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tv   CBS This Morning  CBS  July 16, 2018 7:00am-8:59am PDT

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beach. on tse things.ith his it was chilly but we were and the reason that there needs there. >> thanks for watching this to be precision here is because morning. there is such high risk. >> right. >> some of these decisions. >> give us a little taste, margaret, in advance of their arriving. what is it normally like in these kinds of situations? the poring over of individual good morning. it's monday, july 16, 2018. words. >> they're both entering the welcome to "cbs this morning." room now. president trump was meeting russian president vladimir putin right now in a summit that could determine the future of u.s. relations with russia. norah donaldson is in finland [ speaking foreign language ] leading our coverage. >> two members are hold ing a >> translator: distinguished mr. president, ladies and gentlemen. meeting after some urged him to the president of the united cancel after 12 russians were states, donald trump, took place indicted for hacking. in a frank and business-like atmosphere. i think we can call it a success >> the president says he has a and a very fruitful round of chance of building a very good negotiations. relation slip with putin. we carefully analyze the current
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unrest in chicago. status, the present and the future of the russia/united a body cam was on to defend the states relationship, key issues of the global agenda. shooting of a man who appeared it's quite clear to everyone to be armed. that the bilateral relationship are going through a complicated it did not stop the second day of protests. stage, and yet those a woman who survived a crash impediments, the current tension, the tense atmosphere, essentially have no solid reason off a cliff talks about her behind it. the cold war is a thing of the ordeal. and a very big note to self. past. the era of acute ideological we begin with today's eye confrontation of the two things is a thing of the remote past. opener. "your world in 90 seconds." the situation in the world changed dramatically. >> apparently we haven't been today both russia and the united states face a whole new set of getting along very well over the last many years. i think we'll end up having an challenges. those include a dangerous extraordinary relationship. >> all eyes on the president's maladjustment of mechanisms for summit with vladimir putin. >> it's anybody's guess what the maintaining international security and stability. president will walk away with. regional crises, the creeping threats of terrorism and >> the blood pressure for these presidents is off the charts. transnational crime. chicago police have released
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body cam video of a fatal the snowballing problems in the economy, environmental risks and shooting that caused a protest. other sets of challenges. we can only cope with these challenges if we join the ranks >> a call in boston ended up and work together. hopefully we will reach this with a police officer shot dead understanding with our american with his own weapon. >> bang, bang, bang, bang, then partners. today's negotiations reflected our joint wish, our joint wish silence. three dead in a bus accident with president trump to address in mexico. this negative situation in the it began when a car rear-ended a bilateral relationship, outline pickup truck. and all that matters. first steps for improving this relationship, to restore the >> he has to make this. acceptable level of trust and >> warrior star steph curry had going back to the previous level of interaction on all mutual to best his father del for this interest issues. round of golf. >> oh, steph curry! as major nuclear powers, we bear >> and that made a payout by jumping in the lake on "cbs this special responsibility for maintaining international security. morning." vital, and we mentioned this 19-year-old kylian mbappe during negotiations, crucial that we fine-tune the stability and global security and was one of the only teenagers to score in the world cup final. nonproliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
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we submitted our american it will be some can-can on colleagues a note with a number of specific suggestions. the shores tonight for the we believe it necessary to work champions of the world! together further on to interact on the agenda, military cooperation. this includes the extension of the strategic offensive armed quite the celebration in france last night, but we are limitation treaty. it's a dangerous situation with going to begin today in helsinki. welcome to "cbs this morning." the global american defense system. norah o'donnell is on location as the implementation issues with the inf treaty. in helsinki. we'll go to her in a second. and of course the agenda of we're here along with news nonplacement of weapons in space. anchor jeff glor and margaret brennan who joins us at the table. big day for the white house today. we favor the continued >> very big day. >> good to have you guys here. cooperation inoi president trump and russian president vladimir putin are holding their first extended face to face talks. specifically that our special >> the two world leaders are meeting at finland's services are cooperating quite presidential palace. in a brief statement to successfully together. reporters, mr. trump laid out a the most recent example is their busy agenda for the summit.
