind of economic pressure that brought the Iranians to the table seriously several years ago," says William Burns.
In 1974, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein's reporting brought down a president. Four decades later, they reunite to discuss reporting in the age of Trump.
Amanpour speaks with Alan Dershowitz, Harvard University Law Professor Emeritus, and his former student, Jeffrey Toobin, now CNN's Chief Legal Analyst.
Christiane Amanpour speaks with Cardinal Dolan, Archbishop of New York, about what he calls "a disaster, one crisis after another," in the Catholic Church.
"Climate change is upon us...But the mood and the understanding is changing. You can't deny scientific truth forever," says California Gov. Jerry Brown.
Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi talks exclusively to Christiane Amanpour about President Trump, opposition she faces from both sides, and breaking the marble ceiling.
"We have a President who's surrounded by people who try to keep him from doing terrible things but may not be able to do so," says Wendy Sherman, former U.S. undersecretary of state.