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♪ priceline ♪ >> hello, and welcome to our viewers joining us here in the united states and all around the world. i am rosemary church. just ahead on cnn newsroom, a race against time. rescuers where desperately to track down a civilian, subset went missing during a voyage to the titanic wreckage. high winds, hail, and tornadoes whipped across the southern united states. more storms in the forecast on tuesday. and the u.s., and china, tried to get their relationship back on track in beijing, but fall short of at least one key goal. ♪ ♪ ♪ and we begin with a search and rescue mission happening right now in the north atlantic ocean. for a missing submersible
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carrying five people to see the wreckage of the titanic. this sub belongs to the commercial underwater exploration company, ocean gate, which lost contact with a vessel an hour and 45 minutes into its descent on sunday, according to an archive version of ocean gates websites, the titan submersible has room for five people, a pilot, a constant expert and three paying passengers. one of the people on board of the south of, for this expedition, is hamish harding. the founder and chair of action aviation. in an instagram post on saturday, he said that this mission would likely be the only manned mission to the titanic this year. and that there were a lot of preparations to do before the dive. more now on the search from cnn 's paula newton. >> the u.s. coast guard is taking the lead on the search and rescue mission, and they
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confirmed fact that this is a very challenging mission, the reason is that they say that this area of the north atlanta is very remote if you can imagine, not only do they have to search such a large area and perhaps challenging whether. we do know now that fog has rolled in but the fact that they have to search, perhaps, an area of the sea bed as far as nearly two and a half miles down, that is where the titanic wreck is and that is when presumably they lost contact with the submersible, it's only 21 feet long, and this will continue to be a challenge as the hours roll on, here i want to listen now to the u.s. coast guard. >> make sure that we're looking on both the surface, using aerial and surface vessels but then expanding into underwater searches as well. right now, our capability is limited to sonar buoys, and listening for sounds but we are
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working very hard to increase the capability. >> the rear admiral there is confirming the fact that they are going from what they know on the company, ocean gate expeditions, that they had 96 hours or thereabouts in total of emergency life support, that wedding clued fuel and oxygen. they continue to ask for more resources to go to the region, the canadian armed forces tells me that they will continue to cycle fixed wing aircraft through that area in order to help with the surge, but they are also calling on commercial vessels to go up to the area as they continue to try and located the submersible, really, when they lost contact with it on sunday afternoon, they still have had zero communication and therefore it makes it much more difficult to even pinpoint the search location. paula newton, cnn, ottawa. >> and late last year, ocean gate ceo, stopped in russia, showed a cbs team the inside of
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the titan submersible use for the companies titanic expeditions. >> take your shoes off, that is customary. >> okay. wow. >> inside, the sub has as much broom as a mini van. >> this is not your grandfather submersible. >> we only have one button, that's it. >> it should be like an elevator, it shouldn't take a lot of skill. we run the whole thing with this game controller. [laughter] >> come on! >> we are joined by david gal, okay is a senior adviser for the strategic initiatives with r&s titanic ink. the company that owns the exclusive salvage rights to the titanic wreck site. thank you for talking with us. my >> pleasure. >> now, this search and rescue effort is a desperate race to find the submersible and its crew before those oxygen supplies run out, what are your
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main concerns right now? >> well, i have been in this business for about four decades and this is as tense as i have ever seen that community. it is a race against time, you're fighting against oxygen levels. they should have a day or two more left of oxygen. also fighting the cold at the bottom, because the deep ocean is just above freezing cold, so hypothermia is an issue, i think that the biggest thing is where is it? is it on the bottom, is it floating, is it mid water? and that is something that hasn't been determined yet. hopefully, with all the help that is coming to bear, it will be falling fairly quickly, but that is a dangerous thing to say because i don't know if that means a day, for two days, or three weeks and we will have to wait and see and hope for the best. >> and of course once the submersible is located it has to be rescued. how complicated will the
