tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN March 15, 2022 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT
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this is "don lemon tonight." our breaking news, air riaid sirens blowing overnight in kyiv. that follows heavy shelling earlier today in the capital. russian forces hitting apartment buildings. the city's mayor saying at least four were killed. we're getting images of russian helicopters blown up. those are just ahead. and tomorrow, president biden expected to announce a new round of military assistance for ukraine. fareed zakaria will join me to discuss how russian's invasion of ukraine is up ending the global world order. villagers including an angry grandma bracing for an attack by
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russian forces and refusing to leave. >> by the way, if she saw vladimir putin she said she would strangle him with her own hands right now. >> i want to get straight to cnn's international correspondent live for us in ukraine tonight. another chaotic night in kyiv, more air raid sirens and many explosions. how bad is it getting around the capital? >> there is an uptick in military activity on the outskirts. it's been the case really since the beginning of this invasion but russian forces are not hitting the center of the capital, and ukrainians are really mounting quite a defense of their capital kyiv but as you mentioned there at the top of the hour, russian forces are targeting suburban areas and civilian buildings, as well, and we're seeing civilians killed. the president of ukraine, zelenskyy mentioned of all the
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people killed, 97 of them were children killed in the russian attacks. so this is taking a huge toll on civilians across the country, but it is important to note the ukrainians are really defending their capital and as far as ground troops, they're not near the center of the city because ukrainian forces have made sure to slow advance of any russian troops on the ground level so they are resorting to aerial strikes and missile strikes, but still on the outskirts. the tragedy is in cities like mariupol in the southeast where you have reports an entire hospital, staff and patients are unable to leave because of violence and shelling and targeting around that area, even though a few civilians have been able to leave the city. humanitarian organizations are calling parts of ukraine a disaster zone at this point, don? >> let's talk more about
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mar mariupol. these bombs have been devastating the city and there is also reporting of people being held against their will in that hospital there, as well. what do you know? >> right. so the question is are they held hostage? are they there because and able to leave because of the shelling and the fighting around that facility? either way, this is a desperate situation for people in medical facilities and residential buildings because in the last few weeks, every attempt at evacuation almost every attempt at evacuation has failed because russians have been accused of shelling and targeting some evacuation routes. in mariupol we have reports of people melting snow for drinking water because there is no power, no gas, no energy, no electricity and those suffering the most are the most vulnerable, the elderly and kids. >> the video is devastating there. thank you very much. appreciate your reporting.
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see you at the top of the hour. she'll lead coverage as soon as we're off the air in an hour or so. the russian advance stalling across ukraine as they hammer cities as their initial playbook fails on the ground. russian forces changing tactics. phil black takes a look at why the invasion isn't unfolding the way russia predicted. >> reporter: russian ammunitions are still having a devastating impact on civilians in key cities. in mariupol, in the capital kyiv but russian forces are still making little progress advancing across ukrainian territory. the core u.s. assessment hasn't changed for much of the war. >> the kremlin's forces remain stalled in many areas. >> reporter: experts agree almost three weeks in, russia is in trouble. >> no wars go according to plan. the problem is russia's plan was extremely bad. >> reporter: the question why? >> a mix of everything.
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it's a failed or botched concept of operation with plenty of wrong assumptions, russia believing in a way that ukrainians would capitulate. >> reporter: experts believe russia's failure to secure a quick definitive win has revealed another major flaw in the planning. >> russia is out of available combat forces to put into this fight. >> reporter: analysts say russia's limited forces are now divided between taking territory and laying siege to major cities reducing their ability to do both tasks effectively and that means russia must be reassessing what victory looks like. >> at this stage, we're still talking about limited gains and goals. there is simply not enough troops potentially coming from russia or elsewhere to do a sort of massive force ground invasion of ukraine. keep that territory, hold it and fight a very costly counter insurrection war.
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>> reporter: u.s. officials say they're seeing some early efforts to boost troop numbers with foreign fighters. >> we believe that out of syria, there are perhaps small, small, very small groups of people that may be trying to make their way to ukraine. >> reporter: how the next phase of the war plays out will be significantly determined by russia's atteintentions. trying to take the capital would be months of bombardment and russian warfare. >> those ukrainians know every ally, every back room, every road, every intersection. the russians are going to find themselves in a hard fight. >> reporter: slow russian progress can help ukrainian forces by allowing them more time to prepare and be resupplied with advanced weapons from allies but experts say it could also inspire greater brutality from russia. a willingness to escalate and destroy in order to compensate for its stalled invasion.
