tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN February 28, 2022 10:00pm-10:59pm PST
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>> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. i'm michael holmes coming to you live from lviv in ukraine as this country faces day six of a russian invasion. and a massive russian convoy bearing down on the ukrainian capital, kyiv. satellite imagery showing it stretches for more than 40 miles, or 65 kilometers, and includes tanks and artillery. russian troops have breached the kyiv suburbs before and met fierce resistance.
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what you're looking at there is social media video purporting to show what is left of another russian column laid waste by the ukra ukrainians. but this latest convoy looming to the north is stoking fears that the worst may be around the corner. cnn has learned that u.s. lawmakers were given a classified briefing saying ukraine could soon be overwhelmed. one source said they were given a timeline for when ukrainian cities could fall and called it alarming. it's not just in kyiv. russian troops are pouring in by land, sea, and air. ukraine's second largest city, kharkiv, became the scene of intense shelling on monday. you can see one of the barrages here. buildings being blasted as thick smoke rises into the air. the mayor says at least nine civilians were killed in this. and all of this the same day russian negotiators were meaning a ukrainian delegation at the border with belarus. ukraine's president says the
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russians were syncing up these attacks with the negotiations, and he's accusing them of targeting civilians. >> translator: it was clearly a war crime. kharkiv is a peaceful city. there are peaceful residential areas, no military facilities. dozens of eyewitness accounts prove that this is not a single false volley but deliberate destruction of people. the russians knew where they were shooting. >> now, meantime, ukrainians stepping up to do everything they can to keep those russian troops out of kyiv. cnn's jim sciutto reports. [ sound of gunfire ] >> reporter: ukrainian forces have so far managed to hold on to the capital, kyiv, defying u.s. intelligence assessments despite the increasing intensity of the russian onslaught. but u.s. officials are now
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warning that russia could soon increase the intensity of their attack. >> they have suffered setbacks, but i don't think we can just assume that they're going to stay set back. >> reporter: satellite images show a russian military convoy getting closer to kyiv from the north. the head of the convoy most recently observed at an airport fewer than 20 miles from the city center. as the ukrainians try to hold off the russian advance across the country, the u.s. and its allies are keeping up the pressure on the financial front, sanctioning russia's central bank, essentially cutting off vladimir putin's ability to support the russian ruble, which fell as much as 30% on monday. >> these actions will severely impact putin's inner circle, impede the kremlin's use of its international reserves, and limit its ability to fund ongoing destabilizing activities. >> reporter: and in an historic move, even switzerland, long a bastian of neutrality, has
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decided to match the european union's sanctions on russia. >> translator: russia's attack against ukraine is unacceptable with regards to international law, unacceptable politically speaking, and unacceptable from a moral point of view. >> reporter: as the war continues to rage, russia has come to the negotiating table with ukraine. ukraine says their primary aim is a cease-fire and cessation of hostilities. russia says the two sides found points where they could make progress. a second round of talks will take place in the coming days. though ukrainian president zelenskyy sounded pessimistic before the talks began. >> translator: i don't really believe in the result of this meeting, but let them try. so then later on, no citizen of ukraine would have any doubt that i, the president, did not try to stop the war when i had a chance. >> reporter: today the u.s. made a different kind of move on the
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diplomatic front, expelling 12 russian diplomats from the u.n., accusing them of espionage activities but noting this process had been going on for several months. cnn has reached out to the state department for comment. military aid is still pouring into ukraine. the biden administration approving another $350 million of security assistance over the weekend. and even sweden, a non-nato member, announced they'd be sending 5,000 anti-tank weapons, 5,000 helmets, 5,000 body shields, and 135,000 field rations. >> we're going to continue to provide security assistance to ukrainian armed forces. the ukrainians have been effective at using these weapons and these systems and at resisting and pushing back russian forces. >> reporter: germany finally announced it would send weapons to ukraine as well and has said it will hike its own defense spending in light of russia's continued aggression.
