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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  July 14, 2015 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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an historic nuclear deal with iran. now it is time to convince american lawmaker and regional leaders to get on board. >> also ahead, new prison break images from mexico. moments leading up to drug lord el chapo's rush to his escape tunnel. the 16-year-old who walked from a plane crash speaks out about how she survived.
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warm welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. glad to be with you. i'm zain asher. >> i'm max foster and this is cnn newsroom. >> nearly two years of stop and go negotiations are resulted in a landmark agreement aimed at they announced the agreement on tuesday. it spells out the terms for teheran to scale back the nuclear production. in return crippling economic sanctions would be lifted but there are differenting interpretations as to when. >> these are images in teheran. you are seeing iranians celebrating in the streets. there but the deal needs to be approved by iran's supreme leader and u.s. congress as well with. president barack obama has told
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lawmakers he wants this deal to happen. >> i will remind congress you don't make deals like this with your friends. we negotiated arms control agreements with the soviet union when that nation was committed to our destruction. and those agreements made us safer ultimately. i'm confident this deal will meet the national security interests of the united states and our allies. so i will veto any legislation that prevents the successful implementation of this deal. >> there was no easy diplomatic fete arriving at this point. >> a lot of u.s. lawmakers are opposed to this deal. its implementation is technically not assured. >> a historic moment capping more than a decade of diplomacy after the latest round of 18 days of negotiations both sides claiming victory in a deal they
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hoped would transform the middle east. >> i believe this is a historic moment. we are reaching an agreement that is not perfect for anybody. but it is what we could accomplish and it is an important achievement for all of us. >> reporter: secretary of state john kerry called the final product proof the u.s. had held out for a good deal. >> good for americans and good for our partners our friends, our allies. good for the future of the middle east and good for the peace of mind of the world. that is what we pursued. that's what we insisted on for the long months of hard negotiations and that's precisely what we believe we have achieved today. >> reporter: the deal curbs iran's enrichment of uranium and reduces the stockpile of nuclear fuel. converts the underground nuclear site in to a research facility and limits iran's advance for 15 years. u.n. inspectors get more access to iran's nuclear program, but
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must give 24-days notice for suspicious sites. a stip stipulation that will anger critics. in exchange a win fall for iran. billions of dollars for u.s. and european union sanctions will be lifted as iran makes good on the deal. a u.n. embargo will end after five years, eight years for iran's ballistic missile programs but u.s. sanctions on terrorism and human rights will remain. on the streets of teheran, celebrations. iran's president predicted a, "new chapter in his nation's relations with the world." but for israel one of the quote darkest days in history. prime minister netanyahu calling it a stunning historic mistake to which israel is not bound. >> the world is a much more dangerous place today than it was yesterday. >> as expected three americans being held in iran and a fourth who went missing are absent from the deal. their families left waiting.