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phil black, cnn, london. >> thank you for that. i want to bring in cedrs cedric leighton. biden will announce a new package of assistance for ukraine, including more javelins and stinger missiles but stopping short of a no fly zone. why does this assistance mean so much for ukrainians? >> let's take a look, don, at this and good evening to you. this is the javelin anti tank guided missile system. so again, it's designed to go against tanks. it's a 3.6, 3.5-foot long missile shoulder fired. key thing, shoulder fired. a single soldier can operate this missile. so this is extremely important and as far as the range goes, it is 8200 feet -- it has a range of 8200 feet. it can go that far. over a mile and a half and can do that quite well. now, as far as the air part is
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concerned, this is the stinger missile and a stinger is basically a manned portable air defense system as it says here. it's five feet long with a maximum range of five miles and can reach an altitude of 5,500 feet. this is the key thing. it's a heat seeking anti-aircraft missile. so as a heat seeking missile, it goes after things like the after burners of an aircraft and can find that the aircraft because it's hotter than the surrounding atmosphere and that's why these missiles are so important and they can be a huge game changer when it comes to actually combat capability for a country like ukraine. >> we've been talking a lot about the performance of the russian military and the military is frustrated and hit by heavy losses on the ground but at the same time, russian weapons are devastating ukrainian cities. how long could this dynamic
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last? is there -- can you tell at this point? >> well, there are a lot of different things that could go on, you know, in something like this. let's take a look at something that is happening around kyiv right here. this is the map as it currently exists. if you've paid attention over the last, you know, few weeks we've done this, a lot of this looks pretty static. a lot of movement is not happening in areas like this although the russians are supposedly very close to the northeastern part of the city and the northwestern and this part of the western part of the city of kyiv. but what things are going on include movements by recognizance forces, so you've got scouts going out from the russian areas into these areas right here and what the russians are trying to do is move in this direction. they're still trying to do this and potentially this way, as well. but they seem to be running into some problems with that and the
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reasons for this are multi faceted as other analysts have said. the big thing here is terrain. this is a lot hillier than we think it is and up here it's also a very hilly terrain. it's very different from other parts of the country. what this means is the russians are going to have to figure out how to go through each of these city areas because if they don't do it, then they're going to run into even more difficulties, more difficulties in terms of logistics, in terms of troop moral, in terms of the ability to move things forward and that is a considerable drag on their forces and their ability to do things. >> will russia's first plan to take ukraine didn't work, colonel. are they stalled now because they're working out a plan b? is that what is happening? >> yes, they are definitely working out a plan b because they're adaptive. even though they're looking at different things and we've seen them kind of stalled out here
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does not mean they're being stationary. they are thinking things through. they're trying to adapt, overcome and figure out how to take a limited logistics capability to some kind of victory that's going to be acceptable to vladimir putin. >> we're getting these new images tonight of at least three russian helicopters destroyed at the kherson airport. it's the most destructive known military strike the ukrainian military conducted against russian helicopters during the war. what does this tell us about the defensive power ukraine has? >> pretty considerable. this is imagery of the air field, the kherson air field. it interesting because you already see some flaming helicopters that are stationary on the ground right here and the smoke plume is considerable. this shows that they definitely hit their targets. one other thing i noticed is this. this runway has been creatored. that means the runway is
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inoperable for fixed wing aircraft. i don't know who did that, whether that was done when the russians attacked the air field or done by the ukrainians on this particular strike but there is a lot of ordinance that is extended here and if it's all from ukraine, that's a considerable effort. if it isn't, it shows the ukrainians are capable of mounting a very significant strike against russian combat forces. >> colonel, thank you very much. i really appr'really' appreciat >> you're welcome. has vladimir putin changed global order? can it ever go back the way it was? >> there an independent ukraine longer than vladimir putin. one way or the other, ukraine will be there and at some point, putin won't. his future became my focus. lavender baths calmed him. so we made a plan to turn bath time intoto a business. ♪ ♪ find a northwewestern mutual advisor at nm.com
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so there are air raid sirens in kyiv. that's not stopping the shelling. look at this destruction. it comes as officials say president biden will announce a new round of military assistance for ukraine tomorrow including anti tank missiles. let's discuss now. faree fareed zakaria is here. president biden announcing new weapons for ukraine as soon as tomorrow and he's meeting with leaders in brussels next week. clearly, thaer realizing they need to do more as russian shelling intensifies but is it enough? >> it's not enough but it's the right thing to do.
