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our viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. i'm bianca nobilo live from london. max foster has the day off. >> i'm not a hero. i'm a guy who wanted to protect his kids and his wife. >> i have colleagues who are part of the lgbtq community. >> this is just a blow. >> disturbing stories detailing the authorities brutal. >> they choose the women who were pretty and suited their appetite. then the officer would take one of them from the cell to a smaller, private room. >> announcer: live from london, this is "cnn newsroom" with max foster and bianca nobilo. >> it's tuesday, november 22nd. 9 a.m. here in london. 2 a.m. in colorado where the man
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suspected of fatally shooting five people and wounding almost 20 others at an lgbtq nightclub will face multiple murder and nightclub charges. the investigation is still active and they're gathering more evidence to build his case. >> the location is not lost on us. that is evidence that we can use towards that -- towards the decision of filing bias motivated crimes. we're looking for other evidence as well as that. >> family, friends, and members of the community mourn this tragedy, we're learning the names of the five people who lost their lives on saturday. rosa flores reports. >> reporter: police naming the
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five people who lost their lives on saturday. a shooting that left 19 others injured. thomas james and richard fee arrow. he was watching the drag show when gunfire erupted. his instincts as an army officer kicked in. >> he simply said to me, i was trying to protect my family. >> reporter: according to authorities, fiero and james confronted and fought with the suspect, took his handgun and hit him with it. >> god bless. this could have been a lot worse if they hadn't stepped in. >> two absolute heroes. if not for them, i don't know how many other people would have been injured. >> barry hudson survived the shooting and said he was shot seven times but miraculously escaped serious injury. >> i see a door shut and there's the gunman. there was a man in front of him.
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he put his hands up a little bit, took two steps back and the dude just killed him. >> reporter: the shooting started just before midnight. at 11:57 p.m. someone at the bar called 911 and police started dispatching shooters. >> active shooter. 4 to 7 injured. >> we made a reach to hospitals to see if they could handle all of the patients. >> the first officer arrived on scene at 12 a.m., then at 12:02 a.m. the suspect was in custody. >> suspect has been retained. >> anderson lee aldrich is in the hospital. sources telling cnn he bought the weapons used in the attack. now aldrich being held pending possible charges that include first degree murder as well as possible bias motivated crime. he was ranting about police last year during a standoff.
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>> [ bleep ] rifles out. if they breech, i'm going to blow it to holy hell. >> over a bomb threat captured on camera. the local media report no formal charges were pursued and his records were sealed according to the district community. >> this close knit lgbtq community now struggling to find a way forward. >> i'm doing okay considering i lost friends that i care about and i don't think it's really sunk in yet. >> reporter: the suspect has not been charged. according to the district attorney, he is being held on possible charges of first degree murder and hate crimes. now he is still in the hospital and his condition is unknown. rosa flores, cnn, colorado springs, colorado. families of the deceased sharing more details about their loved ones and the lives that they touched. ashley paul worked with a
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nonprofit helping foster children. her husband says that she was a loving mother whose daughter was her whole world. kelly loving's sister released a brief statement calling her sweet and a caring and wonderful person. derek rump was from eastern pennsylvania and worked as a bar bartender. he found a community of people he loved very much in colorado springs. derek worked side by side with daniel aston. he was a bartender. his mom said he had so much more life to give us. raymond green's family said he just landed a new job and could not wait to save enough money to get his own apartment. they say he was kind, selfless with his entire life ahead of him. and while the families mourn their loved ones, police are calling two men heroes for taking down the gunmen and saving many lives. one of them is richard fiero, a
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retired army major. he went into combat mode. he spoke to cnn about the nightclub rampage. >> i proceeded to take his other weapon, a pistol, and then just start hitting him where i could. i found a crease between his arm and his head and i started wailing away with his gun. i told the kid in front of me, kick him. keep kicking him. call 911. call 911. i've got to protect my kid. i lost my kid's boyfriend. i tried. i tried everybody in there. i feel so bad. it's sad people didn't go home and this guy, this guy, i told him while i was hitting him, i'm going to kill you, man. because you killed my friend. as soon as i got done with that guy and the cop came in, i ran across the room and started first aid with my friend who was