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>> we have a lot of good things to talk about and things to talk operation, the recently about. concluded world football cup. we have discussions on in general, the context among everything from crimea to the special services should be missiles to china. we'll be talking a little bit put to a systemwide basis, about china. should be brought to systemic mutual friend president xi. framework. i reminded president trump about >> the president did not mention the suggestion to re-establish the working group on the russians' indictment on anti-terrorism. we also mentioned the plethora friday. 12 russian officers accused of of crises is not always that our hacking into the 2016 election. postures dovetail exactly,yet of norah o'donnell leads in held sink -- helsinki. contndract c ariy of internatiol norah, good morning. >> the world is watching this meeting between president trump clea w and president putin. concerned, or st it's still going on. by my count it's now been over an hour and 45 minutes alone. the task of establishing peace that is unprecedented for any and reconciliation in this u.s. president to spend that country could be the first much time alone without his showcase example of a successful national security team with president putin.
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it's not clear we'll ever find joint work. russia and the united states out exactly what they discussed. there is still another meeting after that. that's when both of their national security teams will join them for what is called a take leadership in this issue and organize the interaction to working lunch. we did briefly see the two leaders side by side this morning for what we call a quick overcome humanitarian crisis and help syrian refugees to go back spray where president putin looked very relaxed sitting in to their homes. in order to accomplish this his chair, and we heard level of successful cooperation president trump say that he was in syria, we held all the looking forward to what he called a personal meeting from the two of them. required components. again, no readout from any white both russian and american military require useful house advisers yet about what's experience of coordination of going on in these private talks, their action, established the when they may wrap up. operational channels of i think one of the questions that many who watch this, communication, which permitted though, is this a conversation, to avoid dangerous incidents and or will there be a confrontation between the two of them? unintentional collisions in the air and in the ground. given what we've heard from u.s. intelligence agencies and from the justice department about how also, crushing terrorists in the russia is trying to undermine america's democracy. we will also have a press southwest of syria, south of syria, should be brought to the conference between these two leaders this morning. full pliance with the treaty now, that is the first time in more than a decade that a u.s. of 1974 about separation of
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leader and a russian leader will forces, about separation of take questions together from the forces of it's really and syria. press. a white house adviser assuring this will bring peace to golan me this morning they won't just be statements, they are going to take questions from journalists. heights. and bring more peaceful this also comes at a time when lawmakers in the united states relationship between syria and it's really and also to provide question whether this summit security of the state of it's should be happening at all, whether it should be canceled in really. part because of that justice mr. president, pay special department announcement about attention to the issue during today's negotiations. that indictment of the 12 i would like to confirm that russian intelligence officers who were indicted last week for russia is interested in this election hacking. and then just before this meeting, the director of development and this will act national intelligence, dan accordingly. thus far, we will make a step coates, saying the threat of a cyber attack is not over, in his toward creating a lasting peace. words. he said the digital infrastructure that serves this in compliance with the respect country is literally under of resolution, of security attack, saying, we are at a council, for instance, the critical point right now. resolution 338, it is the korean so this complex relationship between these two leaders is going to be dissected. peninsula issue starting to how they work through it, major resolve. to a great extent it was possible thanks to the personal garrett is covering the news engagement of president trump here in helsinki. who opted for dialogue instead he's been traveling with the of confrontation. president. major, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. we also mentioned our concern
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you know, part of summitry is about the withdrawal of the evaluating the pictures, and until we have that press united states from the jcpoe. conference which you indicated, norah, is going to be one thing to watch for sure. well, the u.s., our u.s. questions and answers to both counterparts are aware of our president trump and president putin with each offering their posture. let me remind you that thanks to own summations of what happened the uranium nuclear deal, iran here in helsinki. we have pictures to dissect. became the most controlled country in the world, it if you look at the body submitted to the control of language, president trump leaning forward, energized. iaea. it effectively ensures president putin, leaning back, exclusively peaceful nature of relaxed, detached, borderline the iranian nuclear program, and strengthens the nonproliferation disinterested, at least in what he was conveying with his physical presence, a sign regi. ile we discussed the internal perhaps that he's trying to convey that he believes he has ukrainian crisis, we paid the upper hand here in helsinki. special attention to the bona even if president trump, as so fide implementation of minskagr. many lawmakers and both parties have urgeddo, drives hard in their private context at the same time, the united states could be more decisive in nudging the ukrainian leadership and encourage it to work active of the 2018 midterms, vladimir putin starts his private meeting on this. pay more attention to the economic ties and economic with president trump with a cooperation. tweet from president trump it's clear both countries, saying, all the problems in
