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Bojan Panchevsky
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Christiane Amanpour
Hello everyone and welcome to Amanpur. Here's what's coming up.
Bojan Panchevsky
If one bomb explodes, the mission will be incomplete. They have to lay eight bombs in total.
Christiane Amanpour
Ukraine takes the war ever deeper inside Russia and almost four years after the Nord Stream pipeline sabotage, I speak to journalist Bojan Panchevsky about the shadow war being waged far from the front lines.
Wafa Mustafa
Then I had a father. He existed, he lived with me. I knew him. And it's not just in my mind.
Christiane Amanpour
After Assad's fall, thousands of Syrian families are still searching for their missing. Filmmakers Wafa Mustafa and Waird Al Khatib speak to me about their powerful new documentary.
Narrator/Announcer
Also ahead, AI companies trying to convince their customers that the products that they are creating are are potentially going to cause massive devastation.
Christiane Amanpour
Is the AI industry overselling fear? Hari Srinivasan speaks to leading computer science professor Cal Newport about doom trolling. Welcome to the program everyone. I'm Christiane Amanpour. In London, summer is officially underway, but in Russian occupied Crimea, residents are facing fuel shortages, rolling blackouts and canceled summer camps. It is all part of a new phase in Russia's war. As Ukraine expands its campaign into the invader's heartland, a growing fleet of Ukrainian produced drones is targeting the supply routes that keep Putin's war machine running. Ukrainian officials say the goal is to isolate the Russian and makes Crimean peninsula and make Putin's war difficult to sustain. President Zelensky says the pressure is working.
Narrator/Announcer
The majority in Russia is already complaining to Putin that his war has no end in sight. All the current difficulties for the Russians
Hari Srinivasan
should bring them closer to the idea that this is their war and it
Narrator/Announcer
is not just a stone from the
Hari Srinivasan
sky and that their war must end.
Christiane Amanpour
The expanded campaign comes after Ukraine launched its largest drone assault on Moscow since the war began. And now the Wall Street Journal reports the Kremlin is pressuring Belarus to open another front. As Russia struggles on the battlefield and as this war increasingly resorts to sabotage and covert attacks on critical infrastructure, one of its biggest Mysteries remains unsolved. Shortly after the 2022 Russian invasion, explosions ripped through the gas pipelines beneath the Baltic Sea. Investigators are still trying to figure out who was responsible. Wall Street Journal chief European political correspondent Bojan Panchevsky's thrilling new book, the Nord Stream Conspiracy, reveals the inside story. He tells me about one of the most consequential acts of sabotage in recent history and the secret team most likely behind it. Bojan Panchevsky, welcome to the program.
Bojan Panchevsky
Thanks for having me on.
Christiane Amanpour
So this Nord Stream explosion, for anybody who's, you know, deep into the weeds of this whole big story, they'll remember it. And even those not deep into the weeds just remind us though, set the stage for what happened on that day when it basically exploded.
Bojan Panchevsky
This was 26 September 2022, shortly after the beginning of the full scale invasion of Ukraine. And it was reported that the world's largest pipeline system, offshore pipeline system, had lost pressure. And the next day the footage now iconic, was released by the navies of Sweden and Denmark showing this gigantic kind of bubbling in the middle of the Baltic Sea and essentially signaling that the pipelines had been blown up. So that was a, you know, a literal explosion. It was the greatest ever recorded man made release of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere. And it was a geopolitical explosion because this was a piece of critical infrastructure and extremely controversial at that, because a lot of people opposed the construction of the pipelines because they believed it would make Western Europe and Germany in particular addicted to Russian gas exports, which to
Christiane Amanpour
an extent we discover that they were. You write in the book, it was arguably the greatest act of sabotage in modern history. And you've just explained what happened. The biggest release of greenhouse gases, a huge geopolitical shock and a political crisis over how to source energy. What went through your mind the minute you heard about this? What did you think? Who done it?
Bojan Panchevsky
Well, essentially I sort of really found out what happened on the second day when I saw the footage on my mobile phone. And that's what when I started working on the story, essentially because I knew this was a sort of gigantic story. It was obviously a sabotage, I think from day one that was perfectly clear. And interestingly, my first instinct was that it was the Ukrainians, which proved to be true later as I found in my investigation. But there were lots of theories kind of flapping around. Some people were briefing to an extent intentionally that it could have been Russia. So they were directing the media in the direction of kind of investigating potential Russian authorship of this. Others in the camp that Kind of doesn't really support Ukraine. Blame the CIA. You know, there was a big story around whether or not it was the CIA. It was kind of obvious it must have been a state actor. So I had been reporting From Ukraine since 2014 from the front lines, but also from the capital, et cetera. And I was intimately acquainted with the operation of Ukrainian special services. And I knew exactly what they were capable of and how bold were they in their actions. And I think that suspicion proved to be correct later on.
Christiane Amanpour
Tell me a little bit then about who you discovered were responsible for it. How did they talk to you about it?
