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tv   CNN Newsroom Live  CNN  April 16, 2022 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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over the past hour you heard from the one and only barry manilow on what it's like to be him. i'll bring you more of these stories on future episodes of "being," i'm dana bash in new york, thanks so much for watching. >> announcer: this is cnn breaking news. hello, welcome to viewers in the united states and around the world, i'm live in lviv ukraine. clock ticking down for the fighters in mariupol, moscow demanding they lay down weapons and leave in six hours and lives will be spared, russia in control of the city. >> live from cnn world headquarters in atlanta. north korea test firing a new
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tactical guided weapon. already 12th missile test so far this year. >> battle for mariupol may be coming to end, moscow claiming to have cleared all forces. ukrainian troops lay down weapons and ammunition and leave. ukrainian president volodymyr zelenskyy warned of humanitarian crisis, suffering significant losses. >> translator: situation in mariupol remains as severe as possible. just inhuman, what the russian federation deliberately did. deliberately continues to destroy cities, trying to destroy everyone there in
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mariupol. >> russian strikes continue to hammer other areas in southern and eastern ukraine. kharkiv at least two killed, 18 injured after cruise missile attack. to the south in luhansk, damaged facilities including oil refinery. as the white house says more weapons, ammunition and other military aid has started arriving in ukraine. first time it's additional high-powered equipment, helicopters, howitzer cannons and more drones. russian military claimed it shot down aircraft with western military equipment over odesa. but unable to verify that claim or if any shipments were arriving there. another leader killed in
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ukraine, major general died on the battlefield. russian troops preparing. hundreds of residents seeking shelter and living underground. cannot or will not leave. ben is there. >> reporter: the shelling comes early and often. with russian forces massing nearby, this is a portent of things to come. firefighters brave the threat of shelling but few others brave the streets. life for those who haven't fled moved underground to stuffy shelters where safety trumps comfort. 300 people call this temporary
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home on the grounds of sprawling chemical plant. maxim and his wife try to keep 17-month-old distracted. having fled home two days ago. shows me cell phone pictures of the secellar they hid out in before here. disabled, stays in bed most of the time. would prefer to be at home but what home? there's no electricity, cell phone signal, water or gas she tells me. everything is shaking from the bombing, windows shattered. here for more than a month. >> lot of people can't leave this place because of problems with health. and they don't have enough money
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to leave. they have to stay here. >> reporter: 73-year-old vassili is not leaving town. i was born here, i'll stay here, he says. nearby, tanks at oil refinery burn after russian attack, not first time it came under bombardment, shelling comes early and often. ben wedeman, cnn, outside receiv receiverodonetsk, eastern ukraine. >> british prime minister promised they'll have what they need. spoke with volodymyr zelenskyy saturday, reaffirming support. talked about need for long-term security solution and situation in mariupol.
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military aid should arrive in coming days, will include armored vehicles and antiship missiles. joining me from los angeles, retired u.s. army major general mark mccauley. it's been a while. we appreciate it. >> good to be here. >> mariupol, seems to be beginning of the end. last fighters in sprawling iron and steel plant, is there any point to continue with the fight, should they get out of this alive? >> we really have to salute the courage and valor of the ukrainian forces at the moment holed up in the manufacturing facility. from military analytical perspective, appears there will be no, as we call in the army, no cavalry coming to save those
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ukrainian service members. don't have long range artillery. can't attack the russian vessels throwing down fire on the remaining ukrainian forces. next few hours the president of ukraine is going to have to make a difficult decision and relay it to the soldiers on the ground. it is not good thing, not going to go so far as suggest this is beginning of the end, but this is a significant loss, not only in terms of territory and access to the sea of azor and the black sea but to the morale of the ukrainian people. i'm concerned. >> iron and steel factory is where the russians suggested earlier the possible use of chemical weapons, clearing would be costly in terms of russian
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troop losses. but if the ukrainian fighters in this steel plant don't give up, are chemical weapons on the table as far as the russians are concerned? >> you asked perhaps one of the most important questions facing world leadership, especially the west. will the russians in the manner in which they've conducted the war turn deliberately to use chemical weapons, especially as we move into what will be a protracted gain in the donbas region. that's a difficult urban environment, densely populated. huge temptation on the part of army with the tactics demonstrated by russians last six weeks, no doubt there's a big question whether they'll resort to chemical weapons. if that happens, everything's off the table. >> seeing u.s. military aid
