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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  July 21, 2024 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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when we're young, we're told anything is possible... ...but only a few of us go out and prove it. witness the greatness of anna hall on a connection worthy of gold: xfinity mobile. only xfinity gives you the most powerful mobile wifi network, with speeds up to a gig in millions of locations. and right now, get up to $800 off the new galaxy z flip6 and z fold6 when you trade in your current phone. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. about the bosley guarantee rahel solomon in new york is cnn hello and welcome to our viewers in the united states and all around the world.
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>> i'm fred pleitgen and this is what's ahead on cnn newsroom cnn learns former national security officials are now voicing their concerns to joe biden about the presidential race. what they're saying, and how the white house is responding. donald trump hits the campaign trail with his new running mate. hear the message he took to a battleground state in his first rally since surviving an assassination and israel and yemen launch more attacks against each other as prime minister benjamin netanyahu prepares to visit the u.s we are now just 107 days away from the u.s us presidential election and the race looks very different for the two leading parties at least 35 democratic lawmakers are now publicly urging u.s. president biden to drop out of the race. and he is not taking that in stride. mr. biden is reportedly quote, seething toward nancy
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pelosi amid the growing list of democratic defections. ironically, the former speaker of the house headlined what was touted as a quote, unity dinner in north carolina it's a stark contrast with the republican party where the trump-vance campaign is in full swing. the former president held his first rally on saturday since surviving an assassination attempt a week earlier. meanwhile, mr. biden spent another day in isolation recovering from covid in delaware and more than three weeks after his disease it's astros debate performance. the president's campaign says, he's standing firm with his run for a second term they say he's the only democrat who beat trump before, and he'll do it again. priscilla alvarez reports president biden is facing a fresh wave of democratic lawmakers who say that he should step aside and allow someone else to be the democratic candidate and nominee. >> they remain unconvinced that the president is up to the task of taking on former president
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donald trump this election year and continue to pour out letters asking for him to drop out of the race. but over the course of all of this happening, the president is behind closed doors as he is trying to recover from covid and has been self-isolating at his residence in delaware. sources telling cnn that the president remains in touch with his close advisers as they grapple with what has become an increasingly challenging moment for this campaign, not only hearing from democratic lawmakers, donors, allies, and in a letter obtained by cnn, which former national security officials and higher ranking foreign policy experts who say that it's too risky for the president just stay in the race, particularly because it could allow former president donald trump to take a second term and in turn, potentially have a toll on national security the campaign, however, is remaining firm. they say that the president is going to stay in the race and that there
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are no plans for that to change. they also say that once the president recovers from covid, that he will hit the campaign trail again. now the vice president was on the trail. she had a fundraiser in massachusetts where she raised more than 2 million. aides. tell me that the vice president and the president remained close, that there's no daylight between the two, despite some lawmakers floating her name as a replacement for to lead the party's ticket. but the campaign saying that this is the biden-harris ticket, that they remain on course, even as it becomes even more challenging for them to stay afloat as democratic lawmakers continue to ask the president to withdraw from the race priscilla alvarez, cnn, traveling pulling with the president that we briefly mentioned, nancy pelosi's appearance at a unity dinner in north carolina on saturday. >> the former speaker of the house slammed donald trump for his alleged links to project 2025, the heritage foundation's controversial playbook for the next republican president understand
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this. >> what they have in their 20 to 25 and that thing that project 2025 what's his name keeps saying? i don't want to do with i don't even know these people know well, they worked in his office. one was the head of the office of management and budget, the other is ahead of personnel he knows he knows full well and that is the agenda trump tried to distance himself from project 2025 when he appeared with jd vance at a campaign rally in michigan on saturday. >> it was his first rally since surviving an assassination attempt last weekend, the former president told the crowd that he quote, took a bullet for democracy is speech, however, focused on familiar themes of america being in decline. and it all being the fault of current president joe biden and his vice president kamala harris. our own kristen holmes has more from grand rapids, michigan donald
