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sounds like what is the next step in something like this what we do know that after the attack, the hamas attack on october 7 in israel, that jihadi groups, particularly isis, have made renewed calls for tax on the west christopher wray has been on the hill and warned multiple times with these, not just here, but abroad as well. >> and so what it means that these are very complex investigations that need to unravel. individuals may not even know each other. there could be desperate, different cells that are controlled by one individual. they could be linked. and so until they run to ground, all they're contacts, all the connections they've made phone calls, emails, they really can't be sure that there's not other individuals out there looking to harm taylor swift concert goers yeah. >> obviously, it's certainly a concerning update that will pay close attention to given there are more concert scheduled in the future, we'll see what security looks like for those donell harvin, a great to have
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you >> and the latest reporting on this. thank you. thanks. >> thank you so much for joining us. the news continues right here on cnn rallying crowds in battleground states while team trump tries to slow a democratic momentum with a, by trawling j.d. >> vance taylor swift's eras, tour concerts canceled in vienna details on the foiled terror plot. and what osteon officials say about the suspects and thousands march in anti-racism protests across the uk. and a clear message against recent far right anti anti-immigrant violence live
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from london. >> this is cnn newsroom with max foster we begin with a us presidential race, where the road to the white house runs through seven key battleground states and democrat kamala harris is campaigning in five of them this week. whilst donald trump remains at home in florida with an event scheduled for friday in republican stronghold montana. some of his supporters turned out to heckle harris in michigan to end the affordable care act. you know if you want donald trump to win, then say otherwise speaking introducing voters to her vice presidential running mate, minnesota governor tim walz she's hoping his midwestern roots will add to the campaigns momentum and win over undecided voters. these ideas that they're putting out there, they are weird as hell. no one's asking for it. >> and look, as we move our
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nation forward donald trump intends to take our nation backward while harris and walz will campaign in phoenix, arizona, and las vegas, nevada in the next few days, cnn's jeff zeleny has more on the presidential race we cannot go back. >> hours has to be a fight for the future and a fight for freedom the new democratic ticket on the road as vice president kamala harris and minnesota governor tim walz, barnstorm battleground states 90 days before the november election. i couldn't be prouder to be on this ticket to help make kamala harris the next president of the united states one day after making a philadelphia debut harris and walz visiting wisconsin and michigan as a bitter battle with the republican rivals take shape. what kamala harris is telling all of us by selecting tim walz, is that she bins the knee to the far left of the
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democratic party, senator j.d. vance, taking the lead in a furious scramble to define walz attacking his record as governor and as service in the army national guard. >> he has not spent a day in combat zone. what bothers me about tim waltz is the stolen valor garbage do not pretend to be something that you're not vance accused his rival of ducking his service to iraq when walz left the national guard and ran for congress in 2005. but walz actually retired two months before his unit received alert orders for deployment at 17, i joined the army national guard for 24 years. i proudly wore the uniform of this nation the 2024 race is now fully joined with harris and walz crisscrossing the country together this week and itinerary vance, it's closely shadowed tropical storm debby interrupting plans for the candidates to visit north carolina in georgia. >> their paths or planes at least cross today on a tarmac and wisconsin, i just wanted to
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check out my future plane, but i also wanted to go say hello to the vice president, former president donald trump's spent the day away from the campaign trail calling into fox news this program to try and diminish harris and walz. >> nobody knew how radical left she was, but he's a smarter version of her, a full look at the minnesota governor complicates the liberal brush, trump and vance are seeking to paint him with a social studies teacher and football coach elected to a republican leaning congressional district. now i went to a second term as governor, where he's defending his progressive agenda. >> mind your own business. >> i don't need you telling me about our health care. >> i don't need you telling us who we love and i sure the hell don't need you telling us what books we're going to read. >> the spotlight on vice presidential hopefuls will soon give way to the top of the ticket and back to a debate over debates bates, trump signaled a new willingness to meet harris on a network other than fox, we'll be debating her, i guess in the pretty near future a new ingredient in the
