tv CNN News Central CNN July 12, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm PDT
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at the nato summit president biden said ukraine's resilience and resolve are a model for the world. the thing ukraine wants most is off the table for now. an inspiring run comes to an end. christopher eubanks falling in the quarter finals at wimbledon. we're following these major stories and more all coming in right here to cnn news central. president biden closed out a critical nato summit with a clear message to adversaries and allies. nato will not waiver not in the face of russian aggression and not in the fight, he says, to protect democratic values. he highlighted the alliance's unprecedented unity and had some pointed remarks for vladimir
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putin. >> nato is stronger, more energized, and yes, more united than ever in its history. indeed more vital to our shared future. didn't happen by accident. wasn't inevitable. when putin and his craven lust for land and power unleashed his brutal war on ukraine he was betting nato would break apart. he was betting nato would break. he thought our unity would shatter at the first testing. he thought democratic leaders would be weak, but he thought wrong. >> arlette saenz has been traveling with the president in lithuania. arlette, this was a victorious tone for the president here. a united nato. they're getting sweden in, which they've been trying for a year. is that the view of the allies, that they came together, showed their unity, got what they wanted out of the summit?
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>> reporter: well, i think among the g7 allies you're seeing that show of unity towards ukraine and from nato allies as well. there were differences throughout the summit about how concrete of a timeline that should be offered to ukraine for joining nato. ultimately what we saw throughout the summit is this unwai unwaviering support for ukraine. in that speech president biden insisted that the u.s. and its allies would support ukraine for the long haul. he didn't make reference to the tensions bubbling up at the summit, nor did he get into specifics about the agreement that g7 leaders have had to establish bilateral security commitments for ukraine. he also in that sound bite tried to send a pointed message to putin. the nato alliance has been
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reinvigorated and stronger than ever before. the fact that sweden would soon join the alliance was a big win for president biden after turkey dropped its objections. the speech wasn't just about unity for ukraine and strengthening for nato. it was also making a case for global unity overall, saying that the fact that allies were coming together to support ukraine, the fact they were expanding nato should be a path forward on other issues like climate change and technological advances. the president said the world is in a choice right now, it could be a world defined by coercion or exploitation or a world that recognizes our success is bound to the success of others. that gives you a window of how president biden approaches foreign, especially when it
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comes to ukraine and to nato. he's leaving here hoping to show, especially to vladimir putin, but also the world, that the nato alliance is stronger today. >> these are live pictures of air force 1 there. the next stop is helsinki, finland. that key, arlette, because finland the other ally to join the alliance in the last year, now an officially ratified member here. tell us what the importance is of president biden's visit to hel helsinki. >> reporter: he will be -- he's taking off now. he'll be touching down in helsinki in a few hours. there he'll meet with the country leaders. finland is the newest member of the nato alliance. they're hoping sweden will join once turkey formally votes to give that approval. it's another effort for the biden administration to show
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their support for nato allies and sending a message to putin that they believe his war has backfired against him. the last thing putin wanted to see was an expansion of nato. now you have those two previously unaligned countries, sweden and finland, making nato bigger. >> arlette saenz, thank you so much. melissa bell is also in lithuania. zelenskyy wants to be in nato. he didn't expect to get there in this summit. he got something, a pathway perhaps. is it progress? is ukraine closer to joining nato today than it was prior to the summit? >> reporter: i think what was interesting was to see that even president zelenskyy, who after all had come in yesterday all guns blazing with fiery rhetoric, recognized today in his closing remarks how much had