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trump's spoken grand rapids, michigan for roughly two hours and all over the place guidance very much an element in this row, that was thousands of people cheering her head touch on some issues that would affect people in michigan is critical battleground state that he wanted to 40, 2016 lost in 2020 and really, both republicans and democrats believe is crucial to winning back the white house. he talked about getting rid of electric vehicles. you talked about boosting up auto workers, bringing more jobs to michigan. he also talked about ending this kind of flood of immigration sealing. the border was what he used. now the other thing i want to point out is this is the first campaign rally with this new vice presidential nominee, j.d. vance. and it is important good to note that it was in michigan because part of the appeal of j.d. vance was that he could possibly reach voters in places like michigan, wisconsin, obviously ohio, which has now aumoreover red state. so votes aren't super needed. but in
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pennsylvania, these are all critical swing states because of his working class background, we did hear from j.d vance. we saw them interact on the stage. now, the other portion i want to actually show your have you listened to two when he talked about project 2025, they believe him they being donald trump and his team, that project 2025 is an actual liability to have this course the think tank heritage foundation's transition approach, which has really come under fire for a lot of its controversial that far-right policies. take a listen. >> like some all the right. >> severe right. >> came up with this project 25 and i don't even know. i mean, some of them i know who they are, but that's very, very conservative. justice like you have this sort of the opposite of the radical left, okay? you have the radical left and you have the radical right. and they come up with this. i don't know what the hell it is. it's project 25. he's involved in project. and then the read some of the things and they are extremely seriously extreme but i don't know
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anything about it donald trump has tried to distance itself multiple times. >> at one point, he actually said that he didn't know anyone involved in project 2025, which is not true. many of the people who are part of the various groups that are part of 2025 worked in his last administration, many of them are still current advisers, are still currently friendly lay with donald trump. and a lot of them are suspected to be part of a second administration. however he has said that those policies are some of them at least are too far too extreme again, it's not just donald trump's team believes this is a vulnerability for donald trump. >> joe biden, steve had also been seizing on his running ads, attacking trump and project 2025 kristen holmes, cnn, grand rapids, michigan now we're learning that trump's security detail complaint to the secret service over the past two years that they weren't being provided with enough resources. all this follows intense scrutiny over
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how a sniper was able to get access it's too a rooftop from which he shot trump in an assassination attempt. a spokesman for the secret service told cnn that the agency has not provided certain resources itself at times, but state or local partners are sometimes used in connection with a protect tie. and it's stresses that no request it's for extra security were denied for that pennsylvania rally the director of the secret service will likely face questions over these issues during her testimony this coming week, kimberly cheatle will appear before several committees in congress over the security failures that led to the assassination attempt last week and of course, earlier this week, we learned us authorities obtained intelligence about an iranian assassination plot against donald trump, believed to be in retaliation for the 2020 killing of iranian general qasem soleimani. trump ordered his death while president and boasted about it. sources say there is nothing to suggest
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iran had any involvement in the shooting last weekend at trump's rally in pennsylvania. and our own fareed zakaria sat down with iran interim foreign minister to ask about it. >> you categorically denying that iran had any plans or any element of iran, the revolutionary guard and iranian backed militia had any plans to try to assassinate donald trump a man home to give you some all said, oh, how to, as i, put, it very, blatant, openly through baja of i told you explicitly that we would resort to legal and judicial, or the car procedures and frameworks at the domestic level and international level in order to bring the perpetrators and military advisers of general soleimani assassination to justice but that means not, not violent measures when you say
