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tv   New Day  CNN  July 16, 2015 4:00am-5:01am PDT

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"new day" with chris cuomo and alyson camerota. we have breaking news to tell you about. george h.w. bush is hospitalized. the 91-year-old president broke a bone in his neck after taking a fall at his vacation home in maine. >> the elder bush has been a warrior making it home after a two-month stay in the hospital for bronchitis and breathing issues. we are live in washington with the very latest. what do we know? >> reporter: this is a big scare for the former president. aides say he's in stable condition but did spend the night at a hospital in portland maine. and he does remain there this morning. he took a fall yesterday while at their family home in maine breaking a vertebrae in his neck. and the spokesman just tweeted out in the last moments he remains in the hospital and they will provide updates as necessary. and while we have seen him over the last few years out and about, skydiving, most recently
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just last year on his 90th birthday. he is the oldest living former u.s. president. and he's had some pretty significant health problems in the past. last year he was hospitalized for shortness of breath. in 2012 he was in the hospital for two months for a bronchitis-related cough. and he uses a wheelchair because he has parkinson's disease. now just last week in maine bush did show up at multiple events with donors for his son's presidential campaign. but he did miss jeb bush's big campaign announcement when he declared he was running for forpresident in june. his wife attended that announcement without him. and jenna bush just tweeted in the last moments, always touched by kindness. thanks for all your thoughts and prayers for our dear gamps. president obama coming out swinging delivering a spirited defense with the nuclear deal with iran. he's blasting opponents in congress and mixing it up with reporters during a rather
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unusual press conference. cnn's michelle kosinski is live at the white house. tell us what we saw yesterday. >> reporter: this was different. we are in the midst of a difficult issue, but what we'll hear from the president and the administration are the carefully crafted freas eded phrases over and over. a million times word for word. this is the president out there taking on the tough questions, not from fashion bloggers or comedians, but from the white house press corps. he used direct plain language to talk about why he feels preventive aspects of this deal outweigh iran easter's terrible behavior. however, when he disawe proved he didn't hold back on that either. president obama openly addressed the proverbial gorillas in the room. >> this deal is not contingent on iran changing its behavior. it's not contingent on iran suddenly operating like a
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liberal democracy. it solves one particular problem, which is making sure they don't have a bomb. >> reporter: the president challenged chastised critics in congress. >> explains specifically where it is that they think this agreement does not allow iran from getting a nuclear weapon. and why they are right and why people who are a nuclear physicist in the issues is wrong and why the rest of the world is wrong. and then present an alternative. >> reporter: but that's not all he took issue with. his annoyance reaching a head in this exchange. >> there are four americans in iran three held on trumped up charges and according to your administration one whereabouts unknown. can you tell the country, sir, why you are content with all the fanfare around this deal to leave the conscious of this nation the strength of in nation unaccounted for in relation to these four americans? >> i give you credit major, for how you craft those questions. the notion that i'm content --
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as i celebrate with american citizens languishing in iranian jails -- major, that is nonsense. and you should know better. i've met with the families of some of those folks. nobody's content. >> reporter: he even took one question on bill cosby on whether his medal of freedom should be taken back. and he answered it. >> i'll say this. if you give a woman or a man for that matter without his or her knowledge a drug and then have sex with that person without consent, that is rape. it is not just what the president has been saying but how he's saying it. he's been extremely outspoken on criminals and race.