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been achieved since 2008 when the initial pledge was made by nato that ukraine and georgia would be members some day. he spoke of the gap in those 15 years. those he explained were tangible commitments ratified by individual nations, states and parliaments. there was a distinct change in tone. we heard from the british defense secretary about the fact that he had taken aside the ukrainians to say, look, we understand you want more than you got. you have to understand as far as nato allies goes these are weaponries you're talking about. they are our own stockpiles of ammunition we're giving. there's a lot of political capital that's gone into what you've gotten so far. then i think you saw a distinct shift in the tone of president zelenskyy. there was a lot more thanking, a
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lot more gratitude and recognition of everything that has been achieved rather than what he still wants. i think he goes home having spoken to his public. that's one of the points that the british defense secretary made. look, we understand you're speaking to your people after a lot of blood has been spilled and with a lot of pressure on you. he's also recognized all that's been done and gone home, i think, reinvigorated. you have the secretary general of nato and president biden echoing how galvanized nato comes out of the summit. i think ukraine goes home with a clear message not just that it's going to continue to get all the military capabilities it gets from the f-16s to cluster bombs, but also perhaps more importantly, the political, economic backing its getting to make sure it's clear to moscow as well that kyiv is on the side
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of the alliance. >> he goes home to a real battle. the counteroffensive in the east has not achieved what was expected in the early stages. melissa bell, thanks so much. just days after north korea threatened to shoot down u.s. spy planes, the nation now firing a missile into the ocean near japan. it's indicating that north korea is advancing. let's go to orin lieberman. what can you tell us about the launch? >> reporter: it's significant in terms of the timing around the launch. what did north korea demonstrate? this missile flew for 74 minutes on a lofted trajectory, meaning instead of firing far to demonstrate what it can do, they launched it up and it came back
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down between the cakorean peninsula and japan. it's a marginal improvement on previous launches. the last time they launched was back in april and march, so not all that long ago. in terms of the timing, that signifanas well. north korea llften launch missiles when they see something they view as antagonizing from the u.s. and the west. in this case you have the u.s., japan and south korea meeting on the sidelines in lithuania. this actual according to the joint chiefs of staff's office came when general mark milley was meeting with his counterparts. they will discuss military options. after you see a provocative launch like this, you'll see a joint exercise from the south korea and u.s., perhaps including japan, to demonstrate
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the deterrence the u.s. is trying to maintain as well as south korea and japan against north korea. it's still tense with all the situation on the peninsula there and we've been waiting for months, if not more than a year, for a possible nuclear test from north korea. that also remains on the table for next steps from the north korean regime potentially. >> potentially. these are the developments that are drawing the attention of the biden administration. orin lieberman, thank you for that report. the nato summit wrapping up and the president's speech there today is certainly the big thing that he is focussed on today. we're joined by a member of the house foreign affairs committee, congressman jason crow of colorado to talk more about that. sir, i want to ask you -- we heard that the national security adviser jake sullivan said biden was going to offer zelenskyy
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these long-range missiles in this bilateral meeting. that's something that you and some of your colleagues have been calling for months for. what difference is this going to make in the war? >> well, i think we have to continue to respond to the changing battlefield. one thing i learned at war myself when i was in iraq and afghanistan is that no day or week at war is the same as the last day or week. we're evolving the nature of our support and have to continue to provide the tools for ukraine to strike deeper behind russian lines. we're seeing with the counteroffensive right now that the russian have moved their lines further back into crimea, further back from their frontline of defenses. we have to provide the ukrainians the ability to do that. the british have done it. the french are going to provide longer range strike missiles.
