tv CNN Newsroom Live CNN December 29, 2017 12:00am-1:00am PST
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a surprising comment from the u.s. president on the russia investigation this hour. fatal fire to tell you about in new york. a baby is among the dead and what the mayor is calling the city's worst fire tragedy in 25 years. and apple apologizes after all the outrage over the slowing down of older phones. now the company's trying to make it up to all of you. we'll see what you think about what they're doing. >> see what's happening with that. 3:00 a.m. here at the u.s. east coast. cnn world headquarters in atlanta. i'm george howell. >> i'm natalie allen.
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"cnn newsroom" starts right now. our top story, a wide ranging eye opening and some would say surprising interview with u.s. president donald trump. >> he sat down with the "new york times" at his resort in florida on thursday. perhaps the most interesting point, president trump said that he believes the special counsel robert mueller will treat him fairly in the rub shah probe but the president was still defiant insisting 16 times that there was no collusion between his team and russia. >> however, the president did say this, there was tremendous collusion on behalf of the russians anddemocrat. there was no collusion with respect to my campaign. he went on, i think i'll be treated fairly. timing wise, i can't tell you. i just don't know, but i think we'll be treated fairly. he said the sooner the probe is over the better. everyone will probably agree to that. scott lucas, professor of
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international politics at the university of birmingham joining us from england. scott, glad to have you with us. first of all, interesting that president trump by passed the traditional end of the year news conference. he apparently said he wanted to have one. his aides didn't want him to have to address a barrage on the russia investigation so he ends up sitting down with the "new york times" and talking freely about it. what do you make of that? >> well, trump's done this before, though it's been several months. remember back in the spring when everyone was saying that james comey, the fbi would threaten the hillary clinton investigation. trump suddenly appears on tv with nbc saying oh, no, no, no, it was all about russia. what's happened yesterday? i think trump is a little bit more relaxed. he's been away from washington for a few days. i think in a way that means he can say, oh, i'm going to be charitable here. i'm going to say nice things about the special counsel robert
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mueller, at least saying he'll treat me fairly. make no mistake about this, this is still trump saying, look, i'm going to be exonerated very, very soon. there's going to be no evidence against me. if that does not happen, trump will resort back to the lines of saying this is an unfair inquiry. in fact it's the russians and democrats working together which defies all evidence. we'll get back to the angered trump and frustrated trump once we get back to washington and that investigation continues to go onto the spring and probably the summer. >> yes, meantime though what does this mean to the republican mood on capitol hill to undermine his investigation? of course, mr. trump takes a lot of his cues from conservative tv that is calling for mueller to be out of this investigation and to be over. what does that do to his support there? he's on a different page apparently. >> no, he's not really on a different page.
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here's the key thing here. all he said was that robert mueller will be fair to him. at the same time he said that the justice department needs to listen to him, that he's the one in charge. now of course the justice department does not operate at the command of the president. it is supposed to be ind pendent so when the justice department continues its investigations, when mueller continues the investigations you'll get outlets like breitbart and white house sources and unknown people who will say they still are being unfair, still trying to bring this man down unjustly. it is only a couple of days ago that we have had republican congressmen talk about a coup against the president. that will not be stopped by what president trump said yesterday. indeed, i think within the next couple weeks we're going to get probably to a head as to whether mueller will be allowed to continue this investigation or whether let me be blatant with a word here it is going to be
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sabotaged by the idea it cannot reach donald trump, it must not reach him. >> do you think president trump maybe has an insight that he's off the hook in this investigation? >> no. no. what has happened for months is that white house lawyers will go in and tell trump to try to calm him down, look, it's going to work out. it's going to be okay, mr. president. they said it's going to be over by thanksgiving. then they said it's going to be over by christmas. now they're saying it's going to be over in early 2018. that sort of optimistic side of him saying, i've survived. it's going to be the democrats who are going to be the ones that take the fall. now we know that reality is a much more complicated proposition. donald trump isn't operating with reality here. he's operating with the wishes in his head and when those wishes don't come true, then we're at another critical point. >> he brought up former president barack obama's attorney general eric holder. when he asked about jeff
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sessions recusing himself here's the quote he gave to the "new york times" on that topic. i don't want to get into loyalty, but i will tell you i will say this. holder protected president obama, totally protected him. what's he getting at here? >> that's such a revealing quote because it does two things. one is it says that donald trump blames jeff sessions for recusing himself from the investigation because sessions had contact with russian officials. he's saying sessions should have stayed there and he should have protected me. in other words, the investigation should not have been independent. why is that important? because trump has asked numerous officials, including fbi director james comey before he was fired, i must have loyalty. that demand for loyalty could constitute, and i emphasize could constitute obstruction of justice. donald trump didn't get himself off the hook yesterday with this interview. he may have just added to his