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service be given the deep waters around the wreck of the titanic? >> complicated because you said it, the water is very deep, two miles plus and it's like a visit to another planet, it is not what people think it is. it's a forever cold environment, high pressure. so yes it is one thing to get there, another thing is to understand the situation about what the problem is with the sub and then go to work and try to extricate it from that. the good news is that the technology to do that and the techniques and the talent to do that is all there and if anyone can get that done, that, group if things fall in the right place they can do that. >> yes, and of, course as you mentioned the hardest part right now is finding this sub. how do rescuers indicate a small submersible like this in such deep and summers of waters? >> it's very different from things like france are
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malaysian air. whereas the sonar should have a good idea where the last-known position was, it won't go very far. if it has gotten into trouble on the surface. it may drift a bit. but on the bottom, motoring, two miles an hour. something like that. so a search area should be small, that does that mean that it will be easy to find but it means that you can focus on a very tight area and bringing our snow owners in, and cameras in, and whatever you need to do. into that area to try to locate the sub. so it's not like they're looking for a huge area of the sea floor, it's a fairly small area. >> and i have to ask, you just how safe are these titanic sub voyages. and could this particular incident change or perhaps even and these types, in some way expeditions, do you think? >> well, this is the third year for ocean gates and their head to successful seasons. this point obviously not
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successful to this point. and we're still hoping for the best. it's going to change things for sure. and i think it has to change things because when this all began, it was only a few people that can go as deep as titanic. but now, pretty much anyone that has got the resources of 1 million dollars or maybe less can build a submarine an attempt to go to titanic. and so there needs to be someone's direction and that kind of thing. yes. >> david gallo, thank you so much for talking with us. appreciate it. >> thank you rosemary. >> storms have better that u.s. south, and some of the same places already devastated by tornadoes over the past few days, more than 30 million people across the region are under a severe weather threat, tuesday into wednesday. take a look at this video of the possible tornado in moss point, mississippi. the storm ripped through the area, leveling several homes and businesses in its path. at least one person was killed
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and nearly two dozen injured when a powerful twister swept through the mississippi town of lewin on the night. they gave it a rating of three. severe-ologist chad has more on how it's impacting the country. >> quite a few severe weather reports from virginia, all the down to the gulf coast. the most severe along the gulf coast itself with tornadoes reported down there. some hitting some towns with damage down, they're also, another event, very very heavy rainfall. 6 to 10 inches of rain fell in a short period of time with flash flood emergencies in effect. here we go, this is what the computer things that the rainfall is going to look like throughout the day on tuesday, taking you all the way to wednesday. notice what happens tuesday afternoon. big storms could be rolling right through new orleans. this is kind of the biggest threat that i see here. some of those storms could also be severe with heavy rainfall. went, and even some hail.
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so if it falls on the same places that already saw the heavy rainfall, there could be more flash flooding in the forecast. and also, that rainfall will be heading up the east coast. up into charlotte, up the hills, up the appalachian chain and all the rainfall will be here. along the east of that upslope flow of that mountain area. and also some heavy rainfall across parts of texas. and of course, new orleans where i showed you those storms will be. something else that is going on to the west of there. is this record breaking heat. more than 60 places will likely break record highs with excessive heat warnings in effect and heat index to 1:22 in the afternoon. in some places. that is in the shade. these are the temperatures on the thermometer without the heat to kind of added in. and humidity added in. the temperatures are going to be hot already and if you add in that humidity it's going to feel much warmer in places. it's going to feel like 120 degrees. it did in corpus christi and monday. it felt 120 degrees fahrenheit.