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democratic ticket, enthusiasm from rallies like this here in detroit, vice president harris, governor walz, arriving here after being in wisconsin, of course on tuesday night in philadelphia, those three states of course, are critical cornerstones of their electoral strategy that blue wall, they need to defeat donald trump. this race now feels fully joined with former president trump, senator j.d. >> vance, aggressively trying to really a brand their opponents as too liberal for office but the democratic ticket trying to keep this momentum alive, the democratic convention less than two weeks in chicago jeff zeleny cnn detroit us president joe biden says he believes republican presidential candidate donald trump, will not accept the outcome of the election if he loses. in an interview on cbs on sunday, mr. biden also warned that trump is installing his supporters as local election certification officials. >> are you confident that there will be a peaceful transfer of
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power in january 2025, if trump wins. no, i'm not confident at all. i mean if trump loses, i'm not coughing immediately says we don't take him seriously. he means it all the stuff about if we lose, there'll be a bloodbath. it's metal. have these stolen like to look, they're trying to do now in the local election districts where people count the votes elected they're putting people in place in states that are they're going to count the votes, right? he can't love your country only when you win it's almost gift, the director of the center on us politics at university college london. >> he joins me now from harrisburg, pennsylvania. thank you so much for joining us and certainly we see this momentum that we've behind the harris campaign, but should never underestimate trump either going on past experience. why do you think he appears to be lying low? i'm not saying years, but it feels like that when you've got both the candidates out for the democrats, that any one of them
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out for the republicans? >> what's great to be with you, max, thanks for having me in this election has a totally different feel to it from just a couple of weeks ago, you're absolutely right. it wasn't long ago that trump had emerged defiant from the assassination attempt. there was excitement about who is vp pick was going to be. then there was a gop convention where trump was welcomed almost as a message jannik figure. trump's campaign was talking about putting money into states that republicans hadn't competed in, in years. now, it's a totally different story. he's complaining that he's having to be two candidates. joe biden and now kamala harris. harris is rollout of her campaign, her endorsements the way she's consolidated support, all of it has been and really impressive. and i think trump just knows that the limelight is not with him right now. and so he'd rather spend money and energy after this honeymoon period is over. i think we're going to see a lot more of trump after the democratic convention. but meanwhile, he's really kind of lacking energy and struggling to keep on message they've got a mess this haven't lay on the
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walls, which is questioning his military record. >> do you think they'll get some momentum with that? because obviously walz has made a big thing about his service to the country yeah it's certainly an issue that j.d. vance, who is making on the campaign trail the last couple of days i think that the story there is a little bit ambiguous. we have seen some parallels in the past. if you remember, with john kerry and swift boat veterans for truth there there was a lot of concern about what his record look like. i think that they're kind of using the same playbook here. but really waltzes story with respect to his military services is not a straightforward, i think as republicans are making it really, republicans need to focus on the issues i think they're trying to paint. walton kamala harris as just too far left, just too progressive and not representative of where
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mainstream americans are at the moment they're working hard in these swing states they need there's a strong base, isn't there? >> kamala harris, if you look at the polling, but many of the groups that she appeals to don't always turn out at elections. so big question for them is they might have the support, but can they actually get the votes? >> yeah. no, absolutely. i think turnout is what elections are all about now, in the united states and it's one reason maybe why kamala harris did you choose a candidate who is perceived as maybe further to the left than some of the other alternatives that she was looking at for vice president because she really needs to make sure that the base it's turns out. i mean, if there's one thing that we know about donald trump, he always galvanizes the base, see as this floor of support, huge amount of enthusiasm. they're going to come out. so under joe biden, there was just a lot of concern that many democrats are almost looking at a loss as a forgone conclusion. now there's been some energy
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reinjected into the campaign. and ultimately, i think you're right in states like pennsylvania, ohio, michigan, florida it's all going to be about the base. >> what did you make of biden's comments on trump? not accepting the election results. if he loses, a lot of people assuming that will happen. but why did he use that? meta emphasize that biden well, i think that this is a big part of the democratic story against donald trump and republicans more generally, which is that they don't respect to elections. >> and if you look at what happened in 2020, i think joe biden certainly has a legitimate case here. at the same time, i'm not sure if this democracy is at stake. message is ultimately resonating with voters. when joe biden was the nominee or presumptive nominee, he was really struggling to gain traction on that so you can only take that so far, i think ultimately this election is going to be about some of the issues and it's going to be a
