tv New Day Saturday CNN April 14, 2018 5:00am-6:00am PDT
5:00 am
usinesses in more places can afford to dream gig. comcast, building america's largest gig-speed network. this is cnn breaking news. >> always greatful to have your company. i'm christie paul. >> the breaking news, the united states launches a military attack against syria and promises to keep up the pressure. >> want to show you some of the new video we're getting in. our first look at some of the damage that's been done there in syria. this is in damascus after american, french and british war ships and planes targets sites connected to syria's chemical weapons program overnight. the strikes in response to a suspected chemical attack that killed dozens of innocent syrians last week. >> next hour we expect to hear from top security officials at a
5:01 am
pentagon briefing. plus, the u.n. security council is holding an emergency meeting in three hours from now at 11:00 a.m. eastern. and a nato meeting is scheduled for this afternoon. we have a team of correspondents covering the latest developments from the pentagon to london to northern syria. we'll take you there in a moment. first a look at how the military strikes happened. watch. video from syria shows the missiles in the sky after president trump announced coordinated strikes. >> we are prepared to sustain this response until the syrian regime stops its use of prohibited chemical agents. >> u.s. allies britain and france were also part of the strikes on what are said to be chemical weapons facilities. >> the combined american, british and french response to these atrocities will integrate all instruments of our national
5:02 am
power. military, economic and diplomatic. >> u.s. officials said they hit three targets, including a biological warfare research site and two sites near homes. one a sarin gas production facility. the other a storage site and command post. >> we did everything we could in our intelligence assessment and our planning to minimize to the maximum degree possible any chance of civilian casualties. >> cruise missiles were among the weapons used and british tornado jets, u.s. b-1 bombers and war ships also part of the strike. >> we had some initial surface to air missile activity from the syrian regime. that's the only retaliatory action that we're aware of at this time. >> the strike comes less than a week after a suspected chemical weapons attack on syria's rebel-held down of douma. graphic footage shot by rescuers and activists show victims, including children dead and injured. cnn has not been able to verify
5:03 am
the authsentauthentisity of the. >> the awful attack left mothers and fathers, infants and children thrashing in pain and gasping for air. these are not the actions of a man. they are crimes of a monster inn stead. >> russia which supports the government of bashar al assad and has troops in syria said of the strikes, we warned that such actions will not be left without consequences. all responsibility for them rests with washington, london and paris. and president trump had this direct message to russia's president putin. >> russia must decide if it will continue down this dark path or if it will join with civilized nations as a force for stability and peace. >> let's go to syria now. nick paton walsh. we're seeing first of some of the early video now of damages
5:04 am
there just near damascus. what are you learning about the damage and the propaganda at least response from assad and the regime? >> much of which we're hearing now from the syrian regime suggests that last night, while, of course, there was significant fireworks over the skies of damascus, something people are far from used to seeing, that it really, this morning, was no real change from normal life. yes, videos showing damage to the research facility which we know was targeted around damascus and there's also suggestions that damage was done to three civilians injured near homes where two of the other facilities targeted were as well. but much of the images being sent out show normal life again. bashar al asaud releasing an extraordinary video of him just strolling into the reception of it seems like his office across a clean marble floor looking like he didn't lose an hour of sleep last night.
