On GPS at 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. ET on CNN: First, Fareed gives his take on President Trump's confrontation with Mexico over immigration. Tariffs on Mexico have been averted, and Trump has declared victory, but "he appears to have won little more than renewed assurances that its government would get tougher on migrants from Central America," Fareed says. Trump's main achievement, through his rhetoric and threats, has been undoing decades of progress in America's relationship with its southern neighbor, Fareed argues. Next, we'll talk more about Trump and Mexico—who won in the deal announced Friday and whether it will help solve the migration crisis—with former Mexican foreign minister Jorge Castañeda and Shannon O'Neil of the Council on Foreign Relations. America's yet-to-be-released, Jared-Kushner-led plan for Middle East peace faces concerns over timing, and some controversy after Kushner's comments on Palestinian governance, and we'll ask Palestinian official Hanan Ashrawi and Republican foreign-policy adviser Dan Senor about its prospects and whether America is taking the right approach. Our What in the World segment will make the case for a four-day workweek, and as tensions continue between the US and Iran, Dina Esfandiary of Harvard's Belfer Center will discuss what the US endgame might be. On the heels of D-Day's 75th anniversary, historian Nigel Hamilton will recount how the invasion wouldn't have happened if Winston Churchill had gotten his way. Author of the new book War and Peace: FDR's Final Odyssey, D-Day to Yalta, 1943–1945, Hamilton will discuss Roosevelt, Churchill, and the little-known history of the British leader's doubts. Finally, we'll examine a rise in hate crimes in New York City (and around the world) and the massive demonstrations Czechs have staged against Prime Minister Andrej Babiš. Note to readers: Fareed's Global Briefing will be on hiatus this week. It will return Monday, June 17. | |