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referendum on trump they're americans want to go back to the chaos and the drama and everything involved in his presidency i think we can expect to hear much more about democracy being at stake, both at home and abroad. in the next week or two, but democrats need to get back to the issues health care, the economy, education, and so on. >> okay. thomas gift as ever. thank you so much for joining us thanks. >> facts now, singer taylor swift has canceled a weekend of concerts in vienna, in austria. >> off police foiled an alleged terrorist plot targeting the stadium where she was scheduled to perform so there's kristie lu stout following developments from hong kong. thankfully, it was foiled. christie yeah, thankfully it was foiled as we heard from austria's chancellor, tragedy has been prevented. >> this after taylor swift's three concerts in austria were abruptly canceled and prompted that was when austrian police
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arrested two people on suspicion of plotting a terror attack. now, taylor swift was scheduled to perform three shows in vienna. today, august the eighth august 9, and tenth as well. and police said that they were expecting about 65,000 people attending each show and up to 15,000 additional people outside the stadium without tickets. and that fed security concerns on social media. we heard from barracuda music. this is the promoter for taylor swift's concerts in austria. and they issued the following statement. they said this quote with confirmation from government officials of a planned terrorist attack at ernst happel stadium. we have no choice but to cancel the three scheduled shows for everyone's safety, unquote. now sufficient website says all tickets for the shows will be automatically refunded. now, let's get to the arrest on wednesday morning. police arrested in 19-year-old austrian citizen, who pledged allegiance to israel i'll make state this arrest took place and i believe we have the map for you took place in ternitz, which is located south of
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vienna. and it was there that's where officials found chemical substances at the suspect's home, and that signals a possible link to bomb-making. now, later on wednesday, they detain another person in vienna police say that the two suspects, both of them were radicalized by the internet and that they were taking quote, concrete measures for a terror attack. these him target here events in the greater vienna region on austrian police, they say, this is interesting. they said that further detentions have been made in relation to the alleged plot, and they've also increased surveillance. take a listen to this i think you should be a concrete danger has been minimized, but there is an abstract increased danger therefore, increased surveillance to the extent that we will, in any case carry out increased searches on both on-site and during the access controls we are waiting word from taylor swift. >> she has yet to comment on the cancellations to her 283
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million fans on her official instagram account. max, back to you. >> kristie, in hong kong. thank you. >> these were all bracing for retaliation from iran and his allies. >> it appears to iran's most powerful proxy, hezbollah may strike first with sources telling cnn the lebanon based militant group could launch a direct attack on israel in the coming days, regardless of what iran intends to do, israel as being anticipating some sort of attack in response to its killing of a top hezbollah military commander in lebanon last week israel is also widely believed to have assassinated the political leader of hamas, ismail haniyeh in tehran. and officials say iran still appears to be planning its response. journalist elliott gotkine, following developments for us joining us from manchester, elliott is there a disconnect here between hezbollah and iran? you would assume they'd be coordinating you would assume that they would be coordinating and even if hezbollah does go it alone,
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you would assume that iran would be very much kept abreast of what hezbollah is planning on doing. >> and we heard just a couple of days ago from hassan nasrallah, the leader of hezbollah, saying that making israel wait for any retaliation was in his words parts of the punishment and saying that hezbollah would respond to the assassination of its top military commander for word, shakur in south beirut last tuesday, in his words, regardless of the consequences. and now as you say, we get word from two sources familiar with the intelligence telling cnn that hezbollah may go it alone regardless of what iran is doing because of course we still don't know what iran is planning either. but the difference is that it obviously iran certainly seems to be pondering its response more so, but on top of that, hezbollah, of course, being on israel's doorstep, can carry out responses with little to no notice. i should also point out that the simmering for tat strikes that we've seen over the past ten months was
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continuing yesterday, israel saying that hezbollah launched at ten projectiles and three drones towards it and that it responded by taking out a rocket launcher and also by taking out by dismantling hezbollah infrastructure. so still very much on edge for whatever hezbollah's response will be. and also of course, 40 rounds might be max okay. >> we'll wait and see. thank you we'll trade race. will trade racist for refugees. just one of the slogans from the latest uk rallies, how these protests has prevented further violence ahead. plus two years kresse astronauts are stuck on the international space station. there's a safety issue with the starliner spacecraft that was supposed to take them home. i will have details on what happened there i'm thinking if i'm going to die and i thought that was it violent earth with liev schreiber? back-to-back episodes saturday at nine on feel like i lose track of at least $500 a month.