5:05 am
that can't really be true but we're seeing perhaps syria trying to suggest last night was a successful repulsion of u.s., uk and french military aggression in their words. now the suggestion from the russians and the syrians, too is the syrian air defense is, obviously, boosted by russian technology. you might say russian air defenses took out 70 of 110 or so missiles launched towards syria. if that was the case, it would be extraordinarily successful for any system. terrific sales tactic by the kremlin. they did refer to surface to air missiles being used but not really, frankly, to that extent. but, still, we're seeing a lesser level of anger from frankly iran and russia that many thought could be the case. this is something everybody wants to see pass them by. >> nick paton walsh, we appreciate the insight. at the top of the hour, the
5:06 am
pentagon is holding a briefing. cnn's barbara starr has been working her sources at the pentagon. we'll bring that to you live when it happens. but what are you hearing about what we expect to hear from them in the next hour? >> what we do expect to hear is more of that battlefield detail all through the night. they've been collecting the battle damage assessment intelligence in terms of each target looking through imagery and other sources to see what damage was inflicted. did they reach their target? did they cause the damage on those targets that they intended to cause? it begins to quickly raise the question of what comes next. you heard the president there say that he is holing the door open to a sustained response but it might not be military. there might be other things that the u.s. would decide to do. now defense secretary mattis expanded on this point a little bit more last night at a late night press conference here. >> but right now, this is a one
5:07 am
time shot. and i believe that it sent a very strong message to dissuade him to deter him from doing this again. >> so that's what they're going to be looking for. indications that assad has gotten the message. it may be a very open question as to whether he has. now secretary mattis saying that essentially they are done. we are being told done for now. there are no immediate plans for additional strikes. they want to see what the reaction is. they want to see how the russians react to all of this. whether assad continues to move any of his chemical capability around. and it would be no surprise that the u.s. military always holds up open the optsi the options f action. >> barbara starr, thank you. let's bring in chief international correspondent christiane amanpour. i want to talk about something barbara mentioned there. what is next. let's listen to a portion of what the president said last
5:08 am
night. all right. so we don't have it. he said the combined american, british and french response to these atrocities will integrate all instruments of our power. military and diplomatic. we're prepares to sustain this response until the syrian response stops its use of prohibited chemical agents. the u.s., the world has had all those levers up to this point. what steel realistically is in their collective arsenals that would be more persuasive than anything else up to this point? >> this is really the key question. does this, as general mattis, the secretary of defense outlined, this is a one shot only. they continue to say this current wave is over, and the ball is back in assad the court. it's also in iran and mostly russia's court. will these nations who back assad and upon whom assad depends 100% for his survival. will these nations tell him enough is enough? russia is a signatory to all
5:09 am
these international laws about chemical weapons. it is a violation of international law, the use of chemical weapons, biological weapons and all weapons of mass destruction. so what the west is trying to do is draw a line under the use of that. stop allowing bashar assad as he's been doing for the last seven years to normalize the use of chemical weapons. and it's true he's been doing it and there's only been now two responses, both under the administration of president trump who is trying to re-establish, along with his allies this red line so it isn't crossed again. they're going to have to see if they can come up with a credible set of economic and political measures going forward. it's very difficult. but many who i have spoken to, former secretaries of state, former intelligence officials and all those who have been at this kind of table before say that you have to use all tools in the toolbox. it cannot just be military. and it, obviously, cannot just be diplomatic without the credible backing of military
5:10 am
force. so all of this has to be brought to bear. the question is, is there any appetite to do it? and wooelt see what russia's diplomatic response is going forward. as of yet, you know this is a proportionate response to what happened in douma. not an excessive response. and president putin has called it an act of aggression but he didn't say it's an act of war against russia. so let's see what happens in the security council and whether any kind of political process can be salvaged from this rubble. >> and that's what i wanted to ask you about was this u.n. security council, this emergency meeting happening at 11:00 today. we know that russia called for that tonight, or overnight, saying they wanted them to discuss this, quote, aggressive action of the u.s. and its allies. what do you suspect the u.n. will or can do in this particular instance? >> well, the u.n. itself as a body can't do anything.
5:11 am
the u.n. is the sum of its constituent parts and the five permanent members, there are two camps. there's the pro-stopping assad camp and the pro backing assad camp. it's very, very difficult to get through this. that's what's happened over the last seven years of this war. the russians have provided assad with all the political cover, including obstructing any kind of, you know, politics and other sort of ultimatums to assad. and they have provided the political cover to iran which has provided the military shield for assad, along with hezbollah and other militias. rush ksia is now on the ground in the air there, too. iran and russia control the playing field much more than the u.s. has up until now. there are u.s. forces there. they are in the north. they're not involved in a war against president assad but a war against isis. now there's been this u.s.-led, along with britain and france,
5:12 am
air response. proportionate. we wait to see whether assad is going to have the chutzpah to do it again and we'll see whether that brings the response that general mattis and president trump and president macron of france said it would, if russia -- if syria does this again. but remember, russia is also under a lot of pressure because of the whole evidence that it was a russian military grade novichuk nerve agent that poisoned the skripal father and daughter here in england. so right now there's this kind of -- it feels like this line is being drawn to start pushing back against russia. >> christiane amanpour, thank you. we, of course, are getting reaction in from around the world. a statement from china. their ministry of foreign affairs saying we oppose the use of force in international relations. opposing the strikes that happened overnight. we'll, of course, as we get more
5:13 am
in, we'll bring that to you. >> including reaction from a u.s. lawmaker asking, did congress need to authorize this action? we have details just ahead. after searching cell phones and safety deposit boxes and an office and hotel room, more details on the key evidence the fbi seized from president trump's attorney michael cohen. s in a chevrolet for the first time. trying something new can be exciting. empowering. downright exhilarating. see for yourself why chevrolet is the most awarded and fastest growing brand, the last four years overall. switch into a new chevy now. current competitive owners can get five thousand dollars below msrp on this 2018 equinox when you finance with gm financial. find new roads at your local chevy dealer.