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we'll hear more today when he visits the maximum security prison traveling to oklahoma. chris? >> michelle thank you very much. well, the already crowded republican field is about to get more crowded in the next few weeks. former ohio governor john kasich is preparing to join the race as is our next guest, james steel moore, the former governor and attorney general of virginia. he'll be formally declaring his candidacy next month we hear. and this is his first national interview. thank you so much for being on "new day. requests. >> thank you, alyson. >> why do you want to delve into this crowded pool? >> because i think i'm going to help the country. i think i'm going to enter in august. and the reason is because i'm concerned of wage stagnation. we have to ask ourselves the question are we really better off economically than we were eight years ago? we are not. and in addition to that the national security of this country is in grave danger. and i have background in that that the other candidates are lacking. and i believe i can help. >> so you don't hear any of the
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other republican governors saying those things? >> i think there's a thought that the candidates should come out of the former governors, but i have experience in foreign policy to add to my background as governor of virginia that i think will help the country. because of what i want to do. it's not what i want to be. it's what i want to do. i want to run for office in order to help people get back to work again, get wages improving, get people off this part-time gig that they are on get people off of food stamps. do you know alyson there are 47 million people on food stamps in the united states? that's a sixth of the population. we need to get people more employed to be more dependent. the national security in this country has been widely discussed in the last couple of days and is in serious jeopardy. i have experience working with those issues that the other former governors do not have. >> do you think you can raise the money? >> i think i can raise the money by that's hardly the point. >> but that's a practical point. >> that's a practical point but the key is getting in there and making a case.
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the american people don't care who has the most money or jeb bush will be running away with the race. people care about what the candidates want to do for the people of the united states. >> what do you offer specifically to the people of the united states? they are desperate to hear what trump has to say. what do you say? >> we have to take the sequester off the defense budget and begin to rebuild. because we are sending a terrible message across the world for weakness. which is why we ended up with this agreement with iran that we just had. >> so you do not like the agreement? >> no i do not like the agreement. i think the agreement has sent a serious message of dayer into the middle east. >> why, what is your problem? you don't believe iran will stick to it? >> no i don't think they will stick to it. but that's not the key even if they do stick to it. we are sending a message to the other people across the northeast traditionally allies and telling them in 15 years at the very least iraq is going to be a legitimate nuclear state. >> what was the alternative? >> the alternative is to build a
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coalition and to make a very strong case that -- build a coalition force. second build a very strong case. but we are serious about not allowing iran to be a nuclear power. >> isn't the p5 plus 1 doing that? >> it doesn't though. everybody says oh that's 15 years away. the people in the middle east have to plan for that. and that is highly dangerous. the united states needs to be a force of stability in the middle east. this is expertise that i have based upon a lifetime of work in this including sharing the national commission on homeland security for the united states for five years. but it isn't the only issue. the main issue, the aid main issue is getting people back to work. getting more jobs young people have better careers. >> how do you get more jobs in the u.s. from the companies saying it is too expensive to have a business here? >> which is exactly right. the specific plan that i have
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had out for five years needs to be implemented. and one is to reduce corporate tax to not drive people overseas. we can reduce the rate down to 15% and get as competitive. you need to reform the personal income tax rates to give people a tax cut. and you need to eliminate the death tax. with a few more tweaks our analysts say you can get people working again. >> another reform the president was talk about yesterday was prison reform. and doing away with mandatory minimum sentences for drug criminals of the lower bar. what do you think about that? >> of course i was an elected prosecutor and i was a defense attorney. but i was an elected prosecutor in the room. i have lived a lot on this. >> and a high incarceration rate in that state. >> higher incarceration rate. but a lot of people sell drugs and should be in prison for that. >> what about using drugs? >> using drugs is what people
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are talking about in terms of treatment. but use ging drugs isn't the main point. the president let a lot of people go last week who were selling drugs or in a conspiracy to sell drugs. i want people to know right now, if you sell addictive narcotics in the united states of america, that is a violent crime. it is not a non-violent crime. >> what about prison overcrowding? how would you do it? if you think that -- >> look, i have confidence personally in the judicial system and the rule of law. and i think that the mandatory sentences came into play with more violence and danger on the streets and we are seeing that rise now. >> are you saying there's not overpopulation of these things? >> i think you can overcomplicate this.