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troubles. >> he made some other comments. scott lucas, thanks for joining us. appreciate your comments. it's important to point out it's not just about collusion but possible obstruction of justice. wide ranging investigation. the u.s. president raised some eyebrows tweeting that china had been caught, quote, red handed allowing oil into north korea. that would be a violation of u.n. sanctions. he elaborated in "the new york times" investigation saying, quote, oil is going into north korea. that isn't my deal. if they don't help us with north korea, then i can do what i've always said i want to do. we have a nuclear menace out there which is no good for china. let's bring in cnn's alexander field from the capitol of china. good to have you there in beijing. very sharp accusation from the u.s. president. has there been any response from the tweet or the accusation itself? >> reporter: look, officials here in beijing, george, had already denied the accusations of those same allegations that
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president trump made in that scathing tweet he issued in the overnight hours here in beijing. we know that china is key to the trump administration's policy when it comes to dealing with north korea reining in the regime. the thinking of the trump administration has been to gather international partners, to unleash the wave of provocation from north korea, they want to cut off the flow of resources to north korea, they want to cut off revenue streams which will push north korea into the isolated space. that could be the thing that brings them to the negotiating table putting those nuclear weapons on the table. that's the whole goal here. it's why the trump administration says that oil is so critical. we know that north korea depends on foreign oil, particularly china. their economy is dependent on it, their military is dependent on it. the wave of sanctions that we've seen in recent months and over the course of this entire year has been aimed at stopping that flow of oil, not entirely but largely. the international community is
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now keeping its eyes on how north korea can skirt these sanctions by using an illegal network of ships. south korean authorities have been raising red flags. authorities are saying that back in november they seized a hong kong based ship that had left port in south korea carrying oil that it used to make an illegal transfer to a north korean ship. that's a blatant violation of u.n. security council orders. it came from south korean media about these ships. they say chinese ships were being used to make these oil transfers to north korean ships. again, a violation of u.n. security council sanctions. the ministry of foreign affairs here in beijing was asked about those reports earlier this week even before that tweet from president trump. they denied the accusations, denied the allegations. they said china remains committed to upholding all of the tenants of the u.n. security council allegations. if there was evidence that these
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ships were involved that these companies would be dealt with. that's the last we heard of from the ministry of foreign affairs when they were asked directly. president trump is counting on cooperation from the chinese. that has been his position throughout his tenure in office and really over the course of the last year. we have seen him take a sharp tone with china before, particularly on twitter, but we know at the same time he relies on a close personal relationship with president xi jinping. he's trying to create some cooperation when it comes to dealing with north korea. he's taking a tough approach on twitter. george, natalie? >> we know china does have measured responses with regards to some of these fiery tweets, but the question, what impact do these tweets have in that relationship between the president and chinese leadership. alexandra field live for us. thank you so much. in the u.s. state of alabama, judge roy moore still will not concede the u.s. senate race that he lost earlier this month, but it doesn't matter
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now. democrat doug jones seen here on the right has been certified the winner and will be sworn in early next year. >> moore's last legal ditch effort here to challenge the election, it was tossed out one day after he filed it. the alabama secretary of state said there was no evidence of election fraud or voter irregularities as moore's lawsuit claimed. >> i don't think there's any doubt in anybody's mind that has followed this election objectively that this election has been conducted with the utmost integrity, that it's been safe, secure, it's been credible. the results have the kind of integrity and credibility that the people of alabama expect and demand and that the people of the united states of america know has occurred in our state and if there's ever been a doubt as to whether or not the people of alabama are given the opportunity to participate at the level that they choose to and that they have been able to do so without any hindrance
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whatsoever, that's all been eliminated. and anybody else that continues to perpetuate that myth is doing just that. >> all right. the alabama secretary of state saying, look, there is no fraud to talk about here. even after that lawsuit was tossed out, moore's team was still reluctant to give up. it claims to have experts who can prove the voting machines were rigged. >> but at least one of those so-called experts has dubious credentials. here's an exchange between moore's spokeswoman and cnn's john berman. >> they dismissed it without i don't know if the secretary of state read the 84 pages of evidence. that's what really is screaming from the pages of this complaint. and what it said -- let me finish if i may. >> it's not evidence. it's an argument citing four election experts, people you call election experts. >> i know. you're trying to say maybe the guy got a c minus in spelling in the fourth grade. well, you can discount anybody