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shot in the chest, in the legs, in the arms and i told joanne, stay with me. look me in the eyes. stay with me. and i moved her hand so she couldn't see her father because he had been shot and she was right there. her husband was reaching for her so i put her hand in his hand so that they could be together. i didn't know if they were going to make it. this whole thing was a lot. my daughter and wife should have never experienced combat and everybody experienced combat. not to their own accord. i told the mayor, i'm not -- i'm not a hero. i'm just a guy that wanted to protect his kids and his wife and i still do. >> richard fierro there with his emotional account of the shooting. meantime, we're hearing more stories from other survivors on
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what they witnessed when the shooting began. >> from the amount of shots that initially went off when he came into the club, i honestly thought it was multiple penal shooting either, a, at each other or multiple people shooting just how quick the number of shots were coming out in rapid succession. all i had time to do really was to flip the table next to us to kind of use it as cover and i yelled for everyone to get down. >> i remember the sound. i honestly thought it was the music, may self. until i smelt the actual gun powder. the smell is what got to me. when gill, you know, said to get down immediately, my initial thought, it was react, act quickly and get on the ground. i think i was -- the only thing i was going testimony through at that time was i was praying. >> barrett hudson said he was shot seven times but incredibly
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managed to survive. >> i knew i got shot a few times. i fell down. he proceeded to shoot me. i got back up. i made it out of the back of the club. i don't know how i'm walking. all seven bullets missed my spine, missed my liver, my colon. they cut me in five places in my chest and put cameras in and went through everything and i got really, really lucky. >> the nightclub massacre has shattered the sense of security of what members of the lgbtq community said was one of their few safe havens in colorado springs. colorado's governor, the first openly gay governor ever elected in the united states, said it's time to unite and rally behind
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th those. >> it's the intent to tune the crazy talk out. we all see it. we need to call it out aggressively and say it's not okay to say some americans are the enemy because of who they are, who they love. we're all in this together. we need to focus on unity. we need to focus on the true things we all value and care about. >> attorneys for the family of rich shard brooks said they've reached a $1 million settlement. the 27-year-old was shot and killed in a wendy's parking lot two years ago when officers responded to complaints of a man sleeping in the car in the restaurant's drive through and then a struggle ensued. a special prosecutor said the charges against the officers are
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being dismissed. also in georgia, a missing toddler's mother has been arrested and charged with murder. police found what they believe is his remains in a landfill. the 20-month-old was reported missing in october. police say she was the soul suspect in the case. she is charged with murder, concealing a murder. u.s. coast guard said that it's rescued at least 100 people from an overloaded vessel before it hit a sandbar in the florida keys. the operation began on monday after a good samaritan reported it. the coast guard didn't know who was on the boat or their nationalities. rescue efforts still ongoing.
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rescue crews combing through the debris. at least 103 people have been killed. authorities fear that number will rise. it's making it difficult to access rural areas. the government is putting up tents and shelters for more than 7,000 people forced from their homes. indonesia's location on the so-called ring of fire in the pacific ocean makes it prone to earthquakes. this one was a 5.6 magnitude. cnn's anna coren is following developments live this hour from hong kong. anna, what can you tell us about the rescue efforts and the areas so badly hit. there are concerns a lot of damage was caused to educational sites. >> bianca, it's now more than 24 hours since the first quake which is in west java province
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southeast from indonesia's capitol of jakarta. this is a mountainous area. the buildings are concrete. what we saw when that earthquake hit at 1:20 p.m. you mentioned children, yes, they were all at school all at their desks with this concrete falling from the ceiling. doctors are saying that it was rubble that killed most of the victims. the death toll as it stands is at about just over 100 but we are expecting that to climb. we should hear from officials very shortly giving us an update on that death toll. now the reason the earthquake was so violent, it only hit for 30 seconds, is because it was shallow. only 10 kilometers deep. that is why we saw that destruction, widespread destruction. it wasn't just the p earthquake,
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it was the landslide. a lot of water saturated in the ground. we have the landslides happening around the area. a make-shift hospital was set up outside the main hospital for fears it was going to collapse and there was one woman who spoke to the media when her missing child. take a listen. >> translator: i have seven children and one of them hasn't been found. the children were downstairs and i was upstairs getting laundry. everything collapsed beneath me and i was crushed beneath the child. one of my kids is still missing. my house is flattened. good god. two of my kids survived. two others i brought here and one is still missing. >> just so painful to listen to what that mother must be going through. the indonesian president visited the site today, bianca, asking rescue crews not to give up on finding any survivors.
