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x1 sports app right here. ah jeez it's so close. he just loves her so much. do it. come on. do it. come on! yes! awww, yes! that is what i'm talking about. baby. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com celebrations in iran following an historic deal over the country's nuclear program but not everyone shares their enthusiasm. in just a few hours greece's bailout agreement faces a critical test. and surveillance video shows the moment a notorious drug kingpin broke out of his prison cell. welcome to our viewers in the u.s. and around the world.
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i'm errol barnett. >> and i'm rosemary church. this is "cnn newsroom." with a nuclear agreement reached between iran and six world powers the focus now shifts to selling the deal at home and that may not be easy. >> after stop and go talks that lasted nearly two years an agreement was reached that requires iran to scale back its nuclear program and allow inspections in exchange for lifting sanctions. >> israel's prime minister calls it a stunning historic mistake. take a listen. >> the leading international powers have bet our collective future on a deal with the foremost sponsor of international terrorism. they gambled that in ten years' time iran easter resist regime will change while removing any incentive for it to do so.
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>> and u.s. president barack obama faces a battle with members of congress who oppose the measure. in an interview with the "new york times" mr. obama defended against critics who say that too much has been given away to iran. >> the notion that the world signed up for the sanctions in order to either achieve regime change or solve every problem in terms of iranian behavior or to say to them in perpetuity they can never have peaceful nuclear powers that was never something that was in the cards. >> now president obama will talk more about the nuclear agreement at a news conference wednesday afternoon. of course we'll carry it for you on cnn. nic robertson joins us from vienna. 24 hours ago we were confirming there was a deal. it has taken a full day to
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digest the agreement. the u.s. and iran called it historic but not everyone is so enthusiastic. >> reporter: they are not. they have a lot of concerns and it will take people a long time before they can get their hands on the document and read through it thoroughly and understand what is implied by the content. there are things like the inspection system that has been put in place that will be handled by the international atomic energy agency their responsibility to oversee not just verify the compliance but to go beyond that and try to detect if there is in any way that iran is violating, not the letter of what it signed up to but anything that it hasn't declared, to make sure that there are no covert systems in the country. so it's going to be the strength of -- and the explanations that surround those parts of the
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documents that will convince some of the detractors. nonetheless, since it was announced a huge sense of relief and happiness when the deal was signed. more than a decade to get here. smiles and relief. the world's longest nuclear talks over. >> this is an historic day because we are creating the conditions for building trust. >> talks moderator and iran's lead negotiator finally on the same page. >> i represent exactly the same paper that she read in english in persian. so don't worry. it's the same thing. >> reporter: and here's what they agreed. inspectors will have 24/7 access to iran's key nuclear facilities get rid of 98% of enriched uranium stockpile. the limitation will last for 15 years. sanctions relief with iran will
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be phased in. if iran violates the deal all sanctions will snap back. and much more. >> because of this deal the international community will be able to verify that the islamic republic of iran will not develop a nuclear weapon. >> a deal this day reaching across nations. president obama live on iranian tv. iran's president selling the deal too. telling iranians sanctions gone for good. today, at least, gaps in the agreement, like interpretations over sanctions overshadowed by the deal itself. >> the agreement we've reached fully implemented will bring insight and accountability to iran's nuclear program not for a small number of years but for the lifetime of that program. >> reporter: one of the last pieces of the deal to be hammered hammered out here was iran's demand to have an arms embargo
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lifted. secretary kerry met with iranian, russian, and european counterparts it was decided that the arms embargo would be lifted in five years and ballistic missile ban in eight years. perhaps the final link in the puzzle iran signs a deal to come clean about its nuclear past. >> this is a significant step forward towards clarifying outstanding issues regarding iran's nuclear program. >> in his interview with christiane amanpour zarif denied that iran wanted a bomb. >> if they want to close four pathways or 40 pathways they can close them all we do not want the pathway. >> finally now after years of talking the talk iran will have to walk the walk. >> we're putting to test whether or not there is a change of heart, mind or direction. if there isn't we have ever
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option available to us every day that we have right now. >> reporter: and that kerry hopes, will be enough to silence the critics. and perhaps the first test will come in the near future. the french have been invited to tehran for a meeting. the tests of the goodwill that was shown here, the tarmac -- the pedal will be meeting the tarmac here as we go forward, errol? iranians celebrated the deal in the streets on tuesday night. they chanted, danced and waved signs showing their chief negotiator mohammad javad zarif. >> they went through a lot after all these years. i'm happy about it.