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legal and judicial measures, you are talking about international courts and things like as i told them that we will only resort to near dr. leah for them iranian and into international legal and judicial procedures till now, we have done it, and this is a right. >> and of course, we will continue on because the americans openly said that famine day earlier. and as aumy, they assassinated the senior iranian military commander it is natural, right, in order to follow these issues and those who are slated slated.com, he saw him or the accused in these case. >> they should be brought to justice in a just court and folks, you can watch fareed's full interview with iran's acting foreign minister, ali bagheri kani, coming up later sunday john fareed zakaria gps that is at 10:00 a.m. in new york, 3pm here in london. >> make sure to tune into that. in the meantime, tehran is condemning israeli airstrikes
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on houthi targets in yemen on saturday. and warning of a wider escalation in the region. yemen's houthi run ministry of health says at least three people were killed and another 87 wounded when israel struck the port of hodeidah israel's prime minister accuses iran of using the port to help the houthi rebels before we attack is not an innocent port. it was used for military purposes. it was used as an entry point for deadly weapons supplied to the houthis by iran they use this weapon to attack israel, to attack the countries of the region, to attack an international shipping lane. one of the most important shipping lanes in the world israel's military said early sunday that it intercepted a missile fired from yemen, adding that the projectile did not cross into israeli territory. >> houthi rebels confirmed they did launch ballistic missiles towards israel. and despite the escalating regional tensions, israeli prime minister benjamin
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netanyahu is set to travel to washington dc. he will meet with us president joe biden tuesday afternoon. that is according to the prime minister's office he will also deliver remarks to the u.s. congress on wednesday meanwhile the white house national security council says, the u.s. did not coordinate with israel when it struck yemen, but added that washington does recognize, quote israel's right to self-defense journalist elliott gotkine joins me now in london with more on elliot. stick with these strikes and counter strikes going on how dangerous do you think this is for israel i think fred, it things can definitely escalate. >> we could see more ballistic missiles, drones in the light being fired by the houthis towards israel, but it's important to note that the strikes that got through the drone that got through on friday and that slammed into an apartment block in tel aviv, about 100 yards away from the us consulate. this wasn't an isolated event in the sense that israel says that more than
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200 projectiles be they drones or ballistic missiles, or whatnot have been fired towards israel by the houthis since the hamas terrorist attacks of october the seventh the differences of course that the one and on friday actually got through something that israel is putting down to human error but israel, as we see struck the port of hodeidah, attacking, it says houthi targets on saturday. and the reason why the idf is saying that it struck this time around somewhat 1,800 kilometers, more than 1,000 miles away in yemen. this time round is because in israeli citizen was killed on friday of 50-year-old man who'd only moved to israel a couple of years ago from belarus. and that is the reason why israel struck on this occasion. now the houthis say that they are prepared in their words for a long war, that television is not safe and we saw, as you said, another bout to a batch of ballistic missiles, the houthis say that were fired towards israel, towards the southern city of a lot. israel says that it used
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the arrow three aerial defense system to take out one surface to surface missile at this morning that it didn't enter israeli airspace. but the siren sound the just as a precautionary measures, i think things can heat up a little bit, but because of the distance of the houthis from israel and because of the danger, therefore, that they present to israel, i don't think it's going to heat up to the extent that things have been heating up between israel and iran's main proxy, hezbollah in southern lebanon. fred gotkine. thank you very much covering the story from us for us in london and more details are now emerging about donald trump's phone call with ukraine's president. still ahead, a piece of advice that trump reportedly gave volodymyr zelenskyy about rumors that his second term would be good for russia, plus, what are you praying options on the table if trump does? because when another term we'll talk to a military expert about that coming up laura coates live hi
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national security that when we go to war, we punch and we punch hard. >> but being cautious and not trying to get america involved in every far-flung corner and conflict in the world. sometimes my friends, it just is none of our business. >> and we ought to stay out of it now is donald trump's running mate, j.d. vance, arguing against us involvement in foreign wars. he spoke at his first joint rally with trump since their nomination on saturday. and vance is known for his opposition to you crane aid and he said, kyiv should negotiate with moscow because the u.s. can't afford to keep supporting it but when it was trump's turn to speak, he went into rather apocalyptic territory i will have the horrible war between russia and ukraine settled and i will be the only one that can make this statement. i will prevent world war three from happening. you're very close to world war all right but trump has told