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>> translator: president putin should not underestimate our determination to defend every square meter of our alliance's territory together with our allies. >> reporter: jim sciutto, cnn, lviv. now, as the war rages on in ukraine, the united nations high commissioner for how many rights says more than 400 reported civilian casualties have been reported. all of this coming as the international criminal court has announced it will open an
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melissa bell now reports. >> reporter: it was only a week ago. a rambling tv address in which vladimir putin signaled the start of a war and the abrupt end of weeks of frantic diplomacy. so abrupt, says the french president, the discussions had continued until just a few hours before. >> translator: so, yes, there was duplicity. yes, there was deliberate conscious choice by president putin to launch the war when we could still negotiate peace. >> reporter: but if the abruptness of the announcement surprised the french president, its tone did not. says a french presidential source who described it as rigid and paranoid, something they say chimes what macron had noticed during his five hours of talks with the russian president on february 7th, when the russian president struck him as
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different, stiffer and more isolated than he had been in the past. and few western leaders have seen as much of vladimir putin these last few years as emmanuel macron. the russian president was one of the first foreign leaders to visit macron just after his election in 2017 at versailles. and the russian leader visited macron again during his summer break in the south of france in 2019 and then again at the elysees palace in december of that same year. that was the last time that macron had seen putin until he met with him in moscow. what elysees palace sources say is that by then, he found himself opposite a man who was much changed. macron felt that putin was now in an ideological drift, no longer the man he'd met in december of 2019. by saturday, putin was once again making televised remarks referring to ukraine's leadership as a nazi or fascist regime, urging ukrainian armed forces to seize power even as
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the country's jewish president was defiantly speaking to the world from kyiv and ukrainian forces and civilians were putting up stiff resistance. >> i think that this guy lost touch with reality actually. really and realities. american realities or western european realities, ukrainian reality, and even russian realities because the russian people -- this is clearer and clearer every day -- doesn't support this war. >> reporter: by sunday, another televised address and a further escalation. the russian president putting his nuclear arsenal on high alert, blaming nato for its aggressive statements. >> translator: putin poses a much greater threat to the world than bin laden. >> reporter: even as the russian
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invasion slows in the face of ukrainian resistance, the question is now one of disconnect even within the kremlin. ukraine's foreign minister saying sunday that their intelligence suggests that even those close to putin are against the invasion. a military move that may have devastating consequences for russia. melissa bell, cnn, paris. all right. jeffrey lewis is the director of the east asian nonproliferation program at the middlebury institute of international studies, and he joins me now from monterey, california. thanks so much for doing so. what did you make of putin, his announcement of putting his nuclear forces on alert, but by doing it on television, it was like staged for maximum, almost theatrical effect. do you read anything into that? >> oh, yes. it is not normal to put your
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nuclear forces on alert on television. it's not normal to do it by giving a little speech. these are things that are supposed to be written down, and so i look at this fundamentally as a performance, and it's a way of changing the subject. if vladimir putin had not made this announcement, we would have been talking about how the russian military was performing dreadfully. we would be talking about the civilian toll that was happening. we'd be talking about the sanctions. in short, we'd be talking about how badly things were going for him. by doing this, he changes the subject and gives us something else to talk about. >> yeah, yeah. how concerning, though, is it even as a ploy, and at the same time, does the u.s. have systems that would detect what stage the russians are at with their readiness? >> yes. the united states has satellites and other means of collecting signals intelligence. and so if there was an order that went out or if the alert rate of nuclear weapons forces were to change, the u.s.
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intelligence community would have picked that up. so when richard nixon put u.s. nuclear forces on alert in 1973, he didn't announce it. he just assumed the russians would see it. the same thing is true here. so the fact, again, that they've announced it suggests that it's really about the propaganda piece. now, that said, playing with nuclear weapons is playing with fire, and so there is a danger that emerges from this. and i don't want to discount that, but i think what we're seeing is somebody acting recklessly more than we are somebody who is deliberately planning to start a nuclear war. that i don't think is very likely. >> yeah. i mean it is inconceivable that he would consider using nuclear weapons. but what would use of -- i think they're called tactical or battlefield nuclear weapons look like in europe? what would they even do? one assumes he would have literal fallout for his own country. >> yeah. you know, there are a variety of
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different kinds of tactical nuclear weapons, so it's a little bit hard to group them together. they run from everything from depth charges that you might use to try to destroy a submarine to nuclear weapons that you put on missiles to shoot at incoming missiles. i think in this scenario, if russia were to use so-called non-strategic weapons, what they would do is they would target things like airfields in order to try to knock them out. we've already seen the russians fire a number of conventional missiles at airfields. so nuclear weapons would be something that might be used in that context. but to be honest, i don't think that gets vladimir putin anything new. i don't think that's actually a helpful thing for him to do in terms of their military effect. and then of course are all the follow-on political and other effects that he would have to deal with. so, again, it's -- you know, you can't rule anything out. he does seem to be making terrible decisions. but this really does not seem like it makes a lot of sense for him. >> and presumably -- well, obviously, i suppose, for the
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west, the right thing to do right now is avoid escalation. so the west hasn't really done anything, has it? i mean how should they respond going forward to nuclear moves like this by putin? i mean, do some things happen automatically when a foe makes a change in readiness? >> well, you know, i'll be honest. i'm not sure that there really is a serious change in readiness of russian nuclear forces. the reality is the united states and russia have large numbers of nuclear forces on alert on a day-to-day basis. and so one of the reasons i think that you've seen the united states say that no response is necessary is that just as russia does, we already have many nuclear weapons on alert. so, again, this is one of those instances where people don't think about the fact that there are thousands of nuclear weapons that could be fired on a few minutes' notice. but that is the reality we live in, and vladimir putin can do his little show on tv, but it doesn't change that fundamental
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dynamic. and that's one reason why i think he's probably talking more than really trying to seriously think about escalating this crisis in a nuclear way. >> fascinating and important analysis as always from you, jeffrey. jeffrey lewis there. appreciate the time. >> my pleasure. joe biden faces a critical moment in his presidency. coming up, his state of the union address with a focus on ukraine's crisis and the world's response to it. plus, russia's economy is hit by crushing western sanctions. we'll take a closer look at the economic turmoil ahead.