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>> translator: for sure it's a good feeling, removing the sanctions have put a lot of pressure over our country. and maybe people will say everything is okay but you can see the effects on people. i hope the conclusions of the agreement are what we are look for and be great. >> translator: i wish they had done this sooner so people would not have to go through all these difficulties. >> u.s. president barack obama must now submit it to congress for review. iran's supreme leader will have to approve the deal in his country. >> we take a closer look at the next steps. >> reporter: the iran nuclear deal may have been agreed to but it has a lot of hurdles it needs to clear. one is u.s. congress that has about two months to see whether or not it wants to sign off on the deal. but the other one is iran's supreme leader. he is the highest authority
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inside iran. he is going to have to sign off on this deal if it's going to take effect from the iranian side. once that happened it doesn't mean that the sanctions are going to necessarily be lifted immediately. iran has to do some key things. it has to get rid of two-thirds of its centrifuges and dismantle them and it has to convert a nuclear reactor to make sure it does not produce high-grade plutonium. the iaea is going to have to verify that iran has complied with all the provisions and then sanctions will begin to be lifted. but it's not all of the sanctions that are going to be lifted. there are the conventional arms embargo that will remain in place another five years and there is an embargo on ballistic missiles and ballistic missile technology that will remain in
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place eight years. if that is done the sanctions will get lifted. however if iran is not complying with the terms of the deal then the sanctions can snap back into place. we will have much more reaction to the deal later this hour including a look at how the lifting of sanctions inside iran could open up a new market for investors. >> among the countries that have the highest bilateral trade in the region are the ones that have the least political relationship with iran in the region. therefore, the businessmen know where to make their bucks. >> and that part of the story is coming up in about 20 minutes here on "cnn newsroom." in a few hours, greek lawmakers are set to vote on new economic reforms to get a third bailout from european creditors. today is the deadlie to approve those measures.
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the country's prime minister says he doesn't believe in the new reforms but he says he will see them through. >> the bailout alexis tsipras agreed to on monday is worth as much as $96 billion and much harsher than the one greek voters have rejected. elinda labropoulou is live in athens and she joins us live with the latest. the big question is whether prime minister tsipras is able to convince lawmakers to approve these tough reforms by the deadlines. how is it looking so far? >> reporter: the prime minister is going to have a difficult job ahead of him. he has been talking to his parliamentarians saying this is the best he could do under the circumstances and he gave an interview last night pretty much saying the same thing, that this
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is not a great deal but the only deal available for greece. let's have a listen at that, first. >> translator: i am fully assuming my responsibilities for mistakes and for oversights and for the responsibility of signing a text i do not believe in but i am obliged to implement. i will not run away from my responsibilities. what is important is to ensure the safety of the country and of the working classes so they do not suffer an economic catastrophe and to ensure the security of the banking system and protect people's savings. >> reporter: it's that issue of responsibility and trust he is asking his own parliamentarians to back him. we do know that there have been many voices of discontent within the leading ruling party. we know however that the opposition is going to back mr.
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tsipras. so we expect that the votes will be ratified in parliament today and the deal will be endorsed. but what remains to be seen are what the political cost will be for mr. tsipras and his government the day after. >> let's go where no one really wants to go. what happens if prime minister tsipras fails to convince the greek parliament to approve these reform measures? what then? >> simply because he has all the backing of the opposition and also mr. tsipras is a figure that still enjoys a lot of popular support and also a lot of support within the parliament. in the last vote he got 251 votes in a 300 seat parliament. in the referendum he got 60%. we expect the measures to be voted in. but the political cost will be great and there is a chance. we are definitely expecting a reshuffle right after the vote
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and possibly we could be looking at a grand coalition in a short space of time or possible elections ahead in the fall. but it's too early days. everyone is concentrating to make sure that the measures are voted in to see whether that gives the european central bank the green light for the banks to reopen or for some liquidity so start flowing back into the country. that remains a huge issue for greece. the economy has been standing still for two and a half weeks. >> that is the hope. we will be watching it very closely to see how this vote ends. elinda labropoulou reporting there live from athens. many thanks to you. now to china where economic growth has beaten expectations. second quarter data shows that the gdp grew 7%. >> analysts were on edge. some had even feared the world's
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second largest economy was stalling. >> now still to come here on "cnn newsroom," a judge in the u.s. ordered the release of video which shows police shooting and killing an unarmed man. plus more of this video showing the moments mexican drug lord joaquin guzman snuck out of his prison cell. and search crews have found plane wreckage in an area where a teenaged girl says her plane crashed over the weekend. we'll get you the latest on this information after the break. bp 64/40 sterilize sites. multiple foreign objects in the body. tweezers. (buzz!) (buzz!) if you're the guy from the operation game, you get operated on. it's what you do. (buzz!) if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance you switch to geico. it's what you do.