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the danger is today's battle of narratives will be a battle of interpretation. if all sides are not on the same page about what was agreed upon it could open a pandora'sbox box when it is time to implement the deal. >> cnn, washington. some of iran and united arab emirates support the deal. >> i hope the deal will be finalized and it's implementation will continue and stability will be achieved in the region but i have to stress that iran should reconsider its policies in iraq, syria and yemen. it should take on a positive role. we have to abandon sectarian-based policies. >> saudi arabia says the kingdom has always favored an agreement that would prevent iran from
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acquiring a nuclear weapon. >> in a statement the saudi government says quote under the nuclear deal iran has to use its resources for domestic development and to improve the living conditions of its people rather than incite turmoil in the region which would be met with harsh and determined responses from the countries of the region. >> despite the concerns raised in the u.s. and the middle east region president obama is defending the deal hem spoke to the "new york times" about the opponents' criticism. >> i think criticism is misguided. let's see exactly what we 0 obtained. we have cut off every pathway for iran to develop a nuclear weapon. the reason we were able to unify the world community around the most effective sanctions regime we have ever set up a sanctions regime that crippled the iranian economy and ultimately brought them to the table was because the world agreed with us it would be a great danger to the
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region to our allies to the world if iran possessed a nuclear weapon. we did not have that kind of global consensus around the notion that iran can't enjoy any nuclear power whatsoever. as a member of the non-proliferation treaty the npt, their argument was we are entitled too peaceful nuclear program. >> mr. obama has a lot of work to do to sell congress and people on the deal. cnn white house correspondent jim acosta has more. >> when it comes to the fall out it is on president obama. >> because of this deal the international community will be able to verify the islamic republic of iran will not develop a nuclear weapon. >> reporter: she president's global sales pitch has begun with a call that includes netanyahu, leaders in europe saudi arabia's king and republicans in congress. >> the deal we have out there,
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in my view from what i know thus far is unacceptable. >> the white house strategy flood the iran debate zone, social media showing the ways it will block teheran's path to a nuclear bomb. the president's critics say the billions of dollars in sanctions relief will do the opposite. >> they will put it in their war machine. this is a death sentence for the state of israel if this is not changed. >> reporter: if this deal works it is an obama legacy show piece up there with health care reform same-sex marriage and cuba. congress has 60 days to review and block the deal but much of the time will be during lawmakers august recess pushing a likely show down to september. >> i'm confident this deal will meet the national security interests of the united states and our allies. so i will veto any legislation that prevents the successful implementation of this deal. >> leaders from both parties have problems with the deal. consider the dispute resolution
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process which may take 30 days to brake through any iranian opposition to inspects at sites. 0 more if the u.n. is involved. >> it doesn't provide for anytime, anywhere inspections. >> the president phrases it differently. >> the organization responsible for the inspections, the iaea will have access where necessary, when necessary. >> reporter: others wonder what happened to the president's comments in 2013 when he suggested that iran would give up some of its facilities. >> we know that they don't need to have a underground fortified facility like fordo in order to have a peaceful nuclear program. >> the president told us iran does not need to have an under ground fortified facility like fordo in order to have a peaceful nuclear program. yet this military complex will now stay open. >> the big question comes down though this -- do the deal's opponents in congress have the two-thirds vote need ed to
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override a presidential veto? the answer from both ends of pennsylvania avenue is no they don't. president likes to say he will live long enough to see whether or not this deal fails. now it is all but certain he will have that chance. jim acosta cnn, the white house. we are joined by josh roggin cnn political analyst. josh when obama was campaigning for the presidency in the first place, he talked about engaging back then, didn't he with hostile regimes. this is very much part of a long-term strategy, what he sees as one of his legacies. >> president obama when campaigning promised to out stretch his hand in the hope that rogue regimes would enclinch their fists. he was ridiculed by republicans and hillary clinton who called him naive. nevertheless he set upon this strategy when coming in to office first by pursuing smaller engagements like myanmar, north korea and cuba.