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i've been in the courtrooms all my life and dealing with the law all my life. and i think that regular folks out there who are living their lives every day don't want to the have their children addicted or shown drugs. and we are thank you you for being here today. >> thank you. thank you very much. >> good luck to you. this morning checkpoints are all over mexico. we are fascinated by this escape from prison. and now we can see howell el chapo did this. nick valencia is live there to take one for the em too. >> reporter: good morning, chris. it took us hours at waiting at checkpoints before we got into mexico's maximum security prison. a 30-minute walk from the front
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door we were taken into the home that houses the most violent criminals and that's where we found el chapo's cell. >> this is where he kept his belongings. >> reporter: for the first time our cameras are allowed inside cell 20. >> this is some remnants of what he left behind. the sink he used to wash himself. for nearly a year and a half the senior cartel boss joaquin "el chapo" guzman was in prison behind these bars. that's the access point el chapo used to escape outside of this maximum security prison. this wall providing privacy from that camera. then the drug lord escaped through the bathroom shower floor. i climbeded into the tunnel's exit. >> there's another ladder leading down to another part deeper part of the tunnel. it is hard to estimate just how long and how many people took it to create this remarkable feat
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of engineering. you can see here the electricity lines. it is very difficult to breathe down here. a lot of dirt dust. this here is for the ventilation system. this motorcycle was on a track here. this is the bike that el chapo used to ride out of the prison. still has gas in it. the track also fixed with carts used to carry out thousands of pounds of soil. we'll roll that forth, see that? there's buckets left behind and look behind oxygen tanks as well in order for them to survive down here. it is a very tight space. i can't even stand up. i'm about 5'10" and cannot stand up all the way. but the tunnel just right for mexico's 5'6" most wanted fugitive. this is the fifth day of el chapo's escape. last time he was out of prison, it took them 13 years to find him. if authorities have any leads, they are not making it public.
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>> such and interesting look inside there, nick. thank you for doing that. mean while, 33 people in nigeria killed by militants believeded to be part of boko haram. gunmen barricaded the highway and killed 20 drivers in theest no. the attacker then stormed a village setting homes on fire. a deadly open counter between las vegas and an armed driver captured on the officer's body camera. take a look at this. >> i'll shoot myself. >> stop! no don't! >> that 54-year-old was shot and killed by police after opening fire and wounding a rookie officer. he was pulled over for just a taillight infraction. police say he threat upped his wife days earlier and now the officer is recovering and should
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be okay. body cameras are a big issue right now. some in the law enforcement community or for them. some are for them and some against them. but it is always a window into what this jail entails. >> there's no such thing as a routine traffic stop for police and you see it there. the taillight infraction we have seen people fold over for this. this guy is going for a gun, i'm going to get shot and someone does get shot. meanwhile, we'll go to meteorologist chad myers with a look at the forecast with interesting weather around. what are you seeing, chad? >> a up colecouple big storms headed to chicago tonight. this is peoria. moving ahead, we'll take you all the way to 8:00 tonight when the weather starts to approach on chicago. some of the storms could make wind damage. it will be hot in a lot of places. over 100 degrees is the feel-like temperature in memphis. 109, in fact. a really nice weekend in new
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york city. 85 for saturday. 87 on sunday. but you're going to be inside anyway because this is the second father's day of the year because the open is on this weekend. so steak and eggs at chad's house in atlanta. come on down. i know you like sports alyson. >> i like eggs. >> when i say it's the open i say, what open? tennis? golf? what open? this is the british open. >> got it. we'll be there. >> he calls me christopher charles because i called him chad everett, which is his middle name. >> i know that. it's very -- cute. meanwhile, president obama weighs in on sexual allegations against bill cosby. growing calls for the presidential method of freedom.