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>> we talk about the material that the u.s. is provide. it was interesting to hear john kirby say sunday he was asked about this controversial decision to provide cluster munitions to ukraine. he was asked if the u.s. was sending those because it doesn't have enough of the kind of munitions that ukraine really needs. was this a substitute? he said that's right, that's what was happening there. is the u.s. and our western allies running out of munitions at this point? how much of a concern is that and how is that going to impact the eventual end of this war? >> one thing is really clear and that is we are not going to do anything that jeopardizes our own national security and our own ability to conduct operations and have stockpiles. we're drawing from our reserves and trying to increase our own supply chain. one of the things we've seen with this war is every nato country has seen stresses on its
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supply chain. we're making moves right now to do supply chain reform and to enhance our capability to respond to that. as jake sullivan said a couple days ago, we need a bridge ammo supply as we make those longer term changes to our supply chain. that's why this decision to provide cluster munitions is an excruciating decision. i'm con flighted on this. i don't like these munitions. i've seen the impact on the battlefield. at the same time we have to support ukrainians in their fight for survival. >> an ukraine that ultimately joins nato, assuming it does, do you see it being a ukraine that includes within its border territories of donbas and crimea? do you think that's enough for zelenskyy's domestic audience to have the guarantee that russia
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is not going to come into kharkiv or kyiv or odesa, but he may have to leave other places on the table, but they won't come into these other big cities without nato going to bat for ukraine? >> one of the great things about free and democratic societies of which every member of nato is a free and democratic society, that is a requirement of being a member of the alliance, is that no other country and the alliance can't dictate the terms of how those country's govern. that's a decision for the ukrainians to make, about how far their y'll push for thei sovereignty. we believe the donbas is part of sovereign ukraine. that's ultimately a decision for the ukrainians. i firmly believe that ukraine should be a member of nato, that we provide a pathway for them to
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be a member of nato. nato is designed to maintain prosperity and freedom in europe. nobody has done more to combat russian aggression than the ukrainians have the last yyear and a half. they've done it with blood, soil, money. they've put everything on the line and proven their ability to join that alliance. >> as a veteran yourself, you mentioned, you know what's at stake here when it comes to a nato that might include ukraine. if ukraine is a nato member and that does include crimea, that does include the donbas, does that increase the chances of u.s. military involvement directly in ukraine here in the coming years? >> well, we're not going to be in a situation -- we won't. the president has been clear about this. the administration has been clear about this. we're not going to put ourselves
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or nato in a situation where ukraine is entering into the nato alliance in a manner which invoked article v. article v says an attack on one is an attack on all. we're not going to create a situation where the united states and nato goes to russia. we cannot sustain that. this is not binaryit's false ch it will happen or won't happen. there's a viable large path where we provide a clear pathway to ukraine with clear criteria for them to join nato over the next couple years as they make the reforms, make the investments, create the interoperability with nato. we can do that without risk. the last point is we should never, ever give vladimir putin veto authority over our own security decisions. the united states and nato will
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decide what's in our own interests and the interest of european security and our national security. vladimir putin should not have a veto over those decisions. >> congressman jason crow, obviously a very critical day as we watch what's happening in lithuania and monitor the president's trip. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. microsoft and the white house say that china-based hackers have breached government email accounts and got ahold of some sensitive information. i'll speak to the former chief of the u.s. cyber security about this next. a congressional report says some of the biggest tax prep companies have been sharing their data with tech companies such as meta and google. what one expert calls a fire-alarm fire. plus, california spent more than $17 billion on the homeless crisis and somehow it's gotten worse. we'll explain why.
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congressional probe found some of the nation's largest tax prep companies, tax slayer, h&r block, spent years sharing tens of millions americans tax data. they call it a fire-alarm fire for tax payer privacy. brian chung has been reporting on this and joins us now. what types of data was shared? >> this is a serious violation of privacy here. even the government has restrictions on what it can share and with whom. looking at what this information is it's interesting. it's not just basic personal information like your name or address. it's stuff like filing status, your adjusted gross income, how big your refund was or what tax breaks you tried to claim and what buttons you might have
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clicked. a lot of this information is -- they told congress what they did with this information, but it's not clear whether or not that's going to be enough to insulate them from insulation. it's a serious allegation about how they potentially mishandled information belonging to tax payers and meta, when it received this data, told congress that that data ended up being used for advertising and developing artificial intelligence al gorygoalgorithm. this is a really serious problem and tax prep companies could be on the hook for billions in fines. >> they're saying it was -- if you, brian, used one of these tax services and your information is turned over to one of these tech giants, it doesn't say brian files jonajointly,
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makes this much gross income. >> theoretically this information is scrambled in such a way to protect people's privacy. experts have said, it's very easy to reverse engineer and connect a piece of information to a person. that's the issue here. >> brian, thank you for explaining that. jim? another hack. u.s. officials and microsoft scrambling to determine the impact and scope after hackers based in china breached email accounts of two dozen organizations. that includes u.s. government agencies like the state department. the scope of the hack still being investigated, but the white house and microsoft say it was part of a spying campaign aimed at acquiring sensitive information. the hackers targeted an agency on capitol hill. unclear if they were successful in breaching that agency.