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you want. >> no. excuse me -- >> three math degrees -- >> one of them said the holocaust didn't happen. he said -- >> that's not true. let me refer you to an internet blog, abraham lincoln's internet blog. don't believe everything you read on the internet. >> does it concern you that your election machine expert is a man who said there's an evil shadow jewish government and claims -- >> i don't believe that. i don't believe that's true. i'm going to tell you, he didn't say that. he didn't say that. what he knows about -- we had him on the case. we submitted an affidavit. the guy is an undisputed expert in the election software program. >> he absolutely said there's -- >> sorry. i don't believe it. >> do we have the tweet? do we have the tweet? evil jews in the jewish shadow government must be highlighted even though of course all jews are not in that. >> by the way, john, you know what you're not putting up on
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the screen oddly enough. you're not putting up his 39 years experience in election machines. >> those pesky facts. despite the ongoing objections of the moore campaign, democrat doug jones will be sworn in as the next u.s. senator of alabama in january. we have a tragedy to tell you about in new york city. at least 12 people are dead after a fire swept through an apartment building. four people have been critically injured there. the fire minister says flames erupted thursday evening on the first floor and spread fast. >> the youngest victim in that fire, 1-year-old baby. the mayor of new york described this disaster as dismal. the worst in 25 years. >> this is the worst fire tragedy we have seen in this city in at least a quarter century based on the information we have now, this will rank as
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one of the worst losses of life to a fire in many, many years. >> terrible tragedy. we want to tell you more about this fire from cnn affiliate reporter jay dow. the latest from the scene, we want to warn you some of the images you'll see in jay's report are disturbing. >> move. go! >> reporter: residents stood in 13 degree weather thursday night and watched as firefighters frantically wheeled one unresponsive victim after another performing chest compressions along the way away from a burned five story building at 2363 prospect avenue in the bellmont section of the bronx. >> the last i heard my mom text my sister that they were trapped in the room. >> christine dedriend share her last name stood shocked at the corner. her mother's last text message she was trapped in the third
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floor apartment with her 8 month old granddaughter. i asked if the third floor was cleared and they looked at me and looked away. >> reporter: residents recall climbing out of their apartment windows to escape the fire. >> what floor do you live on? >> third floor. >> third floor? >> yeah. >> you saw the smoke coming in your apartment? >> yeah. >> that's when you left through the back window? >> yeah. >> you climbed out the fire escape? >> yes. >> that was jay dow reporting. the cause of the fire is still under investigation. in mumbai, india, fire there. you see in the images. the fire that killed 14 people. most of the victims were women attending a birthday party. this started at the rooftop restaurant of the building before engulfing the whole building. police say the establishment's owner and manager will be held responsible. new year's eve is right around the corner and new york city is preparing to make it a safe one. just days away from what will be
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there for the people in times square. we'll tell you about that coming up here. plus, apple apologizing over slowing down the speed of the older iphones. what the company is offering to accommodate its customers and the apology they have. stay with us. that's more ways to discover new relatives. people who share your dna. and maybe a whole lot more. order your kit at ancestrydna.com packing to the last minute. guys, i have a couple of things to wash we got this. even on quick cycle, tide pods cleans great 6x the cleaning power, even in the quick cycle it's got to be tide
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apple is scrambling to countser customer outrage and multiple lawsuits after it revealed it deliberately slowed older model iphones. apple says chemical aging and batteries could be one reason behind the lower performance of iphone 6 and 6s devices. they say they'll cut the price of battery replacement and issue a software update. >> my wife has always thought something was happening with those phones. the company issued a letter to customers stating this, in part, quote, we know that some of you feel that apple has let you down. we apologize. we have never and would never do anything intentionally to shorten the life of any apple product or degrade the user experience to drive customer upgrades. let's bring in tech reporter -- cnn tech reporter heather kelly. heather, nice to see you but apple did say it deliberately slowed down the iphone's operation, so what's up here? >> reporter: it did, and it's important to note if you actually read the letter today,
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it's not actually apologizing for slowing them down. it's more apologizing for how it's communicated or, rather, not communicated at all to couples. it's going to keep on doing it going forward. it will try to be a little bit more transparent with what it's doing with the update that will roll out soon in i0s and it will help people get up to the full potential with cheaper batteries. >> so the apology seemed a little bit less than sincere. what's up here with apple? is it losing its way sort of? >> reporter: oh, i don't think it's less than sincere at all. they're being very careful about what they're apologizing for. >> okay. >> reporter: it's actually a pretty clever work around on the tech side as a way of stopping these phones from shutting down automatically because their batteries are old. you know, i think it's kind of clever, but it's obviously angered a lot of people, hence the many lawsuits which i'm sure apple is not pleased with. i mean, it will be seen as taking over this loss of trust.