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one more thing going on. tropical storm bret, it was named bret at five pm on monday. and is now in the atlantic. way out there. but it is forecast to move to the west towards the islands, and if you notice, here are the numbers. forecast to become a hurricane. not until probably wednesday or thursday but this storm will likely intensify and move to some populated islands and possibly even into the gulf of mexico next week. we will have to watch that. this track is still way too far out to figure out where this thing is going to go. just yet. >> in india, a blistering heat wave is scorching parts of the country. officials in -- say at least 44 people have died in recent days due to the high temperatures. they indian meteorological office issued a red alert after some districts have recorded temperatures about 130 degrees fahrenheit. or 45 degrees celsius. but temperatures are expected
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to cool in the coming days. coming up next, the u.s. secretary of state wraps up his trip to china with a key meeting. what both sides are saying about the progress made during his visit. plus, more bad news for boris johnson after british lawmakers approved a report that found that the former prime minister lied to them while in office. we will have that and more in just a moment. do stay with us! your shipping manager left to “find themself.” leaving you lost. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. deed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates mahing your job description. visit indeed.com/hire
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state is telling progress after two days of talks with top chinese officials including president xi jinping. but key issues between the u.s. and china remain unresolved. cnn's ivan watson has details. >> is this enough to stop the downward spiral? antony blinken, the first u.s. secretary of state to visit the chinese capital in five years shaking hands with xi jinping, china's leader for life. the most powerful since mao. he positions himself as the dominant figure at the head of the table but also recognizes the need to stabilize ties between the world's most powerful nations. >> translator: the two sides have also made progress and reached agreement on some specific issues. this is very good. >> relations between china and
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the u.s. sharply deteriorated at the end of the trump administration. >> china's been taking advantage of the united states for a long time. >> since then they've only gotten worse. the biggest flash point, the self-governing island of taiwan which china claims as its own. beijing regularly deploys warplanes and warships around taiwan while accusing washington of stoking the fires of the island independents. in november, president biden met with xi in bali to rescue this vital relationship. >> we are going to compete vigorously but i am not looking for conflict, and looking to manage this competition responsibly. >> but any goodwill generated quickly shattered by the appearance of a giant chinese surveillance balloon over the u.s. in february. u.s. warplanes shut down. meanwhile, beijing complaints -- claims u.s. moves like a ban on the sale semiconductors are aimed at constraining set
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china's rise. >> what this is a go out, about once again is not trying to cut off or eliminate or hinder economic relations. on the contrary, we think they should be strengthened but in a way that looks out for our workers. we can, we will, and we must take steps necessary to protect our national security. i have no doubt that china would do the exact same thing. >> in beijing blinken succeeded achieving his stated goal of reestablishing communication with china. china's foreign minister accepted an invitation to visit washington and both governments agreed to expand person to person exchanges and increase commercial passenger flights. but when it comes to communication between the u.s. and chinese military's and they're dangerously close encounters in the indo-pacific, there's been no progress. >> i think it's absolutely
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vital that we have these kinds of communications, military to military, at this moment. china has not agreed to move forward with them. i think that's an issue that we have to keep working on. >> despite friction u.s. chinese trade reached record highs last year. perhaps the world's two largest economies can't afford further confrontation. ivan watson, cnn, hong kong. >> joining me now is a columnist and editorial board member at bloomberg opinion, appreciate you being with us. >> anytime. >> u.s. secretary of state antony blinken says progress was made during his visit to china and during his 35 minute meeting with president xi jinping. the big picture, what overall concrete progress was really made in resetting this tense relationship between the world two largest economies and of course establishing some level of stability. >> well, concrete progress is
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very hard to define given the nature of diplomacy. although both sides have said we'll keep talking which i suppose is the ultimate goal of any diplomatic initiatives. in this case the two most powerful countries, the two most powerful militaries in the world keep talking, that's a good thing for them, that's a good thing for everybody. so i think blinken, the biden administration are very careful to manage expectation ahead of time. they did signal that no concrete results should be expected from this visit. but he got to see she jinping face to face. this was the first visit of a secretary of state to china. these are not small things and there is talk of more american officials engaging with their
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chinese counterparts in the months ahead, possibly even as she jinping buttoned meeting during or after the un general assembly in the fall. so in some talks about more talks, that's not about thing. >> no military to military communication channels between the two superpowers which is crucial given some recent close calls we've seen. the progress was made on the issue of fentanyl with plans to set up a working group on the deadly deadly drug. but taiwan still remains the toughest challenge for both nations, doesn't it. what needs to happen on that issue. is it even solvable given both sides are pretty much at opposite ends. >> i don't think it's a solution that neatly ties of all the issues into-able. you point out the failure of any progress on military to military communications, this
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is very important in the context of china because there's a lot of military activity around taiwan, the taiwan straits, the chinese navy, the chinese air force, and american ships in aircraft not far away from the area. there's always a risk of something going wrong, to planes flying to close together, ships miss communicating that something going off. but that is a nightmare scenario for military planners everywhere. this is the sort of thing we used to the head of the cold war between the soviet union and the united states. but there was communications between moscow and washington at that time. just to prevent any kind of sudden and -- that kind of communication is not taking place between china and the united states right now. that's something we should all be concerned about. >> the u.s. wants it but china doesn't. do you see that that could change perhaps as these talks
