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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  August 6, 2024 12:00am-1:00am PDT

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vote among likely voters, which is important because it's who's going to actually go out and vote on election day it does speak to where does he stand in this race at this moment in what's crucial is not just his support across, across the country, but again, in swing states where it could be relevant because you do go around the country and see some lawn signs for him if that's any indication of this support and there are people who have signed onto these conspiracy theories and are rooting for him because they liked neither of the leading party contenders did you ever think that you would be talking about this? >> it has been such a bizarre election year in such a bizarre capital, couple of years politically that a, i mean, it's not necessarily on my bingo card, but it doesn't necessarily early days of the trump white house. >> i just want people to know that, emily. thank you so much. >> it a psa if you live in new york city. city and are wondering how to properly dispose of dead animals today, the city's annotation department posted a helpful and timely link and we know
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>> oh, thank you. thank you so much for joining us. the news continues right here on cnn street as us stocks notch their worst day in two years. but in asia, the markets make a comeback and the british prime minister vows is swift response after days of violent far-right protests, grip the nation live from atlanta. this is cnn newsroom with rosemarie church good to have you with us, where we should learn in the coming hours who you are as vice president kamala harris has picked to be her running mate,
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a key decision that will come just two weeks after she launched her presidential campaign. >> harris is expected to announce a choice before she appears with her running mate at a rally. they in pennsylvania later today, multiple sources tell cnn harris focused on two democratic governors in the final hours of her search, josh shapiro of pennsylvania and tim walz of minnesota harris met both men and separate meetings on sunday. former house speaker nancy pelosi lucy weighed in on who might be the best to join the democratic ticket i think they're all great and new ever she takes on for and tim walz is wonderful. >> it was chair about veterans affairs committee, governor of pennsylvania is a remarkable and a real start. it's a question of who she feels the most comfort level with in terms of governance. and people say, well, who can help us win, but it's about who can help us govern more than that cnn's mj
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lee is following developments and has more now from philadelphia we are in a very final, final stages of the vice presidential selection process for vice president kamala harris as of late afternoon on monday, the harris campaign had said that she had not yet made a final decision we of course, have been discussing a three names in particular, as being the final contenders. those names of course, are josh shapiro, mark kelly, and tim walz. and what cnn reported monday evening, is that in the final hours of this election process, the vice president had been training her focus in particular on two of those names, shapiro grow and walz. now, to be clear, our sources said that mark kelly was still in the running in those final hours that he is his name had not been taken off the table. all three of them, of course met with the vice president in washington, dc over the weekend we also know that some of the biggest questions that the vice
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president has been asking of the advisers around her, and probably of herself as she has been deliberating over this process, are questions like, who can help her win? who can help her govern? who does she have a strong personal chemistry with? now, tuesday night? you're in philadelphia, kamala harris and her future running mate will appear at their first joint campaign rally of the 2024 season. and then they are hoping to travel to a number of additional battleground cities and states as they really hope to showcase this joint ticket for the first time. and that of course is when we will first see what kind of personal chemistry the two of them actually do have mj lee, cnn in philadelphia ron brownstein is a cnn senior political analyst and senior editor for the atlantic. >> he joins me now from los angeles. appreciate you being with us hi, rosemary it is decision day for kamla harris. >> she is set to pick a running mate in the coming hours and
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multiple sources tell cnn, she's focusing on two possibilities now, pennsylvania governor josh shapiro and minnesota governor tim walz, who is the smart choice politically for him harris and the democrats well, you know, the impact of the vice president on the presidential race as donald trump himself noted, has tended to be rather modest but to the extent they do influence it, they can be a little bit of a help in their home state. >> and i think that most democrats agree that pennsylvania looks like the tipping point state in this election, the state that is likely to be the 270th electoral college vote for a democrat if they win. now there are certain risks with taking josh shapiro that there are parts of the left of the democratic party who don't like him for various reasons is views on israel and the war in gaza, on school vouchers. but if you have a chance of influencing even at the margin