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there's no precedent for revoking a medal. we don't have that mechanism. if you give a woman or a man for that matter without his or her knowledge a drug and then have sex with that person without consent, that's rape. >> that was president obama responding to whether bill cosby should have his presidential medal of freedom revoked. calls have been growing to do that as allegations pile up that the comedian drugged and sexually assaulted many women. barbara boman is an ambassador for a nonprofit dedicated to sexual education and prevention. and the group has a petition to revoke cosby's medal of freedom. barbara, great to see you this morning. what was it like to hear the president of the united states address the bill cosby issue?
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>> well, it was what we had aimed for. and i would like to mention who initiated this motion. we have been working real hard to educate and prevent sexual assault to everyone in all interested groups. so we have at lo of work ahead of us. and this was another opportunity to open the door for that work. >> barbara, i can only imagine what that moment was like for you yesterday. because let's remind viewers, you were the person basically a year ago, that started the process of talking about bill cosby and what you say he did to you. you brought it to light. you wrote an article, an op-ed saying you were raped by bill cosby. and that started a bit of a tidal wave. other accusers came forward. bill cosby's lawyers have had to respond. and now the president of the
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united states is talking about it. i mean for you who have talked about how you suffered in silence for all of these decades, to hear the president talking about it personally what was it like for you? >> that's right. it was amazing. i have been screaming my story for at least ten years since 2005. and sooner that that even. so to hear now that i don't have to scream my story anymore. that it's possible that the president will revoke the medal, which i personally believe should happen. the presidential medal of freedom is the most prestigious and well honored and earned degree. and for cosby to stand alongside those wonderful prestigeious people who have made enormous contributions is a disgrace.
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and it really degrades the medal and to have him stand alongside those people it shouldn't happen. >> we hear you. and yet what the president said yesterday was that there is no precedence or procedure for revoking a medal. >> well, he did use the word mechanism. and i don't understand how that can be since he does have power of executive order. and please let me say, i am not a apolitician. i am not trained or involved in politics at all. but this is not a political issue. this is a humanitarian issue. and i know that the president is a staunch supporter of rape survivors. he has two beautiful teenager daughters himself. and so i'm sure this is touching him on a deep level. >> there have been a flurry of people coming forward this week to rethink their impression of bill cosby, even people who were staunch supporters of his, like
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fellow and actor comedian whoopi goldberg. she has defended him for years. and then this week on "the view," here's what she said. let me just play a portion for you. >> you have a serial rapist has been on the streets for 30 years. i have to say, i thought that yeah here's all the information. take him to jail. i find out from you that that's not possible. if this is to be tried in the court of public opinion, i've got to say, all of the information that's out there kind of points to guilt. >> barbara, what is it like to hear a former supporter of his say that? >> well, i am very happy to hear that because i remember months ago hearing her say just the opposite. and saying she had questions for that lady. and it was, you know quite difficult during those first few
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days when i was trying to empower other women to come forward to have a public figure basically call me a liar. so now we -- you know we have turned her around. >> it does feel as though the tables are turning somehow. barbara bowman thanks so much for being on "new day." please keep us posted on what happens with your petition. >> i will. thank you for all your support, alyson. >> thanks barbara. in our next hour we'll hear from another cosby accuser. this is one of the jane doe's from the 2005 case whose deposition was unsealed last week. and you'll be surprised to hear where she says the attack happened and what she believes is a bizarre obsession that bill cosby has. you won't want to miss that interview. >> i have to say, legal process or lack thereof, alyson i have watched you from the beginning of this story to now having the president talking about this and
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not just a lone voice out there. we'll take a quick break. donald trump says he's worth $12 billion. well maybe. how much does he have? that number may knock you over. john king has it on "inside politics." and i hope he has a good lawyer if he's going to dispute it. nowhere to rest your beard? choose from thousands of hand-picked hotel deals at the very last minute. only on your phone. only from priceline. when you don't get enough sleep... and your body aches... you're not yourself. tylenol® pm relieves pain and helps you fall fast asleep and stay asleep. we give you a better night. you're a better you all day. tylenol®.