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businesses of both countries are u.s.-russia relations are the interested in this. fault of his presidential american delegation was one of predecessors, not actions the largest delegations in the undertaken by moscow under vladimir putin's leadership. st. petersburg economic forum. norah, it's worth pointing out, it featured over 500 the russian foreikeattweet. representatives from american what the president did was, he said my predecessors have businesses. spoiled relations between the united states and moscow, not we agreed to create the what russia has done. the russian foreign ministry high-level working group that would bring together captains of said that's exactly right. so whatever happens in this russian and american business. encounter face to face, putin after all, entrepreneurs and goes in feeling at least, based on what the president said on business men know better how to articulate this successful twitter and his comportment here in helsinki, he has for the business cooperation. moment the upper hand. let them make their proposals and suggestions in this regard. >> reporter: an important point, once agsident trump major. thank you. and we have much more to bring you from helsinki including a look at president putin's mentioned the issue of the background. remember, this guy has a black belt in judo. so-called interference of russia with the american elections. he's considered nimble and ruthless as he has been in power i had tocling now for almost two decades. right now let's send it back to personal context, that russian state has never interfered and
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bianna in new york. is not going to interfere into bianna? >> and president trump thinks internal american affairs, they will get along in helsinki. including election process. norah, thank you. any specific material, if such president trump says he could have a very good relationship things arise, we are ready to with his russian counterpart and analyze together. wants to get along. before he left for helsinki, h for instance, we can analyze them through the joint working sat down with our group on cybersecurity. the establishment of which we meeting. discussed during our previous what did he say about the tone contacts. he was hoping to set in this and clearly it's past time we restore our cooperation in meeting with vladimir putin? cultural area, in humanitarian >> he said i'll let you know after, because he wants to see how this goes. i think it is more of the area. that recently we hosted the open-ended conversation he's looking for to begin with. our conversation with the president came after that tense american congressmen delegation nato summit in brussels followed and now it's perceived as almost by a headline-grabbing stop in an historic event, although it should have been just current england. in our interview in scotland, affairs, just business as usual. the president did not hesitate in this regard, we mentioned to heavily criticize the status this proposal to the president. quo, including a 25-year-old we have to think about european institution. what's your biggest competitor,
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practicalities of our your biggest foe globally right cooperation, but also about the now? >> i think we have a lot of rationality and logic of it. foes. and we have to engage experts on i think the european union is a foe, what they do to us in trade. you wouldn't think of the european union, but they're a bilateral relationship, who know foe. russia is a foe in certain history and the background of our relationship. respects. the idea is to create an expert china is a foe economically, council that will include certainly, they're a foe. political scientists, prominent but that doesn't mean they're bad, it doesn't mean anything. it means that they're diplomats and former military, experts in both countries, who competitors. they want to do well and we want to do well. will look for points of contact and we're starting to do well. between the two countries, who you see what's going on, we have will look for ways on putting the best employment numbers the relationship on the probably that we've ever had, black unemployment is the lowest trajectory of growth. in general, we are glad with the level in history. hispanic unemployment the lowest outcome of our full-scale level in history, jeff. meeting, because previously we women's unemployment the lowest only had a chance to talk in 66 years. our numbers are great, our gdp numbers are far greater than briefly on international. what they thought. >> a lot of people might be we had a good conversation with surprised to hear you list the president trump and i hope we start to understand each other better, and i'm grateful to donald for it. eu as a foe before china and russia. >> i look at them all. clearly there are some the eu is very difficult. challenges left, when we were maybe the thing that's the most not able to clear all the
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backlog, but i think that we difficult, both my parents were born in eu sectors, okay? made a first important step in my mother was scotland, my this direction, and in father was germany, and i love conclusion i want to point out those countries. that this atmosphere of i respect the leaders of those cooperation is something that we countries. but in a trade sense, they've are especially grateful for, to really taken advantage of us, our finnish hosts. and many of those countries are in nato, and they weren't paying we're grateful for finnish their bills. people and finnish leadership you know, as an example, i have for what they've done. a big problem with germany i know we've caused some because germany made a pipeline deal with russia where they're inconvenience to finland and we going to be paying russia billions and billions of dollars apologize for it, thank you for a year for energy. your attention. >> thank you, thank you very much. and i say that's not good, that's not fair. thank you. you're supposed to be fighting i have just concluded aeeng for someone who then that someone gives billions of with president putin on a wide dollars to the one that you're, range of critical issues for both of our countries. you know, guarding against? i think it's ridiculous. so i let that be known also this we had direct open, deeply productive dialogue. time. i tell you what, there is a lot it went very well. of anger at the fact that before i begin, i want to thank germany is paying russia billions of dollars. there is a lot of anger. i also think it's a very bad president niinisto of finland thing for germany because it's like, what are they, waving a for graciously hosting today's summit.