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transportation officials say they located plane wreckage in an area where a teenaged girl emerged from the woods on monday. >> crews have not been able to reach the site yet and they have not identified the plane or whether the girl's grandparents are in the wreckage. >> this is a surprising and shocking story. autumn veatch was released from the hospital tuesday three days after a plane carrying her and her grandparents crashed into a mountain. >> she was forced to leave her
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grandparents behind. dan simon has more on how she walked for days to safety. >> reporter: the washington wilderness spectacular but unforgiving. no one knows that more now than 16-year-old autumn veatch the lone survivor of a small plane crash that left her alone and scared as she had to claw her way to safety through this terrain. >> we are just impressed with her. >> reporter: the ordeal lasting 48 hours with autumn using every bit of her small frame to trek an unknown distance in the dark and call. >> 911. what is your name? >> autumn veatch. >> this is the teenager talking to a 911 operator after being rescued she had been driven to a country store. she was later described as dazed. >> i was riding from montana to bellingham washington and i
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don't know where but we crashed and i was the only one that made it out. >> okay. made it out? from the collision -- >> from the plane. >> or survived? >> the only one that survived. >> reporter: autumn's step grand parents did not make it. mr. bowman 62 years old, was said to be at the controls. >> are you injured at all? >> yeah, i have a lot of burns on my hands and i'm, like kind of covered in bruises and scratches and stuff. >> okay. all right, autumn how old are you? >> i'm 16. >> autumn stayed with the bodies in the wreckage for about a day hoping that help would arrive. but after a while she decided to make the trek into the woods. >> she was shaken and distraught. >> reporter: for 24 hours she hiked with no cell phone coverage or map. she followed the river down
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stream. >> she looked like she had been in the woods for quite some time. >> reporter: the owner knows the dangers of flying this region. >> classic jagged peaks. >> i'm happy she is safe. >> reporter: autumn was taken to the hospital for observation and reunited with her father who had spent what seemed like eternity wondering whether he would see his daughter again. >> i didn't want to it to be real. i thought not until it was confirmed and i just didn't feel like she was. >> reporter: autumn has a burn to one of her hands because she tried to reach into the plane as it was on fire and pull her step grandparents to safety. she did everything she could to save them. dan simon, cnn, brewster, washington. >> incredible story. there. a federal u.s. judge has ordered the release of a police dash cam video from 2013 showing an incident where police shot an
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unarmed robbery suspects in california killing one of them. >> the video we're about to show you has been released as part of a $4.7 million settlement even though the city and the police department tried to keep it under wraps. some of you may find this disturbing. n see the three men who were mistakingly suspected of stealing a bicycle standing in the street while officers scream for them to keep their hands up. two comply but one appears to be confused by the directions and
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that's when offers open fire. >> reporter: the gardena police chief described the shooting as tragic for all involved. says the department is moving forward with its appeal against the release of the video saying as our lawyers expressed in court we have privacy concerns as it relates to the release of police videos in general. we worry about the impact on victims and average citizens who are recorded by the police. video shows the moment that mexican drug lord joaquin guzman escaped from a maximum security prison. this is surveillance video from inside guzman's prison cell on saturday. you can see him spacing back and forth there. >> and 45 seconds later, guzman takes off his shoes, walks to a corner of his cell. this is where guzman escaped through a tunnel built under the shower in his cell. video from outside the cell also