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this letter shows they're definitely a little panicked about that. >> how will people that have been kind of curious about their iphone and what it's been doing, george's wife is one of them, what's wrong with my iphone, how will you know if this is how you're being affected if this is the situation? >> reporter: it's only certain iphones. they're looking at iphone 6 and later. if you have an iphone 7 and later you shouldn't really be experiencing too much of this problem, at least not yet. it could come up in the future. you can definitely go to an apple store and ask them to check, you know, the life of your battery, how many charges it has on it, what percentage it's at. they can tell you if it's time to pay that $29 for a new battery. >> beats the 70 something dollar charge. do you think this will do anything to customer loyalty or tarnish apple's integrity? >> we have a little apple scandal maybe once a year. we usually put gate after it. i don't know if this is battery
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gate. it doesn't have a lasting impact. in the end iphones are often a superior product to competitors. doing things like this might be one of the reasons why but they definitely need to work on communication about these kinds of issues. >> in this era of apologies for other things we've been seeing, apple needs to get it straight and learn how to apologize. big year for apologies. heather, thank you. >> thank you. new year's eve in new york city. the city is gearing up for it. hundreds of thousands of people are set to gather right there in times square, but police will be out in force. >> the city has been the target of several recent terror attacks, and authorities say they are not taking chances, of course. >> you'll see a stronger police presence out there than we have seen even in recent years, and that's prudent given the terror events we've seen and studied around the world as well as the three incidents here in new york over the past 15 months. we understand why we are a
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target, unfortunately it's a sad reality. we understand it and bluntly it is because of our values as new yorkers, because of our success as a pluralistic city. terrorists regard new york as the exact kind of place they want to disrupt and new yorkers respond consistently with strength and resiliency. >> police will be out in force. people will be wearing their coats, too, there as well. very cold. >> always so happy. >> cold and happy, right? many parts of the united states bracing for the coldest new year's eve on record. the forecast prompted the u.s. president to tweet this. in the east it could be the coldest new year's eve on record. perhaps we could use a little bit of that good old global warming that our country, not other countries was going to pay trillions to protect. >> the tweet puts the president further out of step with the majority of scientists
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worldwide. it's real and it's happening now and of course very dangerous to all of us in this world. so, with that, we turn it to derek van dam for more on mr. trump's assessment. >> he definitely got one thing right. it's going to be cold on new year's eve in new york city, good for him. he did confuse, muddle the lines, between climate and weather. there's a short term, short lived cold snap of air which is weather and a long-term average which is climate and climate change. let's break it down because noaa is just coming out with some interesting news that 2017 is set to be one of the top three warmest years on record across the entire planet. in fact, only 1% of the world right now as we speak is below average climatologically speaking and that is the eastern united states. just as donald trump tweeted, it is going to be cold in the eastern u.s. for new year's eve, but that is not representative of what is happening across the
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rest of the world right now. then you see pictures like this. you go global climate change, global warming, is it happening? water falls are freezing in minnesota. well, there is a marked difference between weather and climate. this is the point that i'm trying to make. weather is measured in minutes to weeks. there's a specific event taking place at a specific time whereas climate is how the atmosphere behaves over a long period of time, at least 30 years. it's averaged over that period of time. you can see the difference between that short-term event being weather and long-term event being climate. the short-term event that's taking place is the jet stream dipping south. that's pulling the arctic blast of air that is going to bring record-setting cold temperatures to places like boston, new york city and philadelphia just in time for new year's eve. seven degrees, that's even gone down a degree from our computer model since the last time i reported on this about an hour ago. so it's getting even colder, but this still doesn't rank up there as the coldest yet for new york