Bojan Panchevsky
Well, the people who orchestrated and executed this operation were members of an elite unit of Ukraine's armed forces at the time. The masterminds were veteran special services operatives. They come from the intelligence services. They had become embedded in the army during the full scale invasion. And they and some officers around them kind of conceived the plot and the plan and, and eventually they hired or rather recruited civilian deep sea divers, so called technical divers. These are people who can go down 100 meters below the surface to the bottom of the ocean to operate there to lay the mines onto the pipeline. And the reason why they did this was because they couldn't find people with that skill set within the special forces. As I found out in my research, it's actually a very rare skill set. People like the Navy SEALs or the SBS in the United Kingdom don't really go to the bottom of the ocean. They have different tasks. You know, put mines on ships or ford a body of water. So it was, it was quite a challenge. And in the end they settled for what is known as proxies in the intelligence world. That is, people who are not trained, who are not, who don't come from the army or from the intelligence, but rather they are ordinary civilians with extraordinary skills and motivation.
Christiane Amanpour
Well, you know, it became known internally as Operation Diameter. And amongst this team, you say, of course, were the four divers and a female, female diving instructor. And you write that this female diver was perhaps the reason the attack was a success. Why do you say that?
Bojan Panchevsky
Well, this was told to me by her fellow crew members and her superior officers. Essentially, she was the sole female member of the entire operation, of the entire team. And she is an extremely experienced deep sea diver and an instructor, diving instructor. She had worked all around the world and she's extremely bold and a strong character. And there was a point where they ran into a storm during their mission in the Baltic. Because the mission unfolded in the latter part of September 2022 when the weather is pretty unpleasant at times in the Baltic and there was a gale force storm and the crew kind of voted to abandon the mission because they felt it was already, you know, a case of risk in their lives and they thought this was becoming too dangerous. You know, they had to do something already life threatening. And then the storm was, it was an extreme kind of hazard. And the woman kind of motivated the men on board to actually persevere because she, I think, told them that she could do it herself if they would let her and they don't really have to go down, etc. And so they felt kind of, I presume, embarrassed and, and you know, she was a great motivator in that. She showed a bit of leadership. That, that's the account that was shared with me from, from different sources on the boat and also the people in the headquarters. So in that sense I can just
Christiane Amanpour
imagine what they thought Boyan, when she said I'll go down on my own. You write that this female diver was perhaps, well, not just that it was successful, but she was incapable of fear and everything else and described as positively mad. So you've just explained why thathow that is so in this unbelievably hostile environment, climate wise. Just describe to us the mechanics. They went down. Where is the pipeline? Is it on the bed of the, is it dug into the seabed? And what did they have to do, the human effort to get it disrupted?
Bojan Panchevsky
Well, the pipeline is, it runs over almost over 1,000 miles beneath the Baltic Sea. It connects Russia and Germany and the operation, I mean, the bombs were laid at a depth of around 80 meters. To go down at that depth you require a special skill set and the ability to breed a different mixture of gases because breeding oxygen at that level is actually toxic for the human body. So you have to add nitrogen and helium, etc. And of course, to operate on that kind of pressure, you know, you have to imagine the surface of the water is extremely kind of troubled in the sea. I mean, they use a small sailing yacht which was thrown around by the gale force wind and then they had to dive in that environment. The Baltic Sea is extremely polluted and because of various reasons, the water is kind of dark and opaque and obscure and you can't really see too far. At the very bottom there's pitch black darkness and you can only see as far as your kind of torch light allows you to. Essentially you can just about extend your hand and you can see that far. So it's absolute darkness. You know, you can imagine claustrophobic and pretty horrible. And then you're breathing in this mixture of gases and you have. And the clock is ticking, right? They couldn't spend more than around 20 minutes at the bottom because the period of climbing up then extends exponentially. There is a period called decompression. They have to slowly, slowly, slowly come out back to the surface. So once you're down there, the clock is ticking and you can imagine the stress levels, you know, the cortisol levels of these people. So it was quite a feat. And then you have to kind of stick the bomb onto the pipeline and it was a kind of complicated contraption and ultimately activate the timer. And once they activated the first timer, very first bomb, then the clock was really ticking. They didn't have, there was no way back because one bomb, if one bomb explodes, the mission will be incomplete. They had to lay eight bombs in total.
Christiane Amanpour
Wow. I mean, it just seems so incredibly, as you, as you describe it, so difficult and so personally stressful. But this is, you know, we haven't got to the why yet and you're going to tell me about the why. But this Nord Stream has been controversial even before the full scale Russian invasion. We know that every administration since George W. Bush's second term opposed its construction. Biden promised to bring an end to it if Russia attacked Ukraine. You remember President Trump was scathing about Angela Merkel's, you know, red light, or rather green light towards Nord Stream, etc. You know, Poland, the UK didn't much like it. That was because they thought it gave, it had them over a barrel. Right. Putin had them over a barrel.
Bojan Panchevsky
Well, essentially they believed that Nord Stream was a geopolitical project rather than a commercial project. The former Chancellor Angela Merkel maintained that this was a purely commercial project. You know, it's part of the private economy, there's no need to worry. And it provides cheap gas for Europe's biggest industrial powerhouse, Germany. And in fact it did work like that. So in a sense both parties were right in the end. In my book, I described the explosions as a kind of a crescendo of 20 years of policy and policy debate that went up in smoke both with the attack on the pipeline and the full scale invasion. Because the idea behind the pipeline really from a German perspective was to make, you know, it was policy turned steel and concrete. Because the idea was that if you become so entangled commercially with a formerly hostile power like Russia or the Soviet Union, before conflict will be, will become impossible. The idea was to remove that tension, that potential of conflict by becoming economically intertwined. But the people who actually blew up the pipeline told me it played the exact opposite role because once you build this pipeline, you paved the way to war. And Putin kind of launched a full scale invasion because he was convinced he can do whatever. The gas will keep flowing, the oil will keep flowing. To an extent, he was right. Even after the launch of the full scale invasion, the European Union continued in Germany to buy hydrocarbons from Russia because it's a zero sum game. You can't just shift overnight when you don't have other suppliers. So from that perspective, it's an extremely interesting. I found that both sides had a point, you know, like, you know, you could argue both sides.