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arriving within the hour apparently. including long range artillery howitzer. it's clearly too late for mariupol, is it too late too little? >> any resupply of that nature is valuable. the fight i think the ukrainians now have to focus on is donbas region. you see that russians are massing both in the northeast and the southern part of ukraine for that, what russians consider big assault into that territory that putin has long considered part of mother russia. if the ukrainians can use and certainly long range artillery, 155 howitzer is valuable. not enough of them. hip helicopters, the mi-17s for
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transport and some delivery of missiles from the helicopter platform, everything will help. key question is how can the ukrainians, perhaps with a force between 30,000 and 40,000 present in that part of the country, can defend against perhaps 70,000 residue of russian forces. and russian forces with ability amplified by their set of drones, missiles, artillery and offshore batteries, going to be one heck of a very dirty fight. for historians, reminiscent of the battles of stalingrad and leningrad, house to house fighting that's bloody and gruesome and what we saw in mariupol. >> when does it begin? timing for russians to rearm and
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resupply? or other factors, want to move on dry land, not muddy areas, that kind of thing? >> interesting you make reference to the mud, some have said that the mud was what restrained and constrained the russians to use the highway network. first two, three weeks of the campaign. there's value for tactical commander on the ground if you can enter without getting vehicles bogged down and move off-road. perhaps that's one of the requirements that the command staff of the russian army is looking at. but more importantly time is on the russians' side, not ukrainians' side. we're all anticipating the attack will take place today, really monday, there's no requirement on the part of the
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russians to move out at that time. they can wait, assemble forces, get necessary artillery. they're receiving resupply of missiles and drones. they want to be set to go in and they have a campaign outline, that campaign is basically to terrorize and to basically destroy the remnants of the ukrainian army any way they know how. >> will be quite the battle in coming days and weeks. >> yes. >> general mac carly, thank you sir. >> thank you. >> back to you. >> john vause in lviv. south korea's president is telling ministers to keep close eye on north korea's next moves after military test that
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pyongyang said will boost nuclear capabilities. fired two projectiles saturday, media says leader kim jong un observed a weapons test, new guided weapon to improve nuclear operations. paula hancock is live. talk to me about the alleged type of missile. >> reporter: this was shorter range missile. just the fact that north korean leader kim jong un was there to witness it and guide the launch is significant. he doesn't usually turn up for short range ones. this is considered important weapon in north korea's arsenal. they say it was new type of tactical guided weapon. we've heard from kim jong
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un himself saying he wanted tactical nuclear weapons. on his wish list. what it means, could be put -- nuclear warhead to be put on shorter range missile. which we know north korea has many. could also be a lower yield and means they will be able to use them shorter range, far quicker and more efficiently on the front lines of any potential battle. this is something kim jong un has said he would like to master. he wants this weapons capability. fact that he was there at a shorter range weapons launch shows that this is significant in his mind. >> and why the uptick in number of tests? also with north korea timing is often relevant, why this test now? >> reporter: very significant time in the north korean calendar. last friday you had 110th anniversary of the birth of his
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grandfather and founder of north korea, kim ilsun, always going to be significant time. there's been festivities around the time. and also been the tenth anniversary of kim jong un becoming party leader. that's significant as well. coming up potentially early as this week, don't have the exact details from u.s. military at that point but will be joint military drills between the u.s. and south korea, that's historically always annoyed pyongyang, and they've had a reaction to that. exercises have been less in recent years, even canceled by former president donald trump, but this is a time tensions are going to be higher as well because many factors, something that north korea is always focusing on, is the birth date of founder. but any anniversary that ends in
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0 or 5 in north korea's mind is far more significant. was always going to be busy time of the year for them. >> paula hancocks in seoul. our thanks. railways have been a life line for millions fleeing russian attacks in ukraine. we'll be hearing from doctor treating life-threatening injuries on board a train. you're watching cnn "newsroom."