5:16 am
5:17 am
let's go. so we climb. hike. see a bear. woah. reach the top. dave says dark magic is a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness. a source tells cnn the fbi now has recordings of president trump's attorney michael cohen. cohen taped his conversations with a lawyer for two women who say they had affairs with the president. all of this is unfolding. meanwhile a source says cohen got a call from the president yesterday. a white house spokesman says cohen is still the president's personal attorney. even though he's under criminal investigation. according to a warrant, cohen is being visit gated for bank fraud, wire friday and campaign issues. so far cohen has admitted no wrong doing. he has not been charged.
5:18 am
katlyn collins with us now. what are you hearing about the plausiblity that cohen will continue on as the president's personal attorney? >> just yesterday the white house is saying he is still representing the president, of course. but that brings all of this into question now that we've learned when those fbi agents did raid not only michael cohen's house, office and hotel room that they did obtain these audio recordings with keith davidson. he's this attorney who previously represented stormy daniels and carrie mcdougal. of course, stormy daniels is the porn star paid $130,000 to keep quiet about her affair with donald trump, as well as karen mcdougal, the former "playboy" playmate who also says she had an affair with the president. of course, the question here is, why was michael cohen recording these conversations with another attorney? we're told that's a standard practice of his. something he did not just with keith davidson but also other
5:19 am
people as well. one thing i should note is that keith davidson no longer represents either of these women. but we do know that that search warrant those fbi agents used when they went into michael cohen's house, hotel and office was they were looking for information relating to that payment to stormy daniels, something michael cohen has admitted he did make that payment to her but he says the president was unaware of it. and also what efforts they used to keep karen mcdougal, the other woman, silent about her alleged affair with the president. the way the white house ties into all of this is the white house is saying that michael cohen does represent the president and, of course, as my colleague gloria borger reported yesterday, michael cohen and the president spoke just yesterday because the president called him to check in. now we're waiting to see what's on these audio recordings. what investigators are going to learn from all of this and what michael cohen's role was with these two women. >> kaitlan collins, grateful to
5:20 am
see you this morning. dozens of missiles strike three targets in syria as the u.s. and its allies hit the country to try to take out its chemical weapons store. details on the military strategy ahead. plus british prime minister theresa may says the strike on syria is not aimed at regime change. we'll talk about that with ryan crocker, former u.s. ambassador to afghanistan, pakistan, iraq and syria. stay close. n life, we tend to start small. less of this. cut back on that. but if it feels like a lot of effort for a little gain, change that. start with something that makes a big difference... ...your student loans. refinancing with sofi could save you $30,000. it's an easier way to reach your life goal sooner. we've helped over 195,000 people. we want to help you too. find out how much you can save in just two minutes at sofi.com/save.
5:21 am
in just two minutes whoamike and jen doyle?than i thought. yeah. time for medicare, huh. i have no idea how we're going to get through this. follow me. choosing a plan can be super-complicated. but it doesn't have to be. unitedhealthcare can guide you through the confusion, with helpful people, tools and plans. including the only plans with the aarp name. well that wasn't so bad at all. that's how we like it. aarp medicare plans, from unitedhealthcare.