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big political news includes donald trump saying what he's worth. let's go to john king for some scrutiny. >> he's proud of that money, isn't he mr. cuomo? >> yes, he is. >> we'll wait for the actual report to see the details. but with me to talk about that with political supporters this morning, lisa lara of the associated press and jeff zelany. let's get a little sample before we talk about this. >> here's the good news. i'm very rich. i don't need anybody's money. i'm really rich. i'm the most successful person ever to run. formally i'm very rich. so i have a total net worth. and now with the increase it
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will be well over $10 billion. i'm not doing that to brag because, you know what don't have to brag. believe it or not. >> he's not doing that to brag. he's just doing it i guess. look we can make fun of this, but some voters actually see this as a virtue in the sense that they think politicians are too beholden to big interest and big money. we'll wait to see, he's filed the report. we haven't seen the details yet to give us where the money is from and what it is. some people are skeptical he's worth quite that much. we'll look at it when we get it. but on the issue of his wealth asset in the campaign or detriment or both? >> i think there's a sense among some voters that he's liberated of politics and speaks his mind. he's telling it like it is and is not politics as usual. i mean that's part of what is fueling his rise. one point that he made and i really cannot believe i'm going to agree with donald trump, but in the paperwork he released about his own wealth it opened up by saying that the fec file
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was incapable of measuring his great wealth because of the argument that trump and his people are making is the top box to measure an asset is $50 million and his buildings are worth far more than that. he has a point on that. we are in the world of billionaires -- >> so if it is worth $350 million, it is listed as $50 million. we are in the point of the billionaires who run for president and in that world maybe the forms in ed to be updated to get a more accurate picture of how much the people are actually worth. >> the fec can't agree on what day of the week it is. >> right. don't hold your breath. >> it is different than we heard of a presidential candidate that i can recall talk about their wealth. mitt romney tried to not highlight his wealth but many others have as well. this is part of trump's brand, his bluster. so this definitely fuels that. but what i want to know is who is giving money to donald trump? $96,000 in contributions. people were actually helping his campaign along. so we'll look into that a little
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bit. but he also loaned his campaign $1.8 million. >> right. we have numbers to show people that. total contributions, he recently announced that he'll spend his own money. we'll see how much he does raise. total contributions, that's a low figure for a presidential candidate. but a, people know he's wealthy. b, he hasn't been out very long. cash on hand for the campaign is low as he spends money. there's no question he can finance the campaign himself. many people say, i want this grassroots to send him a check for $200,000 to $300,000. >> my guess is not many. the other candidates need it. >> it gives you credibility if you have people backing you instead of being the novelty of funding yourself. >> we have watched most of the republican candidates distancing themselves from donald trump. jeb bush has been most critical in saying what he says about mexican immigrants mexico is
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sending in rapists and murderers. one candidate who refuses to criticize it is ted cruz. he went to the trump tower yesterday and came out after meeting with donald trump and said this. >> you're right, there are a number of presidential candidates who went out of their way to whack donald trump with a stick. i'm not one of them. there's nothing the media enjoys more than a republican on republican violence. they are never happier than when you get a republican blasting another. i'm not going to play that game. >> what is the calculation here? you can make the case at the moment new polls out yesterday, trump is still moving up in the polls or staying stable in first or second place nationally. second place in new hampshire. moving up in iowa. some of that support is coming from ted cruz. what is the cruz calculation? >> i mean look i think trump tapped into a certain element of the republican base. that's the element that there's overlap with the kind of voters that ted cruz is pulling. he wants to make sure the people stay with him.