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absolutely wrenching. >> anna coren, thank you very much for that report. a looming rail strike is threatening to put a major dent in the u.s. economy with the holidays right around the corner. what retailers want from congress to get things back on track. how bob iger is working to make disney the happiest place on earth. and the match between the united states and wales. it's comeback season. two new ihop lunch and dinner menu items
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get ready, football fans, because in the next hour lionel messi is expected to begin his very last run at the world cup. argentina will play saudi arabia. reining champions france will start their title defense with a match against australia. the it all follows an eventful second day. the u.s. and wales made their return to the world cup on monday and played each other in a tightly contested match which ended in a draw.
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cnn's amanda davies was there. she joins us now from doha. let's start with the u.s. audience talking about that match against wales and what we can expect from the matches today. >> yeah. the u.s. had waited eight years to return to the world cup finals. i guess the problem was wales had waited 64. they wanted it just as much. as you mentioned, a brilliant atmosphere with two very vocal sets of fans both making the most of their national anthem moment, but just disappointing was how u.s. defender tim rheem put it. missed opportunity despite real positives. it was a fantastic night. 23-year-old timothy weah. the son of legendary player
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george who is the only african player to have won in the 1990s. he's now president of liberia. he was there watching on with the rest of their family as timothy scored the goal, the u.s.'s first goal at the world cup in his first world cup game. but gareth bale had put off his international retirement to make it to the tournament. he wasn't going to give up that result without a fight. he scored the late, late penalty to see the point shared. speaking of retirement though as you mentioned, we are now gearing up just less than an hour away for the start of lionel messi's, what we so much expect to be his final world cup in an argentina shirt. the argentinian fans have been flocking in in their numbers over the last 24 hours or so very much making their presence felt. the atmosphere has been
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brilliant. they have high hopes that this could be their year to reclaim that first world cup since 1986 to send their seven-time winner out of the international games on a high. not many people giving saudi arabia a chance. they are just hoping they do better in their opening game than four years ago in russia, they were thumped 5-nil. >> amanda, it's only day three. it does seem this world cup is shaping up to be the most politicized ever. we saw a defiant display from the iranian team. talk about that and if we're seeing any other visible protests? >> reporter: yeah, there's no doubt. i mean, since -- all the way through this buildup it's been very, very clear this is a tournament that is about so much more than just football and it kind of makes a mockery, i said it yesterday, of all of those fifa claims we just want this to be focused on the football.
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that is not the case. and we very quickly yesterday got an answer to whether or not iran's players would take a stance against their government, show solidarity to the antigovernmental protestors at home when the players walked out onto the pitch, lined up for their national anthem against england and also in silence, they didn't sing. their captain said in the run up to the game that he felt that he and his team needed to be the voice of the victims, the people affected back at home. he said, we sympathize with all the grieved families of iran. there is though anger amongst the european teams. they have been unable to wear the one love arm bands they were hoping to show support against discrimination and for the lgbtq+ community. that has been taking place at the same time as reports of people going into the game last night having rainbow hats taken
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away from them. we're expecting more protests. denmark with their shirts specially designed with no logos, no different colored trim. that's a move to take a stance against the human rights. >> amanda davies in doha. we'll let you go. i know you have a very busy and exciting day ahead. thank you so much. u.s. financial markets are looking to rebound when trading begins in just a few hours. there are no signs of that yet when we're looking at futures. on monday the dow fell 1/10 of a percent on more interest rate hikes. the nasdaq closed more than 1% lower and the s&p 500 dropped more than 1/3 of a percent. leading u.s. retailers are warning of a self-inflicted p disaster if freight rail workers go on strike. they have rejected a labor deal with freight railroad meaning congress may have to step in.
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cnn's matt egan explains the impact. >> reporter: america faces the growing risk of a crippling rail strike. just two weeks from now. the nation's largest rail union announced monday its rank and file members have rejected a tentative labor deal that was reached in september with freight railroads. all 12 rail unions have now completed their ratification process but only eight unions backed the deal. four are against them. and even if just one of the dozen rail unions go on strike, the other 11, they would honor the picket lines shutting down the railroads. a prolonged freight strike could cause mayhem for the economy. leading retailers warned on monday that a strike would result in a self-inflicted economic disaster. that would spoil food, online shopping delivery delays and worsening inflation. the national retail federation
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called on congress to immediately intervene to avoid catastrophe. for now the four unions that have voted no, they will remain on the job until at least early next month while talks are held to avoid a strike, but if new deals are not reached in time, congress may be forced to decide whether to order rail workers to remain on the job or return to work. a strike would come at a delicate time for the economy. the covid-19 pandemic scrambled supply chains that have only just begun to move back towards normal. inflation remains very high and recession fears have bubbled up as central banks race to get prices under control. a crippling rail strike might be the last thing the economy needs right now. back to you. disney's new ceo, bob iger, said major plans to restructure the entertainment company will be announced in a few weeks.