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welcome back everybody. russian campaign intensifies in eastern ukraine, it's increasingly dangerous for civilians to escape. number of humanitarian corridors were opened saturday, nearly 1,500 evacuated from areas of heavy fighting, only 170 escaped from mariupol and had to use their own vehicles. more than 4.8 million people have left ukraine for other countries, more than 7 million internally displaced since the war began. many fleeing by rail. cnn's jake tapper. >> reporter: close to 6,000 war crimes being investigated. potentially tens of thousands massacred, and russia repositioning for a new assault. these ukrainians are not waiting
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for what's next. >> translator: a week ago we were thinking and hoping it would stop. it will be calmer. but it didn't change. >> reporter: less than a week after russia bombed a crowded railway platform, those lucky enough to evacuate on these trains believe the ride was worth the risk. air travel nonexistent, unexploded bombs and russian checkpoints on the roads, trains remain the safest way to flee. >> translator: not only the question of shelling but safety, some people may come and take you away. we can't stay. >> reporter: baby maxim and his mother plan to wait out the war in germany. outside the main lviv train station, volunteers answer questions and coordinate transportation and safe housing in germany, poland, lviv and
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more. most want to go back in time. >> translator: we want as soon as possible to continue living as before. >> reporter: vida and her husband two of nearly 4 million ukrainians the railway has evacuated. >> translator: people say on the internet anything can happen, even here. hope it can be easy. we left everything behind. >> reporter: thousands fleeing home towns to the lviv train station, try to get accommodations, food from the world central kitchen. there's a fire over there, wood burning stove heating water. people came with belongings they could take and loved ones, trying to get to someplace safe. away from crowds at smaller train station, most fragile passengers have carefully coordinated welcome. doctors without borders arranged
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the trains, ten people remaining, nine children, almost all wounded in attack. they're getting off the train and into ambulances. this was not arrival they imagined when they came to the railway station friday. after russians targeted the crowd on the platform, many of the children suffered shrapnel wounds so deep surgery is required. their train is outfitted with medical equipment and team of doctors and nurses. the er physician on board for 24-hour journey oversaw complex injuries along the way. >> pneumothorax, air between the lung and chest due to penetrating trauma of blast.
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>> reporter: normally see in soldiers, not children? >> expect to see in war-struck areas where civilians are close to the firing line. >> reporter: pretty tough to see kids hurt like that? >> always remains tough, yes. >> reporter: his team going back and forth on these medical transports for ten days. group of some of putin's youngest victims safe for now. and headed for more care. back at main terminal, trains keep chugging in and out, across the country. bringing ukrainians from besieged south and east to lviv, where they can have small luxury of a moment to cry. jake tapper, cnn, lviv, ukraine. >> russian missile strike hit a restaurant in kharkiv which
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partnered with aid group world central kitchen. four staff members injured, taken to hospital. ceo put video on twitter describing the horrific scene after the attack. >> horrific brutality. we are going to head to the hospital now, check on some of the restaurant staff. we're told they're okay but this is the reality for so many now in kharkiv. coming to work, cooking for people hungry. immense act of bravery. >> world central kitchen founded by chef jose andre. no one was hurt at restaurant but did kill another person. not confirmed yet. wounded,or fanned and taken
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live in lviv, ukraine. russian military issued ultimatum to all fighters in mariupol, lay down weapons, leave the city, effective immediately. until 1:00 p.m. local time to comply. russia's defense ministry claiming to have shot down a plane with military aid from the west. supposedly near odesa but no confirmation. u.s. says first shipment of heavy weapons has arrived ahead of renewed russian offensive expected any time. 18 howitzer cannons and artillery rounds which may last only a few days. white house scrambling to secure more ammunition for ukraine as soon as possible. since the war began, tens of thousands of ukrainians have
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been reportedly taken from homes to russian territories. one girl from mariupol taken and being featured in propaganda russian video. phil black. >> reporter: it's almost hard to comprehend, this was mariupol, not long ago, its people knew safety and happiness. girl in pink is kira, joyful, loved, 12 years old. this is after the russians came. orphaned, injured, alone in russian controlled hospital. russian media released this video showing kira in donetsk, capital of a russian separatist backed region in the east. telling some of they are story. why she fled mariupol.