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across the southeast, spawning at least ten reported tornadoes so far, along with sustained flooding, nearly 41 million americans are under heat alerts as well, raising concerns for customers with no electricity due to the storm in juneau, alaska, more than 100 homes have been damaged by flooding from a so-called glacial lake outburst. they rush of water was unleashed by mail, melting glacier on tuesday, which in turn caused the river to swelled to record levels. it comes almost exactly a year after a similar disaster occurred after days of violence, anti-racism protesters appear to have prevented a new round of riots in the uk. thousands fanned out across more than a dozen british cities on wednesday to stand up to the far-right agitators behind days of anti-immigrant violence please beefed up their presence as well most of the right-wingers didn't show up at the immigration and visa processing
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sensitive centers. that were thought to be the targets here. now this comes after the u.k.'s worst bout of anti-immigrant violence in more than a decade over the weekend rodgers clashed with police and damage it's public buildings there are reports the app telegram has been used to organize the rioters. the platform says its moderators are now removing calls to violence and misinformation campaigns set off all of the outrage in the first place after a stabbing attack, left three children dead in northern england and police have made hundreds of arrests that's whether you're in this country. committing crimes on the streets, or committing crimes from further afield online. we will come after you, bring a keyboard warrior does not make you safe from the law amendment. >> is the director of uk in a changing europe, he joins us now from london and they really was a big turnaround, wasn't it last night? and a lot of people really heartened by the response from everyday people
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just wanting to reclaim their streets effectively absolutely. yeah. there was a big change in tone, a big change in mood. there was a palpable sense of relief in the country that violence had been avoided. and as you say the people on the street last night were predominantly for the most part anti-racism protesters. that being said, i think we need to avoid too much mutual backslapping because clearly, we've seen some unacceptable scenes this week, there were a lot to think about whether it's the role of social media in generating violence. whether it is the vulnerability of some of these places where asylum seekers are being housed. we come out of this with plenty to think about, but on balance after last night, i think we can feel a lot more positive than we did earlier. >> yeah. and it's early days as you say, those right-wingers haven't gone away. well, a few of them have because of been locked up with pretty severe sentences. this is part of the government's strategy, but the sentiment is still there and it could flare up again. i mean, some people arguing that this was a thursday, perhaps people
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weren't drinking as much so leave. it to the weekend. i mean what's your feeling about what might happen from here i mean i can't predict what's going to happen. >> it seems to me that weekend seem to be times when people go out and drink far more. so obviously dependent on the weather, the forecast for this weekend is bright and sunny and that will make a difference and i think also above and beyond the sort of immediacy of the protests, we need to think about the fact that there is significant, there is a small minority in this country that is significantly dissatisfied with immigration policies, asylum policies, and things like that. those flames have been fanned thank by years of pretty irresponsible political rhetoric that is very noticeable that some of the anti-immigrant protesters on the streets were chanting stop the boats, which was precisely the slogan of the sunak government again, there are things to reflect on here above and beyond the immediacy of the
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riots and the protests yeah, it's an interesting point you make because it has been noted that we talk about places like france and you talk about the rise of the far right there's a similar right-wing movement here in the uk, but it's effectively mainstream because centrist governments are adopting right-wing policies like stop the boats yeah, i think you're absolutely spot on that actually, too often. we congratulate ourselves because populist parties aren't in power while forgetting that in some places center right parties adopt the policies of the populist, right? so effectively, that their agenda is empower. it's worth putting it into context. i mean we're, talking about a relatively small minority. i mean, one of the things that is striking about the united kingdom at the moment is over the last sort of seven or eight years since our referendum on eu membership overall public opinion on immigration has become significantly more positive than it was then. this isn't a country where the majority of
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people think immigrant question is a massive problem, but there is a very vocal minority some of whom we saw on the streets for whom it is the priority issue and who wants to cause trouble it's been interesting how the government and the police have a new government, obviously, but clearly the new home secretary is pretty well respected by the police forces. >> there had been a very close coordination. the police have got what they wanted they came out in force. there are pretty restrained, weren't they when they needed to be as well and they're looking at major punishments extended core hours. so people are sent to prison straight away if they found guilty with severe sentences but i was also very interested in this other punishment they're looking at, which is banning these thugs from football matches. just explain the link between the game and many of these people who are being arrested well, it's a complicated link, but of course traditionally,
