THE KING OF JORDAN, A NEW COLD WAR AND A
PICASSO MYSTERY ON THE 49TH SEASON PREMIERE
OF "60 MINUTES," SUNDAY, SEPT. 25, ON CBS
Scott Pelley interviews King Abdullah II of Jordan amid the current Middle East turmoil; David Martin reports on the surprising and worrisome U.S.-Russian nuclear stance; and Bill Whitaker finds that Picasso's art and personal life continue to captivate four decades after his death on the 49th season premiere of 60 MINUTES Sunday, Sept. 25 (7:30-8:30PM, ET/7:00-8:00 PM PT), on the CBS Television Network.
Terrorism. Civil war. A refugee crisis. Geopolitics. That's the situation in the Middle East and right on the doorstep of the country of Jordan. Pelley talks to Jordan's leader, King Abdullah II, who says the trouble in his country poses a danger to the entire world.
President Obama's nuclear strategy says that while the threat of all-out nuclear war is remote, the risk of nuclear attack somewhere in the world has actually increased. 60 MINUTES decided to take a close look at how that attack might occur and found both the U.S. and Russia are developing nuclear weapons that make the once unthinkable decision to use them "less difficult."
Pablo Picasso's former electrician, 77 year-old Pierre Le Guennec and his wife Danielle, came forward with a trove of 271 never-before-seen Picasso pieces. The revelation of the existence of these works stunned the art world and the Picasso heirs. The Le Guennecs say they were a gift from the master. But were they? Whitaker finds a fascinating story befitting a painter who was probably the greatest artist of the 20th Century.
Follow 60 MINUTES on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
|