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ukraine's president not to assume that his election would be good for a good news for the kremlin. that's from volodymyr zelenskyy is press secretary following friday's phone call between the two liters, the spokesperson said, trump told mr. zelenskyy to ignore what trump called quote, fake news who's that his reelection would be beneficial to russia earlier, mr. zelenskyy said trump had agreed to meet him and discuss possible ways to end the war. the spokesperson says the details of that meeting are yet to be worked out for more analysis. we're joined from canberra by mick ryan, a retired general of the australian an army. he is also the author of the book war transformed the future of 21st century great power competition, and conflict thank you very much for joining us. how concerned do you think volodymyr zelenskyy really is about a possible second trump administration that he's already agreeing to meet with. the former president does it before he's even elected well, let's think president
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zelenskyy would be concerned that some of the statements from trump previously and his vice presidential running mate, evan exactly. >> they very positive frame and most the presidential candidate trump has said, he's election one be positive for russia. >> he didn't say it would be positive for ukraine either. >> one of the things that we keep hearing about a lot now we heard it from from j.d. vance. we heard it from donald trump and from others. is the possibility of negotiations. but of course, the big question there is, how do those negotiations start? where did those negations can negotiations are they even possible with russia i want to play to you really quick something that oleksiy goncharenko is, of course a member of ukrainian parliament, said about that. let's listen in dress, understands my language. >> sunday show of force. >> so the question is about, what is the subject of negotiation and do we have enough force to make russia a
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listen that is in the hands of united states do the ukrainians have enough means to force the russians into negotiations well, i think the ukrainians at the moment understand that they probably don't. i need to work with nato. they need to work united states. and even if dpp negotiations did occur, there's no guarantee he's at the russians would stick by any promises they made that broken just about every promise that made over the last 30 used to ukraine. the ukrainians expect them to do it again do you think the russians are up for negotiations at all? i mean, you touched on it a little bit, but when you hear vladimir putin speak about this, he keeps saying, look, his demands are still very much the same as they've always been that they have to cede all those territories. a lot of which russia doesn't even control at this point in time that they have to stay out of nato and stay neutral and other things as well. i mean, it seems like something that's just not feeling he's able for the ukrainians it's much tougher for the ukrainians. >> bouton could potentially sell a freezing of the front
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lines at the moment as victory to his own people, whilst ensuring that he gives his military chains to reconstitute for what might be subsequent phases of future aggression against ukraine one of the things that i want to talk a bit about the situation on the battlefield because there is also, of course key to any negotiations that would pick up. where do you see things stand at this point in time? because if you look bigger picture the frontlines really haven't changed very much in the past 1.5 years, even though scores of people have been killed. but it also appears as though at this point in time, the ukrainians, at least to an extent, but have managed to stabilize things. if you look at the northeast, but if you look at the easter, also the area around chasiv yar as well? >> the russians have managed to squander what was a big opportunity in the last six months with ukrainians at the lowest step been manpower in the frontline brigades as well as drastic shortages in firepower and a defense weapons and the ukrainians have still
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managed to keep the russians to minimal territorial gains. over six months, the russians have probably made a rents five to 600 square kilometers of gains that the cost of 190,000 troops, that is a very, very poor return on investment yeah, that's and that's one of the other key things. one of the interesting things that i heard j.d. vance say in his vice-presidential acceptance speech at the republican national convention, as he said, that ukrainians need to stop in his mind with costly counter offensives. now, as critical as he is of ukraine, aid is that something that you think? is also maybe an idea that the ukrainians might heat considering that they have so few resources at hand. and the other question is, how long can vladimir putin sustain the kind of losses that are happening now, even though it appears clear, he's willing to sacrifice a lot of soldiers well, at this point in time, president zelenskyy is being very clear. they wish to liberate all the territory that the russians have taken, including crimea, the