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historically we used to get a lot of violence at football matches and police use to monitor suspected football hooligans and football was a channel for a lot of this anti-racism anti anti-immigrant hatred, and racism. >> so in a way think, this is logical because another obvious way the football season in this country starts again on saturday i think a logical way in which some of these anti-immigration protesters might decide to continue. their struggle is via football matches at the weekend. so i think it's a sensible step by the police to say, okay we've identified these people involved and while we're at it, we're going to stop and go into football and causing trouble as well yeah. i'm anna, we'll be watching it very closely. thank you for your insight today thank you the democratic nominee for us vice president is facing questions about his dozens of visits abroad. tim walz and look, china. connection just ahead, plus ukraine turns the tables on. russia, sends its troops across the border. now, moscow
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one unlimited line and get one free for a year. get the fastest connection to paris with xfinity. free text. now this is cnn. >> the world's news network welcome back to cnn newsroom. >> i'm max foster. if you're just joining us, our top stories, officials in austria have arrested two people for an attempted terror plot on taylor swift's eras tour concerts in vienna the suspects were allegedly radicalized online and one claims to be an isis sympathizer. organizers have canceled all three of the vienna shows. thousands of anti racism protesters took to the streets here in the uk on wednesday as a message of solidarity for migrant communities to counter far-right immigrant sentiment and violence and kamala harris and her running mate tim walz, hit the campaign trail across
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the u.s. midwest. the two made their debut in wisconsin rally their largest crowd of supporters in michigan as part of a battleground blitz, which is going to carry on through this week whilst his sudden rise to national prominence is bringing scrutiny from republicans looking to attack his record. and that includes his long history with china, the gop is seizing on his dozens of visits to the country over the past 35 years, taking students on school trips than even going there on his honeymoon. cnn's will ripley has our report in the summer of 1989, about two months after china's military massive pro democracy protesters in tenement square tim walz in american teacher fresh out of college, traveled halfway around the world to china, paying respects in beijing, where so many people die, i felt it was more important than ever to go to make sure that story was told them to let chinese the chinese people know. we were standing there,
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we were with them president of the united states 35 years before becoming the democratic nominee for vice president, walz volunteer to spend a year in china teaching english and american history to mainland chinese students. >> the nebraska native, later telling his hometown newspapers, he was treated like a king and there was no anti-american feeling whatsoever. walz moved to minnesota, teaching high school there for years. who got married on june 4, 1994, the fifth anniversary of the tenement square massacre. you wanted to have a date hill always remember, his wife told a local paper at the time, they spent their honeymoon taking students on a two-week tour of china, hong kong, and macau. those students trips became a summer tradition alphago back in a heartbeat, in a heartbeat because it wasn't political for us. >> it wasn't any of that. it was it was an educational trip with one of our favorite teachers, carrer rome hale
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says, she and her classmates still talk about their trip to china with mr. walz in 1998 it felt very, very comfortable and we went all over, you know, train rides a whole bunch of different places. >> just seeing a different culture they're having respect for it while seen it, knowing that it's different, but knowing that that's okay, too. >> since entering politics in 2006, walz has consistently criticized china's human rights record. in congress. he co-sponsored a resolution condemning the arrest of nobel laureate, you shall bow he also met with the exhale dalai lama in 2016, and even hamas governor tim walz hear happy chinese new year all the while advocating empathy for everyday chinese people, support or say, his understanding of the country could lead to more informed, pragmatic policy let's seize critics like republican richard grenell, a former trump ambassador to germany, label walz pro china and on china's tightly controlled internet, some question walls. >> his reasons for traveling to
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china, the same year as the tiananmen protests 1989. great timing. the years he was in china make him suspicious comments on untouched by government censors but they are censoring cnn's live signal inside china earlier when this report aired, they went to bars and tone the minute that we started talking about tenement square in this illustrates the challenge that china will face in portraying tim walz. yes, he made around 30 trips to china. he humanizes the chinese people. he knows how things work over there, but he's also co-sponsored a series of resolutions supporting human rights in china and hong kong and has been a fierce critic of the chinese government will ripley, cnn, taipei moscow says hundreds of ukrainian troops have crossed the border and launched an incursion into russia's kursk region. ukrainian forces have pushed several miles into russia as moscow scrambled troops and fighter jets that's to hold them back. that appears to be the largest cross border attack
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since the war began, reportedly also involving tanks and armored vehicles for more, we're joined by clare sebastian here in london. it does feel like the game has changed here yeah, max, this was a really significant moment if you believe the russian accounts, because ukraine is still saying absolutely nothing about this cross-border incursion. >> but the russian accounts seem to suggest that this was not some kind of motley group of pro of, pro-ukrainian russian citizens, as we've seen in the past. but the actual ukrainian regular army, they'll having said that the fog of war is very much in view here, even the russian accounts have somewhat different from each other. the defense ministry it's one point saying that some 300 ukrainian personnel were involved. then we heard the head of the armed forces claiming there were 1,000 and they say that they've managed to push them back, although we are seeing some accounts this morning suggesting that fighting a ground level continues as to why ukraine would want to do this. well, i