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stability, especially regarding oil prices. mr. biden hosting a call with european leaders, japan, and canada's prime ministers, and nato's secretary-general on monday. the white house emphasizing president biden remains firm in his commitment to keep u.s. troops out of the conflict. white house press secretary jen psaki said it also means u.s. enforcement under a no-fly zone in ukraine is off the table. no real surprise there. psaki says the crisis in ukraine will have a major role in the president's state of the union speech later tuesday. no surprise there either. for more details on all of this, cnn's white house reporter jasmine wright joins me now live from washington. good to see you again, jasmine. thoughts early on in the conflict. only 42%, i think it was, of americans in a cnn poll say they trust president biden at least moderately to make the right decisions regarding ukraine.
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what is his message going to be tomorrow? >> reporter: yeah, michael. it's going to be a critically important speech tomorrow for the president, something that just a few months ago white house officials thought would be a perfect platform for him to do a domestic reset on the issues facing the country. but fast forward to right now, of course things look a lot different, and ukraine is going to have to be a major focus of the speech. so yesterday white house press secretary jen psaki, she laid out a couple of things that the president is going to talk about regarding ukraine. first she said that he is going to highlight just how unified nato and western allies are in the face of russian aggression, especially when it comes to those sanctions. i think we've seen over the past week-plus, really a unified effort trying to punish russia, trying to cripple the economy and put the ruble in free fall. so that's going to be one of the things he talks about. he's also going to talk about the amount of military assistance both the u.s. and
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allies, a part because of what president biden has built, she said, have been able to deliver to the ukrainian people, really trying to bolster and support that assistance, especially as we've gotten these grave warnings from lawmakers and u.s. officials of what they believe could be a real challenge ahead of the ukrainian people in this long slog of a conflict. and third, she said he's going to bring it back to the homeland and talk to the american people about exactly what this administration has done to try to mitigate really the impacts on americans' lives when it comes to the ukrainian situation. one of the things that was quickly identified from u.s. officials is gas prices and how those could go up with oil restrictions in the face of this crisis. and it's been something of a focus of this white house trying to keep those prices low at the pump. so the president is going to address that as well. now, of course, michael, he will have to address the domestic issues like the ongoing pandemic and the inflation problems and the squeeze that americans feel
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in their wallet. but a big, big focus of this, again, is going to be on ukraine, something that has had the white house's attention not only just for the last week really intensely, of course we know all these calls that the president has been making, really all the trips that his officials have gone on to really yao night allies, but just for the last few months. so this is going to be something that the president on his first state of the union in his presidency is going to address head-on, the white house says. michael. >> all right. jasmine, good to see you. jasmine wright there live in washington for us. appreciate that. we're going to take a quick break here. when we come back, we're going to hear from one ukrainian woman who has been hiding in a bomb shelter with her children for days. why she decided to stay in kyiv once the invasion began. our live coverage of the crisis in ukraine continues after the break.