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the outcome in a state that you are very unlikely to win without politically, at least it would seem that is the most logical pick. the advantage of tim walz sees a very good campaigner broadly liked in the democratic party. there's really no controversy associated with him, but the upside does not look nearly as potentially a great as it could be if shapiro gives you, even us until hello, better chance of winning a state, you have to win and kamala harris will hold a rally with her vice presidential pick on tuesday in philadelphia. >> a former new jersey governor chris christie says, it should be josh shapiro because he has a 65% job approval rating and he's so popular in pennsylvania, a state that harris needs to win as you've pointed out, but does his popularity necessarily translate into the pivotal state of pennsylvania going blue no go but you know, if obviously not, i mean, there
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are plenty of vice presidential nominee john edwards, most recently in 2004, who could not deliver a quote, unquote, their home state. >> but the political science is pretty consistent that the vice president makes at least some impact and as long as the impact is more than zero that would seem to be a pretty good argument for picking the gun guy who as a 65% approval rating or favourability rating in a state that you almost certainly have to win. if democrats knowing works conston, they can replace it with arizona. if they don't win michigan, they can replay i said with georgia, if they don't win, pennsylvania, they have to win both georgia and either nevada or arizona. and that's a lot. so again, on a purely political calculus, i think shapiro is head and shoulders now, there are parts of the party that are more resistant to him for all the reasons we just discussed. and tim walz so as a good campaigner is probably the path of least resistance. but i
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would think that much like hillary clinton, clinton picking tim kaine in 2016, democrats may come to view a waltz selection as a safe pick that was an opportunity lost and politico wrote over the weekend that the junior senator so from pennsylvania, john fetterman, is concerned about harris choosing governor josh shapiro as her running mate because he says he's excessively focused on his own personal ambitions. >> is that likely to be enough to turn harris off shapira? and does that make him any different to any other politician you're fetterman is a loose cannon at this point. >> i mean, he is someone who was even more supportive, netanyahu than almost anyone else in the democratic party is very critical of the movement on biden. i would not be shocked if he has a primary race when he comes up again in 20 a serious race when it comes up in 2020 the point that he's making that as a germ of truth is that if you are picking shapiro and you when you are kind of, you are clearly
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putting a thumb on the scale in the succession for the democratic party going forward. whereas barack obama picks joe biden, who was presumed at that point to be someone who did not have ambitions of his own. and that kind of reassure the obama team that biden would not be out freelancing for his own benefit. walks might fit into that category more than shapiro in the sense that fewer people can imagine him running for president one day. but your job is to win as the nominee, particularly if you believe as democrats have been saying for several years there's that a trump victory is an existential threat to the future of democracy, to the rule of law in america. it's just hard to see how you don't end up with the person that gives you the best chance of winning. and if you don't, i think it is a somewhat ominous signal of the ability of fact actions in the party to move you toward a decision that may not be optimal for your chances. >> ron brownstein, always a
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pleasure to chat with you many thanks thanks for having me financial markets here in the u.s are on track for a positive start when trading gets underway later today, the dow nasdaq and s&p 500 are hoping to recover from their worst percentage drop in nearly two years. >> you see there the nasdaq and s&p 500 futures it is up more than 1%. a weak jobs report, renewed fears of a recession, and the lack of an interest rate cut by the federal reserve all contributed to monday's selloff. in asia, japan's nikkei has bounced back from its worst one day percentage drop since 1989. the index gained and more than 10% after falling 12% on monday. so let's go live now to tokyo and cnn's hanako montgomery had to go what's the latest on markets in asia? and what can we expect from the financial day ahead for the rest of the world?