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look, the only strategy that makes any sense here is to raise the cost for putin, and you can raise them in two of three different ways. but the most potent one by far is going to be the military costs of arming ukraine, giving them weapons is what is already achieved this extraordinary resolve which is that russian plans are entirely thrown in disarray. you can already see the impact of ukraine's resistance on demands. we have good reporting what is going on on negotiations and it's clear the russian demands are moderated. the russians thought they'd take ukraine within a day or two or week or so. it been two weeks and u.s. estimates are that russia lost five, 6,000 soldiers.
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that's more russian soldiers that died in ukraine in two weeks than american soldiers that died in 20 years in afghanistan. so this is all working. we need to accelerate and intensify and keep the pressure up on the other forms of costs for putin, economic, financial. i still continue to believe we have to get at his energy supplies and have to in someway or the other make it virtually impossible for russia to sell oil and natural gas. president zelenskyy appears to be moving away from his push for ukraine to join nato. this is what he said today. >> translator: it is true and must be acre knowacknowledged,
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our people can understand that and rely on ourselves and partners that assist us. >> and putin is apparently backing off regime change telling the finished president it was never a demand. could this mean this is hope for a negotiation? >> i think there is hope for negotiation but it's worth pointing out he is like a dream for us, not a reality and ukrainian talked about the forms and nato told the russians privately ukrainian membership was very unlikely to happen any time soon. chancellor schultz of germany, prime minister boris johnson of britain both communicated to putin personally that ukrainian membership was not in the offering.
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so there is a certain methodology ukraine was about to become a member of nato. it wasn't. putin had as a desire that ukraine really be a vessel, a satellite state. basically like belarus. a country where the regime essentially is entirely behold to him, vladimir putin. but all of this does suggest what i was saying earlier, don, which is that the ukrainian resistance is having an effect. russia approached this with a demand unconditional surrenderer, we'll destroy the regime and denazify it and neutralize it. that is gone. we're having apparently a more serious conversation about okay, do the russians keep the parts of the eastern ukraine with the terrain will ukraine recognize crimea? that's a serious negotiation and let's hope it moves forward but
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not mistake the only reason it has even gotten to this place is because the ukrainians are fighting and they are effectively fighting because they have weapons from the west. >> listen, i'm so glad you said that. people commenting on the war saying well, the media both sides say they're open for negotiation. well, as you said, ukraine and zelenskyy has always been open for negotiation. the russian side needed to move and the russian side is moving, if i'm hearing you correctly, only because of the difficulties they're facing in ukraine. correct? >> yeah, i mean, think about it, don. if putin had taken kyiv in two or three days, which was his plan, would there be any negotiation? no. zelenskyy would be hung up. there would have become en comp regime change. we know some plans. we know some people that were planning to put in place and it -- this is part of a pattern.
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putin responds, you know, reacts only to force to counter measures and to a certain extent, i think what happened here is there have been two sets of counter measures that putin did not anticipate. one internally from ukraine, the resistance from the extraordinary brave ukrainian people, the other, the unity and purposefulness of the west and effect of the sanctions. this is the most dramatic economic sanctions ever put in place because it's comprehensive economic sanctions against a fairly connected country. you know, sanctions north korea or venezuela, fine. these countries are not that connected into the global economy. russia is. and so the reality for russia of losing all of its bank access, losing all -- eight, 900 mcdonald's stores and boeing and
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airbus not supplying spare parts, the reality they've suddenly been cut off is a big deal. this is what russia is reacting to. this is what putin is reacting to in the new apparently the new more reasonable negotiating demands. >> fareed zakaria, thank you. appreciate it. ukraine's parliament meeting in secret today in the middle of a war torn kyiv. i'll speak with a member of the parliament there right after this. th skin care super ingredient collagen. olay body wash hydrates to improve skin 3x better, from d dry and dull to firm and radiant. with olay body, i feel fearless in my skin. i didn't know my genetic report could tell me i was prone to harmful blood clots.
