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On Monday, U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon appointed Major General Kristin Lund – a former deputy commander of the Norwegian Armed Forces – to head the mission in Cyprus, which is divided between Greece and Turkey.
She is the first-ever female commander of a Untied Nations peacekeeping mission. Right now, women make up just 13% of the U.N.'s 125,000 peacekeepers.
What does Lund see for the decades-old Cyrpus peacekeeping mission, what does she believe women can bring to peacekeeping?
Click above to watch Amanpour’s full converations with Lund.
By Mick Krever, CNN
The task: Challenge a dictator in the middle of a devastating civil war that has killed well over 100,000 people.
That’s what facing the two candidates running against Bashar al-Assad in Syria; the government announced elections due to take place on June 3.
“I hope Assad will go and I will take his position,” Hassan al-Nouri, one of the two approved candidates, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Wednesday. “This is why I'm running for this election.”
Maybe so, but pre-war elections in Syria have usually been nothing more than a simple referendum on Assad’s rule.
“Let me tell you, this is Syria,” he told Amanpour. “In Syria, we have a constitution [which requires] a new presidential election 60 days before the end of the current president's time.”
“And I do believe that this is our right; this is our freedom. We own our decisions. This is a national decision.”
The deal between the Syrian government and opposition to turn the long-contested city of Homs over to Assad forces has “the potential of actually be replicated elsewhere,” Yacoub El Hillo, the U.N. Humanitarian Coordinator in Syria, told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Wednesday.
"Homs is an experiment that needs to be studied carefully, he said. “I think it’s always the case when Syrians are able to sit together, and agree to discuss the problem – and it’s a big one – there is always a possibility of reaching a solution.”
After a brutal three-year siege, residents of Homs are returning to utter devastation.
Homs was ground zero in the revolution, but the government won back the city last week, when it offered to bus the rebels out with the government looking on.
“At the end of the day there is no victor, no winner. This cost of this conflict is too high for anyone to claim victory, frankly speaking.”
But it is critical to stem the killing and return some normalcy to civilians, he said.
“I think there is a lot that can be drawn from the Homs experiment. And I do hope that the Syrians – because after all this is a Syrian-Syrian affair – they will choose to see if this can be applied elsewhere.”
Click above to watch Amanpour’s full interview with El Hillo.
By Mick Krever, CNN
As tensions rise in eastern Ukraine, Germany may be the key to détente with Russia.
“We are the West's number one modernization partner for Russia,” Markus Kerber, director-general of the Federation of German Industries told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour succinctly on Tuesday.
Germany came in for some early criticism of the Ukraine crisis for being viewed as too soft on Russia, because of the massive trade and historic links between the two countries.
Vladimir Putin and Angela Merkel were both behind the Iron Curtain in East Germany in 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell – she as a young scientist and Russian scholar; he as a KGB officer. They speak each other's languages fluently.
But if diplomacy doesn't work, then German industry is publicly stepping up to refute the notion that billions of dollars in trade trumps the international rule of law.
By Mick Krever, CNN
The Netherlands is a country that, in some sense, shouldn’t exist.
Thirty percent of the country is below sea level, and would sit under the ocean were it not for centuries of effort by the Dutch, battling the sea.
New York, ravaged by Superstorm Sandy in October 2012, has taken note.
“I really have to stress this,” Henk Ovink, who is spearheading the effort to bring Dutch knowhow across the Atlantic, says: “Water is not a threat; it's an asset. Especially for the Dutch.”
The Netherlands’ lessons could not come any sooner. Two separate groups of American scientists are now warning that the West Antarctic ice sheet is melting, and nothing can be done to stop it. One section alone would increase sea levels four feet, NASA says.
And this after last week’s White House report, which said climate change is a clear and present danger – not some abstract problem for the future.
The Netherlands has water engrained in its culture, acquired over centuries. But can the country export its unique approach to New York – and the world – in the short time needed to living with rising sea levels?
“It's not easy,” Ovink told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Tuesday. “It's very hard. It is a change between your ears and eyes. It is a change of culture and therefore a change of the heart, which is always harder than an engineering change, or harder than an investment decision. You really have to change the way we go about water.”
By Mick Krever and Claire Calzonetti, CNN
Jose Mujica is often referred to as the world’s “poorest” president.
“I'm not a poor president,” he told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour through an interpreter on Monday. “Poor are the people who need a lot – Seneca said that. I am an austere president.”
He donates 97% of his salary, drives a 1987 Volkwagen Beetle – the original “peoples’ car” – and sells flowers with his wife at their home.
Mujica, a former Marxist guerrilla, lives in the same modest Montevideo house he always has, forgoing the presidential palace.
“I do not need much to live. I live in the same way I used to live when I wasn’t a president and in the same neighborhood, in my same house, and in the same way. And I am a republican” – small ‘r.’
“I live like the majority in my country lives. It was a majority who voted for me. And that's why I identify with them. Morally, I do not have the right to live like a minority in my country.”
“A lot of people like a lot of money. They shouldn't go into politics. That's my way of seeing it. I am not improvising. I don't do marketing. This is my philosophy.”
President Mujica met with U.S. President Barack Obama at the White House Monday. What is it like for a former Marxist guerrilla to enter the White House, that most potent of Western’s symbols?
“I cannot deny reality,” he told Amanpour. “I don't know whether I like this planet or not, but I have to accept it.”
By Mick Krever, CNN
Referendums by separatists in Ukraine, such as Sunday’s in Donyetsk, “don’t count,” NATO Secretary General Anders Fogh Rasmussen told CNN’s Christiane Amanpour on Monday.
“These referendums are illegal, they are organized in a chaotic manner with dubious and ambiguous questions.”
Pro-Russian separatists claimed victory in a vote in the eastern Ukrainian region; they say that 90% of voters wanted independence from Ukraine.
The acting Ukrainian president called the referendum a “propagandist farce.”
“The only thing that counts is the presidential election on the twenty-fifth of May. And I urge all actors to make sure that those general elections can be conducted in an orderly manner,” Rasmussen told Amanpour.
NATO has tried, through limited troop deployments, military exercises, and air flights to present an enhanced deterrent to Russia, its erstwhile Cold War foe.
Amanpour challenged Rasmussen on whether that was enough.
“The allies say they’d like to see a little bit more – if not reassurance, heft,” Amanpour said. “I don’t know what you think, but a hundred and fifty U.S. soldiers to Poland? I mean, is that really enough to tell Mister Putin – who’s got forty-thousand troops massed on the borders there – to step back?”
CNN's Christiane Amanpour has interviewed all the major presidential candidates in Afghanistan - Zalmai Rassoul, Abdullah Abdullah, and Ashraf Ghani.
You can watch those interviews here:
CNN's Christiane Amanpour speaks with the leading candidate for Afghan president, Ashraf Ghani.
CNN's Christiane Amanpour speaks with Afghan presidential candidate and former foreign minister Zalmai Rasoul.
CNN's Christiane Amanpour speaks with Abdullah Abdullah, a leading contender to replace Afghan President Hamid Karzai.
Appearing on the BBC's Andrew Marr show on Sunday, CNN's Christiane Amanpour asked fellow-guest UK Prime Minister David Cameron whether he would join the #BringBackOurGirls campaign.
"I don't know, prime minister, whether you would like to hold this and join this campaign," she asked, holding up a sign with the now-famous hashtag written on it.
"Happily," he said, according to the BBC.
Photo courtesy the BBC.
For Russian and Ukraine, geo-politics and pop music collide - on stage. Christiane Amanpour has the story.
Click above to watch.