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>> yeah, rosemary stock markets in asia have recovered somewhat after those massive losses we saw just a day ago. but experts are warning me that we can expect to see much more volatility in markets until september when the u.s federal reserve is expected to make take rate cuts. now, the reason why asia stock markets and specifically the japanese stock market, which was the hardest hit, made such a quick recovery is really twofold. the first reason is because we received better than expected service sector data for the month of july from the united states that's ease some concerns about the possibility of a recession in the world's largest economy. now, the second reason is because the value of the yen has dipped just a little bit on monday, we saw the yen surge against the dollar. and these massive movements that we've seen in the dollar yen rate really is largely attributed meta to the bank of japan raising interest
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rates for the second time in 14 years, just last week, the interest rates are now at 0.25%, which doesn't sound like a lot. but the the bank of japan has raised interest rates, which is a break from what other countries are doing because they recognize that a needs to raise just rates and therefore boost the value of its currency over the last year or so, the value of the yen has dropped significantly against the greenback, making the cost of imports for things like food and fueled that much more expensive. so the bank of japan raised interest rates and therefore boosted the value of its currency but the sudden surge we saw a monday really spooked hedge funds and also investors, which is why we saw that sudden panic selling. now again, because the value of the yen has dipped a little bit, it's now trading at 146 yen to the dollar that's east and soothe some nerves. now, we can expect talk to us and uk markets to open higher like
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asia markets have done, but experts are warning me that we're not out of the woods just yet. and central banks will watch with bated breath with the u.s. federal reserve will do come september. rosemary, hanako montgomery joining us live from tokyo with that report. >> appreciate it well, for decades, google has it's dominated the internet search market. >> now handling about 90% of the world's online searches. but that dominance has been dealt a serious blow in a us district court, which ruled monday that google has violated antitrust laws, acting as a monopoly to stifle competition the landmark ruling is a stinging rebuke and could reshape how millions of americans get their information online google has spent tens of billions of dollars on exclusive contracts to make itself the world's default search provider us attorney general merrick garland hailed them ruling saying, quote, this victory against google is an
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historic win for the american people know company, no matter how large or influential is above the law. no comment yet from google, which is expected to appeal any penalties, it may face large parts of the southeastern us, including florida, georgia, and south carolina, are facing torrential rain and catastrophic flooding from tropical storm debby. the storm is bringing the threat of tornadoes and dangerous storm surge and coastal areas. the mirror of savannah, georgia says, he's terrified ed by the amount of rain from this slow moving storm. it's blamed for at least five deaths so far, the storm is expected to move into the atlantic ocean in the hours ahead. and we'll slowly push into north carolina and up the east coast later this week. more now on tropical storm debby from cnn meteorologist chad myers well, debbie started out certainly as a rainmaker with almost a foot and a half
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of rain over parts of florida everywhere that you see purple on this map that's ten inches of rain or more. >> and then the red spots here somewhere around six, look at the wind gusts here, just barely getting into the hurricane category, but they were there. this is the rainfall that is still to come because the storm is moving so slowly, literally five miles per hour the olympic athletes could power walk faster than that. and it's going to hang around for a very long time, putting down significant amounts of rainfall. there could be ten to 20 inches of additional rain into parts of georgia, south carolina, north carolina, and look at this by saturday, there could even be rain into the northeast. now obviously the cone goes all the way to the left and all the way to the right, five days away from now. but it's certainly a possibility. you keep watching it for you here. now, also remember that there could be some tornadoes still coming in if you hear those sirens or your phone goes off, make sure you take cover. low country,
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south carolina, also up toward the grand strand a flurry of diplomacy is underway to prevent a larger conflict in the middle east. but us forces are now coming under attack in iraq details on that after the break and donald trump's running mate is facing huge backlash after saying, quote childless cat ladies shouldn't be running the country. now his wife says, people are taking it all too seriously i earth with liev schreiber, back-to-back episodes saturday at nine on cnn, america's hospitals go the extra mile to provide quality healthcare to our patients. we are committed to putting our patients and their families first providing health care. >> your family contrast, we're here for the communities we serve 24/7. >> no one is turned away or denied the critical care. they need america's hospitals and health systems our here for you every hour, every day, for