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welcome back, everyone. i'm michael holmes coming to you live from lviv in ukraine. bitter fighting still under way across the country as ukrainians try to hold off a russian invasion. deadly explosions rocking ukraine's second largest city, kharkiv, on monday. ukrainian officials are accusing russian forces of carrying out strikes in a residential area near apartment buildings and a supermarket. i've got video to show you now posted online that shows what appears to be rockets raining down outside some apartment homes. this is in kharkiv as people try t to run to safety. officials say it was one of several attacks on the city on monday. in all, kharkiv's mayor says nine civilians, including three children, were killed in the attacks. now, these scenes playing out on the same day ukrainian
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and russian officials met for negotiations at the border with belarus to discuss a possible cease-fire. no breakthroughs, but officials did indicate more talks could be on the horizon. meanwhile, a different crisis is developing on the edges of this conflict. the u.n. now says more than 500,000 refugees, half a million have fled ukraine since russia invaded. that number is rising, they say, exponentially every hour. and the u.n. high commissioner for refugees says the exodus is happening on a scale he has rarely seen before. >> i regret to say that unless there is, as americans said, an immediate hold to conflict, ukrainians will simply continue to flee. we're currently planning -- i repeat planning -- for up to 4 million refugees in the coming
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days and weeks. >> but for many ukrainians, leaving simply isn't an option. some have been ordered to stay -- the men -- while others say getting out has just been too difficult. earlier cnn's anderson cooper spoke with one woman who has been sheltering with her children in kyiv while her husband volunteered to fight for his country. anderson asked her how she and her family are holding up amid all the chaos. here's their conversation. >> for us, well, we are bad, but we -- >> your children are with you. how are they doing? >> children are basically doing very fine. you heard coughing right now, but she is getting much better. i have some important medications for her because she has breathing problems, and
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obviously the air in the bomb shelter is not the best quality, but she's doing well. and the other kids, who are 5 and 7 years old, i'm amazed how wise they are, how they understood what's really going on, how quickly they grew up. and like yesterday i went away for, like, half of an hour for the first time back home just to take some food and water and clothes for them, and my daughter said -- i said, i will be -- i will come back very soon, and my daughter said, mommy, just come back, please. >> how did you explain to them what is happening? >> just what is happening, just directly, yeah. on the first day, me and my husband, when we understood that basically it started, we just told them that, yes, the war has started, that russia attacked because before we was telling them about this possibility,
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that we were calming them down, that everything will be fine, that we have very strong army. we'll be protected. but we needed to they them what's going on for them to understand fully and to be prepared. we taught them how to hide, how to lie down on the ground and cover your head with your hands in case there is a bombshelling, why it is so urgently needs if you're outside, that you shouldn't pick up toys on the streets because there could be explosives so they fully understood everything that was going on. >> have you been able to talk to your husband? i know he's volunteered to fight. >> yes, yes. i've been able to talk to him in the evening. so right now it's like half past 3:00 in the morning, and before the night started, i talked to him, yeah.
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and we had about two minutes of conversation, and that was the l longest. before he was saying only i love you, and this time he even described a little bit what they were doing. in total, he said that it's not romantic at all, but people are doing very well. everybody -- many people, they do their best to protect the city, to protect ukraine. >> and what is it like in the bomb shelter? how many people are there with you? >> so the first day and night, there were much more people here. there were more than 300 as far as we understand. the first days and night, it was full absolutely. in each of these chair, there
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was somebody sitting on this side and even on the opposite side. but many people -- >> where do your kids sleep? >> so there another room. so i am right now in the corridor, and there is like a room near the corridor where families with children mostly stay. so i do not want to wake them up. this is why i came here. so today we have about 100 people in this bomb shelter. and you call it a bomb shelter, but in fact most of the places where people hide, they are not really bomb shelters. they're just the basements of the building. so they are not very well prepared for any kind of bomb shelling. so if the missile hits directly this building, it will not stop, and it will be a trap. but at least it will protect from some tiny explosions. for example, in our room, we have a window with glass, and
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there is no way how we can change it. and the glass in a bomb shelter, it's dangerous. >> do you have enough food, enough water? >> well, today, yes. but today we are not hunghungry. for today and tomorrow and the day after tomorrow, we have enough. but i'm not sure we have enough for later. so we have just for a couple of days. >> there are obviously many people trying to get into poland or hungary or somewhere else, women with children. have you thought about trying to leave? >> yes, many times. that's a very complicated question for me, why we didn't leave. you see, at first, the government was saying that everything is under control and you should not panic. you should stay where you are and continue your work, and
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basically this is what we did in the first day. like my husband went to his tv channel to work as a journalist because that was very important, and i decided to stay and wait for him and see what happens. in a couple of hours after the bombs fell, the first bombs, there were already huge traffic jams around the city. so i understand that for me with three children, it was very complicated to leave the city, and it's much equally safe for me and my children. and then in the daytime, there was air defense alarm that i need to run into the bomb shelter, and here i am since then. and while we were talking with my husband, what should we do? one is to escape and survive. another one is to stay and take the battle. and we decided to stay.