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shows guzman in the upper right corner there, just moments before he disappears. >> and authorities say el chapo used this motorcycle to speed up his escape through the tunnel. this video shows the route that guzman took. the tunnel led to a half built house outside the prison walls. >> and all of that suggests he had inside help outside help. that's the suspicion. the mexican government therefore is offering a $3.8 million reward for any information leading to el chapo's recapture but it's he could be hiding in so many places. cnn's brian todd looks at some of the leads in this manhunt. >> reporter: a new picture of the drug lord joaquin "el chapo" guzman and new information on a key piece of intelligence that may not have been heeded. a law enforcement official says following his capture in 2014
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d.e.a. agents developed threads of information including that relatives and associates were looking for ways to get him out of prison. the official says u.s. officials had no specific information on guzman's escape on saturday but they passed along what they had to mexican authorities. now, a mexican official tells cnn about 50 people have been questioned and three top prison officials fired in the investigation into guzman's escape. the official says that guzman may head back to the mountain hide aways to sinaloa state. >> in these communities he is seen as a hero. he's almost venerated. he's larger than life. >> reporter: a u.s. official tells cnn that guzman has a support network in sinaloa with advanced teams of lookouts spice and scouts who help him evade capture. and an advantage? his robin hood reputation.
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>> he brings benefits and pays for thing, whether it's the 15-year-old party or whether it's putting on a rodeo for the community or paying for something the local church he has done that for many years. >> reporter: is this woman helping him? a glamorous former beauty queen who married el chapo when she was a teenager. he was around 50. she gave birth to guzman's twin daughters in 2011. officials say she is related to another drug lord who was killed by the mexican army in 2010. >> she comes from these communities in sinaloa state in the countryside who have grown up and around among drug traffickers. and it's almost like a large tribe of drug traffickers. >> there is no indication that she has been involved in
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criminal activities or in his escape and it's not clear if she is being questioned by mexican authorities at the moment. her phone was one of the leads used in el chapo's capture last year. a mexican official says she is traceable and usually not hiding. brian todd cnn washington. agreement is reached in vienna. but support for iran's nuclear deal is not unanimous in the middle east. a look on that coming up. plus pluto as we've never seened before. we'll tell you what a nasa probe learned as it zoomed past the dwarf planet. stay with us.
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"cnn newsroom." i'm errol barnett. >> i'm rosemary church. we want to check the headlines this hour. president obama is vowing to veto any measure by u.s. lawmakers that would block the nuclear deal with iran. it will lift sanctions in exchange for tehran limiting its nuclear program and allowing international inspectors to verify no nuclear weapons are being made. greek lawmakers are set to vote on economic reforms to get a third bailout from european creditors. greek prime minister alexis tsipras says he doesn't believe in the new measures but will see them through. surveillance video from inside joaquin guzman's prison cell shows the moment that the mexican drug lord escaped on saturday.
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guzman known as el chapo escaped through this tunnel built under the shower inside his cell. el chapo used this moisture to move through the tunnel in his escape. a german court is expected to announce a verdict in the oscar oscar greuning trial. france's foreign minister has just tweeted he accepted an invitation to visit iran now that the nuclear agreement has been reached. he says his iranian counterpart issued the invitation. on tuesday he predicted that the u.n. security council will endorse the nuclear agreement in a matter of days.