Christiane Amanpour
These guys obviously believe that they were heroes of the resistance against the war. Tell me how they spoke to you about what they did. And cruciallyand this is still sort of an open question. How much did the Ukrainian government know? How about the head of the armed forces at the time was General Zaluzhny? How about President Zelensky? What did they know and was it green lit?
Bojan Panchevsky
So the motivation, first it was pretty simple. Their idea was to cut the revenues that the Kremlin was receiving from the sale of hydrocarbons that fed into the war chest of Vladimir Putin. They felt that Russia is using the money it got from sales of gas and energy, etc. To fund the war on their territory. So that was pretty straightforward. The secondary motivation was to break the bond, the geopolitical bond between, between Moscow and Western capitals, including Berlin, which was personified in a way embodied in this pipeline. It was an operation of the military forces. The highest ranking officer who approved the mission was indeed the then commander of the armed forces, General Valeri Zaluzhny, who is now an ambassador to Great Britain. President Zelenskyy denies knowledge of this operation. He continuously denied knowledge in the past couple of years since the first news was leaked that Ukraine have been behind this. His advisors are also denying this. People around General Zaluzhny say that General Zaluzhny did in fact brief at one point the President that this operation among many was underway. So, you know, we may never find out. We may, you know, General Zaluzhny may choose to speak about this publicly at some point. We don't, we don't quite know. But for the time being, you know, these people claim that the President was informed. The President denies that in the strongest of terms. But I think what is important to say, I spoke both to the people who carried out the attack as well as with the German Investigators who are hunting them. And to an extent, my investigation was corroborated by the official investigation in Germany. And I believe, you know, a suspect has been apprehended by Germany and they accused this person of being involved in operation. And the German prosecutors will say this was an operation that was conducted on behalf of Ukraine.
Christiane Amanpour
It really is fascinating. And there's still sort of unknowns, but also the real split in how different nations view the two. And the seven. Well, the seven, the whole team. A lot of allies of Ukraine, you know, believe that. Well, you know, they did what they had to do. And actually towards the end of your book, they talk about they would do it again. And apparently Putin has already this month said that the remaining intact pipeline could start pumping gas tomorrow. And in your epilogue, the general, the man you name as a general, told you, by all means, let them fix it so we can blow it up again. Were you surprised when you heard that?
Bojan Panchevsky
No, not at all. I wasn't surprised at all. That's the spirit that reigns in those quarters. And I think it's absolutely true, and I know this from my own reporting, that as soon as the Trump administration started negotiating with the Kremlin over, over a possible settlement in Ukraine, the Russians brought up the issue of Nord Stream. They publicly even spoke about it. Sergei Lavrov, the foreign minister, very early on last year said that that's one of one of the conditions. They're working towards reopening the pipelines. Putin recently said, as you said, that it only takes a press of a button to restart the intact. One line of the pipe is still relatively intact. It's only damaged a little bit damaged. Ultimately, the pipelines can be fixed. There is a consortium of sorts in the United States led by American businessmen. They seek to acquire the pipeline, to kind of Americanize it, to make it an American company property in order to restart the gas trade. So this saga is by no means over. And I don't believe that the Russians are ready to give up on this project.
Christiane Amanpour
Well, Boyan, it's fascinating and just to end by what an elder statesman of Ukraine's intelligence community told you, that the perpetrators will one day they will be given the medals they all deserve. So you can see how various different sides think of the people who did this. And Bojan Panchevsky, thank you very much. It's a really fascinating story.
Bojan Panchevsky
It was my great pleasure. Thank you for having me on.
Christiane Amanpour
A heck of a story. Later in the program, the Assad regime has fallen, but for tens of thousands of Syrian families, the search for their missing loved ones is far from over. When we come back, the story of one daughter's extraordinary struggle to find her father.
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Wafa Mustafa
So we had this episode idea because
Narrator/Announcer
a producer on our team, Hazel is currently in the midst of an apartment
Bojan Panchevsky
hunt and they have been running into
Narrator/Announcer
content in listings that appears to be AI generated. You wrote about this phenomenon earlier this year. How did it come to your attention? It's just become so widespread. I mean, the problem is you can't tell a lot of it is AI unless you look very, very, very closely. I've read industry reports that suggest at least 50% of all listing Im been altered with AI.
Bojan Panchevsky
Wow.
Narrator/Announcer
And it might be as high as 70, 75%. Listen to CNN's terms of service wherever you get your podcasts.
Christiane Amanpour
Now, Vladimir Putin is not only facing serious setbacks in Ukraine, he also lost a major ally when Bashar Al Assad was forced to flee Syria. For the families of Assad's victims, however, the end of his regime has not brought the answers they need. More than a decade ago on, we broke the story of a Syrian military defector known only by the codename Caesar. He had smuggled out thousands of images that provided some of the first irrefutable evidence of the Assad regime's systematic torture, starvation and execution of detainees. Today, tens of thousands of Syrian families are still searching for their missing loved ones.