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north korea didn't work out but u.s. relations with myanmar and cuba have been revolutionized. this deal, the iran deal is bigger in scope and scale than those previous efforts. it's simply the most ambitious, most aggressive and most risky of rahm's policies in pursuit of that campaign promise. so whereas the down sides of failing with north korea 0 or cuba or myanmar would have little blow back for u.s. security and position the region the down side if this deal collapses, would be huge, not just for the president's legacy by also foreign policy. >> critics of the iran deal could point to myanmar, couldn't. they it all looked positive to start. and it is still positive in many ways according to a lot of analysts. at the same time it has been back pedaling since and regressing. you could use it as a criticism of how this overall strategy perhaps isn't as perfect as it
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seems. >> sure the obama administration has been clear this week in not promising that the iran deal with cause a revolution in iran's internal politics or its approach to the region of the world. they are holding out that hope expolices it isly. it is part of the calculation that this is a possibility. when you look at myanmar, it is totally a mix ed picture. in cuba there's been scant signs of actual political reform or progress. what the administration's response has been this week is they point to the soviet union and say deals made with the soviet union eventually led to the opening of that country. none of these examples are exactly on point. iran is a unique situation, because of regional aspirations and activities in so many other countries and linkage to so many other foreign policies the u.s. is involved in none of these provide good precedence. the truth is despite the obama administration's claims that the deal will produce a benefit in the region and republicans
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claims it will not produce a beneficial flult the region the bottom line is nobody really knows them future hasn't been written and could go either way. that's the essence of the risk the obama administration is taking. >> can he implement the strategy on iran before his time's up? it is so crucial to him, isn't it? >> my analysis is the president will be able to implement the deal and pursue all of the processes for the remainder of his term. that's based on two with calculations. one, the president has set up the deal so the sajss lifted first are not the ones congress imposed. in other words congress will not have to lift sanctions during obama's term as president. second there will be an effort in congress led by congressional republicans to disapprove of the deal if -- effectively halting its implementation. what obama needs is one-third of house democrats or one-third of senate democrats to back him. the administration has been working hard with nancy pe
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lowcy. it believes she can muster 145 house democrats needed to prevent the deal from being scuttled by congress and most analysts will say that will be possible and the deal will be preserved. >> josh thank you very much. >> anytime. newly released video shows the moment mexican drug lord joaquin guzman escaped from a maximum security prison. this is surveillance video from his cell. you can see him pacing several times. >> 45 seconds later, he sits down on his bed. begins to take off his shoes and then he walks toward the corner of his cell. mexican officials say this is the area where guzman also known as el chapo escaped through a tunnel built under the shower in his cell. now take a look at. this this is surveillance video from outside of the cell. it shows the moment before el chapo disappears. if you look at the upper right kornder of your screen you can see anymore the background.
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>> off he goes. authorities say el chapo used this motorcycle to move through the tunnel in his elaborate es skachlt mexican officials say this is the escape tunnel. showing the route he took as he made his get away. it led to a half built house outside of the prison walls and we spoke to nick valencia about how easy guzman escaped. >> monitoring his movement and the left the bracelet behind before he slipped in to the tuchbl according to the equivalent of the interior minister of mexico is prison guards likely helped el chapo escape. there's no other way really for him to have done it so easily. we were actually in that prison. we managed to get in to the prison earlier today. going past one perimeter to the other. it was incredibly frustrating and seemed it was incredibly embarrassing as well for the director that our news crew was
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able to get past some of the checkpoints. no communication within that prison. if we, as a news organization, cnn, were able to get that access without being really able to or should have been able to you can only imagine what access and the ease of which el chapo moved, a man with incredible influence, a lot of money. you can not forget he was with one of the richest men in the world. that influence seems to stand today. >> so much corruption and the fact he was able to -- they were able to build that tunnel and he cycled through it. it is like something from a movie. >> the investigation continues. we will see what happens in terms of that. the teenager girl who walked away from a fiery plane in washington state is now out of hospital. >> 16-year-old autumn veatch was flying with her grandparents in a small private aircraft on saturday when it went down.
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she was able to call 911 after hiking in the wilderness to a highway where she was rescued. >> we crashed and i was the only one that made it out. >> okay. made it out -- from the collision or -- or survived? >> only one that survived. >> just gives you chills. authorities are calling veatch a super hero after hearing how she survived. >> she said they were flying and they got in to some bad weather, a lot of clouds and she said as she got in to the clouds she knew that something was wrong. she said they came out of the clouds and she said all she saw was trees. and grandpa tried to pull the plane up. couldn't and it basically bellied in hit the trees and then went down. she said it immediately caught on fire. she did try to save them. that's how she got burned. and then she said there was too much fire and she had to get
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away from the aircraft. >> reporter: did she tell you how she tried to save them? >> she reached in and tried to grab them and pull them out but said there was so much fire she couldn't and burned her hand. she didn't drink anything. she started to try a little water out of the running creeks. but didn't do too much. she was afraid she would get sick. last night she told us she went basically three days no water or food. >> crews are still looking for the plane and grand parents. coming up will greece's prime minister have to say about the deal. and deliberations are set in the colorado movie theater murder trial. we'll look back at the case.