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there was a lot of shooting she says, our building was hit. so was her father. yevgeny was a former captain of the national water polo team, shot from a distance and killed as russian forces fought way into mariupol on march 17. days later, kira, neighbors and father's girlfriend tried to flee on foot but someone stepped on mine and she was injured, russian soldiers took her to donetsk. russian military which killed your son has your granddaughter. grandfather tells me mother died when she was baby, watched her father die, misses remaining family, wants to return to him. aleksandr is scared he won't see her again. official invited her to travel
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to claim her. that's impossible because of the war and when he spoke to the hospital, he was told kira will be sent to orphanage in russia. they took her documents he says, said they'll provide new ones in russia. russian government said it's helped move 60,000 ukrainian people to safety across the russian border. ukrainian border said around 40,000 have been relocated against their will, describing it as abduction and forced deportation. russian media video shows kira talking happily how she is sometimes allowed to call her grandfather. i called him today, she says. also will call him in the evening. russian tv presenter called the video proof she was not abducted, another ukrainian
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fake. kira also sometimes sends audio messages like this one. [ speaking foreign language ] first tells him not to cry but can't stop her own tears. i haven't seen you for so long, i want to cry, she says. the voice of a young girl can who has lost her family, home, freedom, all to russia's war. phil black, cnn, lviv, ukraine. >> more from lviv top of the hour. back to michael. that's horrendous story. >> and one other day with the old lady they eventually got out to care home as well. it's countless story after story of just horrible things happening to people, isn't it?
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yeah. >> never ends it seems. >> we'll be back with you john later. meanwhile news of another high ranking russian military leader killed in ukraine. major general vladimir frolov, reportedly deputy commander of eighth army. claimed to have died in battle with what he called ukrainian nationalists. cnn could not confirm but would be among several top officers believed killed in russia's invasion of ukraine. douglas london is retired senior cia operations officer, adjunct associate professor with georgetown university, and author of "the recruiter: spying and the lost art of american
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intelligence." thanks for joining us. you wrote a piece in foreignaffairs.com related to intel world, raised what america could do covertly to undermine the kremlin. give us examples. >> cia would be continuing and expanding training and support it's likely been inviting since 2014. but the agency has unique abilities that include access to covert supply lines, foreign sourced weapons and ability to provide targeting support and intelligence our defense might not be able to do. there's also a lot of room to accelerate. biggest vulnerabilities that putin has, client states, b belarus, chechnya, kazakhstan,
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there were hundreds just recently protesting in belarus. there's ukrainian forces made of belarussian troops and czechens fighting for ukraine. there's ability to organize, provide intelligence and ratchet up to uprises if possible. something we could expand as well inside of russia. grassroots opposition is what putin worries about, just getting news into the country is something the agency can do covertly. take it up another ratchet, there are those in putin's circle the agency could reach out to, looking for life rafts, way out of this. even appearance of those considering cooperating with the west would tap into putin's paranoia and make him look over his shoulder more than the ukrainian battlefield. >> we often talk of a leader's
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world view. you also wrote a piece on cnn.com on that aspect of this conflict. what is putin's world view as it applies to ukraine? >> unfortunately wouldn't say he's irrational despite the horrors. he's a product of the cold war era kgb. very black and white point of view, might makes right for him. and witnessed soviet union collapse, his practice of denial and deception, going to bark loudest with biggest threats when he has weakest hands. going to wedge allies, decouple them if he can, look for daylight to identify what he thinks is weakness. having been in power so long and built a cult of personality, he's drunk his own kool-aid i
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think, made serious miscalculations launching the invasion in first place. >> putin is many things and won't want to ever appear he's losing or backing down at all. but also about self-preservation. how does the west evaluate what point he's at on the pendulum and exploit that? >> it's a balance. bluster can't be dismissed entirely, but reliance on denial and deception with a weaker hand will likely lead him to make biggest threats where he feels he's under strain. but i think there's reasonable concern, intelligence putting out declassified information suggesting possible use of chemical weapons on the battlefield or a tactical nuclear device. latter is less likely. less military advantage and more
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than likely to invite a nato response. balancing his bluster, denial and deception with his plans depends on good sources of intelligence, which we seem to be doing pretty good job. >> if it comes to point of peace talks, what are the risks of ukrainian or western compromise which putin would see as weakness? how should a deal be handled given his record of taking advantage of compromise? >> putin only understands consequences. strength, he would see concessions as appeasement and sign of weakness to exploit. he's going to look for ways to undermine western unity, undermine the public's response. counting on lack of western interest over time. that the west will grow tired of
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it, fatigued of its own sacrifices and innate weakness, which he believes from cold war kgb conditioning is going to play to his advantage. continued vigilance and unity is key, not allowing for anything other than certain show of strength and constraining him through new chapter in containment, making sure there's a price he has to pay, not just incentive he thinks this will advantage him in the long run. >> a man with decades of experience in intelligence commute, good to see you. >> thank you. what life is like for millions in lockdown in n shanghai. you're watching "c"cnn newsroom we'll be right back. aid, pay your s staff, and know where yoyour business stands. new bubusiness? no problem.