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if he alienates trump, he alienates that population. i also think for the primary, the way i think about the primary is two contests happening at once. once for the beast and one for the establishment candidates to come out and say really strongly they don't agree with trump. i'm curious to see if we see that in the first stage. >> when we get to the debate stage, if your slice is the conservative slice, you have huckabee and ted cruz do you let him be on the alddonald trump and let him hold it? >> if donald trump is taking the oxygen you go where he is. he's the only candidate siding with donald trump here. the only way to get attention or best way to get attention is either attack him or join him. so ted cruz decided to show up outside of trump tower. he knew the cameras would be there. interesting strategy i would
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say. >> surprise, surprise surprise. a lot of numbers in the news this week because it's the filing deadline for candidates. let's look at the numbers. a lot of people are asking questions on hillary clinton's numbers. hillary clinton and jeb bush the two favorites, she's raised $45 million. jeb bush raised $11.4 million. that's just from their campaigns, not the super pac. 17% of hillary clinton's donations come from small businesses. jeb bush's come from 3%. bernie sanders says 77% of his comes from small donations. does this prove that hillary clinton has problems with what president obama did successfully. raising $100 from average joes in the democratic party? if you look at $250 or less 94% of the donations come from that. so they say this is a bit exaggerated. but is this a problem that the
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base of the party is not seconding her a check? >> the clinton campaign wants to make sure they said over and over this primary is not coronation. they have been highlighting the numbers really hard because they want to make sure that everyone in the media and everyone in the public knows she has support and enthusiasm among the rank in file democratic party voters. but the numbers are not great for her. particularly they are bad also for jeb bush who has a similar problem of looking like the establishment candidate that really isn't supported by the grassroots of this party. >> it's a passion and intensity. they like her. hillary clinton's poll numbers among democrats, her favorability is fine but they seem to have a -- >> there's not a sense of urgency. she's not under attack or threat. that's another reason people are not sending money, but they tried mightily to get the number up by selling small things and selling aprons and all these things online. all that goes into this $5 for this, it's a struggle for them. because 60% of her contributions are from people who can't give
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again. bernie sanders can give again and again, sort of like paying the phone bill every month. she has enthusiasm issues. >> thank you for coming in. we should know some of the ways to get the excitement going is to be out on the trails. hillary clinton's first town hall is today. we'll keep an eye on that. >> thank you, john. bring us all the highlights. meanwhile, the u.s. reportedly offering more military aid to israel after the iran deal. is this a consolation prize? we'll get the obama administration's reaction, next. ♪ ♪ ♪
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this deal is not con tintingent on iran changing its behavior. it's not contingent on iran suddenly operating like a liberal democracy. it solves one particular problem, which is making sure they don't have a bomb. >> bottom line, is the iran deal going to make you safer or is it a capitulation bent on the destruction of the united states and israel?
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joining us to answer the critics, deputy secretary of state tony blankin. good to have you here secretary. let's begin with the words of concern from the united states' closest allie in the region israel. here it is. >> there can be no real compensation for nuclear threat. you are doing an agreement, the immediate result will be to pull fuel all around the middle east. >> there's yuval steinitz. you know who he is. did you stop the nukes in the best way? and the second is the impact of giving them all this money when we know often they are up to no good. first, why is this the best you could do in terms of stopping the nuclear machine? >> chris, that's exactly the right question. and this is the best way to prevent iran from getting a
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nuclear weapon far into the future. and you have to compare it to the alternative. some people say to keep squeezing them but we tried that for more than a decade. and what happened? they went from having 150 centrifuges to having 19,000 before we stopped them. and they built up a stockpile of enriched uranium to make 10 to 12 bombs until we stopped them. and the partners we need around the world for sanctions, there's no consensus say shouldn't have a peaceful military program. the other action is military action. we know we can set back their program by nuclear action. this deal sets it back far longer. if you take the military action the net reaction is you can't bomb away knowledge. iran would eventually brace a bomb. this is the best way to prevent them from getting a weapon far, far into the future. >> the push-back is yes, you could have squeezed the