5:22 am
but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. we're on a mission to show drip coffee drinkers, it's time to wake up to keurig. wakey! wakey! rise and shine! oh my gosh! how are you? well watch this. i pop that in there. press brew. that's it. look how much coffee's in here? fresh coffee. so rich. i love it. that's why you should be a keurig man! full-bodied. are you sure you're describing the coffee and not me? do you wear this every day? everyday. i'd never take it off. are you ready to say goodbye to it? go! go! ta da! a terrarium. that's it. we brewed the love, right guys? (all) yes. your society was led by a woman,
5:23 am
5:25 am
i ordered the united states armed forces to launch precision strikes on targets associated with the chemical weapons capabilities of syrian dictator bashar al assad. to iran and to russia, the nations of the world can be judged by the friends they keep. >> michael cohen had tapes. we don't yet know what is on them. but this is only getting worse for the president. >> if michael cohen flips, he knows all the secrets, he knows all the dirt, this may open up a wide universe of illegal conduct. this is cnn breaking news. >> welcome back. we've got more on our breaking news coverage this morning. >> the president is tweeting
5:26 am
right now talking about syria. want to read what he's saying. a perfectly executed strike last night. thank you to france and the united kingdom for their wisdom and the power of their fine military. could not have had a better result. mission accomplished. of course, he is talking about the u.s., uk and france just pounding syria with missiles overnight. targeting three sites associated with the research and storage of chemical weapons. >> we'll talk about those last two words, mission accomplished in that tweet in just a moment. the u.n. security council meets in just a few hours and a nato meeting is scheduled for this afternoon. two defense officials say three u.s. ships participated in the air strikes, although the u.s. and its allies would not say how many missiles they used. the president had this message for syria's allies. watch. >> to iran and to russia, i ask, what kind of a nation wants to be associated with the mass murder of innocent men, women
5:27 am
and children? the nations of the world can be judged by the friends they keep. >> russia called the attack, quote, an act of aggression against a sovereign state and warned that such action will not be left without consequences. major general james spider marks explains where these strikes originated and the movements of allied troops in that area. >> most of the strikes probably came from this location here where both the french and the u.s. are located because of the proximity to targets within syria and the closure time on those targets. the u.s. has presence in turkey. the brits in cyprus. the u.s. always maintains presence in the mediterranean. we also know now the u.s. is transiting up through the red sea. it doesn't have to go through the suez and join the forces here in the med. that could get crowded but could stay in the red sea to go north or south and get back into the
5:28 am
indian ocean. and we also have forces that are down here. this is where the strikes came from. i think what's important to realize here as well is that russian forces in syria are co-located in many locations where syrian forces are. what we see here, this indicates that russian forces are here. it's also a location of where syrian forces are. so you have strike packages that might be going into locations like this or in damascus where you have proximity. you need to have standoff. we do not want to go to war with russia. >> thank you to spider marks for that. colonel cedric lleyton with us now. thank you for being here. i want to get back to what the president just tweeted saying it could not have had a better result. mission accomplished. do you agree? was the mission accomplished last night? >> well, christie, we doepn't really know where the mission
5:29 am
was accomplished. i think the president's tweet is an early indication that what we call the battle damage assessment, or bda, has been quite good n quite positive for the u.s. and its allies. but what we'll really have to see is not only what targets were struck but what the after effects are. will the sir crals will the sir crayrians do what t them to do and that's not use chemical weapons. it's too early to say whether that part of the mission has been accomplished. >> what we're seeing on the right-hand part of the screen is some of the damage, the newest video that's been coming in from syria so we can see exactly what was done. at least in this part of damascus is what we're looking at here. but here's a question for you, colonel. if you target, as we know we're targeted here, research and development facilities and stockpiles or facilities where they believe stockpiles of chemical weapons were stored, do
5:30 am
you not risk dispersing that chemical weapon into the air and causing more damage? how do you balance -- how do you balance that? >> that's very difficult, christie. it's a great question. what you have to do is kind of figure out where these chemical weapons are and also in what state they are being stored in. so some chemicals when they don't have a fuse associate with them, when they're not weaponized, they can actually be destroyed or disposed of quite safely. so depending on the exact type of chemical and we're probably talking about sarin in this particular case, it is possible to get rid of stockpiles without having them actually pose a danger to the surrounding area. but it is risky, and it is certainly possible that the types of precursors that are used can actually serve to actually create a big problem for the neighboring community.