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the capital of ukraine, kyiv under a curfew. residents only allowed to leave their homes to go into bomb shelters as the ukrainian parliament held a secret meeting in keyiv. before the meeting they rose together for the ukrainian national anthem. listen. ♪ ♪ >> a member of the ukrainian parliament joins me now. thank you. i really appreciate it. you were in kyiv in the meeting held in secret because of the fear of a russian air strike could take out the entire parliament, what was that like
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today and there today and what did you discuss? >> well, it was our duty to meet. we adopted around 22 pieces of different legislation basically for the wartime period, we changed the whole system of ukraine. we introduced a very simple 2% turnover text for the whole ukrainian businesses independent of the size of the profit so that at least some economy could function during this time and of course, it was a symbolic moment to show we're in kyiv and strong so almost all of the parliament arrived and sang our anthem and the words you just heard literally that you played is that we will lay our body and our soul for our freedom that we will never give up. >> you know, the other day you said that kyiv only has two weeks left of food and water with even fewer medical supplies. how dire is it on the ground? >> well, currently, you can
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app approach kyiv relatively safe. apparently, i think, that there are grounds away from kyiv. you know, several groups who are monitoring social media very closely and what our soldiers are posting are trying to calculate the number of casualties that the russians are actually confirmed having and only those captured on videos you can see that at least 217 russian tanks destroyed or captured and more than 400 infantry fighting vehicles. this is captured so russians suffered enormous loses that they are not able to contest to. >> what is being done to replenish these day to day necessities. what are you doing? >> it seems like the whole
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country is working on the war effort so almost like a total war effort so me, other members of parliament and regular people, we are bringing supplies in as much as we can so i was able to discuss it further but there is such an enormous spirit, the armae oy of the fros getting everything we have and the savings ukrainian people ever had and plus, we're extremely grateful for the aid u.s. government is providing. it is true that. >> the prime ministers of poland, and more were there today. what is it like to see the leaders there at such a dangerous moment? >> it is extremely important for us. it shows support and provides additional protection. the fact they were traveling by train to the capital of kyiv
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provides additional protection to the trains going in and around ukraine and the previous actions before in 2008 when putin attacked georgia at the time our president also traveled to the capitol of georgia to show support and prevent further strikes on georgia. >> so president zelenskyy is slated to speak to congress tomorrow. what do you want to come out of that? >> i am very sure the president will deliver a sincere and very emotional speech that will further energize american people and u.s. congress for the support and plus, i'm sure he will show the gratitude for billions of dollars provided and military aide. i hope some of the companies and
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yes, i look at what is going on can do more because some of the support like fphillip morris international pays taxes to russia and we know they paid well over $4 billion of taxes to the russian state budget and still does snotnot want to leave country and continue to finance the russian military. >> you told my team you've heard many stories of athrocities beig committed by russian soldiers. what have you heard? >> very difficult to talk about them but some of our members of parliament are deeply involved in taking people outside of the worst affected areas and they were told the stories of the people logged there for days. it's stories of systemic rape and random shootings and a dozen
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buses full afof civilians shot by people other parts of russian military and basically, capture areas is even much worse than i thought initially when i 45hear it on the ground. >> thank you. be safe. we appreciate you joining. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you for having me. a village refusing to leave prepping for attacks by russian soldiers and a 71-year-old grand mother says she's ready. >> yeah. >> translator: i'm ready she says. if the russians come here, i'll shoot them all and my hands won't shake. i'll throw grenades at them.
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residents of many towns and businesses in central ukraine are spared russia's brutal military assault, at least for now but they know it's coming and preparing to defend themselves. ordinary people, firefighters, electrics, grandmothers ready to stand their ground. more on their determination from cnn's ivan watson. >> reporter: dawn breaks over the city with an air raid siren. the ground war has yet to reach this city in central ukraine but
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locals aren't taking any chances. this is the entrance to a village on the outskirts of the city, a check point protected by volunteers, an ex-cop, fireman and electrician. >> look how this village is protecting itself. home made tank traps which the locals call hedgehogs, they've sewn netting and put up sandbags and around the wall of this check point, they have boxes of molotov cocktails ready. this is all locally made. these are imp imp vised defenses. >> i meet nina that seems like a sweet 71-year-old grandmother. by the way, nina says if she saw vladimir putin, she would strangle him with her own hands right now. i'm ready she says. if by god the russians come here, i'll shoot them all and my
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hands won't even shake. i'll throw grenades at them. there is seething anger here at moscow's invasion and at the same time, the humanitarian assistance trucked in from europe. personal donations of clothes and food for the struggling people of ukraine. aid that will then be shipped off to front line cities. >> i want to say thank you for the rest of the world, for the world and i want to say that we need help. we will need help. >> reporter: are you ready if the russian military comes to the city? >> yeah, yeah, and other cities we have two weeks to make good
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defense. today we ready. but we don't want this. >> the war effort extends to he and his farm where workers labor listening to news of the war. the city donates free food to self-defense forces. he says he's doing his part to help with the war effort. he says he's planting more crops and he's going to trey to grow more food to feed ukrainians who may be in need in the weeks and months ahead. one of vladimir putin's stated objectives for the war on ukraine was to demilitarize the country. instead, he has mobilized farmers, grandmothers and electricians to form a grass roots resistance against the russian invasion. don, everybody i've spoken with knows somebody either fighting
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the russian military or been made homeless or injured or killed by the russian military and it does feel as if everybody i've spoken with feels like they're trying to do their part in matter how small in helping to protect their homeland from this unprovoked russian war. don? >> ivan watson, thank you. she's a mentor on "the vioie ukraine" and using her amazing voice to protest war in ukraine. tina carol is next. hello, how can i? sore throat pain? ♪honey lemon♪ try vicks vapocool drops in honey lemon chill for fast acting sore throat relief ♪ahhh!♪ wowooo! vaporize sore throat pain with
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day after day we're seeing ukrainians fight to save their country from the bloody russian on slot. take a pop star and actress often called the britney spears of ukraine for her powerful singing voice and lavish concerts that attract thousands of young fans. she's walking and singing in solidarity are young fans and created a center for information of resistance to tell the truth what russian forces are doing to ukraine. and tina carol joins me now. tina, thank you so much. we appreciate you joining we appreciate you joining us. >> hello and thank you.