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president, and secretary of state discussing the attack in the situation room and state hickman saying they went over the steps being taken to defend us forces and support the defense of israel. they also discussed efforts to lower regional tension intense diplomacy is underway to prevent an attack that could lead to a wider war. it's unclear how and when iran we'll go after israel. the iranian foreign ministry is stressing that tehran is determined to quote, deter israel and no one should doubt its resolve. >> that andrew mummery, islamic iran, iran does not seek to escalate tensions in the region. if iran talks about its right to punish the aggressor, this is an action to help consolidate security and stability in the region iran has been vowing to punish israel for days now after its ally, hamas political chief ismail haniyeh was assassinated on iranian soil last week
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israel has not claimed responsibility for the killing cnn's paula hancocks is covering these developments live from london. >> she joins us now. good morning to you, paula. what's the latest on this heightened tension in the region as israel braces for retaliation from iran well rosemary it's really a waiting game at this point to see what iran will do in its retaliation that it has promised against israel what form it will take an also, when it will happen. >> now of course the question is whether it would be a iran alone that will carry out some kind of retaliatory attack or whether they will be using their proxies in the region as well, which would make it potentially more significant and widespread event. now, what we have seen, as you mentioned overnight, we did see that there were a iran aligned militia groups according to washington, that did carry out an attack strike against the al-asad airbase in iraq. and now we have seen since october
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a number of these attacks in iraq and also in syria on us troops that are stationed there. and they have consistently been blamed on these, these iranian proxy groups. this one has been no different the u.s saying that is who was responsible. >> but we have been seeing somewhat of a lull in recent months for these attacks, or at least they haven't been publicly acknowledged between october and january, we saw more than 150 strikes against us troops in iraq and syria. so that is a reminder to israel, to the united states that there are these iranian proxies that are ready and willing to carry out these attacks. so of course, the question that the u.s. is trying to figure out now is whether or not these groups will be involved in any kind of retaliation. you did mention there was this situation room meeting where they tried to assess and
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predict what could happen. we have heard though from two us officials that many of the iranian military assets that would need for this kind of retaliatory attack had been moved back in april. so it's made it far more difficult for us intelligence to follow any kind of movement, any kind of preparations to be able to predict what and where may happen. so this is why we are seeing certainly on this occasion there appears to be less predictions and less knowledge of what could happen very different to what we saw back in april when iran carried out that retaliatory attack on israel, where you saw more than 300 drones and rockets and missiles being fired to israel. but it was well telegraphed and there had been preparations in place. so the u.s. and its allies were able to shoot the vast majority of them out of the sky. rosemary. >> all right. paula hancocks joining us live from london. many thanks for that report.
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>> my next guest is the author of making the arab world and a professor of international relations at the london school of economics for whilst gerges appreciate you joining us so with an iranian retaliatory attack on israel expected anytime now, the u.s is reporting a strike on american personnel. any rock blaming iranian proxies for the attack. is this an effort to drag the u.s. into the conflict? and if so, how should the u.s. spawned no, not at all. >> actually, the reverse is true. neither iran nor it's local partners or proxies would like an all-out hall with the united states. in fact, one of the reasons why iran and hezbollah in lebanon and other local partners have iran have been reluctant to really retaliate on a much bigger
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scale than before, is that they are terrified. they're anxious that the netanyahu government is trying to drag iran into all-out war. the united states and the u.s. knows this the us has made it very clear that neither iran nor its local allies or proxies have any intention or desire other for all our poor or for a direct confrontation, not only with the united states, but even with israel itself. and that's why i think the big question on the table antony blinken, the u.s. secretary of state said yesterday, all nations in the middle east should refrain from escalation. it's a wonderful statement but who has really triggered this current crisis? you alive, we're talking about does the escalation applies to israel? >> has the netanyahu government accepted the hostage deal and a ceasefire in gaza, who basically violated iraq's
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sovereignty and try to humiliate the new president, the new president of iran, who was inaugurated last weekend and where it's cold for closer ties with the west, including the united states. >> so we have to really be direct when we talk about the foundation and the causes of this particular prices you and i were talking about what calculation would iran be making right now as it assesses how to strike back? at israel in response to the assassination of that senior hamas leader hernia on the, on iranian soil last week. and what type of retaliation are you expecting to see? >> what should and challenge facing iranian leaders and their local partners are proxies in lebanon in yemen, in iraq. while they really want to retaliate and basically show