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at tripadvisor. in a few hours greek lawmakers are set to vote on new economic reforms in order to get a third bailout from the european creditors. greek prime minister tsipras said he doesn't believe in the new measures forced upon his country but will be seeing them through. >> the bailout tsipras agreed to
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on monday is worth as much as $96 billion. much harsher than the one greek voters rejected. >> i'm not going to tell the greek people that this is a success story. this is a difference between past goth r governments. they were telling us the bailouts are a blessing. i'm just saying it is a policy that doesn't help us. and in this harsh framework we did whatever we could. we arrived to a point where we couldn't go any further. >> well this reforms include an overhaul of the system. tsipras is taking full responsibility for mistake and oversights. >> i want to take you to china where economic growth has beaten expect takes. second quarter data shows annualized rate of 7%. >> now investors -- some feared the world's second largest
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economy was stalling to financial crisis levels. >> 7% gdp growth figures did not have much effect on investor confidence. look at the shanghai composite. down 2.8%. what's that about? can you explain that. >> so volatile that market. >> okay. >> prosecution and defense lawyers wrapped up closing arguments in the movie theater murder trial in colorado. james holmes is accused of murdering 12 people and wounding 70 others in july of 2012. he jury will begin deliberating on wednesday. we look back on the case. >> at that time did you have any doubt that you would end up killing a lot of people? >> no. >> reporter: james holmes describes a mission to kill. >> the dead can't be repaired or come back to life or be normal
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again. so -- it is irreversible. >> what i heard you say is that accrues something positive for you. >> right. >> his words likely to linger with jurors. >> what about the wounded? >> they are collateral damage, i guess. >> reporter: prosecutors played 22 hours with the court appointed psychiatrist. dr. reid. one of two mental health experts who concluded holmes suffered mental illness was legally sane when he carried out the attack. >> the delusion propelled him to commit the acts. >> one doctor told jurors it made him believe killing would increase his self worth. >> i do not without being mentally ill this would have
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happened. >> reporter: the defense showed videos of holmes in jail acting strangely, falling back wards from his bunk a few months after the shooting before hospitalized for a psychotic epiepisode. proof of insanity, they say. a psychiatrist treated holmes at the university of colorado when he was a grad student. the defense highlighted ramblings that don't make any sense. while prosecutors argue the notebook provides evidence of holmes' detailed planning. holmes writes he considered bombs, biological warfare and serial murder before settling on mass murder at the movies. >> i just remember getting hit in my chest. i remember falling and landing on top of her. >> dozens of victims hold heart -wrenching stories. ashley left paralyzed after the shooting lost a pregnancy and her 6-year-old daughter veronica. >> did her hand reach back?
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>> no. i couldn't feel it. it just slipped through my hand. >> reporter: sure to weigh heavily on the hearts and minds of jurors will decide whether the man responsible for killing 12 and wounding 70 was sane when he did it. >> i was told she had -- she had passed away. >> cnn, denver. >> so hard to listen to isn't it? now 20 months of grueling negotiations are led to a nuclear deal twooi between iran and six world powers. coming up hear about the country's reaction to the agreement. still ahead, donald trump talks to cnn about his run for president and what he'd do if he were in the oval office. that's coming up. i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com.
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you are watching cnn newsroom. i'm max foster. >> i'm zain asher. let's give you the headlines. president obama is promising to veto any measure that would block the deal with iran. it will lift sanctions in exchange for teheran limiting the nooik program and allowing international inspectors to verify no weapons are being made. >> newly released video from inside of joaquin guzman's prison cell shows the moment he escaped on saturday. mexican officials said he escaped through this tunnel built under the shower inside of his cell. authorities say el chapo used his motorcycle to move through the tunnel in his elaborate escape. in the coming hours, lawmakers are set to vote on economic reforms in order to get
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a third bailout from european predators. tsipras said he doesn't believe in the new measures but will see them through. china's economy has grown by an annualized rate of 7% in the second quarter, beating expectations. there have been fears the world's second largest economy was falling to financial crisis levels. the iran nuclear deal has been a strain on relations between washington and israel. >> israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu has consistently warned the u.s. on what he feels is a bad deal and the israeli campaign is far from over. >> reporter: while there's optimism in vienna and washington. >> we have stopped the spread of nuclear weapons in this region. >> reporter: and jubilation in teheran, in jerusalem there's outrage. >> the world is a much more dangerous place today than it was yesterday.