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>> we saw you marching in solidarity with fellow ukrainians. you're in poland right now, but you didn't want to leave ukraine at first. how hard was it to leave your home? >> it's so hard because really, like love my ukraine, love my country, love my neighborhood, my everything around and everything inside my country. and of course i have a home, and of course i have a road to my home, and of course i have a lot of memories that about my home. and now of course i have a stage. of course i have an audience. and now i'm homeless. now i sing on the street. and when you are a huge star in your country, when you play with musicians, justin beebe were the stage, you know, then you just always need to explore who are you and explain who are you.
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i'm a star. i can't help you. so now my life is terrible. this is big trouble in the world. this is world trouble what we have now. we just take first punch. and you'll see the problem will come inside the europe. this is sad and bad what happened. >> you think -- hold on, hold on, slow down, tina, please. you think trouble -- you think europe should brace for trouble, larger europe, not just ukraine. is that what you just said? >> yes, yes. this is what i think. this is what i understand for now. of course. >> your parents stayed in ukraine. have you spoken with them? are they safe? >> oh, my parents now in ukraine, of course i spoke with them all the time. and my father was cry because his mother was run from center
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of ukraine when the fascism was. and he's jewish. and now he cry because he saying my mother was run like this. i do this now. what happened with the world? so we are peaceful people. trust me. we're just people. and now we, i don't know how to say. so much painful. >> you created the international center for information resistance. and you're trying to get the truth of the atrocities of the war out. how are you -- how are you doing that? >> of course this is of how i spoke, this is how i see, how i took with that. people and of course i knew the russian language, and i can explain to the russian people what is true. it's important to show them what
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is true because they're close. and now on instagram, facebook, connection, you know. and of course i am close to i.t. army. it's new type of soldiers, you know. they soldiers too. this is innovation. >> did you see -- did you see the russian journalists protesting live on russian state tv? we're learning that she was questioned for more than 14 hours after that. >> yes, i saw. and someone tell me that this is fake because news not online always. but everybody, we online now. >> how do you get past the putin propaganda machine and spread the truth about what is taking place to the russian people?
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>> they know me. they know that i am really good in regular live because i help to the people. i help to the kids who have cancer. my husband died because he was ill. and they understand that i'm always was -- it was a good vibe. i can't lie. so trust me. >> you're also working on providing humanitarian aid in ukraine. what do people there need most, do you know? >> what do people what? >> what do people need most there? >> oh, you know, it's big stress. nobody understand how to begin new life or who are you. this is all musicians -- i'm a
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musician, you know. all musicians, they don't know how to find new place, no help to find yourself a new place. it's more deeply problem. and a lot of people there just -- the family are broke because fathers, sons, they stay in ukraine. they need to fight. what? this is 2022. and we need to leave our man's on the war. s it's can't imagine, you know. and the father and the glass, try and they cry. i can't -- >> it's heartbreaking. it's heartbreaking. but you're trying to do something about it. you're trying to do something
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about it. we appreciate it. tina, thank you. we have to get to the top of the hour for more of our live coverage with our folks on the ground. but we appreciate what you're doing. you're welcome to come back any time, and stay safe, okay? take care. >> yeah. >> thank you. >> and thank you for watching, everyone. our live coverage continues. now they can. downy unstopables in-wasash scent boosters keep your laundry smelling freshsh waaaay longer than detergent alone. pour a cap of downy unstopables into your washing machine before each load. and enjoy fresher smelling laundry. if you want laundry to smell fresh for weeks make sure you have downy unstopables in-wash scent boosters. shop for downy unstopables online, including our lighter scent. [inspirational soul music] [inspirational soul muc]
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