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folks in iran have been celebrating the agreement. but you didn't see similar scenes in every country in the middle east. cnn's becky anderson has more on that part of the story. >> i believe this is a historic moment. >> reporter: this moment, long in the making ricochetted around the region. israel also called it historic, an historic mistake. >> in all areas meant to prevent iran from armg itself with nuclear weapons, excessive concessions have been made. >> reporter: the state thought to have a nuclear arsenal of 80 warheads has been a fierce critic of talks with iran. but other middle eastern states are just as rattled, none more so than saudi arabia. >> the sunni regime has been suspicious of iran's shiite regime since the islamic
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revolution in 1979. but the arab-persian rivalry is centuries old. and it's a rash of regional proxy wars. other arab nations are watching carefully. speaking to cnn in may, jordan's king abdullah said any agreement would be the beginning of a long dialogue with tehran. >> i hope that opens the door where there are concessions on many other issues that need to be discussed with iran that reflect challenges in the region. it's not just the nuclear issue. >> reporter: there's expectation in other domains. iran is an almost virgin market with plenty of opportunity for regional investors who are waiting in the wings. >> among the countries who have the highest bilateral trade in the region are the ones that
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have the least political relationship with iran in the region. therefore the businessmen know where to make their bucks and i'm sure they're ready. >> reporter: politically, regional unseize is palpable. previous attempts fell flat. the summit earlier was attended by two heads of state. becky anderson cnn abu dhabi. >> joining me now is a professor of middle eastern politics and international relations at the london school of economics and political science. he is the author of this book "the new middle east protest and revolution in the arab world" thank you for joining us from london. the iran deal reaffirms that under no circumstances will iran
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ever seek develop or acquire any nuclear weapons. but not everyone is convinced. do they have reason to be concerned and was there any better alternative to the iran nuclear deal that was reached? >> rosemary my simple answer would be let's give diplomacy a chance. let's see if the iranian leadership will comply with the agreement. 35 years of institutionalized hostility between iran and the western powers particularly the united states. more than three decadence look where we are, iran was and is six months away of acquiring the capability of a nuclear weapon even though the international community imposed one of the most stringent sanctions regime
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against iran. iran has been able to almost acquire the capability. why not give peace a chance? iran the hard liners both in iran and the united states and some in the region would like to derail this particular agreement. so what's the alternative to them? the alternative to them is war. this is really bluntly. i'm being very very clear about it. for the hard liners the only thing that would make them happy is no agreement. there is no agreement that would make them happy. they would like a military confrontation in which everyone loses. we know rosemary how volatile the middle east -- in fact and i -- i'm not saying original here -- this is the only piece of good news that comes out of the region in almost a decade or so. i'm not suggesting this the is the end of history and this
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agreement could or would be translated into effective means on the ground. but let's wait and see instead of trying to derail this compromise between the great powers and iran. >> and you talk of hard liners former vice president dick cheney says that it moves us closer to the use of nuclear weapons than anything else since world war ii. that's his words. what is your response to that? >> first of all, let me be direct. this is rubbish. and i'm sorry to use such harsh language. first of all, this is ideological nonsense. it is playing on fears. trying to basically square americans. in fact one of the major lessons we have learned is that iran now is on record saying that it will not acquire a nuclear and militarized nuclear
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weapon. this particular agreement freezes iran's nuclear program for the next 10 15 years. this particular agreement gives the international community the international atomic agency unfettered access seven days a week, any time, anywhere in iran. and of course more -- i mean conditions as well. so the reality is all i am suggesting as president barack obama said yesterday i'm not defending president obama he said this agreement is based not on trust but rather on verification and compliance. let's give diplomacy a chance. let's see whether we can end this institutionalized state of hostility between iran and the world. i would say to the prime minister of israel,net nose tackle -- benjamin netanyahu and
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realize that this is the only way to go with the palestinians. what we have seen in the last few years that diplomacy does work. painful concessions are the only way to overcome the state of war and mistrust and suspicion, in particular in this volatile place called the middle east. >> we thank you for your sharing your perspective with us here on cnn. appreciate it. let's take a looker look at the nuclear deal now. the agreement lifts economic sanctions in exchange for iran restricting its nuclear program. in addition inspectors will have round the clock access to key nuclear facilities. and these measures will be in place for 25 years. cnn's christiane amanpour asked the director general of the iaea
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for more details about the deal. here's what he said. >> so is it 24/7 any time any place. tell us what you have to do to verify this? >> important thing is that it will allow us to implement the additional protocol which is very important verification tool. >> what is it that you do and where does it let you go? >> in authority, the additional protocol will give us more information and access right. we receive very detailed declaration from iran more extensive and more in depth. we verify it. and when we find a need to review that document or visit the location then we can request the visit. this is called complimentary access and can be done in a
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managed manner. >> christiane amanpour speaking to iaea intersecter general amano. next a story that confirm we are living in the future half a century after the first fly by of mars nasa sends a spacecraft all the way to pluto. after brushing listerine® total care strengthens teeth, helps prevent cavities and restores tooth enamel. it's an easy way to give listerine® total care to the total family. listerine® total care. one bottle, six benefits. power to your mouth™. great job! k.... now let's get ready for the ball. here it comes. here you go. good catch! perfect! alright, now for the best part. lets see your pour. ooo....let's get those in the bowl these are way to good to waste right?! ohhhh......yeah let's go for it, around the bowl annnddd... share what you love with who you love.