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ukrainians are going to have to take offensives in the future but do it more carefully and better than what they need in 2023. as for the russians, no one's really sure how alone they can last the former commander in chief general zaluzhny thought that once see russian sub and 150,000 casualties they would go home. well, they near suffered over 500,000 in their stool bay major general mick ryan. thank you very much. and i'm fred pleitgen. thank you for joining us for those of you watching in north america, we'll have more cnn newsroom after this break for those of you watching national it is inside africa. stay tuned for that e said,
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but it's only for a limited time. five years? -five years? introducing the comcast business 5-year price lock guarantee. powering 5 years of savings. powering possibilities. i'm taylor available on the apple app store or android thank you for joining us here on cnn. >> i'm fred pleitgen, uncertainty hangs over the democratic party less than 30 days before they convene in chicago to officially choose their presidential nominee, at
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least 30 five democratic lawmakers are now publicly urging u.s. president biden to drop out of the race. others, including barbara lee of california, say they are sticking with biden to be the party's standard bearer in november he has a record to run on he and vice president harris, they've delivered they've lowered costs for people. they've been fighting for people fighting for reproductive freedom fighting to make sure that insulin is capped at $35. so they have a record and they beat donald trump in the past. now that only is an indicator of what they will do in the future. i'm sticking with the president if he changes his mind, of course, the person who would be the next person would be a vice president harris. but i believe that president biden is in this to win meanwhile, president biden spent yet another day in isolation
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recovering from covid in delaware. >> he says he is looking forward to getting back on the campaign trail next week. as for the republican ticket, donald trump held his first campaign rally with his new running mate, j.d. vance the former president, told a large crowd in michigan that he quote, took a bullet for democracy after a gunman opened fire at his rally last week, he urged his supporters to get out and vote in november, but he also took time to slam his political rivals and as you're seeing, the democrat party is not the party of democracy. there really the enemies of democracy, the parties have corrupt insiders like whitmer, special interests and the failed political class that's what they are joining me now from ann arbor is rick pluto, political correspondent for the michigan public radio network. >> and he has been covering michigan's politics since the 80s. and rick, i got to ask you, what did you make of trump's? the vent and his
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speech last night? very, very long and obviously very divisive. once again yeah, it was the same old donald trump that we've certainly come to expect ai i was surprised at how long it was and i got a lot of speeches that political rallies or not a new thing. >> but these, these really go on yeah, they certainly do. >> they certainly do former president trump also attacked the head of the united auto workers, which of course is a big deal when you do that in michigan, i want to listen to what he said about that and then get your take on it the leader of the united autoworkers should be fired immediately and every single auto worker union and non union should be voting for donald trump because we're going to bring back car manufacturing and we're going to bring it back fast how does that go down
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with the crowd there or does donald trump maybe you have a point that maybe union leadership is to a certain degree out of touch with some workers well, it's always a goal of republican campaigns in michigan to try and plead off that conservative politically conservative portion of the union vote that doesn't always align with leadership on political matters and right now union membership and even a lot of union leaders are butting heads with president biden democrats, governor gretchen whitmer here, who was mentioned by the former president in his speech, that they are concerned about the conversion to a green economy kindami electric powered vehicles that it's not going to be as many union workers in the factories. >> and so that's got rank and file union members rattled. and so republicans think that maybe
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they can capitalize on that it was interesting because i, because donald trump obviously also attack the green transformation is acceptance speech at the rnc. but another person i wanted to talk to you about is j.d. vance and what he brings to the table for republicans with the working class background, it seems like a rally like the one we saw yesterday is exactly the reason why donald trump brought him on that seems to be exactly as you said exactly why advance was put on the ticket and that was to appeal to working class voters in michigan, ohio, wisconsin, which are going to be big battleground states and the industrial midwest it could very well be where the election is decided what are the main issues for the voters there in michigan, you touched on it a little bit that there is that fear of a possible green transformation possibly going into directions as bad for michigan because we know michigan obviously as a huge auto industry, but it's not