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the stock prices are up. iger, who you will see on the left, returned to the media empire after his successor, bob chapek, was ousted. disney's problems are vast. last quarter they suffered $1.5 billion in streaming losses. iger says he'll dedicate the next few years to trying to turn the company around. elon musk says that twitter's blue verified feature is now on hold until the company can address concerns over accounts being impersonated. initial rollout earlier this month came with all sorts of problems when fake accounts began popping up. meanwhile, the impact of twitter's mass layoffs is being felt around the world. the head of twitter france announced his departure from the company and french regulators are concerned whether the staff
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can do enough to keep the platform afloat. a minnesota children's hospital is the latest to be overwhelmed by a rise in rsv cases. workers say the icu has been over capacity for several weeks with as many as 40 children waiting to be seen at some points. area hospitals are also running low on liquid antibiotics and flu medication as kids catch seasonal viruses. doctors are urging patients to use virtual appointments as a way to conserve the precious resources. still ahead, a cnn exclusive. new, disturbing details on the brutality of iranian security forces are coming to light and you won't want to miss this. menthol topical papain relief brand. works fastst. lasts long. cool the pain with b biofreeze.
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welcome back to "cnn newsroom." i'm bianca nobilo. if you are just joining us, let me bring you up to date with our top stories. court documents show the 22-year-old suspect who went on a shooting spree in an lgbtq nightclub in colorado is facing multiple murder and hate crime charges. rescuers are looking for survivors in indonesia. the at least 103 people are dead. that number could rise. in iran the situation continues to be volatile as the government continues the crackdown in the kurdish region. a human rights group based in norway tells cnn that at least 13 people have been killed in
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kurdish cities in the past 24 hours. this as an internet watchdog says cellular data was down in kurdish areas for hours. since protests started, iran's government has unleashed a barrage of tactics. the report contains details of sexual violence. >> reporter: over these mountains is iran, a regime that has succeeded in cutting many of its people off from the outside world, but disturbing stories detailing the authorities' brutal retribution, systematic sexual violence have begun leaking out. we've come here to try to find out more. this is hannah, not her real
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name. a kurdish iranian recently smuggled out of iran. she fears for her life. after taking off and burning her head scarf on the streets, she was arrested and detained by iranian intelligence officers. >> translator: they choose the women who were pretty and suited their appetite. then the officer would take one from the cell to a private room. they would sexually assault them there. >> reporter: hannah isn't only an eye witness, she also was violated. >> reporter: i feel shy talking about this. you can still see what the policeman did. look here on my neck, it's purplish. that's why i'm covering it. he forced himself on me. >> reporter: then a fight broke out with another protestor drawing away hannah's attacker. hannah and others could hear screams and they believe a woman was raped in an interrogation room. hannah sketched out the police station as she remembers it. she estimates 70 to 80 men and
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women were together in a main hall that accessed four private interrogation rooms. it was in these interrogation rooms, she said, she was assaulted and others were raped. cnn was able to locate the police station through hannah's description. eye witness corroboration and geo location using key landmarks. it's in the islamabad neighborhood of omir. based on this testimony and speaking to a number of sources, a pattern of repression comes into focus. police centers used as filtration points moving protestors from one location to another, often families left not knowing where their loved ones are held. one iraq based kurdish opposition party identified over 240 people who they believe are missing within this maze of detention centers. human rights organizations believe the number is higher, in the thousands. some of the victims as young as
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14. many are men supporting female protestors. their punishment as severe as the women's. >> translator: they brought four men over who had been beaten, screaming intensely into the cell. one of the men who was tortured was sent to the waiting room where i was. i asked him what all that screaming was about. he said, they are range the men. >> reporter: based on witness testimony, cnn traced the location to an iranian army intelligence headquarters. voiced by a translator, a 17-year-old sent cnn a voice note. we are withholding his name and location for his safety. >> translator: my security guard heard me discussing it with the other inmates. he started torturing me all over again. they tortured, raped me from behind. >> reporter: even as authorities are forcing sexual violence on them, they are forcing the
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females of prostitution, wanting to be naked. most occurred in the kurdish majority areas to the west of iran. home to a historically oppressed minority. disturbingly in some cases the rapes were filmed and used to black mail protesters into silence. there has been a real escalation where female protesters are, as you can see here, being openly assaulted, often sexually. but the violence against women, like the protests, are not confined to the kurdish areas. they are often focused on locations where the protests are most intense like here in the capitol. >> translator: one of these stories is armeta. >> she's a typical 20-year-old on social media sharing her love for animals. in social media posts appearing