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that israel really cannot just violate their sovereignties and kill their leaders just very easily but at the same time, they want to make sure that their retaliation does not trigger all-out war either with israel or the united states and that's why the leader of hezbollah, hassan nasrallah, has repeatedly said that their retaliation is will be calculated will focus on particular targets. it will not basically provided the pretax for israel to basically go for all our pool, my own reading and i could be wrong that iran will directly involved in re retaliation was hezbollah and the houthis in yemen and iraq. uraki, a militiamen. and this particular retaliation will be multilayered targeting is israel strategic positions
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airport what have you, the infrastructure. and i think iran and its allies will most likely rely on hezbollah's precision missiles in order to overwhelm israel's air defense capabilities. and the coalition that the united states has been reassembling in the past few days in order to really shoot it down. most of these missiles or drones that they will be fired at israel. when and if the attack takes place and so how would you then expect israel to respond once iran retaliates i think this is the key question the question is not whether iran and its allies will retaliate the question is, when and how extensive this particular attack the question facing the united states will the united states be able to convince the netanyahu government not to retaliate
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against the retaliation and trigger a trigger a cycle of retaliation for a few days that could easily expand into a wider regional conflict. >> so this is what the biden administration in particular the president and his associates, senior aides are really discussing now, trying to work on multiple fronts, sending messages to iran against really strategic escalation and trying to also basically impress on netanyahu the need for against strategic the escalation as well if and when the iranian retaliation takes place, it's not very easy at all. but again, what has happened and for your own american viewers is that the united states is being dropped into the killing fields of them at least. and we have been warning about it as you know, for the past ten months. is that what the war in gaza, unless the war in gaza ends now not tomorrow, we could really, all you need is a trigger that
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could basically find the united states and britain in all out war in the middle east but once george as many thanks for joining us. >> appreciate it thanks and still to come team usa's simone biles misses out on gold in her last event at the paris games, but she has no problem with who took the top spot. we will explain her. >> russia for trying to spy on us. we were spying on them. >> this is a secret war secrets and spies. now streaming on max. >> what is circle surplus the field to take flight circled is the entity that gets you to the next level circle his whole life tosses limits away. circle available at walmart and drinks circle.com. >> i still love to serve snow and of course, scape. so i take kuno magnesium to support my muscle and bone health queue knows extra streak high absorption magnesium helps me
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welcome back. everyone. will the wife of donald trump's vice presidential pick j.d. vance is defending her husband after outrage over his childless cat. ladies comment. brian todd has more on how show chauvin is trying to soften the view of her husband and his message
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speaking out in a new fox interview about her husband's now infamous childless cat lady remarks when he made a quip and he made a quip in service of making a point that he wanted to make that was substantive. >> i just wish sometimes that people would talk about those things and that we would spend a lot less time just sort of going through this three-word phrase, or that three-word phrase, j.d. >> vance is controversial comments from a july 2021 interview on fox, insulting adults without children drew scorn from hollywood as well as from conservative outlets were effectively run in this country via the democrats be via our corporate oligarch's by a bunch of childless cat ladies who are miserable at their own lives. >> and the choices that they've made. >> usha vance's first solo interview comes as the trump campaign is trying to deflect attention from her husband's remarks and change the narrative. >> jd absolutely at the time. and today would never, ever, ever want to say something to hurt someone who was trying to have a family who really
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struggling with that. and i also understand there are a lot of other reasons why people may choose not to have families and many of those reasons are very good. >> it's not the first time usha vance has confidently stood by her husband politically during his two now some 20 to run for senate in ohio, she took the lead in a campaign ad, our families story isn't ohio story. my husband, jd grew up in middletown and things weren't easy. he's an incredible father and he's my best friend. >> that proclivity to be able to comfortably appear with her husband in public contrast with melania trump, who is rarely seen with the former president at public events. >> we seem melania trump humanizing her husband. that's really not the role that she's ever played. and so perhaps usha could be a really big advantage should this campaign. she's young, she's well-spoken, she's successful. >> born usha chilukuri in 1986. she was raised in a san diego suburb by indian immigrant parents and met j.d. vance when they both attended yale law school. they married in 2014 and have three young children,