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just that there's a lot of manufacturer bring in general going on in the state manufacturing jobs, the economy in general are always going to be a big deal in michigan, manufacturing in general. but also in this election, one of the unique aspects is people are very invested in winning that they want the candidate who is going to prevail over the, over the other ticket in michigan we just had a big a big sweep of democratic victories. >> a lot of it rooted in abortion rights. and so republicans want to win that back, not just at the presidential level, but going down to the state house level and democrats are really trying to hang onto it and all the polling shows that michigan is still very, very close yeah, i was going to say you were
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obviously reporting on politics and michigan since the 80s and at least far back as i can remember, which is about the 80s. >> it's been a swing state obviously, president trump or former president trump won it in 2016, the democrats wanted in 2020, how are things looking right? now and how concerned are the democrats i mean, look, the democrats are very concerned. >> i have not spoken to a democrat on the street who isn't afraid about the results of the election and what's happening with the president another thing i'll point out it's kind of a wrinkle in michigan politics is in michigan. >> robert f. kennedy jr. is on the ballot. he is the natural law party candidate, which is a minor nominated, which is a minor party on the ballot, that he was able to snag the of nomination for at a party convention. >> that's like maybe 3% of the
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vote. but that's a big deal you know, donald trump has never won the majority of the vote in michigan that president biden has. he's gone over 50%, but that's 3% could make the difference. prince between donald trump getting over 50% or staying under 50%. and that could decide the election while i have you and i do want to ask you one more thing because we've been speaking so much about domestic issues, about the economy being of course, big in this election. >> what role does foreign policy play? a especially the situation in israel and gaza without which obviously some places in michigan that do have substantial palestinian american communities yes, and, and i'm jewish communities as well. >> and it's really fracturing the, it's really fracturing the state. and fracturing our politics and again, when we've been talking about just getting
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down to the craven numbers that small groups of people turning out to vote, not turning out to vote, sticking with the ticket or finding an alternative could everything could turn on that and people here in a lot of neighborhoods are very angry about what's going on in israel and palestine right? >> florida in ann arbor, michigan. thank you very much for joining us in this very early morning. and the worst may be over after a massive tech outage that affected computer systems worldwide. but there's still no end in sight for me any us air travelers that is coming up next with jake tapper? please it for cnn how can experience boost help if finds payments i already made like insurance streaming foam to build my credit. and it's from experience, the credit experts more ways to build credit download the experience app.
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bonus. jackpot party, a party and every spread eva mckend in washington this is cnn welcome back everyone. >> computer systems are back online after a global tech outage, but the fallout is far from over more than 2000 domestic and international flights in the u.s. were canceled on saturday and more than 8,000 were delayed the most affected airline is delay we'll to which is now putting on hold its unaccompanied minors program until monday.
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but in europe, officials say the situation is largely back to normal at british and french airports, as well as the uk train service. many international carriers say their systems are back or close to being restored, including turkish airlines jetstar, japan, and hong kong express airlines airline passengers across the us though, are still stranded because of the lingering effects of that tech outage. isabel rosalas spoke to some people in atlanta who couldn't get on there connecting flight, but flying back home is not an option either. >> what, we're, seeing is really a concentration of that mess with one carrier. and that's delta. take a look right up here at the departures, sign up sign after sign here cancellations and delays. so this is a huge headache for delta customers. and that tracks because this is atlanta, hartsfield, jackson, this is deltas headquarters. this is their largest hub. the most amount of flights from