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city by the way. if the forecast holds, it will be the coldest since 1962. i will round up to the top three. it's still dangerous out there. we start talking about hypothermia. i have to end with this video. you have to check this out, natalie and george. this time of year, people start throwing boiling water in the air. >> whoa! >> and it freezes instantaneously. we want to see that. >> do that sometime. >> throw that water. you have to have the perfect setup conditions. we don't have that here in atlanta. >> thank you, derek. >> joke's on you, right? >> i guess. thank you. still ahead, the russia investigation has been a thorn in the side of the president from day one and it's bothered the other implicated party, the kremlin, just the same. the latest from moscow ahead. also ahead, residents of coastal u.s. cities are already
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feeling the impact of melting arctic glaciers. speaking of climate change, we've got a report coming up here on "cnn newsroom." resolution #1: binge more. join the un-carrier, and get four unlimited lines for only forty bucks each. plus, netflix for the whole family. on us. so, they get their shows... let's go, girl! you're gonna love this bit! and you get yours. watch however you want. on your phone, tablet, or tv. for just forty bucks per line. with no extra charges.
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almost a year into his presidency, the u.s. president donald trump has given a revealing interview to the "new york times." there were some surprising quotes. on his state of mind that included the russia probe. >> he said in stark contrast to hisounsel robert mueller will treat him fairly, but he also said the investigation makes the country look very bad and it puts the country in a very bad position. so the sooner it's worked out,
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the better it is for the country. >> cnn's fred pleitgen following the story for us live in moscow. good to have you with us. the kremlin shares that opinion lamenting that the damage is done to u.s./russian relations. >> reporter: yeah, absolutely. and, you know, the kremlin from the very beginning has essentially been saying two things. they've been saying, look, there's no evidence that the russians were involved in any sort of election hacking or support of the trump team, what people in america obviously call collusion. the russians have been quite angry about this probe going on. at the same time they have been saying exactly the same thing that the president said in the interview. they say they think the probe into all of this is an embarrassment to the united states, not just the probe itself but the whole discussion going on around and about collusion, all of the things that you're hearing in public as well. at the same time there has been a bit of a shift it seems to us of the russian position while for a very long time they seem to believe that relations
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between the u.s. and russia would improve under the trump administration. you could really tell that in public comments where they were criticizing some of the things coming from the u.s. -- from u.s. politicians but always making sure not to criticize president trump and it seems as though that's changed a little bit, especially over the last couple of weeks, maybe the last couple of months, especially this past week where there's been some very heavy criticism by the russians of the united states and only a few days ago there were some actually pretty revealing comments from vladimir putin who was offering an amnesty to the russians bringing their money back to russia. he said, look, he believes a lot of the restrictions on russian money referring to the sanctions by the united states and by other countries as well seem to be getting more rather than getting less. russia seems to be gearing up for that. yeah, the russians seem to share president trump's opinion. at the same time. they don't seem to believe that any of this is going away any time soon, george. >> fred pleitgen following this live from moscow. thank you. a few moments ago we
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mentioned president trump's tweet still denying that there is a thing called global warming, but in the arctic melting glaciers are becoming the largest source of sea level rise around the world. it's affecting the coastal u.s. cnn's clarissa ward traveled to miami beach, florida, and norfolk, virginia, two cities impacted by this change. here's her report. >> reporter: how high does the water get here? >> so far the water has come to just here, which is eight feet. >> reporter: i mean, we're talking like a few more inches and it's coming into the house. >> exactly. that's our worry. >> reporter: that must be a big worry? >> huge. >> reporter: flooding now consumes her neighborhood up to ten times a year during high tides or after a big storm. >> we moved the outside furniture indoors and put the sofa up on them and move anything that's soft up to the second floor. take all the books off the
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bookcases and get them upstairs. >> reporter: you've devised a drill? >> yes. exactly. exactly. >> reporter: mel bout her dream home 35 years ago, but since then the water and flood insurance prices have soared. >> i gave my husband waders for christmas. >> reporter: very practical. >> it is. >> reporter: does he get good use out of them? >> he sure does, yeah. >> reporter: let me ask you this. if you had known when you bought this house everything that would come with it in terms of the tides, the floods, the power outages, would you maybe have looked for somewhere else to live? >> maybe, but it really was my dream house and it always has been so -- but i can certainly see it becoming unlivable, and that does worry me. >> reporter: for norfolk, the problem has added significance. it hosts the largest naval base