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state department says, quote, detected activity. took immediate steps to secure systems and will monitor and quickly respond to any further activity. joining me now is the former senior official at the department of homeland security chris krebs. good to have you on, chris. >> good to be on, jim. >> the breaches were not of classifiedbut as you know, china and other state and nonstate actors will use information from nonsensitive systems. when you look at the scope of this one, how big is it? >> the most concerning aspect of this hack is it's a fundamental security tool inside microsoft that was obtained by the
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chinese-affiliated actors and they were able to use those to gain access to these accounts as you said. the upside or the good news -- and there is some here. it was a fairly limited in scope -- you mentioned the state department and capitol hill. my understanding is it's a handful of agencies, possibly three, and fewer than ten accounts per agency. very targeted. very narrow. we got on it -- the u.s. government detected it early and was able to report it to microsoft and mitigate. >> that's key. early detection is key when you look back at a russian breach of the state department, they were in there for months and didn't know. the hackers breached a digital key to the system here. that's surprising. how often does that kind of thing happen? what does that show about
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microsoft's security that that was breachable? >> that's where the key questions are with this incident, with this event. as i understand it, the u.s. government is taking a hard look at the security processes and whether the requirements for government contracting, including these mail systems, this email -- cloud-based email, complied with government requirements that have been steadily improving over the last several years. the takeaway is the chinese actors see what we're doing. they see we're making this dramatic shift into cloud-based systems and they know that's where the sensitive data is. they're targeting. they have a bug bounty, a competition where they bring in hackers to find vulnerabilities in western-based cloud systems
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and they use those in their hacking capabilities. >> it's such a fantastic point. it shows china, like russia, will use these hacking groups in event as nonstate actors, but brought in, drafted into the national efforts to breach sensitive information. you were so involved in investigating russian interference in the 2016 election, which was impactful. we know that. they did it again in 2020. we're coming up on another election. how safe are the systems? i'm not talking about election vote counting systems, but systems in general. are our protections better today than seven years ago, three years ago? >> jim, i got to say the hair on the back of my neck stood up thinking about 2020 and what we have in store in 2024. look, any software has potential
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vulnerabilit vulnerabilities. it's a matter of time before a bad guy finds it and exploits it. the key for elections in the united states is the concept of software independence. that's where the election process itself is not singularly dependent for success on software or hardware and there are measures of resilience. that's why in the runup to the 2020 election we put such an emphasis on paper ballots. georgia switched. pennsylvania switched. i got confidence here, but i think it's going to be -- it's going to get hairy in the next 18 months. >> the downside is -- i always mention this. in 2016 the primary actor in terms of disinformation was a foreign actor, now we have willing domestic participants in interference, whether candidates are asking for it or sharing
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disinformation. is there anyway to protect against that? >> well, you know, the russian playbook from 2016 has been repeated and the iranians took a page out of the playbook in 2020 and domestic actors seeking influence, power, money, whatever it is. i would expect to see that come again. this is where we need to redouble those efforts to support state and local election officials as the authoritative sources of information around our elections and not listen to the random person on twitter or threads. >> or the random candidate on twitter or threads. chris krebs, always good to have you on. hope to keep up the conversation as we get closer. >> thank you, jim. still to come, the department of justice reverses
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itself on another e. jean carroll defamation case. they now say they don't believe the former president should have immunity. we'l'll explain why just ahead. you know you have a team behind you thatat can help you. not having to worry about the future makes it possible to make the present as best as it can be for everybody.