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sanctions. you have the juice with the allies and could have gotten them to do what you wanted them to do. the sanctions were just starting to work in the last few years. why did you start to run away from them? >> we didn't run away from them. the deal was this our partners around the world came in on this reluctantly. they were losing money and didn't believe this is the way to go. we brought them along. and the deal was once iran was satisfied with the concerns of the international community, then the sanctions would go away. that's why they were imposed in the first place. that was the deal. >> the inspection and review it is not any time anywhere it is sometime somewhere, you give them too much time to react and they are going to cheat and you won't be able to catch them. >> chris, let's be clear about this. two things with the inspections, first, in terms of the known facilities it is 24/7 access by the iaea. and it is not just these place where is the centrifuges were spending it's the mines, mills,
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assembly lines and entire chain of production. that means it will be incredibly difficult for iran to divert stuff to the covert program. or built the chain covertly to have a program. second with regard to places that are not declared if the iaea gets suspicion of something and want to see it they can do it no longer than 24 days. that's plenty of time. for years iran has been trying to keep the iaea out of this military facility where more than a decade ago we think they were undertaking weaponization activities. why have they been pushing back for a decade? because the stuff we are looking for in these kinds of areas can be picked up before they happen. >> one basket of metaphors is in 2014 president obama used a
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steppingstone in the first place and let him keep it. two, we know the secretary of state was talking about the hostages kept unlawfully according to the administration and iran. you can get upset with their tone. thirdly, all this money and you know they are seeding discontent all over the region. they keep shouting "death to the u.s." and "death to israel." why do you give them all that money? >> first, it is taken out of commission. you cannot get material for a nuclear weapon. in the beginning we said if iran tries to break out, it will take a year to develop enough equipment to make a nuclear weapon. with regard to the hostages the only thing we have talked about on the margins of the nuclear talks were the hostages. if we had tied the hostages to
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the talk what would that mean? we hope to get our americans back and will not rest until we do. finally, the money. iran unfortunately is engaged in all sides of activities right now under sanctions. and a lot of what they are doing is not capital entenseintensive. chris, one thing is interesting, the very people in iran who are behind these activities are the ones who didn't want the steal. they were the ones in this that pushed back. >> thank you for being here antony blinken. >> thank you. the search for el chapo guzman is continuing today. wait until you see what our reporter found down there. s, i want to eat. (woman) do you want to eat? (dog) do i want to eat, yes. that's like nine times you've asked...yes.
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time now for cnn money now.
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chief busy correspondent christine romans. >> a six week high for european stocks after the greek parliament voted yes to economic reforms. people in athens are not happy. protests turned violent overnight. still a very difficult situation there. the stock to watch today here. netflix. it's up more than 10% before the bell. huge subscriber deal. the stock has doubled in price this year. netflix is the best performer in the s&p 500. it's trading for around $100 a share. >> i'm so happy. i don't own a share of it. george bush had been hospitalized. he's got a broken bone in his
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george h.w. bush hospitalized. >> it sounds like a mild fracture of one of the vertebrae in the cervical spine. >> this is the bed that "el chapo" slept on here. that's the access point that he used to escape. >> stretches for more than a mile a feat of engineering.
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>> to leave the conscience of this nation the strength of this nation unaccounted for. >> that's nonsense. >> bill cosby invited you for a dinner party at his home. >> he gave me a drink and i started to feel really odd. >> when did you realize you were in danger with him? good morning. welcome to your "new day." it's thursday july 16th 8:00 in the east. we do have some breaking news for you. former president george h.w. bush taken to the hospital after a fall. >> how is he this morning? >> reporter: aides say he is in stable condition.
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he took a fall yesterday while at their home in maine, breaking a vertebrae in his neck. and he will be in a neck brace. his spokesman tweeting in the last hour quote, president bush remains hospitalized at maine medical center. we will send updates as they become available. while we have seen the president in the last few years out and about, sky diving last year on his 90th birthday he is of course the oldest living president. last year he was hospitalized for shortness of breath. in 2012 he was in the hospital for months for a bronchitis related cough. just last year he showed up at multiple events. he did miss jeb bush's campaign announcement when he

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