Wafa Mustafa
My name is Wafa Ali Mustafa. I'm a Syrian journalist. My father was arrested and forcedly disappeared by the Syrian regime.
Christiane Amanpour
Now that is from the documentary maybe A Story of Loss, Love and of a daughter who refuses to let her father be forgotten. I spoke with Wafa Mustafa and the acclaimed filmmaker Wair Al Khatib about this powerful new film Wairdar Khatib and Wafa Mustafa, welcome to our program.
Waird Al Khatib
Thank you.
Wafa Mustafa
Thank you.
Christiane Amanpour
Wafa, you were only 23 when your father was arrested and he basically disappeared and you were all forced to leave Syria, we really see your spirit, his spirit through the film. But I wanted you to tell me a little bit about your father, what he meant to you, what he meant to the whole family.
Wafa Mustafa
Thank you so much for having us and for this opportunity to talk about my father, but also, of course, to talk about all of Syria's disappeared. My father, Ali Mustafa, he was called Abu Samid by his friends. And you know, Abu Samid comes from resiliency and he was a very, very powerful, very tough guy. But he was also at the same time very kind. He was a young man with big dreams. He always fought for freedom and justice even before the Syrian revolution started. He was a great lover. He loved my mom in a very amazing, kind way. He taught us Allah allot me and my two other sisters. He taught us a lot about, you know, how much it's important to sacrifice for our communities, how to be selfless and how to believe that freedom and change are possible even when they seemed very, very impossible in a country like Syria.
Christiane Amanpour
And Waad, you have been very well known not just for your daily reports for Channel 4 during the actual war by Bashar Assad, but then of course for Sama, which was Oscar nominated. And it's a very personal journey that you recreate. What made you decide to take on Wafa's story also in a personal sort of diary way?
Waird Al Khatib
Yeah. Thank you so much again for having us. I think I've known Wafa since we were both born. Both mothers were friends since they were at school, and we've been very close to families, to each other. We were born in the same city, raised up in the very similar situation. And when I made For Summer, I think the first thing I thought of after the film was going around, around the world was really Wafa's story. And I thought about it in the same way, how I wanted to tell my own story and own it and be able, you know, to fight all the loss that we had through different ways. So I contacted Wafa and I thought, like, let, let's do this together. I believe that, you know, Wafa has a lot to say to the world and she will say it in a very different way. But I thought, you know, through cinema and films, we can do something a little bit different and hopefully, you know, it stays more to fight all this ignorance and like waiting and also for like everything Assad was trying to do, which really erase everything was going on in Syria.
Christiane Amanpour
Your father, Wafa apparently said, according to your mother in the film, write things down, document things so that your Memory doesn't block things out. Tell me about that, what that meant to you. Write things down, document them.
Wafa Mustafa
To be honest, I mean, I was raised, like what said, also in a similar environment where both our families were quite political, in a country like Syria, where politics, you know, could kill you easily, could cause you, you know, imprisonment for decades. And my father, I would say, you know, it took me years thinking about this question, why did he say why did he encourage us a lot to write and document? And I mean, you can imagine at the beginning of the revolution for I was 21, and to be honest, I thought, you know, I mean, how long it could take, right, for the For a regime change. I thought, you know, you know, it will be maybe a few months maximum, a year, and the world cannot just turn a blind eye to what's happening to us. And I think, of course, my father knew better because he was an older, right, you know, an older fighter, and he wanted us to keep the memory. I think now I know very, very well how much my father believed in the power of memory and in the power of documentation and in the power of, you know, presenting, preserving the narrative. And I think, you know, maybe I've tried to do that in different ways throughout the past years. You know, I've been toi've been to the UN Security Council, to the UN General Assembly. I've been to different protests. I've been to different events. But I think that, you know, when we thought about this film, I think one of our main goals was to preserve the narrative about what has happened not only to my father, because this is a reflection of what has happened to millions of Syrians and millions, you know, of people, not even not only in Syria, but in many other countries. Now.
Christiane Amanpour
The Syrian Network for Human Rights says that over 177,000 Syrians were disappeared by between 2011 and 2025. That is the years of war by Bashar Assad on your communities. Some of this disappearing is actually happening right now as well, even under the new Syrian government. And many Syrians think justice has been slow. And actually there's someyou know, there's some pushback against even those who are trying to have accountability for what's going on under New Syria. How, how do you describe what's happening in New Syria today? I call it New Syria, but post Assad Syria.
Waird Al Khatib
Yeah. Thank you so much. I think this is really very important for us because part of why we wanted this film to happen is really to talk about what has happened to Wafa's father and to many other people, but also to ensure that this should not have a space in the new Syria that we want to. And we know of course, you know, from the states that's going on around from what's going on. Like we're not even there. Like we're not even nearly there. And the fact that you know today in a, in a new country where like as you just mentioned post Assad disappearance and people who've been kidnapped been like going around Syria in different areas by the transitional like government today, but also by other parties who are also like involved today. And for us it's really like the Syria that we hope to see is a Syria where it's equal, it's safe, there's freedom of speech. It's everything we've been chanting for since 2011. And you know, talking about this pain that the families are going through that no one else should go through, not in Syria, but also not everywhere around the world.