quote
5:31 am
so that becomes this real serious issue and one of the things you look at is wind direction, wind speed, things of that nature at the time of the strike so potentially you mitigate those kind of effects. >> we know that the allies, u.s. and its allies here, were working very closely to make sure that there was no russia presence in any of the targeted zones. president trump just tweeting now again saying so proud of our great military which will soon be, after the spending of billions of fully approved dollars, the finest our country has ever had. there won't be anyone or anything even close. with russia now saying this was an aggressive action, what do you expect in terms of a response from them? and what the president is saying there, that our military, obviously, fully equipped to handle whatever come what may. do you have confidence in that
5:32 am
and in any plan moving forward of dealing with syria? >> well, i think the u.s. military, of course, is an excellent military force, and it is certainly better prepared than it has been in some time. however, there are still some significant gaps because of budget shortfalls in the past in the recent past. as far as the response from russia is concerned, putin can decide to do one of two things. he can either decide to allow the kind of action that we've taken and respond to it in a way we deem positive, or he can double down. and i'm afraid he's going to try to double down at least initially. so what we have to do is make sure that our military not only has the right kind of budgetary process associated with it and the right kind of money but that it can also respond and, quite frankly, the response that we need to have is one that needs to be now.
5:33 am
needs to be capable at a moment's notice. the budgetary issues that the president talks about are budgetary issues that will take a long time to resolve. so you're talking about readiness issues, training issues, things like that. but we're in a far better posture than we were, say, you know, a few years ago. and that does make a difference. and i think potential adversaries should take note of that. >> colonel leighton, thanks for sharing your expertise. >> you bet. up next, we are talking live with ambassador ryan crocker. former u.s. ambassador to afghanistan, iraq, pakistan and syria. we'll get his thoughts. stay close. you know, i used to be good at this. then you turn 40 and everything goes. tell me about it. you know, it's made me think, i'm closer to my retirement days than i am my college days. hm. i'm thinking... will i have enough? should i change something? well, you're asking the right questions. i just want to know, am i gonna be okay?
5:34 am
i know people who specialize in "am i going to be okay." i like that. you may need glasses though. yeah. schedule a complimentary goal planning session today with td ameritrade. and lose weight with contrave. it's fda-approved to help adults who are overweight or struggle with obesity lose weight and keep it off. contrave is believed to work on two areas of the brain: your hunger center... i'm so hungry. (avo) and your reward system... ice cream.
5:35 am
french fries. (avo) to help control cravings. one ingredient in contrave may increase suicidal thoughts or actions in some children, teens, and young adults in the first few months. serious side effects are mood changes like depression and mania, seizures, increased blood pressure or heart rate, liver damage, glaucoma, allergic reactions, and hypoglycemia. not for patients with uncontrolled blood pressure, seizure history, anorexia, bulimia, drug or alcohol withdrawal, on bupropion, opioids, maois, allergy to the ingredients, or pregnant. may cause nausea, constipation, headache, and vomiting. reduce hunger, help control cravings with contrave. now you an talk to a doctor online and get free shipping at getcontravenow.com. liberty mutual saved us almost $800 when we switched our auto and home insurance. liberty did what? yeah, they saved us a ton, which gave us a little wiggle room in our budget. i wish our insurance did that. then we could get a real babysitter instead of your brother. hey, welcome back. this guy, right? (laughs) yes. ellen.