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lost to president emmanuel macron in first round but polls show it's closer in the runoff. last week of campaigning before the runoff april 24. tracking yet another mass shooting here in the u.s. 14 people injured saturday after gunfire at mall in south carolina. one person arrested in connection with the shooting. incident happened in the state capital, columbia. police chief said earlier three people were detained. >> we believe that the individuals that were armed knew each other and was some type of conflict that resulted in gunfire. wasn't a random person showed up at mall to discharge a fire arm and injury people. >> incredibly, almost weekly event. health officials say nine of those injured were treated and
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released from the hospital. new covid-19 cases ticking up again in the u.s. but still a fraction of where they were at height of the omicron surge. health officials keeping close eye on new york, two new omicron subvariants are spreading quickly through central part of the state. covid hospitalizations have started to tick up there, appropriating promotion of testing and mask wearing, especially indoors. in shanghai the covid-19 outbreak shows no sign of slowing. 26,000 new cases reported, almost all in shanghai, been in strict lockdown for weeks as authorities try to curb the spread of the virus but learning key industries in shanghai will be allowed to resume production, including companies that produce
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biomedicine and automobiles. david is following other signs of progress and frustration in that city. >> reporter: a few steps of freedom granted to some shanghai residents, strolling their own neighborhoods as if taking in a strange new world. >> where are you going to go? nowhere to go. >> reporter: shops closed and public transportation halted. still couldn't hold back joy, recording as she and neighbors roam empty streets. after weeks of harsh lockdown, government officials facing mounting pressure lifted restrictions. communities like mine without a case in several days, could step outside. neighbors enjoying the taste of relative freedom and pets eager to stretch legs, still in the confines of the compound. extent of my freedom? all the way to here. compound gate.
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still double locked. it's been like that for about a month. in recent weeks we had to get community permission to leave our homes, mostly for covid tests, of which there were many. also could pick up occasional government distribution. today's delivery, a bag of rice. but even with heavy restrictions still in place, we had it good, for now at least. majority of the city remains in hard lockdown, kept to their homes, some hungry and suffering. this woman heard begging in middle of the night, pleading for fever medicine for her child. and this man recording his dwindling food supply. then those who tested positive, ten thousands sent to cramped government quarantine centers. described a host of problems. quickly and poorly constructed. outside of shanghai, panic
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spreading quicker than the virus. horror stories from the financial hub have residents in other cities stocking up. online, sales for prepackaged foods surging as china's national health commission warns of more cases and publicly calls out shanghai for not effectively containing the virus. shifting blame to local officials for allowing it to spread. strict approach forcing dozens of cities in weeks long full or partial lockdowns. residents banging on pots to protest. more of the 24 million people in northern chinese province confined more than a month now. back in shanghai, joys last only a few hours. takes one new case to send them back inside. resetting the clock for their community. 14-day sentence in lockdown,
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seemingly endless cycle. cnn, shanghai. when we come back on the program, new postage stamp commemorating one of the most famous moments of the war in ukraine is becoming a hot collectible. that and more after the break. i booked our hotel on kayak. it's flexible if we need to cancel. cancel. i haven't left the house in years. nothing will stop me from vacation. no canceling. (laughs) flexible cancellation. kayak. srch one and done.
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