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new legal trouble for former president trump. the justice department has reversed course. it's now saying it no longer believes the former president should be entitled to immunity in the initial defamation case brought against him by the author e. jean carroll. it's a move that will allow the civil lawsuit to move forward to trial. we have cnn legal correspondent
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paula reid joining us now. this is complicated. everyone thinks they know of the defamation case. there's more than one. >> let's go through this chronologically. several years ago when trump was in office e. jean carroll alleged he raped her in a department store in the mid '90s. while he was president he responded to this denying the allegation and saying she, quote, wasn't his type. then she sued him for defamation. the trump justice department and attorney general bill barr said, wait a second, as president he has immunity. he can't be sued for things he says while president. that was controversial, but what was more surprising is when president biden was elected and we had a new attorney general, a new justice department, they agreed. they agreed to uphold this immunity protection. now the biden justice department is changing their mind.
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some people might say i thought e. jean carroll sued over this. >> successfully. >> indeed. in a separate case e. jean carroll used an opportunity in new york given to sexual assault survivors to sue their alleged perpetrators even if the statute of limitations passed. she sued him for the alleged rape under that opportunity in new york. she sued him for alleged rape and alleged defamation. she was largely successfully. a jury found he had sexually abused her and awarded her $5 million. after that the justice department said we're not going to defend him for that other lawsuit. in the successful lawsuit they're talking about things he said after he left office. it is complicated, but the difference is things that he
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said during the presidency, which the justice department said you're protected, now they're saying you're no longer protected. this new case is going to court in january. >> another case? >> another case. >> how many kcases? >> cases actually going to trial? >> i don't mean to pop quiz you. >> i'm ready for it. >> do it. it's hard to keep track of. >> in new york alone we have this trial, civil trial. we have a potential criminal trial for the alleged hush money payments. we have the classified documents trial. it's unclear when that's going to trial. we're awaiting news out of fulton county, georgia, and the other special counsel investigation. there's other outstanding legal issues too. >> he has a lot going on as he is running to be president again. >> he does, both civil and criminal. >> paula reid, thank you for
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any state in the country. nick watt has more and the search for solutions. >> reporter: $17.5 billion. that's what california spent fighting homelessness over the past four years. at the same time the homeless population of the state grew by around a third. >> the problem would be so much worse absent these interventions. that's not what people want to hear. i get it. >> reporter: here's some back of the envelope path. with 17.5 billion in theory, the state could have paid the rent for every unhoused person in all four years. >> it is reduction. can i say why with respect? perhaps that would work for me because i don't have mental health challenges. >> reporter: my reductive math left $3 billion for mental health and other services. even if the state paid the rent, there's not enough affordable houses to go around. >> where are we supposed to go?
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>> reporter: dr. margot kershel was commissioned to find out who is homeless in california and why. her survey has busted some myths. myth one, most homeless people don't want a home. not true. participants overwhelming wanted permanent housing. take daniel and his disabled son who live on skid row. >> you would take it if they offered you housing? >> yes, i would. together, yes. >> reporter: myth two, many homeless people here aren't from california. therefore the state owes them nothing. >> nine out of ten people lost their stable housing here. these are californians. we have to create housing for all californians. >> reporter: there is a state plan to build 2.5 million more homes by 2030, a million among them must be affordable. when it comes to housing, zoning is ultimately down to local
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government. >> we have communities in this state that are refusing to build low income housing because they say it's all rapists and child molesters. that's the dynamic. >> reporter: the state, they say, has built 13,500 affordable housing unitisunits. christina smith moved into one after five years. >> i thought it was fake. i'm sorry. until they gave me the key and i was like this is real. you don't believe it after a while. >> reporter: now to the why. why do so many californians become homeless? >> even when we had a job and tried to look for housing, it was impossible. >> reporter: rent is too high because housing supply is too low. many who fall into homelessness say it's not by much. >> one of the surprising things was how optimistic people were