5:36 am
that's my robe. you could save $782 when liberty stands with you. liberty mutual insurance. the toothpaste that helps prevent bleeding gums. if you spit blood when you brush or floss you may have gum problems and could be on the journey to much worse. help stop the journey of gum disease. try parodontax toothpaste. ♪
5:37 am
5:38 am
let's bring in ambassador ryan crocker, former u.s. ambassador to afghanistan, iraq, pakistan and syria. mr. ambassador, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> i want to start with the president just tweeted out just about 15 minutes ago. this was his tweet about the air strikes yesterday. i want to folk ous just the last two words here where the president tweets out, mission accomplished. of course, for a lot of people that's reminiscent of when former president george w. bush stood in a flight suit on an aircraft carrier during the iraq war under the banner that read mission accomplished and some of the deadliest years of the iraq war followed that affirmation, that assertion. from your perspective, was mission accomplished considering that something like this happened just a year ago where there was a chemical attack and then a limited military response and here we are one year later? was the mission accomplished? >> well, clearly, he could have had a better choice of words. it depends how you define the
5:39 am
mission. if the mission was to put missiles on a select group of targets, i guess we did that. if we're talking about where the whole syrian conflict is going, not only is it not mission accomplished, we report is even begun a mission. we have no strategy in syria. >> let's talk about the mission in two separate conversations. first, limited to the chemical weapons. based on what we know about the strikes, the u.s., french and british executed last night, do you see that what happened last night, at least significantly makes it less likely that the world won't be in this place with the same chronology next april with a chemical attack, a limited military strike, as we are this april, as the u.s. and the world was last april? >> i have no idea what damage we did to his chemical weapon facilities and production units. even if we did knock them out,
5:40 am
those are not, as i understand it, very hard to replicate. it really comes down, i think, to a question of what are the russians and the iranians prepared to do. if they are going to encourage or even tolerate the rebuilding of chemical stores, then, yes, that's exactly where we're going to be and we may not need to wait until next april to get there. >> so, i mean, and tell me if i'm putting this in the wrong phrase here, in the wrong framing. as long as russia and iran are fully committed to assad and syria and the u.s. and the rest of the world are fully committed to staying out of a hot war there or directly confronting assad or putin, nothing is going to change? >> again, they have got the forces on the ground. they are prepared to use them in support of their ally. we cannot seem to get to the point of even developing a strategy for syria.
5:41 am
so i don't see russia and iran changing any time soon. i wish i could say i saw something in this strike last night that would indicate that we're getting serious about dealing with the issue. look, it's not a military problem. it's a political problem. and, by the way, i don't think it was lost on anybody in the region that we paired up with the british and the french just at about the 100th year anniversary of britain and france dividing up the middle east between them. here come the old colonialists and new colonialists. >> let's talk about that political solution which, as the years go on, seems less likely. the president last night said that the u.s. is prepared to sustain the response using both military and economic, also diplomatic levers of power to stop at least the prohibited
5:42 am
chemical agents use. the use of the word sustained. are you convinced the u.s., the global community, will sustain those three levers of power, and what could be persuasive? what could get assad or convince assad to stop using these chemical weapons? >> again, it will depend probably more on assad's allies than it does on assad himself. we've actually created a problem for ourselves. when we launch strikes against chemical weapon capabilities and only chemical weapon capabilities, we are in effect saying, hey, you know what? mr. assad, you can kill your people from sunrise to sunset, you know. we don't care. have at it. go whack them, just as they did, of course, in aleppo. tremendous loss of civilian
5:43 am
life. and indeed in the whole east ghouta region. so effectively that's what we're saying. kill them any way you want, just don't use chemical weapons to do it. if -- >> continue your thought. i'm sorry. >> and again, if that's what this is shaping into, a sustained u.s./british/french effort solly against chemical weapons, it might have been better that we didn't even start. >> ambassador crocker, thank you for being with us. >> thank you. quick break. we'll be back. [burke] vengeful vermin. seen it. covered it. we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
5:44 am
this is the story of green mountain coffee roasters dark magic told in the time it takes to brew your cup. first, we head to vermont. and go to our coffee shop. and meet dave. hey. why is dark magic so spell-bindingly good, he asks? let me show you. let's go. so we climb. hike. see a bear. woah. reach the top. dave says dark magic is a bold blend of coffee with rich flavors of uganda, sumatra, colombia and other parts of south america. like these mountains, each amazing on their own. but together? magical. all, for a smoother tasting cup of coffee. green mountain coffee roasters packed with goodness. at a comfort inn with a glow taround them, so people watching will be like, "wow, maybe i'll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com." who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom.
5:45 am
book now at choicehotels.com. my secret visitors. hallucinations and delusions. the unknown parts of living with parkinson's. what plots they unfold, but only in my mind. over 50% of people with parkinson's will experience hallucinations or delusions during the course of their disease. if your loved one is experiencing these symptoms, talk to your parkinson's specialist. there are treatment options that can help. my visitors should be the ones i want to see.
5:47 am
there are treatment it's hard to get all the daily that's why i love fiber choice. it has the fiber found in many fruits and vegetables, all in a tasty chewable tablet. fiber choice: the smart choice. 47 minutes past the hour. there are civilians caught in the middle of the syrian air strike. some of the civilians have nowhere to go. >> the u.s. at one point accepted tens of thousands of them but so far this year, 11.