Wafa Mustafa
I think part of the issue today is that enforced disappearance is dealt with as if it's a crime of the past. But it's not in the past. Not only because many people like me still don't know the truth about what has happened to their loved ones and the perpetrators are still unfortunately like living their lives and not being held accountable. But as you said because new cases are happening. And to be honest, I think what we wanted to say through this film is that to show what we call the violence of waiting that the families of the disappeared experience hoping that it will contribute to the efforts that are advocating for ending enforce disappearance once and for all.
Christiane Amanpour
WAFA and WAD because you, you know, you're obviously the filmmaker. There's a really good scene. I found it really, really good in terms of accountability and justice and that whole court process where you Wafa are filmed sitting in front of many, many pictures of the disappeared. You know, at the time when your father, you didn't know what had happened to first ever criminal trial brought over state led torture in Syria. It's in Germany. It's from the year 2020. And I want to play this clip because it's you engaging with the defense lawyers, that is the lawyers for the guys accused of this state sponsored torture and disappearance. Here's this scene. I'm just interested in what you are doing.
Narrator/Announcer
I'm one of the defects French lawyers
Bojan Panchevsky
just want to have a look.
Waird Al Khatib
Thank you.
Wafa Mustafa
This is my father. And Today he completes 25, 22 days in Assad detention centers. I don't even know if he's alive or not all people who protested in Syria. This is what we want, actually. Freedom, justice in a state of flow. But I hope that he didn't deny it and say that there was no torture. I just want him just to acknowledge that it happened.
Waird Al Khatib
Okay,
Christiane Amanpour
So listen, I'm really struck by that, because there you were confronting the defense lawyer and asking him at least to give you that dignity and not to try to, you know, deny that that had happened. Now, I don't know what they did in court and whether those on trial admitted that there was torture. But in the trial, the former colonel was sentenced to life in prison, and a former junior officer was sentenced to four and a half years in prison. He then was released afterwards in 2025. That surely must give you some confidence in the justice system.
Wafa Mustafa
I think this is. To be honest, this is a very difficult question. I mean, I don't know what the justice system is because, you know, for years we've hoped, of course, as you see, I mean, in this scene, I've, you know, I went to Copeland's. I've advocated for the disappeared. I've wanted just, you know, this very technical process to have this, you know, human side and to be reminded of, you know, the faces and the names of the disappeared and thus make it more accessible for the families who are not even in Germany and who do not really know what's happening in Copeland's. But for years, we've advocated for justice to be, you know, taking place in Syria by Syrians, by national authorities, of course, after the fall of the regime. But today, to be honest, you know, the way that the transitional government is, you know, is approaching, transitional justice is not. Is not assuring for me. It's very, very concerning. And unfortunately, you know, I would say that in a year and a half, we had two massacre massacres, and there is, you know, random killings in different places. There are random cases of enforced disappearances. And there are. Which is very, very dangerous, I would say. There are, you know, economic settlements with, you know, Assad businessmen and other perpetrators and war criminals who were involved with supporting the Assad regime. So I think the justice system for me today is. Is the families and their efforts and their voices and their determination to still fight despite all, you know, the change, but also the lack of change.
Christiane Amanpour
Just to say, you know, justice is very slow and everything you're desperate for is totally justified, should happen, but it's very slow. But this month, a major trial has begun in Austria against two former Assad intelligence officials. So in some lanes, it is being taken Very, very seriously, the issue of justice and account. But finally, and of course, I've stayed away from any spoiler alerts about what happened to your father. What did you find out? So I'm not necessarily asking you to give away the plot. You decide between yourselves, but there is some very powerful scenes at the very end of the film where at one point you go in, you see all sorts of documentation, but you also see some traces of. So you know, he was there for that period of time. I'm going to first ask Wired. I don't know whether you were there. I don't know whether you were shooting that, Wyatt, but in terms of storytelling and what happened, Tell me about that, because it was really chilling and really very, you know, edge of your seat moment.
Waird Al Khatib
Yeah. So thank you. I mean, first, I wasn't there, unfortunately, and I wanted really to be there, not for the film, but also to be with my friend on such a really sensitive situation like that, to be honest. Like, while we were talking about the film and seeing what was going on, our friend who was with Wafa filming it, was more about, really, how to reflect the reality of what WAFA and other families are going through, through this experience, which is unfortunately, no closure. And that really was part of, again, the effort for the transitional justice. And the accountability that we are asking for is. Is for answers, for truth, for people knowing what happened. And in the film, you don't really know what happened because Wafa, until now, doesn't know what happened. And the fact that, you know how the film can and should reflect, you know, what these families are going through, it's a way of like. Like, love to her dad, but also, like, hoping that, you know, this continuous effort of looking and searching for people who cannot just, like, you know, move on and let go. Like, these are their beloved ones. These are people who are, like, lived with them in their entire life, and they cannot just, you know, like, let it go without a real answer, a real accountability as well.
Christiane Amanpour
So Wafa and we don't have these pictures. People have to see this film, to see this dramatic denouement. How did you feel when you found scratchings, essentially, words from your father, on the wall?