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between the two nations continue? >> well it's a little hard to gauge that. the chinese think that the united states is iran similarly hostile towards them. the u.s. feels that the chinese are making hostile gestures of their own. they have not agreed to a timetable when they might resume military to military communications. so it's a little hard to predict if that might come off. there was hope that blinken's visit to like that particular conundrum, that hasn't happened. >> and in his press conference, secretary blinken said the better communication engagement with china will happen going forward. what is your assessment of that and how long and delicate might that process prove to be do you think? >> if it happens that's
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wonderful. if blinken is coming away generally optimistic -- that something we should all be relieved and happy about. i think it would be very delicate, i think it would go on for a very long time. i don't think the two countries are going to be good friends. if they can just keep talking and use communications channels to prevent more antagonism, to try and solve individual areas of miscommunication or disagreement that would be good enough. that would be progress enough that blinken's had an excellent trip. >> good talk with you, many thanks. british lawmakers have overwhelmingly voted to uphold a report claiming former prime minister boris johnson lied to parliament multiple times over the partygate scandal. johnson has dodged some of the
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consequences already but can't avoid all of the fallout. cnn's nada bashir has more from london. >> the report was backed by an overwhelming majority of mps. 354 members of parliament voted their approval with just seven mps on the opposing side. and it was a damning report of boris johnson. it's funding describing the former pm of having repeatedly and deliberately misled parliament over parties and social gatherings which took place under his watch at a time when the country was facing strict lockdown restrictions. allegations the syrians would warrant a suspension for 90 days the duration of which could interned trigger a violation. with boris johnson but fiercely standing down from his post as an mp this parliament sanctions will not apply. he will, however, be stripped of his access to the office minister. boris johnson has previously rejected the committee's
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findings describing it as a charade and accusing the committee of twisting the story to suit their purposes -- of course the allegations are against boris johnson are serious and there continues to be widespread anger and distrust toward the government over the party gate scandal. a scandal which is still very much in the headlines. take a look at this video from uk tabloid paper the mirror. >> >> this featured in the video include former aides of boris johnson taking part in a celebration over the christmas period in 2020. while the country was still under lockdown restrictions. london says is it aware, it is aware of the footage and is considering it. as we've seen in the past those involved could face financial penalties. but this is of course a huge
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and damning piece of evidence for the former prime minister who is no stranger to scandals. cnn, london. >> just ahead, the u.s. presidential election is almost a year and a half away, but a new poll shows how president biden would fare in a head to head matchup with donald trump. plus, russia says it has a new battlefield tactic. claiming it can use the tank as a bomb. we will bring you the latest on the war in ukraine, back with more in just a moment.
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the family statement says as of now, contact has been lost with the submersible craft and there is limited information available. we will of course continue to follow the story. a u.s. magistrate is boring donald trump and his co defendant from disclosing any information handed over to their attorneys in the classified documents case. special counsel jack smith asked for the ban. trump went on fox news monday and offered his latest explanation for not handing over boxes of documents to government investigators. >> i've got a lot of things in there. i will go through those boxes, i have to go through those boxes. i take up personal things, as far as the levels, everything was declassified because i had the right to declassify. >> might not just hand them over then? >> because ahead boxes i want to go through the boxes and get all the personal things out. i don't want to hand it over
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yet and i was very busy as you sort of seen. >> pictures from the special counsel's indictment show boxes of materials stored in a bowl room and a bathroom. at trump's mar-a-lago resort. he has pleaded not guilty to 37 counts of illegally retaining national defense information and obstructing the justice department investigation. new polling shows donald trump's two indictments are not making a dent in his support with republican voters. cnn's jessica dean has our report. >> as former president donald trump sort through all of his legal battles, we are getting some fresh insight thanks to recent polling by quinnipiac university as to how this is all playing out politically for the former president. and if you take a look at the republican field for the 2024 nomination you can see his support really is not eroded away at all in the wake of this recent indictment. the second of course this year and a potential third one on the way out of georgia. you see him there with 53% of
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support from republican voters or those who lean republican, and then 23% for florida governor ron desantis, that's the next closest competitor there. everybody else in the single digits. couple things to keep in mind, it is of course very early still and this is a national poll this is not done in the states that will really determine so much of the outcome for this early voting states at the beginning part of 2024. quinnipiac also doing a potential and a hypothetical head to head matchup between the current president joe biden and former president trump. biden leading there with 48% to trump's 44%. and while all of the actual voting in the 2024 race continues to be far away that is not, we are not seeing the candidates out on the trail, we are seeing president biden in northern california where he is doing some fund raising and also talking about one of the key issues that we are told will be central to his campaign and that is climate change. he's club talking about climate resiliency talking about money that will be going to one of these coastal areas to put
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climate resiliency practices into place, that's part of the inflation reduction act, some of the signature legislation that passed with democrat-only support out of congress last august. and it is that we see florida's governor ron desantis there. he's also doing some fund raising but talking about very different messaging, where he is really seeking to contrast, himself to blue states led by democrats. but he's really seeing that contrast between himself and california governor gavin newsom. we saw his team putting out a video today really slamming newsom and his policies there in california. we also know that he was fundraising to the smaller donors of text messages, that sort of thing. on being in california and really taking on these democratically-led states and then of course the ultimate democrat, president joe biden, who he continues to try to laser focused on when he's on the stump. when he's off the stump, that's when we see him take on his chief rival, lets the former president donald trump. jessica dean, cnn, washington.