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delta right here. take a look at this line right over here. these are people who have had some sort of an issue with their flights. they are waiting to talk to a customer service agent and over here too the left, yet another line, those are people waiting here. they've been canceled, they're trying to get their luggage bag. so a nightmare scenario for so many travelers, i want to also introduce you to some passengers right over here. this is richard and this is johnny tell me where were you guys supposed to be today? >> portola, valley, california for my mom's wedding you're missing the wedding? yep. >> and you're trying to get back home to tampa pasco county to be precise? how has that experience been like for you guys to get some answers from delta and get back home. >> it's been nearly impossible. we've been waiting online for about 24 hours to talk to someone one he still waiting last night. he was 2001 in line and then two hours later he was about 2,300 in line. and this morning he is still we're still about a good
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two hours away to hear from any buddy so we're waiting to see if we can either get a plane home to tampa and if not, a rental car, but that also was looking nearly impossible right now to me more about that, about the alternatives of getting back home you can't fly. >> well, yeah, the alternative would be a rental car. we want a one-way, but of course, only companies will only give certain amount of those one ways out. so when we got there, there was only one left. they had gouge that price up to about $586. and then there's other options buses, trains. the train was about $1,000 per purse and amtrak so it's just it's nearly impossible. so we're just waiting here. we are at the mercy of the travel god's right now and just praying that something is going to open when up for us. >> one quick word, how would you describe this entire therapeutic you guys are nice spirits, keep that up i hope you get back home soon. thank you so much. >> thank you. back to you pretty sure that dog doesn't feel its therapeutic to be stuck at hartsfield-jackson
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airport in atlanta. >> now the chaotic aftermath has many asking if this is likely to happen again, or if hackers could exploit such a flaw in software updates for their own purposes? our own jessica dean put that to the same question to a cybersecurity expert just want to ask you too about this reporting that hackers are already taken advantage of this. >> they've set up phony urls meant to appeal to people who are obviously trying to get more information about how to fix this you know, get solutions what should people be on the lookout for? and it seems unfortunate, but this seems like the reality in these situations, hackers want to take advantage after every one of these outage criminals jump on it and creates move websites that mimic crowdstrike's own websites. >> and maybe it says, will make it up. crowdstrike fixed.com. i'm just making that up. >> and in this particular case, the people who would be drawn
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to that are not the average consumer because the average consumers computer wasn't hit by this presumably relatively sophisticated. >> it personnel at companies are engaged in fixing this. so i don't know that those spoofs in this case are going to be all that important but you could see how that could in other situations be a big problem. and then lastly, foreign countries such as russia or china north korea ran our adversaries in the cyber realm. they're going to look at this kind of bug, see if they can replicate it, reverse engineered and use it in their nefarious activities in the future. so we've got to be on the lookout for that. >> just to get even with that interview and we will be right back after this chasing life with dr. sanjay gupta they said, wherever you get your podcasts. >> when we say it will be on time, they expect it to be on time turned shipping to your advantage, it does thank patients with reliable ground shipping thanks. >> brandon with usps ground
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new abdo targeted relief bounce back from kherson was comes gummy bites and loved him back closed captioning is brought to you by skechers, slip in pants, looking for the most comfortable, stylish, easiest pants around, dry news skechers, slip and pants. just slipped in and experienced skechers, innovative comfort technology fabrics, skechers slip in pants in sports that wnba all-stars taking down the u.s. >> women's olympic team as they prepare for the paris games, the great andy scholes joins me now with more and they'll start certainly weren't messing around what they were. >> i mean, a lot of them, maybe a little sour that they aren't on the us women's national damba this year's wnba all-star game. >> it featured the u.s. national team taken on those
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wnba all-stars. now rookie sensation caitlin clark, she was left off the national team, so she was teaming up with angel reese to take on team usa. rough shooting night for clark. she went au for seven from three, but she did this. yep. and it says including this one right here to reese in the fourth quarter reached finishing with 12 points and 11 rebounds. the second half of this game, though, it belonged to a 3k of gumbel wall-e exploited for 34 points, all of them coming in the final two quarters or 3k leading the wnba to the win, beating team usa 117, 2109. she was named the game's mvp for a second time and credited coach cheryl miller for getting her going coach actually caught me out and i have time in front. everybody was like, just take a deep breath and play your game and then i guess you guys saw what happened alright, the us men meanwhile, playing a tune up against south sudan in london yesterday, team usa was favored by 43.5 in this one, but south sudan, giving them all they could handle, leading