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that relatively small amounts of money would have prevented homelessness. for a lot of them 300 to $500 a month would do the trick. >> reporter: bigger picture? >> if we want to truly solve homelessness, we need to build more housing. >> reporter: this is, they say, a problem decades in the making. at fault? politicians of every stripe. they say it won't be a quick fix. at least the governor is focusing on the issue, spending money, thinking differently. they're overhauling the mental health provision in the state. california says they also need more federal money. end of the day advocates and the unhoused people say, stop throwing so much money at this. think a little bit more about how to spend that money effectively. nick watt, cnn, los angeles. american tennis sensation
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and you're growing in california? -yup, socal, norcal... -monterey? -all day. -a branch in ventura? that's for sure-ah. atms in fresno? fres-yes. encinitas? yes, indeed-us. anaheim? big time. more guacamole? i'm on a roll-ay. how about you? i'm just visiting. u.s. bank. ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with retail banking in california by j.d. power. there's been no shortage of surprises at wimbledon this year. and at the top of that list is american christopher eubanks. although his dream run has just come to an end, his journey was anything but ordinary. not long ago, eubanks had plenty of doubts about his professional tennis career, even taking a job as a commentator for the tennis channel while he continued
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playing. this week a phenomenal trip to the wimbledon quarterfinals for this atlanta native. i want to bring in max who is joining us from wimbledon to talk more about this. a former world number one tennis player and a euro sports commentator. the final match game really came down to the wire. this was tough. >> reporter: this was very tough. he at one point was 4 points away from being in the semifinals at wimbledon because he was up two sets to one. got in a tie breaker and the score was 3-3 in that tie breaker, and then in the fifth set, he ran out of shame. being number 3 in the world is a great player and that's what he does. but christopher eubanks is the most inspirational story we've had at wimbledon for many, many, many years. >> what do you think is next for him with so many people who will be curious about the answer to that question? >> reporter: yes, so next for
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him, he will be ranked, we think, 31 in the world. and that's a really key number. because 32 players are seeded at the u.s. open. when you're seeded at the u.s. open, that means you're not running into the novak djokovics in the first two rounds. that's the first milestone. then he'll start having to deal with a little bit of pressure when it comes to the american hard court swing which happens literally a couple weeks after wimbledon. the most important thing is his attitude. he's playing tennis with a smile on his face. he just broke the record for the most winners hit at the wimbledon ever. andre agassi had it. now he has the record at wimbledon. so the inspiration is what he stands for. and he's a great guy and he loves tennis. and you can see it. it came out of him during this fourth night. >> let's talk about the comeback power of a new mom. the ukrainian player who gave birth to her daughter in
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october. she returned to play in april and now finds herself in the semifinals at wimbledon. to get there, she actually knocked off the number one seed in the tournament. and she said she not only plays for her daughter now. that she plays for her native ukraine. i want to listen to some of what she said. >> made me stronger and also made me mentally stronger and i don't take difficult situations as like a disaster, you know? because you know, there are worse things in life. i think having a child and war made me a different person. and i look at things differently. >> mats, her presents is so meaningful on so many levels. >> reporter: it isnby meaningful, obviously, coming back, having just had a daughter. that's very meaningful. the situation back home in ukraine is incredibly meaningful
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for her and all the tennis players here at wimbledon for sure. and she's now entered a mindset that a lot of great grand slam champions already had before they had a kid or before they had some other problems. so i think she's now realized that losing is okay. we're okay with losing. i'm not afraid of winning. and i'm going to give it absolutely all. if i lose, i have other things in life. and that's the mountain of novak djokovic and serena williams and all these players. they were not afraid of losing. and elina svitolina, she is not afraid of losing. she will give it her all in the semis. >> it is great to have out this big day at wimbledon. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> a big win at wimbledon and a big win in lithuania. ukraine did not get exactly what it wanted but it did get
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assurances going forward. what now happens with finland? oh, he's straight ahead. hehe's straight ahead. straight ahead. go go go. ♪ -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com cover more groun kia. movement that inspires. a third kid. what if she likes playing golf? it's expensive. we're outlawing golf. wait. can i still play? since we wk with emower, we don't have to worry about planning for a third kid. you can still play golf... metimes. take contr of your financial future to empower what's next. [announcer] if you're thinking about earning your degree online, snhu can help you get there. - i felt supported throughout the whole process, even from the first call. [graduate] my advisors consistently reached out and guided me along the way. - it was like i was talking to a friend, like someone that i had known for years.
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