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think that is a significant point to look out. we've seen across the, of course that russia has been able to launch a new front across the border in recent months in the kharkiv region from the north, this is just a few hundred kilometers west of that with this raid seems to have taken place. this incursion, so it could be from a military perspective that ukraine is trying to get in front of russia doing something like that again and push to cross the border to try to hit military or weapons installations that that is one thing to look out. they are, of course, facing questions around this. why would they want to deploy more resources in this new offensive when they are really on the backfoot, on the eastern front facing increasing russian pressure, russia inching forward towards key towns like pokrovsk, but of course, as i said, ukraine not saying anything about this, what they are talking about as of wednesday though, is another incident where ukrainian defense intelligence appears to have attacked. it's called the tenders spit it, which is sort
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of strip of land of the coast of southern kherson. it has occupied by russia. defense intelligence also releasing video of this. it looks like a sort of choreographed attack using multiple small boats. russia, though the russian appointed governor of kherson, this is the video you can see it there it says that russia managed to sink three of those boats. they saw them coming the rest retreated. so due to different accounts there, but i think the picture that we're building up here is that ukraine in the absence of resources and certainly manpower is using its ingenuity to try to hidden in different ways, not just on that frontline where they are struggling to hold russia back. >> thank you. glad a tense waiting game right now in the middle east, as israel braces for a possible attack by both hezbollah and iran over the assassinations of two militant leaders last week two sources tell cnn, hezbollah appears ready to strike israel. first
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independent of whatever iran might do the lebanon based militant group, iran's most powerful proxy just across israel's northern border is moving faster. and plans to attack israel in the coming days, according to those sources on wednesday, there was an emergency meeting in saudi arabia by the organization of islamic cooperation, which held israel responsible for the assassination of hamas leader ismail haniyeh in tehran as well as a top hezbollah commander last week lied to tel aviv ambassador alon pinkas, former israeli consul general in new york. thanks for joining us. do you think there's some disk coordination amongst iran and its proxies right now well, you know, it all begins with the question of how much of the proxy it is in the sense that does his battle against marching orders from iran. >> can they do something independently of iran can they
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defy iran in terms of their reaction or is well, this actually directed from unsupervised by iran that has to do it, or that affects rather the quench the main question that is on people's minds here in israel. and that is whether or not this is going to be a coordinated attack, meaning from iran and from his balah is it going to be sequential, meaning it gets start with hezbollah and then iran will join a contingent on how why broad the scope of the israeli reprisal will be or or which you see in the last few days and you alluded to it. could this just be a fierce balla israeli thing? and they, iranians will stay outside of this and just wait for the right opportunity or the right target. no one really knows it's all game of speculation, right? >> that could be the mission though, right? to confuse everyone oh, absolutely. >> i mean, if the idea, i mean
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this is, this is the textbook psychological warfare one-on-one, if you will okay. the israelis are anxious. they are panicking, they are uptight they are apprehensive they are uncertain about what's going to happen tomorrow it morals, their lives. so why should we do this now, that's, let's wait it out and stretch their nerves. i mean, if that's the tactic is working what's the atmosphere like in tel aviv right now? because obviously there's always a concern that that would be a target if hezbollah were to really ramp things up well not necessarily. >> she's about that because again, the conventional wisdom which is based on nothing but a combination of guesstimates and wishful thinking. >> is that hizballah will try and limit their response to either military targets, war, northern israel rather than go to tel aviv, which would then basically allow israel warned a
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massive israeli retaliation in lebanon and hezbollah may not be interested in that you know that is as far as the speculation and the guesstimates go but you asked about the sense the census anxiety and uncertainty you know, everyone has a sister or a brother or friends who knows supposedly. >> and he said, or she said thursday and then they said saturday and now there saying that the next thursday no one really knows and they're look, there are some tangible pieces of information here. >> there were 132 air carriers that flew into israel regularly. now they're only 24 the airport is basically empty people are going out less you can even sense it in the traffic that palpable and so the mood is sort of anticipation, expectation, and
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you know, in the dark black humor yeah. >> i all i fought so with you in this horrible atmosphere ambassador, a lumping thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. anytime my pleasure still to come a comeback worthy of a gold medal winner more on team usa's quincy hall, and the latest olympic highlights from paris after the break russian 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 circled is which hope for life tosses limits away so available at walmart and drinks circle.com when you're the leader, is as clean up and restoration. >> how do you make like it never even happened?