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and what is going to happen, the worst happened to us, in both cases, this is it. we can die. and we decided that we can die anyway, so let's just use the time that is left. >> i have a 3-week-old child at home, and i cannot imagine the strength that you have to take care of your children in this situation. it's -- it's stunning. >> well, all the people in these bomb shelters, they help a lot. they hold your hands, and i was not cooking the first days at all because, like, with children, i couldn't run to the apartment. so i was just given food by
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other people all these days. like yesterday only for the first time, i bought something myself. so the atmosphere here is very kind, and i feel how people care. so, yeah, they helped me. >> just incredible to hear that story from that woman there with her children. hello, i'm john vause in atlanta. our breaking news coverage of russia's invasion of ukraine will continue after a short break. when we come back, the shock and awe of unprecedented western sanctions sending russia's economy into a meltdown. of us will look back in our lives, and regret the things we didn't buy? (camera shutters) or the places we didn't go.. ♪ ♪
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ruble, which lost about a quarter of its value against the u.s. dollar on monday alone. there have been long lines at atms across the country, many scrambling to exchange rubles for euros and dollars but foreign currency has been difficult to find. after heavy losses last week, the moscow stock exchange will remain closed for a second day on tuesday. still, the kremlin insists preparations have been made to compensate for western sanctions. we're joined by ryan patel from the drucker school of management. ryan, thanks for being with us. >> my pleasure, john. >> part of putin's preparation was a nest egg, a foreign currency reserve of about $640 billion. about half of that, if not more, is now out of putin's reach because of sanctions and other measures by the u.s. and europe. it seems odd firstly that putin did not predict that. but more importantly, how does this now impact russia's economy, and how will it impact it over time? >> well, obviously impacting the war chest they've built and
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other assets and cash for the war, i think they have that. but i think the plan here with the s.w.i.f.t. financial institution making the blockage piece, the citizens are the ones struggling to go buy things, right? i think that happened a lot more faster than i think the sanctions came in a lot more quicker. i think that's where the russian government has to step in to create that stability and we're seeing in the last couple of days that it is not right. when the currency isn't able to hold its value, it's going to cause people to have to go to exchanges as fast as you can. they reported in russia, like their prices can go up tomorrow because of inflation. >> on sunday, it looks like bp announcing it was going to sell its stake. volvo is stopping production in a russian factory. mercedes-benz is dropping a partnership as well in russia. what does it mean when the
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corporate world moves this quickly? >> that's it, john. i think it is the corporate businesses moving more quickly than ever before. that is causing also this ripple effect because now when you have many corporations coming together, it makes it easier for other businesses to step in, to provide. well, i'm not going to buy anything from russia, or i will go a different way. you mentioned b.p. that is huge for them. it's at a cost of $25 billion and a 20% stake. that is nothing -- that decision was not made lightly. and even the largest foreign, you know, fund in the world in norway, they came out -- the prime minister came out and said it would divest $3 billion in russian assets. you know, these are not just little statements. these are big statements showing the rest of the leadership, and we even heard even switzerland, which is always pretty much neutral, they've come out and stated their positioning as well. >> you know, these economic sanctions being imposed by europe and by the united states and other countries are not
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without cost to those countries. and the calculation seems that, you know, the european economies can absorb the pain because if they don't, the cost further down the road, if putin is not stopped, will be a lot more than whatever the increase in the cost of gas and oil, right? >> that's it, right? i think the eu is leading the charge here because obviously they're going to be affected the most in this war and that they continue to support as it seems to ukraine and be able to step through that and put itself in position, including countries like germany, france, and the rest of the eu, stating that they will burden that and protect their citizens. i think the question becomes here, which we don't know, how long will this go? and i do want to make a point, john. these sanctions are not just an on and off button. we're going to see -- even when the war stops, it's not like you're going to go back to normal business as normal. so these decisions that are being made, there is going to be a short-term for sure effect, but there's going to be a
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long-term effect in how business is being done in the future, especially from the corporate world. >> and the sanctions normally, these ones anyway, have been the financial equivalent of shock and awe, and normally those sanctions play out over the long term. has there ever been a similar situation when economic sanctions have taken hold this quickly and this painfully? >> truthfully, i can't think of one in this kind of synchronous that happened so quickly. i think part of the reason too, john, is many of these corporations have learned from their mistakes, and not to pick on b.p., but they've made mistakes in the past. i think the other aspect to this too is it is the citizens. it's all the employees. we've seen a lot of the social injustice over the last couple years. i think many of these leadership is finally making decisions, but they're not going to wait for governments for decisions and they're going to make decisions on how they do business moving forward. also finally, i think many countries and businesses have realized there has to be more
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than one way to make money or a supply chain. obviously russia is in the mix of many of these things and aspects moving forward. >> yeah. they're in a boat load of trouble right now, ryan. thank you, ryan patel, live from los angeles. when we come back, from football's world cup to the olympics to world rugby, russia has now been cast into the sporting wilderness as well. details in a moment. ♪ limu emu and doug.♪ and it's easy to customize your insurance at libtymutual.com so you only pay for what you need. isn't that right limu? limu? limu?