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which usha vance has balanced with some impressive if professional accomplishments she clerked for two supreme court justices, chief justice john roberts, and brent kavanaugh, when he served on the us court of appeals. she recently resigned from a high-powered law firm in a 2020 podcast, j.d. vance joked about how tough it is to argue with her at home. >> oh my my god, it's terrible terrible she uses so much facts and logic during that fox interview. usha vance also seem to want to clarify reports that she and her husband had privately condemned donald trump before trump selected j.d. vance as his running and more specifically, a report in the washington post that said usha vance was upset with trump over the january 6 attack on the capitol. usha vance told fox, she has grown to understand trump's since then brian todd, cnn, washington another day of olympic drama was unfolding in paris, say slightly lighter schedule we'll
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see 15 medal events on tuesday those include finals in women's skateboarding and athletics james sprint final in men's track cycling team usa and china are currently tied a atop the middle table for most golds with 21 h. >> but the u.s. still ranks first in overall medals. and cnn's amanda davis joins me now live from paris with more great to see you, matt. take us through the highlights of monday's events i've sat laughing a slightly lighter schedule. it's not that light. and certainly the athletes involved will very much be going full steam ahead. but yesterday, i mean, we got what is being talked about as the most iconic photo of paris 2024. i'm dubbing and the abc rebecca, i'm dr. jay simone biles and jordan chiles, not only the first all-black olympic gymnastics podium, but a true show of love, support, and respect between the trio. all game changers in their own right with biles and chiles
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bowing down to celebrate brazil's entourage as she celebrates her first olympic gold that have third games after coming back from not one, not two, but three, acl tears, having won the floor competition is women supporting women in the best possible way with biles signing off here in paris with three goals at or silver and what she's described as more than how wildest dreams as speaking though of iconic pictures that a fair few have been produced 10,000 miles away from here in the french territory i've tahiti, which has venue of the surfing competition. and you might have missed while you were sleeping, team usa's caroline marks taking the gold 22-year-old, defending world surf league champion upgrading her fourth-place finish from tokyo in the best possible way to take the gold or maybe the best possible way was the way that mondo duplantis did it in the pole vault, the world champion successfully defending his gold from tokyo, setting a new world
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record well, the 24-year-old to chez keeps rewriting the record books. he's raised the world record six centimeters and the last four-and-a-half years since he first broke it previously took 23 years to move it that distance and you just have to see noah lyles reaction to mourn those achievements last night to see the respect that he deserves as an athlete. it's another massive day on the track as well though we've got one of those iconic showdowns to look forward to in the men's 1,500 meters. defending champion jakob ingebrigtsen up against world champion josh kerr. and usa's gabby thomas heading into the 200 meters, very much as the favorite, having posted the fastest time in the semifinals, rosemary well done. >> amanda davies joining us live from paris. now go off and have some fun. appreciate it. coming up. but some israeli soldiers are speaking out against the war in gaza and are refusing to go back to fight.
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ibd degree, 69369 i'm bill weir on the california coast and this is cnn the israeli
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military returned 89 bodies to gaza on monday, were palestinian officials are preparing them for a massive burial. a warning viewers may find this video disturbing family members of missing people gathered at the burial site, hoping to find information about their loved ones palestinian officials say the bodies were handed over in a shipping container. and the israelis did not provide their identities or information about when or how they died gaza's civil defense officials say some of the body bags contained the remains of more than one person. and now forensic specialists are examining them to find out details some israeli soldiers who have fought in gaza are reconsidering what they were ordered to do in the enclave. one former reservers tell cnn that he witnessed serious misconduct and says many troops
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were motivated by anger or revenge for the october 7 attacks jeremy diamond speaks to some israelis who now refuse to go back to the war michel offers eve is interest protesting israel's war in gaza. >> he served in it? >> and now as the war enters its 11th month, he's refusing to serve again. it just feels like this is my duty now, i go after doing whatever i did there, i feel like my duty to oppose this as much as they can my voice to be part of this, of this fight michael served as a fire control officer monitoring threats to israeli forces in gaza and approving airstrikes from across the border. you are watching live feeds of these airstrikes happening? >> yeah. and what were you seeing though? no audio. just video. we just see the feed. and then all of a sudden you see just a building goes bu you know, goes up in flames like baking mushroom clouds.