Wafa Mustafa
Very surreal, to be honest. I mean, even when we were in Sheffield and we premiered the film and I watched, it was. I mean, it was very. It still had the same impact on me. It's very surreal, to be honest. I. You know, it's very difficult, you know, the level of. Because enforced disappearance is mainly about, you know, about memory, and it fights your brain, you know, like for years, because it was very painful. For years I've had to fight myself every day to remind myself that I had a father, he existed, he lived with me, I knew him. And it's not just in my mind, you know, it's not just in my head. It's that painful. It makes you, to be honest, it forces you to like, it makes you question whether you're hallucinating or not. So seeing the writings and seeing his words, which were like, very, very sad and very painful, but also full of love and, you know, full of like, you know, I mean, it's just heartbreaking that, to see that, you know, he was thinking about us. Because for years, I think the only thing I had in my mind is that I hope my dad knows that I did not forget about him and that I did not let him go and that I will not give up on him and that I will make sure that everyone on earth knows what, who he was and what he believed in and what he deserved to see in this country and that he did not and not any other Syrian deserve to be tortured to death.
Christiane Amanpour
Wafa Mustafa and Wad Al Khatib, thank you very much indeed. The film may be tomorrow.
Waird Al Khatib
Thank you.
Wafa Mustafa
Thank you.
Christiane Amanpour
We wish them a lot of luck. Coming up after the break, are the companies building artificial intelligence also fuelling unnecessary fear about it? A leading computer scientist says the doomsday rhetoric needs to stop.
Bojan Panchevsky
Craig Ferguson is going coast to coast
Narrator/Announcer
to unpack what it really means to
Bojan Panchevsky
be an American today. What could possibly go wrong?
Christiane Amanpour
CRAIG ferguson, American on purpose.
Bojan Panchevsky
New episodes now streaming on the CNN app.
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Go to CNN.com watch to subscribe or
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log in with your TV provider.
Narrator/Announcer
I'm Dr. Sanjay Gupta, host of the Chasing Life podcast. Nelson Dellis is a six time US Memory champion who not only trained his
Wafa Mustafa
brain to work better, but he also
Narrator/Announcer
wrote about it for his new book called Everyday Genius.
Hari Srinivasan
You know, the message is, is that everybody, no matter where you are in life, what you think your memory currently is capable of, we all can transform
Narrator/Announcer
our brain, the mind. And memory is just like any other skill that you can learn. And it's not a fixed thing. Listen to Chasing Life streaming now, wherever you get your podcasts.
Christiane Amanpour
We turn now to the growing debate over artificial intelligence. The heads of some of the world's biggest AI companies have warned of catastrophic consequences from the technology they are building. But computer science professor Cal Newport says that messaging is misleading. And he's joining Hari Srinivasan to discuss why he believes an AI industry should stop what he calls the doom trolling.
Hari Srinivasan
Cal Newport, welcome back to the program. Your most recent piece says, dear AI companies, the doom trolling needs to stop. First of all, what does that mean? Who is it who needs to stop doing what?
Narrator/Announcer
Well, doom trolling is my term for this completely strange and arresting and novel behavior of AI companies trying to convince their customers that the products that they are creating are potentially going to cause massive devastation or other negative consequences down the line. I think OpenAI does this. Anthropic in particular is a big practitioner of doom trolling. And it was actually a recent report that Anthropic released talking about how they were concerned that Claude Code was on a path towards recursive self improvement that could lead them to lose control of AI altogether. That finally had me snap and say, this type of communication strategy, this has to stop.
Hari Srinivasan
What is the purpose? What can be gained by using a message like this where maybe they feel like they're factual, but at the same time, like, how do you create a market for somebody who wants to use this product?
Narrator/Announcer
There's many possible explanations and I don't know which one is the most prominent driving the strategy, but partially it does make your technology seem more important. You care a little bit less about exactly how much revenue you're making when you consider this company might be producing the most powerful tool that's ever been built. It's also a recruiting tool. San Francisco culture, where a lot of the top engineers currently live, this doomerist mindset of AI becoming this harbinger of a new digital end times is actually really, really prevalent. So speaking this language could, could help you recruit. It could also be, as some have suggested, regulatory capture strategy, where you say this is a dangerous technology that needs regulations and you hope that those regulations are such that the big companies can abide by them, but it holds back your competitors from being able to make progress. But I think more than any of those other explanations, it's just in the Silicon Valley culture to talk this way about AI. I think they have completely normalized this idea that machines at some point are going to perhaps even replace humanity or like significantly change our existence. And that this is not necessarily a bad thing. It's quasi religious. For a lot of people in Silicon Valley culture right now, it's eschatological. It is about the sort of future of what's going to happen. And I think the rest of the country is just waking up now to just how sort of strange and eccentric these type of belief systems have been in Silicon Valley because Now we all have to face them, and we're saying, what are you talking about? You're going to destroy us all. Why would you build this? But that's a completely normal idea if you're over in that part of the country.
Hari Srinivasan
Okay, you're a professor of computer science. Should we be looking at this technology just like a technology or. Look, I mean, Sam Altman, the head of OpenAI, has compared this to, you know, nuclear power. And that comes with a whole other set of risks and rewards that we think about. I mean, is this that grand venture that we're about to go on where we need a completely different frame of looking at it than, you know, an operating system upgrade or a new tech gadget?
Narrator/Announcer
I mean, I do think it's something we do need to be careful about. But when I say we need to be careful about AI, I think about the long trajectory of this technology. Not in particular the tools that are being built right now, which are typically large language models with various harnesses or programs connected to them. But I think the right way for them to deal with this technology is like a normal technology. Here is a product, here are the benefits, here are the costs. Here's why we think those benefits are worth the cost. And of course, we take full responsibility for any safety concerns. If you approach the product that way, you're able to advance the technology without accidentally stumbling into something that could be more dangerous. That's the way I want to see us talking about is product by product, treat this like a normal technology. And we should all be very wary about potential dangers and harms, including the companies themselves. These are things to take responsibility for, not things to just shrug your shoulders at and say, well, what can we do?