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under her name, she criticized the regime openly after the protests began. unlike most, she it it without anonymity. it didn't take long for security forces to find and arrest her. abase disappeared. soon after whistle blowers began to post on various social media platforms, medics sharing eye witness accounts of what had been done to her. first of all, they say, there were a few plain clothes men with her and they did not let her out of their sight. even during a private medical examination they were there. she was my patient. i went to her bedside. they had shaved her hair. she was scared and was trembling. when she first came in they said it was rectal bleeding due to repeated rape. the plain clothes men insisted that the doctor write that the rapists were prior to her arrest and after this issue was
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becoming obvious to all they changed the entire scenario altogether. the details of these leaks were confirmed to cnn by an insider at the hospital where she was brought to be examined. in a statement the government say she was treated for digestive problems. the medics who treated her said that was not true. the iranian regime denies the rape accusing her of leading process, an allegation which could see her face the death penalty. at this usually busy border crossing it is deceptively quiet. those who can cross tell us the noose is tightening on protesters. authorities have for decades used sexual torture against iranians and it appears once more a familiar pattern. sexual violence deployed to enforce an assertion of moral guardianship.
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bianca, we have reached out to iranian authorities and they have not responded to us for comment. many we have spoken be to, their actions speak louder than any of their words could. they are engaged in a continued horrifying militarized escalation in the kurdish majority regions to the west where we tracked many of those rapes to. they also are engaged in an attempt to black out communication even further. what is really extraordinary, not only about the bravery of the men and women who were able to send us voicemails, who were able to get their stories and their voices out to us and to the rest of the world is they did this in the face of an increasing escalation of an increasing attempt by iranian authorities to block them and to silence them and really to encircle them from the rest of the world. the sad thing is there really doesn't seem to be any respite
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on be the horizon. it's very clear that the iranian authorities view what is happening especially in those minority areas in the kurdish west as an existential threat, bianca. >> thank you so much for that exclusive. investigating donald trump. the newly appointed special counsel is getting down to business and there's a key hearing in the coming hours.
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vice president kamala harris intends to keep her job. she says if president joe biden runs again in 2024, she will be his running mate. the comments came on a trip to southeast asia. a majority of americans, even democrats, do not want biden to seek re-election. in the coming day u.s. appeals court will hear arguments about
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whether a so-called special master should be allowed to view the records seized from former president donald trump's mar-a-lago estate. they're repeating the investigation and they want him gone. meanwhile, special counsel is now overseeing the mar-a-lago case as well as another criminal investigation. cnn's katie has the details. >> reporter: newly appointed special counsel jack smith is getting down to business. he's getting to work only three days after his appointment by attorney general merrick garland to take over two investigations around donald trump and the first indications are that the work is not slowing down. so smith is going to be taking over a case that is about to be argued in a federal appeals court on tuesday about documents that were seized from mar-a-lago. donald trump's trying to keep those documents away from
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criminal prosecutors. in a court filing on monday, the justice department showed to the court smith's documents showing that he was writing his oath of office. he was signing off on his oath of office. merrick garland put him into this role and said smith has reviewed the filings in this litigation and approves of all of the arguments that have been presented in the briefs and will be discussed at the oral arguments on tuesday. also, stepping back we've been hearing from sources the subpoenas out there trying to seek information from witnesses and witnesses both testimony and documents in a federal court in washington, d.c. those subpoena dates are not changing. smith has sent the message to investigators who are working on these probes that he shouldn't be delaying any work as he's coming into place as the special counsel. now he is in the netherlands right now recovering from a bike accident but does plan to return
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to the united states to take over both of these criminal probes. caitlyn polantz. a senior russian officer has a message for the west. the comments come one day after nato's secretary general renewed calls for greater support for ukraine as the fighting grinds on. let's head out to moscow now where cnn's frederick pleitgen is standing by. fred, you obviously monitor this very closely. i've been to moscow a lot throughout the year. have you noticed any shifts in terms of russia's rhetoric and posturing in terms of how they're framing this war to their domestic audience and the international community? >> reporter: yeah, it certainly does continue to change, bianca. it's been quite interesting over the past couple of months especially to see how the russians have sort of changed their narrative.