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>> it looks like a video game exactly and then you start seeing that the aftermath of those strikes. at some point your brain kinda cannot disconnect those two things anymore. they start to connect. this is happening in real life and has an actual effect on those people so you start connecting the dots once he connected those dots, there was no going back and even had opened at the end of may, he and 40 other military reservists said they would not serve again, signing an open letter declaring our conscience does not allow us to stand up and lend a hand to the desecration of the lives of the hostages and to sabotage another day. >> deal. >> i'm actually supposed to be there now i was called back i told them i cannot come cannot and clear conscience come and do this and clear mind clear, hard cannot just cannot participate in this thing the main vibe was we shoot first, ask questions later. it became
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clear to you that the system was not doing all it could to protect civilians? yeah yeah. >> very, very clear at some point because most of the pictures are take you've all greene is taking the same stand after wrestling for months with his service as a combat medic in gaza. >> i was always in conflict, wasn't simple, but i felt like i abandoned my friends at this moment when they need me the most but the measurable destruction around him became impossible to ignore. and so was the language of revenge. he says that seemed to imbue everything is israeli soldiers in his unit did in gaza the way they spoke the violent way they spoke ideas like killing the entire population of gaza suddenly became almost almost normal. what was that moment when you decided? i can't be a part of this anymore. >> basically, they told us to after one of the houses we've used to procure, protect ourselves. we went out of it and this was a house in they'll
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can yunus a place that would be definitely rehabilitated by the posterior ends afterwards. and they told us to burn it down because we're burning down every house were coming out of i said, this is just not good enough reason to take away the house of two or three families not doing that. if we're doing that and leaving the commander of my company just didn't have good enough answer is and i just left the next day. >> you've all jumped into a vehicle making a supply run out of gaza. he never went back. there is a sense in israel that if you refuse to serve or if you criticize the war that you can be viewed as a trader in some ways. >> yeah, a lot of the closer of my closer friends and families are more afraid that i'd be harmed because of those interviews, then i was in gaza crazy, right? >> these really military has yet to try and call uvalde back
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to active duty but as the war rages on, in a wider regional war looms, the military could process the you volun michael for refusing to serve. >> i do prefer to go to jail than to participate in what we're doing gaza. but i prefer to do neither if it's possible he may need a cease to turn that hope and to reality. now, in response to uvalde green's allegations, the israeli military says that it follows israeli and international law and that buildings are only destroyed in order to quote, remove a threat, they say that any destructions of buildings that don't fit operational needs are quote, contrary to the army's orders and the idf values and will be examined jeremy diamond, cnn, haifa, israel still to come hundreds arrested as violent far-right protests sweep the uk. and new prime minister keir starmer is vowing to end the riots we'll have the latest in a live
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everyone. britain's new prime minister is vowing to end the riots sweeping the uk with what he calls a standing army of police, ready to bring biden protesters to justice, facing his first major crisis since taking off offers keir starmer cheered his first emergency response meeting known as cobra on monday, he says far-right agitators of seized upon the deadly stabbing of three young girls in southport, england last week using that tragedy to spread anti-immigrant and anti-muslim disinformation starmer says it's nothing more than violent, organized, thuggery and cnn salma abdelaziz joins me now, live from london. good morning to you, salma. so what is the latest on these violent protests sweeping the uk yes, if we're nearly a week now, rosemary, these massive demonstrations that have taken place in town he's in centers across the country have really rocked the uk. >> we've seen mosques and
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muslim communities attacked. we've seen these very tense and violent clashes with police in multiple places across the country. and we've seen this very violent rise of heat in anti-immigrant sentiment that keir starmer, the country's prime minister, has responded to with what one could call an iron fist. he has said he has no tolerance for the violence that's taking place and that he will crack down. i want you to take a listen to how he laid out his plans to quell the violence we'll run pop criminal justice they've already been hundreds of arrests. >> some of appeared in court this morning. >> i've asked for early consideration of the earliest naming and identification of those involved in the process. who will feel the full force of the law and thirdly, i've been absolutely clear that the criminal law applies online as well as offline, and i'm assured that that's the approach that is being taken.
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>> so far, 370 people have been arrested, but authorities expect that number to go up because as you heard, there, the government has promised, has vowed to find every single individual involved in these violent riots into prosecute them, keir starmer has said that he will find extra spaces does in prison. he's creating more hours in the court system to prosecute these people more quickly and they're reaching out to technology companies. and this is absolutely key, rosemary, because the lever for this is on social media where this misinformation and hate bread online where individuals were able to organize these violent rally. again around the country. the country's technology secretary met with some of the key social media companies, meta, tiktok, others in began to lay out the need to crack down on this misinformation. but rosemary, when you have the head of one of these companies on musk, of course the head of x himself, engaging in for tat with keir starmer himself, engaging in
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misinformation and trying to fan the flames by saying there could be a civil war in the uk. it's hard to imagine. yes, keir starmer could get a grip on the streets, but how does he get a grip online? >> yeah. important question. salma abdelaziz, joining us live from london. many thanks. thank you for spending part of your day with me. i'm rosemary church, cnn newsroom continues next with max foster and christina macfarlane in london brad job for a minute i'm
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