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did i tell you i bought our car from carvana? yeah, ma. it was so easy! i found the perfect car, under budget too! and i get seven days to love it or my money back... i love it! i thought online meant no one to help me, but susan from carvana had all the answers. she didn't try to upsell me. not once, because they're not salespeople! what are you...? guess who just checked in on me? mom... susan from carvana! [laughs] we'll drive you happy at carvana. out here, you're more than just a landowner. you're a gardener. a landscaper. a hunter. because you didn't settle for ordinary. same goes for your equipment. versatile, powerful, durable kubota equipment.
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more goes into it. so you get more out of it. at pulte, we build homes that think ahead to everything you'll need. like a dedicated office space with wi-fi for you to stay focused. hard wired internet outlets for more gaming. an oversized pantry? yes. with more space to fit everything. or, just enjoy more outdoor living. at pulte, we build homes that think ahead to tomorrow, so you can build the life you're dreaming of today. pulte homes. more life, built in. we need to reduce plastic waste in the environment. that's why at america's beverage companies, our bottles are made to be remade. not all plastic is the same. we're carefully designing our bottles to be 100% recyclable, including the caps. they're collected and separated from other plastics, so they can be turned back into material that we use to make new bottles. that completes the circle and reduces plastic waste. please help us get every bottle back.
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and welcome back, everyone. i am michael holmes coming to you live from lviv, in ukraine. want to give you a quick recap of the situation here now. ukrainian forces continuing to mount fierce resistance to the russian' invasion, which, of course, is now in its sixth day. the mayor of kyiv says the city is under a nonstop attack by russian forces. on the outskirts of the capital, a massive russian military convoy stretching more than 40
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miles, or 65 kilometers. satellite images show plumes of smoke rising from homes and buildings in the areas near where the convoy is traveling. although it's not clear exactly what caused the smoke. meanwhile, ukraine's president accusing russia of synchronizing monday's negotiations with a new wave of attacks. volodymyr zelenskyy says russia committed war crimes by bombing kharkiv and attacking civilians. the city's mayor says the rocket attacks killed nine of those civilians. >> translator: there can be fair negotiations, if one side does not hit the other side with rocket artillery at the time of negotiations. so far, we do not have the result we would like to get. russia has stated its position, and we have declared counterpoints to end the war. >> now, one matter russia doesn't have a say in is
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football. both, fifa and uefa have susor suspended the national team and professional clubs from competition saying they stand in full solidarity with ukraine. the groups, though, were backed into a bit of a corner, after at least 11 countries refused to play against russia in matches leading up to the world cup. fifa had, previously, ruled the nat na russian national team would have to compete under a different name, no flag, no national anthem, nor any fans present at their matches. the international olympic committee taking action against russia, as well. recommending both russian and belarusian athletes be banned from all international sports. the russian olympic committee, or roc, says the decision contradicts the olympic charter and the spirit of the games in beijing. russian athletehouse to compete there under the roc name, with no flag and no national anthem played for medal winners.
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the last day at their current address. for the mornings when everything's wrong. for the manicure that makes everything right, for right now. show up, however you can, for the foster kids who need it most— at helpfosterchildren.com this is cnn breaking news. welcome to our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. appreciate your company. i am michael holmes coming to you live from lviv, ukraine. it is now day six of the russian' invasion, and this country is bracing for what could be russia's biggest offensive yet. there is a massive russian convoy bearing down on the ukrainian capital, kyiv, where if you can hear there in the last few minutes, air-ra
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