Hari Srinivasan
You know, just in the past few weeks, there's been this back and forth between Anthropic and the Pentagon. And, and there's. There's been concern about this new model that they came out with, which they said was so dangerous that we're only going to give it to a few different companies around the world and we want to make sure that everything's set up. And then now it almost seems like this campaign of saying that this is so powerful, this could crack the encryption of banks and find all these different vulnerabilities and holes has worked to a point where the administration says that no foreign national is allowed to use this tool. Right. Is this so dangerous that the kind of the regulations that they were asking for. Did you get basically what you said you should?
Narrator/Announcer
I do think they got what they were asking for right now. I believe as a computer scientist who have studied these models, that Mythos did not represent a revolutionary jump over previous models when it comes to its ability to find software vulnerabilities or exploit them. That's a serious concern of models, but it was something that we've seen in every model going all the way back to GPT2. So I think they to make this model seem more exceptional six weeks ago or seven weeks ago, whenever this was, I think they turned up the rhetoric on just how dangerous this was. We can't release this model. They had meetings at the White House to try to convince the White House how scary this model was. They had meetings with reporters and then six weeks later they said, oh, it's okay, we added some guardrails. It's fine again. So, yeah, I think in some sense the White House was maybe, you know, embarrassed or upset that, hey, you came to us and convinced us this was the most dangerous thing to have been, you know, released in years. And now with sort of just minor standard guardrails, are releasing it to the public. We feel like we were a little bit duped. Now, there's other things that are probably going on in this story, but that thread is one that we have to pull, is that if you tell people that you have summoned a super weapon, you don't also then get to say it's $20 a token or whatever. Now we're going to release it to the public.
Hari Srinivasan
In a perfect scenario, if I had total trust and faith in the government to say you are looking out for my best interests and nothing else, and you've taken this very well thought out and it's like careful approach. I don't necessarily know if the people who are kind of at the levers, whether it's this administration or the next one or the next one after that. Can I separate their alternate agendas, their other interests from regulating this kind of a technology?
Narrator/Announcer
Well, I share your concerns about the current administration that clearly they're not implementing this sort of regulatory oversight in a consistent or transparent way. There's all sorts of connections with the administration and Anthropic's competitor OpenAI, so that's a confusing mess. But I do think going forward in the future, is it possible to have consistent and transparent regulation of these type of AI models? I think absolutely, because we do it with so many other sectors of the consumer product market. I mean, you can't sell me a car if the government hasn't given it official safety rating. If you put something dodgy and dog Food. We are going to push back and say this is unacceptable. So I think it is possible, and I think it's time or will be time soon to move past this stance of this is somehow an exceptional technology. I think that companies like to talk about this like they are the reluctant stewards of an inevitable technology. And they're sort of just watching from afar as this thing develops, like virologists watching COVID 19 spread across the country. But this is not the case. These are companies that are building specific products for specific business plans. It's not an inevitable technology that they're stewarding, it's products they're building. And you need a third party, as we do with all other consumer products, to say if this is potentially very dangerous for the American public. We want to be involved. And I want to say that danger should involve mental health. I think we're completely underestimating the toll, the mental health toll in terms of anxiety and stress that the last two or three years of doom trolling has caused. I get messages from people who are miserable because of this messaging. They're hearing from these AI companies again and again. And that matters as well.
Hari Srinivasan
You know, in a way, the messaging we're talking about here has succeeded in shifting public opinion. Right. I mean, it seems like forever ago, but it wasn't that long ago. When the first one of these generative AI models came out, people were like, wow, this is pretty cool. And now it's like, okay, you're telling me that it's going to totally displace white collar work. You're telling me that this could potentially turn into that Terminator scenario. You were telling me that it uses gobs and gobs of water and energy and it's going to make my bills go up and make my water and the aquifer dirty. Now, the majority of people are cautiously skeptical.
Narrator/Announcer
Yeah. Which I think is a tragedy. Like, this should have been an exciting technology. Large language models at scale are interesting. They can parse human language. They can produce structured language with a sort of prodigious fluency. There's a lot of cool things we can and will build, build with this. And instead we terrified the whole country. Now, the fact that they did this leads me to believe that this is not some grand game of 4D chess. But again, it's a collision of worlds. A way of talking in Silicon Valley that doesn't play at scale. Let me give you an example. For most of the fall and coming into the winter, there was a relentless drumbeat on this message of white Collar jobs are going away. And it led to all this coverage of like, what are we going to do when there's no white collar jobs left? Right, because the they're all going to go away. And then around the time Anthropic and OpenAI started talking to bankers about an ipo, we had this sudden turnaround this spring where suddenly Sam Altman said, I was wrong about AI taking jobs and I'm glad to be wrong. And you have Jensen Huang from Nvidia saying, this is stupid. This is just CEOs trying to sound smart. And we had Even Dariel Amade said, I know for two years I've been saying 50% of new white collar jobs will be automated. I didn't really, really mean that. I meant parts of those jobs will be automated, not the jobs themselves going away. So they switched hard on that message. But then, because now you had a lack of whatever interesting stories or fear or whatever they were looking for, they leaned hard into the recursive self improvement AI superintelligence message. So as one message went away, they found another one. So it is pretty erratic.