5:48 am
arwa damon joins us from a refugee camp in northern syria. arwa, give us just an idea of how these attacks affect the people there. >> well, let me first start off by describing the attacks that actually caused people to flee to these refugee camps. everyone is living here in these tents right now is from the ghouta/douma area where the alleged chemical strike took place. we've been spending the better part of the day with this family. the two girls, the twins and they have brought some of their stuff with them. the kids' bags still have a very acrid smell with them and what she's going to show us is what her daughter did when they were leaving. and as they were leaving, this is how traumatized children are. as they were leaving, she took her dolls and hid them inside this box and then told the doll,
5:49 am
speaking to the doll said you're going to suffocate in here maybe but at least you might be safe from the bombings. we were talking about those air strikes that took place, those u.s., uk and french air strikes that took place. and she was telling us that she does not want to see more civilian casualties. she does not want there to necessarily be a violent military end to all of this but there has to be a political solution. this has to end. they were all underground when the regime, the alleged regime chemical attack took place. and she was telling us about how -- they were trying to come up when the bombing happened and she could barely breathe. she was trying to get up the stairs. she could feel -- she felt her entire nerves basically released and they were trying to hold cold, wet pieces of cloth.
5:50 am
they tried to go up to the upper levels and then when they reached the upper levels trying to escape this chemical strike, there was an air strike that happened. so they were forced back underground. and this is just a smidgion of what these families have been going through. and that is exactly why they don't want to just see limited air strikes. she wants to see a political solution. at the end of the day, it's not just chemical attacks killing and destroying people's lives here. it's all of the other bombings that are taking place. >> arwa, you are talking to that family specifically there. where do these people want to go? >> well, in an ideal world, they would go back home. they would go back to the lives that they had before. but where can they actually realistically go? this is going to end up being their life for who knows exactly how long. no one can answer that and what
5:51 am
so many of these parents are worried about is where are the children going to go to school? these two twins are 7 years old. all they've known is war. they haven't had a chance to have a proper education. when they first came to this camp, their mother was telling us that they began for the aunts here, they began digging a little trench for the ants. that's how they were playing a game so the ants could stay safe from potential bombing. and that is going to be the next big crisis that this region, this country is going to have to deal with. there are so many people living in these refugee camps throughout this entire province that don't have the option of going back home because their homes have been completely destroyed. talk to anybody here, and they will tell you that when you refer back to ghouta, to douma, what happened to them is beyond words. the nightmare they've lived. the fact there are no buildings standing. the fact you can't recognize streets that you used to have
5:52 am
anymore. we were talking to an elderly lady who was here. and she lost her son and three of her grandchildren. she was telling us that the only thing she wish she's could have back is those moments when the entire family was all alive and still together and they were having their friday lunches. and it is heartbreaking to be talking to these people and when you ask them what their thoughts are about the reaction from the outside world, they feel as if they have repeatedly been betrayed. they feel as if these strikes are limited and that they're not really about trying to save them or trying to end the suffering of the syrian population. that they are more just another move in this broader, global, sickening game of chess that's going on, and they truly feel as if there's no one standing by them and no one who really wants to protect them. >> arwa, quickly, the numbers we discussed at the top of this
5:53 am
segment that previously thousands of syrian refugees were allowed to come here to the u.s. in the first quarter thus far this year, just 11 syrian refugees let into this country. that's got to be heartbreaking for a lot of people hoping this would be their refuge. >> yeah, it would be if they were aware of those numbers, although, frankly, i don't think many of them would be surprised by it. there has long, long been a sense amongst the syrian refugee population, whether it's those who are internally displaced in their own country or those who are in neighboring countries trying to begin to build their lives that the rest of the world doesn't care about them. that doors are being shut repeatedly in their face whether it's europe or the united states. they have long felt as if america isn't going to come to save them. and there is this complete and total sense of despair because
5:54 am
fundamentally, many of them actually do want to believe that if america truly wanted to, it could save them. it could have ended all of this years ago. but there is that ongoing sense that everything is being shut in their faces. that they have no other option. that they truly are being left to try to fend for themselves and some of the most inconceivable, inhumane circumstances. and that is incredibly difficult for anyone to go through, never mind for people who have already been through so much to have to begin to try to comprehend and understand. >> arwa, we saw a boy, i think, there go by. was he holding -- what was he holding? could you tell? was there a toy gun? >> i think he had -- no, no, i think it was toy guns, but --