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>> reporter: the deal reached on tuesday is meant to stop iran from becoming a nuclear power. it leaves israel at odds with the foreign policy of the most important ally the united states. >> the leading international powers have bet our collective future on a sponsor of international terrorism. they have gambled that in ten year's time. iran's terrorist regime will change while removing any incentive for it to do so. in fact, the deal gives iran every incentive not to change. >> reporter: ieshlly officials are critical under the terms of the agreement aran is allowed to keep the nuclear infrastructure. after a period of five days the arms embargo is lifted and a suspected nuclear sites will not be inspected anywhere, anywhere anytime. if the goal was to block iran's path to nuclear weapons, this deal count it. >> reporter: after the deal was
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announced, israeli prime minister netanyahu and u.s. president obama spoke over the phone. according to israeli officials he told the president the deal is a threat to israel and the whole world. >> where should a red line be drawn? >> reporter: for years, prime minister netanyahu has campaigned against a bad deal with iran. >> his excellency, benjamin netanyahu. >> reporter: in march came his controversial address to both chambers of the united states congress. though he received multiple standing ovations. the address soured his relationship with the obama administration. now that congress has 60 days to review the deal israeli officials show no signs of slowing down. the opposition is reaching out to lawmakers. >> i've discussed in recent hours with our friends at apec and other bodies in the united states and intend to go out there and speak and meet with relevant people and organizations in order to explain the inherent risks entailed in the agreement.
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israeli security cabinet rejected the deal and determined that israel is not bound by it. prime minister netanyahu says he will not stand for a nuclear iran. so the question becomes, if he feels the deal will pave the way for iran to develop nuclear weapons. what will israel do next? cnn, jerusalem. christiane amanpour spoke to one of the top negotiator. that was shortly after the deal was done. >> he called the deal a historic moment but says it is certainly not perfect. here's more of their conversation. >> history is made by good decisions implemented. i think it is good for all. it is now time to implement it. more importantly than that if you want to make history today,
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this has to be the foundation for building on something that can in fact break a several year old misperception, unnecessary crisis so we can deal with the real cry cease that are affecting all of us. >> iran has always called the united states the great satan. now you are making a deal with the united states the great satan. some are already saying it's a surrender. how will you sell it back home? >> well first of all, we have an agreement it's not with the united states but the united states is an important part of this. was an important part of the process and it is in our view a good agreement. any agreement includes compromise. we have in fact accepted some
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limitations, and reciprocation for our acceptance of those we receive quite a lot of benefit. neither side was prepared to provide the flexibility that has now led us to this agreement. if you look at the fact that now iran has a nuclear program, an enrichment program, a raekter an r&d program, peaceful because it was always peaceful nuclear program. two years ago people thought would never be accepted by any of the major powers. now heim happy these people have come to the conclusion the old way didn't work. that it has produced nothing. and two years of diplomacy has produced an agreement at least. >> what do you say to those who
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will take what a you told me about all you have gained under this agreement and say well you know what it is only ten years and then they can do whatever they want. sure they will go for this agreement. >> well the fact is if people are worried about iran's nuclear ambitions, those ambitions were always peaceful. last year it was peaceful. ten years ago it was peaceful. ten years from now it will be peaceful. they shouldn't worry about that. iran's interest in maintaining a nuclear weapons free region is paramount. we believe that nuclear weapons do not augment our security. and that is a very serious sober political analysis but founded in our religious believes. don't forget that we were victims of chemical weapons during the iran/iraq war and we had the capability of using them but never did. these are principles