Hari Srinivasan
I wonder if we learn enough from our societal entanglement with social networks and social media. Right, because when you say that, look, most consumer products can't be released if we know that they're dangerous. And here we are, even in the relatively early stages of generative AI, we already have cases of chatbots just really hallucinating in the worst way possible. I don't know, what are we waiting 15 to 20 years to figure out what kinds of harms can be there? I mean, how should we navigate this from a legislative perspective or from a global perspective?
Narrator/Announcer
I mean, I think we did take way too long to understand it with social media, but now we finally are. And because of that there will be a much smaller window and a much smaller amount of sort of trust or leeway we're going to give the AI companies, right? So there's a similar playbook that both are trying to pull. So in the heyday of social media in the 2000 teens, the playbook that the social media leaders use was to say, this technology is inevitable. This is the evolution of communication. It's the digital town square. We are just the stewards of this technology. But obviously it needs to be here and it's going to have some harms. But to stop it would be like trying to stop the printing press. We have finally had enough of that argument. I think the recent losses in courts with Meta and Google and the hundreds of lawsuits that are coming behind those has shown that from a litigation perspective, the court system is saying you're responsible for harms you cannot hide behind. This is a fundamental communication technology that can't be restricted. You can't fully hide behind a First Amendment. I think that has profound implications for the AI leaders because they are also trying to say this is just an inevitable technology. If it's not us, it'll be someone else and we're just doing our best to try to steward it. The courts could step in and say, no, you're liable. We're starting to see this. There was an important ruling recently at a hort in Germany that said LLM creators are responsible for the text that the LLMs produce. You can't say that text was the LLMs. We just created it. If that becomes an international precedent, we might have much tighter constraints on these AI companies much faster than it took for social media. We trusted the Silicon Valley way too long as this is the future and we let so many harms build up over a decade to 15 years that I don't think we're going to make that same mistake again.
Hari Srinivasan
Do you see this trickling down into like, you know, I'm on WhatsApp groups with different parents about the influence of AI and technology and elementary and middle and high schools, right? They're wondering like, wait, wait, are we rolling this out too soon? Is this actually going to stunt my child's ability to solve critical problems and have good ability to think? So I wonder like what in the next five years, 10 years, when students come to your classroom, is there going to be a difference in how they think about solving problems?
Narrator/Announcer
I mean, I do think it's an issue to which we need a national solution. We shouldn't leave individual schools and school districts at the mercy of the sales forces of these ed tech companies. They're all going to be telling them if you don't sign a big deal to get Gemini access to your 4th graders or whatever, that somehow they're going to be left behind. In the modern economy, it's really difficult for individual schools and school districts to resist that. So I think we need national standards from non governmental agencies that are saying this is what we actually recommend. Because I do think it's a problem. My biggest concern is actually writing. I mean, I think that the production of words from on a blank page, just using your brain is one of the most cognitively demanding and cognitive growth enhancing activities that we do. And it's one of the core things we do in education to make your brain stronger. To have a AI model right for you, I think is like bringing a pulley system to the gym to lift the weight for you. It completely defeats the purpose of the institution. And so we need strong guidelines about when AI is and is not appropriate, because otherwise we will just be taken down district by district, school by school, by relentless ed tech, marketing and sales
Hari Srinivasan
professor of computer science at Georgetown University, Cal Newport. Thanks again.
Narrator/Announcer
My pleasure.
Christiane Amanpour
That's it for now. Thanks for watching. And goodbye from London.
Hari Srinivasan
From the descendants of history makers involved in the Louisiana Purchase to the Lewis and Clark expedition, discover the untold stories of American expansion in the CNN original
Narrator/Announcer
series this Land, now streaming on the CNN app.
Date: June 26, 2026
Host: Christiane Amanpour (CNN International)
This episode of Amanpour explores three intertwined themes:
The episode closes with a critical discussion of the AI industry's "doom trolling", with Professor Cal Newport questioning the narrative around the dangers of AI.
[00:42 – 02:33]
Guest: Bojan Panchevsky, Author of The Nord Stream Conspiracy
[02:52 – 20:14]
[03:53 – 05:09]
[05:34 – 06:52]
[07:00 – 10:14]
[13:00 – 16:02]
[16:02 – 18:04]
[18:04 – 20:10]
Guests:
[22:39 – 38:41]
[23:11 – 24:31]
[24:31 – 26:00]
[26:00 – 27:57]
[27:57 – 34:21]
[30:27 – 32:36]
[35:27 – 38:34]
Guest: Cal Newport, Professor of Computer Science
Interviewer: Hari Srinivasan
[39:57 – 54:48]
[40:22 – 41:19]
[41:33 – 43:08]
[43:40 – 44:35]
[44:35 – 47:01]
[48:36 – 50:46]
[50:46 – 53:15]
[53:15 – 54:48]
The episode is investigative, compassionate, and briskly analytical—mixing frontline reporting, interviews with key witnesses, and personal testimony.
This episode is a must-listen for those interested in global security, covert operations, the long shadow of authoritarian violence, and the social responsibility of advanced technology companies. The stories are rich with first-hand accounts and sharply relevant to current affairs in 2026.