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in the country. sailors are coming home from long deployments to a base threatened by encoaching seas, made worse by natural phenomena that cause the land here to sink. this base is uniquely vulnerable to sea level rise and that potentially makes it a very expensive headache for the military. to replace just one of these piers would cost roughly $100 million. ray mavis is the former secretary of the navy. >> if we don't arrest sea level rise, if we don't reverse this or slow it down, norfolk is going to disappear. that naval base will go underwater and, you know, i represented the navy. our bases tend to be on the ocean and so you're going to see these bases being more and more at risk. >> reporter: so it sounds like
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you're saying that climate change does not only have an impact on national security, that it's vitally important to national security. >> it's one of the biggest risks we have in national security. it's one of the things we've got to plan for the most in national security. >> reporter: but america has been slow to wake up to the threat posed by climate change, in part because it has become a politically charged issue with the trump administration actively dismantling legislation by president obama to curb the use of fossil fuels. does it frustrate you at all that this has become a political issue? >> this notion that climate change is a partisan issue is just nuts. you can see it happening. you can see it out there. and when the military is telling you in unequivocal terms this is happening, it's having an impact on us as a military but it's
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having an impact on this country in security terms, to not listen to that is just foolishness of the highest order. >> reporter: it's a sentiment phil levine shares. >> a little ridiculous. can you imagine debating gravity and the theory of relativity and all of the other proven scientific theories. the ocean is not republican or democrat, it just knows how to rise. we need to understand that quickly. >> reporter: so what can be done? most scientists agree carbon emissions need to be cut to zero within the next few decades to stop temperatures rising to dangerous levels. >> reporter: is it too late? >> it's not too late. the good news is it's not too late. the laws of physics tell us there's still time to prevent catastrophic warming. the only obstacle is our will. our will power. >> reporter: the changes that
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are happening in america and the challenges they present are real. the question is, what will we do? clarissa ward, cnn. two romanians have been charged in the united states with a bold plot to hack police surveillance cameras. authorities say they infiltrated almost 2/3 of the outdoor police cameras in washington last january just days before the inauguration of the u.s. president. >> the suspects were arrested in romania earlier this month. they allegedly hoped to use the computers behind the cameras to spread ransomware. still ahead this hour, it's been 100 days since hurricane maria. puerto rico and the island still has a long way to go regards to recovery. >> no idea when she'll get power back. i'm asking her if she thinks it will be soon? she said, no. ok, yeah...
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♪ that's my request as long as he's breathing he passes the test ♪ ♪ forget the fancy paper and the pretty bow, just wind him up, santa, let him go ♪ >> rosemarie died at the age of 94 years old. >> fans will remember her as one of the wise cracking stars of the 1960s dick van dyk show. the actress and singer played the whitey sally rogers on that sitcom. her trademark black bow and her hair always. in her character she was just sipping there, always searching for a husband. >> rosemarie rosetta, she was first a child star, baby rosemarie, who began her nine decade career just three years old. she became a fixture on game shows. rosemarie died at her home in
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los angeles. >> how many people can say she had a nine decade career. >> yeah. yeah. >> how about that one? all right. to puerto rico where many residents will start the new year in the dark. 100 days since hurricane maria struck the island and much of it still does not have electricity. >> cnn's leila santiago says that's unlikely to change any time soon. >> reporter: it's more than just the flip of a switch. finally, a hint of what life was like before hurricane maria. after more than three months without power, ida is one of the lucky few who just got power. ♪ ♪ >> hot water. i want to take a hot shower. that's what she's excited about, a hot shower. in southeastern puerto rico
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there is a massive zben ner rater to power the substation. it's enough to power part of the town, not a permanent solution, not enough to turn the lights back on for all 38,000 people. it's always been known for its agriculture. now it's that area. where hurricane maria came in knocking out electricity immediately. the mayor said he doesn't know when power will be restored. he believes they were the first to deal with maria and they could be the last. the mayor was born in these mountains near the coast. he calls maria a monster that destroyed them. >> he's saying the urban area could get power very soon but this area, the mountainous area, he says, it could be summer before they see it, which take note, summer is when the hurricane season begins. >> miles away from town high up in the mountains where the power lines are harder to fix cheryl