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after a 5 billion kilometer journey nine years in the making a u.s. spacecraft has completed the first ever trip to pluto. >> we are on lock with telemetry with the spacecraft. >> the cheering was for the new horizons probe which successfully phoned home after a
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communications backout. >> the satellite has been taking these amazing images for days of the dwarf planet and its moons and the newest close ups will be released in a few hours. the u.s. is the first country to spend a space probe to every planet and pluto in our solar system. pedram javaheri has all the ins and outs of this. one cool thing that someone is saying never again will we get fresh close up images in our lifetime. >> there are thousands of images being taken right now. it takes four and a half hours to make it here from 3 billion miles away. it will take 16 months for all the images to make their way down here. >> do all the meteorologists go over all the pictures and have parties? >> this really is a test maintain for the scientific
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community and the astronomers in the bay area of california a few dozen worked on this $700 million was spent in the last 15 years to make this possible. we'll show you the spacecraft. a grand piano shape and size of the spacecraft with ashes of the astronomer who discovered pluto in 1930. it launched in '06 and went out from florida traveling 30,000 miles an hour as it is getting the images. but the international image when it was discovered in 1930 in arizona and in 1996 the hubble space telescope and the last couple days with the incredible detail and much more to come in the next three or so hours. as of mid trial you pick up the speck that is one of the five moons that is zoomed into the picture there. and 10 million miles away.
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and we get closer and closer and the details on july 12th and a couple days ago now, 476,000 miles away. and the whale's tail region at the bottom of the dwarf planet. it's about 18% of the surface area of our planet. of much of the your seen continent and eastern china from beijing over to hong kong. and this is something that has been many many years in the works and you look at pluto and charon and you look at our moon luna is 50% larger than pluto itself. what we have learned in recent months weeks and hours we know that icecaps exist and the southern hemisphere grows dark
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and doesn't see sun for 100 years. it's an incredible place and it's so cold that scientists use the kelvin scale to measure temperature. zero kelvin is the coldest possible temperature that is 273 degrees below zero which is what it is on pluto. >> and you can tie it to the iran nuclear deal. >> the last substance is named after pluto. >> class dismissed. we'll be testing later. a short break but still to come donald trump has faced a lot of criticism since announcing his run for u.s. president but he appears to be leading in a national poll. we'll have that for you next.
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take a look at this video everyone police released this footage showing the moment a small plane landed on the grass
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median of a highway in eastern new jersey the single engine plane was carrying a group of skydiving students when they made this emergency landing on sunday. >> terrifying for them and for the cars on that road. one instructor was treated for a small cut but no other injuries were reported. the incident is under investigation. that is incredible. now 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. the former florida governor jeb bush is at 14%. >> and scott walker got 8% and ted cruz and marco rubio are just behind. >> he is definitely sucking the
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oxygen out of the room. donald trump posted a campaign photo to his twitter account tuesday but it didn't stay up for long. >> it showed the republican's face with the american flag and shadowy image of soldiers. twitter users quickly noticed the soldiers uniforms were foreign. >> cnn was able to confirm the uniforms were a nazi unit. trump's spokesman said a young intern mistakingly created the photo. but they need a checking system underway. we'll see what happens. we have breaking news into you coming from reuters, a german court announced the verdict in the oscar greuning trial. he was accused of 300,000 counts
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of accessory to murder. he was sentenced to four years. you have been watching "cnn newsroom." i'm rosemary church. >> i'm errol barnett. "early start" is next. do you toss and turn? wake up with back pain? if so, call now! the sleep number bed supports you with a cushion of air that conforms to your body for more proper spinal alignment and better sleep. before i had my sleep number bed i just had a hard time getting us because i'd
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selling the iran nuclear deal to congress and the world. today president obama begins making his case that this deal will make the world more hopeful, not more dangerous.

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