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fundamental principles on which we operate. if they want to close four or 40 pathways to a bomb they can close them all because we do not want the pathway to the bomb. >> what do you say about this is not trust, this is verify and the bottom line will be what the iaea says. how do you swear what president obama and secretary kerry say which is 24/7 anywhere anytime inspections and what you say which is no it's not anywhere anytime. >> i just ask them to read the deed. >> so what is it? >> the deal is we accepted an international mechanism that is actually provides 24/7 access to nuclear facilities. we have had in the past -- it's interesting. over the past ten years, iran has been visited more often than any other country probably in some years with the exception of japan. but in the last three years, iran even exceeded japan. in the time of visits that the
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iaea made to iran in order to search iran to see whether we had any undeclared nuclear program and they didn't find any. for the past ten years they have looked everywhere in iran. we are not a member of the international protocol. two years we were with but eight years we were not but iaea inspected and inspected and inspected and didn't find any indication of nuclear weapons activity and we believe another ten years of inspection by iaea will produce the same result because we are not interested in nuclear weapons. >> what about the military sites? >> we will hear the answer to that last question in our next hour in the sect part of our interview here with him on cnn newsroom. >> still to come donald trump is laying out his plan for america. >> i want to save the country. our country is going to hell. we have a problem. i want to make america great again.
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a day of commuting the sentences of 46 nonviolent drug offenders president obama made a passionate case for overhauling the entire u.s. criminal justice system. >> that's right. speaking at the end of the naacp annual convention in philadelphia on tuesday, he called for legislation that would minimize or even eliminate sentences entirely for non-violent drug crimes. he lambasted the poor conditions he often sees in u.s. prisons. >> we should not tolerate conditions in prison that have no place in any civilized country. [ applause ] we should not be tolerating overcrowding in prison. we should not be tolerating gang activity in prison. we should not be tolerating rape in prison. and we shouldn't be making jokes about it in our popular culture. that's no joke. she's things are unacceptable.
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>> all of these issues are sure to be back on the agenda and in the spotlight on thursday when president obama visits a federal prison in oklahoma. that will be his first such visit as a sitting president or any sitting president actually. >> he wrote letters to the people he was pardoning, commuting their services. he said listen i'm giving you a second chance. okay. well, now we move to politics in the u.s. donald trump is leading a national poll for the first time in the race for the u.s. presidency. >> in the survey of republican candidates released on tuesday, trump got the support of 17% of respondents and former florida governor jeb bush at 14%. >> so wisconsin governor scott walk wither got 8% in third, and x texas senator ted cruz and marco rubio are slightly behind. >> which is why people shouldn't dismiss donald trump. despite his outspoken comments.
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>> that's right. trump spoke one on one with cnn about his run for office. >> he discussed his fellow republican contenders and how he thinks president obama is doing. dan that bash dana bash has the story. >> reporter: donald trump trashed president obama's nuclear deal with iran. >> the president said it is not built on trust but verification. >> it's not true. it's not true. >> how do you know that. >> they can do whatever they want to do? because i know many involved in the negotiation. the iranians are good negotiator and the persians are great negotiators they are laughing at us in iran. >> reporter: trump said he would have made sure americans held in iran were released as part of the deal. >> you are in the oval office and iran and the inspector of them having the nuclear weapon is in front of you. what do you do. >> it wouldn't have been that soon and not a deal from desperation, i would have doubled and tripled up the saks
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and made a better deal. >> 40% of voters believe she running for publicity. trump who with landed here on a helicopter with his name emblazoned on the side do dismissed doing this for the attention. >> they think i am doing it for publicity. i hope that is right that 40%, because a lot of them will vote for trump but won't in the polls if i'm doing it for publicity. why would i do this i'm taking abuse and this isn't fun. i want to make america great again. >> reporter: his strident criticism is drawing from bush. >> they are concerned about the way you are taking the conversation within the republican primary process. >> i don't know about that. i'll be honest with you, i want save the country. our country is going to hell.