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>> more now on biden's visit to california where he is touting his record on fighting climate change as he makes his case for reelection. mr. biden visited a nature preserve in california on monday let's than a week after four major environmental groups endorsed him. the president says he is taken the most aggressive climate action ever while republicans have tried to block it. >> but i think a climate, i think of jobs. when i think of climate i think of innovation, when i think of climate i think of turning peril into progress. that's why i'm so optimistic about the future, i really am. >> the president also announced funding to modernize california 's electrical grid and host the first ever white house climate resilience summit. he's also appearing at several fund-raisers during his three-day trip. and coming up next on cnn newsroom, russia's most
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>> a new trial has begun for
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jailed kremlin critic alexei navalny. this time on so-called extremism charges which he and his supporters say are absurd and politically motivated. navalny appeared in court monday at a penal colony east of moscow. journalists were not allowed inside and we knew there were navalny's parents who he had requested be allowed inside. but even behind bars facing health problems and new charges, navalny is still fighting for change in russia. he is starting a new campaign to turn russians against the war in ukraine and to fight what he calls putin's lies and kremlin hypocrisy. he's pressing attacks planes
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how they plan to. . >> we won in russia has someone or knows someone who has died during the war or was affected. it is difficult to cover the truth. but still, it is very difficult as well to get actual sources of information. this is what we are trying, we are hoping to do. we would like to use call center social networks and messengers and try to persuade the russians that the war is something that is ruining not only the neighbor country but their own country as well. >> russia is launching fresh air attacks across ukraine targeting cities as far away as lviv in the west and zaporizhzhia in the east in a
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massive overnight assault. ukrainians say they identified and destroyed about two dozen drones around the capital kyiv. all this as ukraine's battle to claw back its own territory from russian control intensifies. ben wedeman has the latest. but >> russian forces have laid dense minefields and deployed a significant number of reserves on the southern front, this according to the commander of the ukrainian armed forces evolutionary underscoring just how difficult ukraine's counteroffensive still in its opening phases is proving to be. monday morning the ukraine deputy defense minister announced that kyiv's forces had managed to retake eight settlements. and 113 square kilometers or about 44 square miles of territory. but by the afternoon it wasn't all clear which side, if any, was in control of one of those
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eight settlements. but the town of piatykhatky south of zaporizhzhia but. the ukrainian counteroffensive is less than two weeks old, and it's why they believed the ukrainians have yet to commit the bulk of their forces to the fight. this, as the russians seem to have unveiled a new tactic cramming an old soviet t-50 for tank with tons of explosives and driving it unmanned toward ukrainian lines. the russian defense ministry has put out a video showing that tank going up in a massive explosion just 300 yards from the ukrainian lines. but it's not clear if the blast caused any casualties. i'm ben wedeman, cnn, reporting from zaporizhzhia. >> in the west bank, five palestinians are dead. more than 90 others are wounded and at least a israeli forces injured as well. the result of an israeli raid
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on monday in the city of jenning. as cnn's hadas gold shows us it escalated into a ferocious battle in which both sides brought a new weapons and new tactics. >> what was supposed to be interest operation to arrest two wanted suspects by israeli forces turned into a much bigger situation that turned actually into an 11 hour operation. taking place engine in the occupied west bank which is long been a flash point city for both militant activity and israeli military raids. but what happens showed new tactics, different levels of force than what we have seen here in recent months. since we've seen escalating levels of violence. who do militants the roadside bomb that exploded while the convoy of israeli military vehicles were going through the israeli military sitting the panther command vehicles was hit by this roadside bomb.