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obviously at the beginning of the war and the initial invasion of ukraine from various sides the russians believed that all of this would be over fairly quickly. that was sort of the messaging that you then also saw on state tv and from a lot of politicians that this would not affect the general population in russia. this would be over very quickly. that's certainly also what they seemed to project towards the outside as well. they were the dominant power. they were going to get air superiority quickly and end all of this quickly. it seems that has drastically shifted from the part of the russians. the messaging you're seeing was a very well-known senator in the russian federation counsel. they're saying it's the west that continues to fuel this conflict. they say it's the west that's supplying weapons, keeping the ukrainians fighting and that it's russia that's actually wanting to negotiate. the russians have said there's no pre-conditions who are negotiating. the ukrainians are saying with
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russia annexing various areas of ukraine, most of which the russians don't have under their military control, that the ukrainians are saying they're not going to negotiate under those circumstances. that's where the russians are going to message that they are the ones who want to resolve all of this. it's interesting to see the nuances when you look at the messaging towards the inside for the domestic audience. it's what's surprising. on state tv, for instance, you could get the impression russia is close to winning and still strikes on the critical infrastructure here in ukraine that's almost causing the ukrainians to capitulate immediately. the reality on the ground seems to be a very different one. you do see a big shift that has occurred over time as far as messaging is concerned, bianca. >> fascinating. fred pleitgen in moscow, thank you so much for that reporting. wet and cold weather could force many americans to change their thanksgiving travel plans. we have the forecast coming up.
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and any type of cough, day or night. mucinex dm. it's comeback season. if you have diabetes, then getting on the dexcom g6 is the single most important thing you can do. it eliminates painful fingersticks, helps lower a1c, and it's covered by medicare. before dexcom g6, i was frustrated. all of that finger-pricking and all of that pain, my a1c was still stuck. my diabetes was out of control. i was tired. (female announcer) dexcom g6 sends your glucose numbers to your phone or receiver without painful fingersticks. the arrow shows the direction your glucose is heading: up, down, or steady, so you can make better decisions about food and activity in the moment. after using dexcom g6, my a1c has never been lower. i lead line dancing three times a week, i exercise, and i'm just living a great life now. it's so easy to use. dexcom g6 has given me confidence and control that everything i need is right there on my phone. (female announcer) dexcom g6 is the #1 recommended cgm system by doctors and patients.
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call now to get started. (bright music)
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welcome back. as americans prepare to visit their families this thanksgiving, a series of storms could force them to alter their plans. we have the forecast. >> we're still dealing with some snow across the great lakes but nothing like we had before. grand rapids, michigan, let me show you this. the record daily snowfall depth on monday of 12 inches. previous record in 2014. new update hamburg reaching the top spot, 81.2 inches. thankfully, again, the snow finally winding down. otherwise, high pressure's in control and it's trying to warm us up. we're still dealing with winter weather with the next low pressure system coming in over the pacific northwest. get over 3,000 feet, we're talking a foot. not so much when it comes to
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tr travel. there's the quick-moving system. in billings and montana and wyoming. the darker pinks, that's 10 to 12 inches. higher elevations. lower elevations 2 to 5 inches. one front after the next reinforces the cool air. more of a southerly wind. we have temperatures back up into the 60s in atlanta. the warmer temperature trend holds over the next three days. as for precip, you saw the low moving in over the northwest. there's that front. as that front moves down across into the south and the low moves in from the gulf, we increase our rain chances bringing in a substantial amount of rain across the southeast and down into the lower mississippi valley where we really need it. we've been under the drought. 2 to 4 inches here. as for your thanksgiving forecast, travel a bit dicey across the south and southeast
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as temperatures warm back up into the 60s and 70s. nasa's one step closer to putting astronauts back on the moon. the orion spacecraft completed a fly by. it's spending a month going around the moon saving fuel and testing systems before heading back to earth. the unmanned orion will go 65,000 kilometers, further out than any spacecraft intended to carry humans. that does it for "cnn newsroom." i'm bianca nobilo and "early start" is next. effortlessly responds to both of you. our smart sleepers get 28 minutes more restful sleep per r night. proven quality sleep. only from sleep numbmber.
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