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we have a problem. i want to make america great again. to do that you have to be bold strong you have to use the abilities i use. you need a certain ability. we don't have that in office right now. we have people who are incompetent. as far as the republican party, they are big people. they can stick up for themselves. >> that is our dana bash reporting. donald trump always speaking his mind. i cannot wait to see what happens in the primaries. >> some entertainment as well. fass natinging. half a century after the mars flyby nasa sends a spacecraft to pluto. it's unbelievable. what scientists are learning about the mysterious corner of our solar system. i don't want to live with the uncertainties of hep c. or wonder... ...whether i should seek treatment. i am ready. because today there's harvoni. a revolutionary treatment for the most common type of chronic hepatitis c. harvoni is proven to cure up to 99% of patients... ...who've had no prior treatment.
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welcome back, everyone. after five billion kilometer journey nine years in the making a u.s. spacecraft completed the first ever mission to pluto. >> copy. that we in telemetry with the spacecraft. >> that is cheering if er the probe that successfully phoned home after a communications blackout. the satellite has been taking stunning photos for days of the dwarf planet and its
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moons. as scientists say this success is an important learning tool for future space missions. >> today's mission was one more step on the journey of getting humans to mars because it gives us one more piece of the puzzle about our solar system. you know one more piece to help us understand how it all formed. what's going on here and everything. so an incredible day for everybody. >> really is. the u.s. is now the first country to send a space probe to every planet in our solar system but technically -- >> pluto is not a planet. it is a dwarf planet. but our meteorologist is joining us now. he's been looking in to how our view of the dwarf planet. it takes four and a half hours to get a photo to earth. >> they are traveling the speed of light and when you consider
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the distance it takes 4 1/2 hours to get here. 16 months is what they are saying this particular probe out there in space will take for all of the images thousands of images it has take thant hour. roughly the size and shape of a grand piano that is out. there we know it was launched in 2006 from florida 3 billion miles traveled. 30,000 miles an hour is the speed the probe is traveling at. so much learned in recent years and days with the sunlight being 900 times weaker than here on earth. you saw what we saw in 1930 when it was discovered and then work toward 1996 and then 2015 in the last couple of days. the incredible depictions coming out of the region. notice the speck in the center of the screen. we go to june, 22 million miles. it has five moons. july 1st 10 million miles away
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as of a few days ago, 4 million miles away and july 12th 1.5 million and as of the last two days or so 500,000 miles away. what we know inside the next 6 1/2 hours, nasa will release the images at a distance of 7,0007800 miles. the distance from new york city to mumbai. expansive when you put it on our planet and bring it to the surface. if it were centered over the united states it would take up 1400 miles. expansive region of europe as well. and then go to asia. it would stretch beijing to hong kong. australia, it would take the heart of australia as far as the size and of course the numbers continue. we know there are ice caps on pluto. we know parts of pluto in the southern hemisphere see little
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sunshine sometimes once every 100 years and methane and nitrogen snowfall occurs. here's a larger moon in relation to pluto as well. a lot to be learned and seen in the next few hours. >> i wonder what methane snow looks like. >> there is a heart shape on there that i find say dorable. some say it is not a heart. >> they are saying whale's tail is what nasa is calling it. >> thank you for watching. i'm zain asher. >>. please with us. crohn's disease is tough but i've managed. except that managing my symptoms was all i was doing. and when i finally told my doctor, he said humira is for adults like me who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. and that in clinical studies the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief. and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis.
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soccer. top chef. soccer. top chef. [whistles] soccer! top chef! [shouting]
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disco! [singing] say it and see it. the x1 voice remote, only from xfinity. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com from celebrations in iran to doomsday predictions in israel. see the very moment that one of the world's most notorious drug lords escapes from his prison sell. and -- >> we are locked in telemetry with the spacecraft. >> there it is. hello, everyone i'm rosemary church. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around

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