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we see a dramatic video that roadside explosion taking place -- and some of the israeli forces who were injured were in that vehicle. in fact five other vehicles were read rendered in operable as result of the heavy firefight and it took several hours to extract israeli soldiers out of jenin. while the israeli military was trying to extract some of the injured soldiers out of the situation they used something, these really military use something that hasn't been saying -- that the use of an apache helicopter firing over jeanine to provide air cover for the soldiers as they are trying to leave. these really military says -- as far as we understand there are no injuries specifically ascribed to the helicopter firing. to see the use of an apache helicopter over a dense urban area, this is not something that we have seen in decades.
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five palestinians were killed as a result of this operation. three of them have been claimed by the islamic jihad militant group. 90 others were injured as a result of these fierce clashes. but among the dead, we do know, is a 15 year old boy and among the injured is a freelancer photojournalist who was covering the raid as it happened. hadas gold, cnn, jerusalem. >> a courageous world war ii marine corps veteran celebrates his 100th birthday. but he still waits for the one recognition he wants from the pentagon. we will bring you his story in just a minute.
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try parodontax active gum health mouthwash. works hard at hour one and twice as hard when you take it again the next day. so betty can be the... barcode beat conductor. ♪ go betty! ♪ let's be more than our allergies! zeize the day. with zyrtec. >> welcome back. -- he was one of the first black marines in the u.s. military. he fought both the enemy and discrimination during world war ii. and he is the recipient of the congressional gold medal on his 100th birthday. there is only one thing he is asking for. a middle of the so far the pentagon has denied him. cnn's jason carroll has his story. >> 1923, the year of the
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charleston, a time before televisions, fm radio, before scientists had discovered penicillin. the year leave vernon newbie junior was born in jackson tennessee. 100 years ago. >> i had a quiet life. >> that's a quiet, in 1942 with the onset of america's entry into wilbur to he made history. he was drafted into the u.s. marine corps when he was 18 years old. making him one of the first african american marines. >> i was nervous. i didn't know what i was getting into. we but i wanted to save my country. >> did you feel extra pressure because you are one of the few? >> yes i did but i was thankful for the opportunity. >> he was assigned to the montford point maghreb marines, a segregated unit in
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jacksonville, north carolina. not long after he's headed to the south pacific. >> it was time for america to take the offensive. >> to fight an enemy overseas while still coping with racial barriers from home. >> black overcame wipes over there. >> so they kept you segregated? >> segregated, yep. >> it was that mission in the solomon islands where newbie was badly injured during an accident when gasoline exploded in a hole. >> something hit me right in my chest and i hit the deck and got up and all the skin was just laying out. i prayed i said lord i want to come back but i want a family. >> burns covered more than 60% of his body. he was hospitalized for several weeks. that his family says the marines sent him back into action. >> he was ordered to go back into the war. he wasn't 100 percent healed.
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>> that's just being i was getting married and so forth. >> i don't want to ask you what your that was. >> [laughter] >> he received an honorable discharge in 1936 but was not treated as a war veteran back home where you struggle dealing with racism and jim crow laws. he eventually found work as a janitor and chauffeur and raised family. years later he received recognition for his service and longevity. local news covered his birthday in april he took us to his room at a senior living facility outside detroit where he showed us his medals including the congressional gold medal. >> >> and this was presented by president obama. >> and a friend birthday letter from president joe biden. he says he's grateful for all of it but it is this letter that's causing him so much pain these days. it came last month informing him he is not eligible to receive the purple heart. something he had been hoping
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for. but are concluded, since you are not wounded at the hands of the enemy you are not entitled to the purple heart. >> this makes me feel not good. the government, the united states government, in the years didn't pay us back, they're giving us a short deal. >> his family, heartbroken but planning to appeal the decision. >> he's 100 years old and he should have that and that's what he still fighting for, hoping for. >> you to recognize and respect his sacrifices. >> purple heart or not newbie has already earned his place in history. >> i still love america, i still say america, maybe someday that it will be better, for my race as a whole. >> jason carroll, cnn, detroit. >> numbers may, churchill be right back, more cnn newsroom
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