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has little hope her home will be back soon. maria rushed in through the windows and doors and it ruined more than furniture. it ruined her life. for now new paint is all she can afford to fix any of it. >> she has no idea when she'll get power back. i'm asking her if she thinks it will be soon? >> reporter: without power, cheryl and her children lost more than the lights. >> without power they don't have water. >> reporter: the mayor says the problem, constant bureaucratic delays. for a month they had power workers here but not enough materials to actually carry out the work. mayor santiago calls this a start. he says they need more generators, cables. the u.s. army corps of engineers
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admits a shortage of supplies stemming from other natural disasters is part of the reason why it took so long to get power back to people like ida. >> she doesn't have to wash clothes by hand anymore. >> reporter: back in town, ida will spend time in a home overjoyed. power is the best christmas gift they could ask for, but for the families up in the mountains, the sun sets on another night as they wait for their gift to arrive. >> she has really shown us the relief by so many people, the frustration by others though. still waiting for power. leila santiago, thank you for the report. still ahead, we take you to the box office for a sneak peek at movie releases for 2018. stick around.
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jurassic world fallen kingdom will roar into theaters in june starring chris pralt and the snarky hero and jeff goldbloom reprizes his original role. the film enjoys a flurry blockbusters. the "star wars" franchise will release the movie "solo." >> can we even say the name of the movie? i'll see you next year. >> that's director ron howard. the film is part of disney's strategy to appease voracious "star wars" fans year after year. marvell studios will release a new avengers film and the black panther will get his own spinoff. >> you get to decide what kind of team you are going to be. >> starring chadwick boezman, movie studios are going all in with sci-fi films. like a wrinkle in time based on
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the young adults book. >> into the universe. >> we believe he is. >> oprah winfrey, chris pine and reese witherspoon make up this all enstar ensemble. only to be rivaled by ocean 8 where a crime ring starring sandra bullock try to steal ann hathaway's necklace. >> over $100 million. >> 150 million actually. >> on the animation side disney pixar will release the incredibles 2 more than 13 years after the original. >> you have powers! yeah, baby. >> you may have noticed disney will roll into the new year with its name on some of the biggest money making franchises. perhaps no surprise since disney holds the top two highest grossing films of 2017 in the united states. beauty and the beast and "star
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wars the last jedi." about a billion dollars combined. sara sidner, cnn, los angeles. >> all right. sounds good to me. >> totally. totally. all right. so if you're cool with cold weather, there is an art expo on display in china you've got to check out. >> yeah. it's packed with some unique creations all made of snow and ice except for the penguins. here's amber walker with the story. >> reporter: a dazzling 3d light show complete with polar bears, tigers and melting ice effects debuts in harbin, china. the lights adorn a model of the saint sophia cathedral made completely of snow. this is the first time a 3d light show has launched at the 28-year-old snow sculpture art expo known as a global leader of snow sculpture art. the main sculpture this year is shaped as a skier with angel wings atop a snow mountain anticipating the beijing winter olympics in 2022. the annual exhibit is a main
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feature at the famous harbin ice festival clurg all to the globe and enchanting winter activities and glittering light shows. there are penguins that slide, siberian tiger sightseeing and palaces fit for a snow king. a wonder land saturated with rainbow colors sure to bewitch any adventure seeking traveller willing to brave the cold of the frosty months ahead. amber walker, cnn. well, thanks for watching "cnn newsroom." "early start" is next for viewers here in the united states. i'm natalie allen. >> i'm george howell. for viewers around the world, we have your world headlines. watch cnn.
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wouldn't it be great if you had investments that worked as hard as you do? yeah. introducing essential portfolios. the automated investing solution that lets you focus on your life. extensive new insight to president trump on key topics for next year. what he says about the special counsel. his own attorney zwren and north korea. that might stun you. we have live coverage and reaction. a holiday season tragedy in the bronx, at least a dozen people killed in the deadliest apt fire in new york city in a quarter century. >> good morning to you. good mor
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