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by 16 at one point, lebron though, would lead a furious rally in third quarter to bring us back. >> then down one under 20 seconds left lebron here that drive gets the layup to go to put the us up by one. team, usa would have been served five to game-winning attempts by south sudan to win this one 11 au one to 100 narrowly avoiding an embarrassing loss it's i liked old who better than the blowout lives to get tested all are all right. >> american billy horse have been while overcoming the wet and windy conditions yesterday to take a one stroke lead into today's final round at the open championship. horschel looking to win his first major and he said he always pictures himself being in this position every night when he closes his eyes, shut sometimes done this year, i've done a better job this week of it. >> or try to do a better job is sort of manifest. see myself holding the trophy before i go to sleep every night, envisioning myself holding a
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trophy on 18, walking out to the crowd and being congruent gradually, does as open champion and that's, that's what i'm going to do again the night and hopefully that comes through tomorrow. if it doesn't i'll get back on the grind and work hard to get back in a position like this again i will say it becomes true pga champ xander schauffele, he's one stroke back, world number one, scottie scheffler. he's to back fred, so we have a crowded leaderboard could be an exciting day. leaders tee off at 9:25 eastern this morning yeah. >> and that wind and weather is going to be an issue again. thank you, andy. an after fleeing the taliban in afghanistan, a young afghan girls is on the road to the olympics break dancer maneesha to lash will be competing with the refugee olympic team in paris this month. cnn salma abdelaziz has her story training to perfect every move. this 21-year-old is preparing for her big debut a refugee from afghanistan manisha taalas, fled the taliban three
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years ago, leaving her home and family behind, polish took the risk to freely pursue her passion. now, she's headed to the 2024 summer olympics in paris a competitive form of breakdancing. breaking was not widely accepted in her kabul community. to lash was also the only female member of her brain breaking crew. >> word spread of the first afghan be grow as they are called. >> and while to los received disapproval from her family, she also got death threats in 2021, the taliban took control of kabul, among many other professions, music and dancing were outlawed. >> low taliban that's when the taliban came. i thought it was very difficult time. what do i want to do? do you want to be here with your family? or do you want to do more than being in afghanistan to launch chose not to be trapped in a place where her passion was not accepted after spending a year in pakistan, she was then
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granted refugee status in spain. >> so annual, but i had a dream, but now i can live that dream and i can reach it if our in afghanistan, i cannot live because the taliban does not like this board and it is very dangerous for me and my family, but i'm doing it here and i'm not afraid securing a spot on the refugee olympic team for the paris games to los, trains are breaking skills six days a week added to the olympic games in 2024 16 v boys and 16 be girls. we'll be judged based on the types of moves in their routine. the technique, how each move is executed, and the originality of the routine as she prepares to be judged on her skill set to launch says breaking is not just for her, it serves a greater purpose as for the girls who are in afghanistan and is very difficult to do anything for example, to go out of the house or just study. they can't do anything. but i'm happy that i'm here and now i want to do
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something for me. my people who are in afghanistan, my girls, my friends, salma abdelaziz, cnn, london and that wraps this hour of cnn newsroom. >> i'm fred pleitgen. thank you for joining us cnn this morning is coming e back up for a minute welcome to the now way to network. >> they switch to junipers ai, native network now, everyone's
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make it easier to drink less or to quit drinking altogether qualify for treatment today at we're health.com can to reverse support your brain health. mary janet, hey, eddy. >> now, fraser, frank, frank bred. >> how are you? >> fred, fuel up to seven brain health indicators, including your memory, joined the nerivan brain health challenge getting older is part of the journey, even with worsening heart failure so when i had carpel tunnel syndrome, lower back pain, and shortness of breath, i thought that's what getting older felt like thank goodness. i called my cardiologist i have att rcm, a rare but serious disease, and getting diagnosed early made a difference. if you have any of these warning signs, don't wait ask your the moment i met him i knew he was my soulmate. "soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere.
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but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title.

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