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i had a serious fall. i called the barnes firm. injured on a job site? call the barnes firm now. ♪ call 1-800 eight million ♪ your family is the best plan you can make we've been watching the first gold medal on day 13 of the paris olympics, the women's ten kilometer marathon swim in the river. and the goal goes to shine van rwanda, all of the netherlands, followed by australia's moshe johnson. it was the first to 27 medal events today it's a tight race for the most gold medals between team usa's 27 and china with 25, the americans have a 29 medal lead on china, though the most medals of any nation in paris the u.s.
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probably going with that medal count. amanda yeah, there's always that debate isn't there as it most medals won almost gold-medals one, but whatever whichever way you look at it, the u.s. >> are certainly having a very successful games. you hope they're not peaking too early. of course their games is isn't four years. i've been in la, but it was another incredible company back on the track where the usa's quincy hall from missouri. his profile page said his aim was just to take part here at the olympics, but he's not just done that. he has now celebrating gold, having taken the 400 meters victory in a personal-best time, it was a quick one. the fourth farces time ever run over the distance he came from fourth to first to be the pre-race favorite, matthew smith. the fight and the grit, the expressions. you can see clear for everybody to see was asked how he did it. he said, well, you can't outrun it the race is anyone's at that point. i just wanted to keep
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doing what my co somebody to do just keep driving and keep grabbing gill. we do a lot of hard practices and then we focus on coming home at the end of each practice. so that was nothing more than just me trying to go hard, just harder and harder to you, but i'm used to do yeah, it was quite incredible. we had a rematch of the world championship battle in budapest in the final of the women's pole vault, two athletes who shared goals in that one, this time with australia's nina kennedy taking the victory over her us ryan will, the defending champion, katie moon, who finished with silver kennedy, had missed out on the final in tokyo three years ago through injury. >> she's openly talks about her struggles with depression. >> but this time she saw her to the heights of olympic gold, giving australia their first ever gold in the event and more goals than they have ever won olympic games as well. >> incredibly, just four days left of competition nerve to run here in paris. lots of medals on offer. one of the most brutal event since the women's heptathlete on that is kicking off this morning with belgium's nephi tm chasing history, looking to become the
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first woman to win three golds in that events. although world champion katharina johnson, thompson, and team usa's anna hall are all hoping they have something to say. can noah lyles become the first man since usain bolt to do the 100, 200 double at the olympic games where he's unbeaten over the distance in 23 races, dating all the way back to the final i know in tokyo three years ago, this is the one he sees as his favorite events. he calls it his wife, while 100 is his mistress, his best chubb's have breaking her world record as he puts it, but it was his us teammate kenny bednarek. the silver medalist in tokyo, who posted the fastest time in the heats. and he said, after his 100 disappointment, he is a man on a mission for this swan. but following that one on the track, we have the head-to-head that people have been waiting two years for in the women's 400 meter hurdles, the defending olympic craig champions, sydney mclaughlin-levrone it up
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against the world champion femke bol, two athletes whose times are second and a half faster than anybody else? in the field, they have made the bar their own. they're the only ones to have broken 51 seconds. they are pushing each other further and further is there going to be a tough night football beating sidley loved one is being described as the impossible job that femke bol already has one medal to her name for that mixed relay, she's hoping this might be number two in paris. >> thank you so much to us astronauts went on a mission to the space station for a few days, but they may be forced to stay there for months why they're stuck and what nasa is doing about it after the break violent earth with liev schreiber, back-to-back episodes saturday at nine cnn. what the effects of viagra but faster meat roast sparks they contain. so dana, phil, and to dalla fill with sparks, dissolve under the tongue.
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