5:55 am
[ speaking foreign language ] he's right here. his name is hamed. i'm asking him why he's playing with guns. hasn't he had enough of war? he's playing with his friends. yeah, he's playing war with guns, and i think, you know, that's -- it's not a game for these children. for them, war is very, very real but at the same time, and this goes back to maybe your other question about where can they go. if -- people have forgotten this concept of children's rights. when a child doesn't have an alternate reality, an alternative narrative, when they don't have an opportunity to go to school, to go to learn, when all they know is this violent way of life then what chance do
5:56 am
they have hat a future? what chance do they have to integrate into society and to begin to believe that the world can actually be a better place than the one that they know? >> arwa, we see just as much as your photographer can show us here with this camera angle, but how large, how expansive is this camp? >> sorry, could you repeat that question? >> how large is this camp? >> there are probably a few thousand families here, and this is just one of the camps that has been set up to try to receive those who were forcibly evacuated from ghouta and douma. there's a second camp significantly larger than this one. and if we were to somehow be able to drive through this entire countryside that we're in in aleppo and in idlib, you see camp after camp after camp. it's endless.
5:57 am
and that goes back to this whole issue of what happens to these families? what happens to these children? the nightmare scenario is these camps somehow become much more permanent. that this then becomes their reality. that then they are not able to go back home. they're not able to actually have a viable and real future in their own country. when you ask some of them why they stayed in those areas under siege for so long, some will tell you that it's because when you've lost so much in your life, when you've lost so many people that you love, you somehow just want to cling to whatever it is that is remotely familiar and that's why some of them don't leave. others don't leave because they don't have the means or they have elderly living with them and, yes, a fair number of those families here are the families of people that were fighting against the regime. every single person we've been talking to today has lost someone who they love. we have spoken to people who
5:58 am
were impacted by the 2013 chemical bombing who then were wounded in other bombings that happened afterwards. who then were affected by this most recent chemical bombing and who then were wounded again afterwards before they were able to be evacuated. and i think the other most striking thing, though, is -- just to leave you with this thought, is despite everything that these people have gone through, every family we spoke to that invited us to have tea because that is what this culture here is all about and that is the humanity that they are holding onto. >> strong people and resilient people and yet so sad to see, particularly. arwa, thank you for bringing us the images and the vision there of how these people are living, these children and what they're living with. >> we often talk about the deaths, the hundreds of thousands. many organizations stopd counting. but we also need to remember the survivors across syria. arwa, thank you. we're just moments away from an update from the pentagon.
5:59 am
we'll bring that to you live, of course. also, the u.n. security council holding an emergency meeting at 11:00. and a nato meeting scheduled for this afternoon. "smerconi "smerconish" is with you now. this is cnn breaking news. >> i'm michael smerconish in philadelphia. we welcome our viewers in the united states and around the world. we have breaking news this morning. we're standing by for a pentagon briefing on the air strikes on syria. the united states, uk and france assessing the success of the coorinated raid targeting sites associated with the syrian regime's chemical weapons program. the u.s. and its allies blame syria for a chemical attack on douma just over a week ago. president donald trump and theresa may said such action could not go unchallenged. the president tweeting this morning, a perfectly executed strike last night. thank you to france and the united kingdom for their wisdom and the power of their fine
6:00 am
military. could not have had a better result. mission accomplished. as we wait for the brief, let's bring in cnn's senior international correspondent nick paton walsh for the latest. nick, any casualties in the attacks? >> at this point, the u.s. are clear they have no losses themselves and the syrian regime have said three people were injured as part of falling debris from an intercepted missile. now, obviously, take to some degree the syrian regime's statements here with a pinch of salt. they've not been enormously truthful in the past, and the russian regime today say themselves that 71 out of 110 of the missiles launched by the uk, u.s. and france were intercepted. that will be a staggeringly successful rate by even the best missile defense systems. it's quite clear the russians have beefed up what the syrian regime have been able to do here recently but still i'm sure a lot more got through than thisly that. this is part of the strategy to
175 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=366838692)