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white flag?% president putin and i were saying how lovely it was and >> zero hesitation, as you saw, what a great job they did. going after germany right now. i also want to congratulate zero hesitation going after the european union. even when you ask him, he'll russia and president putin for having done such an excellent double down. job in hosting the world cup. there is intense focus right now on these trade deals, on what it was really one of the best the president believes nato has ever, and your team also did to do, nato members, at least, very well. it was a great job. most of them, and that is pay more. >> it's amazing, jeff. i'm here today to continue the let me bring in margaret brennan proud tradition of bold american of "face the nation." margaret, let me ask you about diplomacy. from the earliest days of our the president asking about republican, american leaders china. he opened the meeting and said have understood that diplomacy perhaps some of the business he could do with russia was create a counterweight with china. and engagement is preferable to. what do you make of that? >> it's an interesting gamble. productive dialogue is not it's also something he refers to only good for the united states and good for russia, but it is xi jinping in his remarks as my good for the world. great friend. they are, of course, a the disagreements between our competitor. what's interesting is in the two countries are well known and president's language in his president putin and i discussed interview with you, jeff, and all of his actions seems to be describing america alone, not part of the alliance or the them at length today. but if we're going to solve many european union, our friends, our of the problems facing our allies, of nato, but us alone.
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world, then we're going to have it's opposite of what china is to find ways to cooperate in doing right now in terms of trying to expand beyond its own pursuit of shared interested. too often in both recent past quarters, trying to use it economic influence to sort of and long ago, we have seen the replicate what the united states had done. consequences when diplomacy is in terms of whether he can get vladimir putin to side with the left on the table. u.s. against china, it's we've also seen the benefits of calculus that hasn't paid off so cooperation. in the last century, our nations far. >> also dealing with other countries alone. that is a one on one with putin, fought alongside one another in a one on one with macron, a one the second world war. even during the tensions of the on one with xi. cold war, when the world looked much different than it does it's not involving others in this, and i think that's judst today, the united states and russia were able to maintain a the very notion of the european strong dialogue. union to him is not what he likes. >> saddling him with old but our relationship has never commitments. he wants everything to start today. been worse than it is now. >> right, but it is the one-on-one meeting relationships however, that changed. both personally and nationally. that's the focus. >> and those are the as of about four hours ago. relationships that vladimir putin prefers as well, the bilateral relationships. i easier i was struck by what theresa may politically than to refuse to meet, to refuse to engage, but said last week in their press
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conference, that her advice to president trump was to go into this meeting as a position of strength and a position of that would not accomplish representing nato's interest. anything. as president, i cannot make i didn't get the sense coming from your interview of the decisions on foreign policy in a president that he is going to heed her advice. futile effort to appease at least on the nato front. partisan critics or the media or >> i think that's an accurate democrats who want to do nothing assessment. i do think he's going in for but resist and obstruct. this open-ended conversation, but i think he wants to talk constructive dialogue between about the u.s., and i think he wants to talk about how he the united states and russia thinks russia might be able to help. or anybody can help. >> i thought it was interesting, though, jeff, when you said forward the opportunity to open about the goals going in, he said, i'll let you know after new pathways in peace and the meeting. a, did that comment surprise stability in our world. i would rather take a political you? he also said he has low expectations going into the risk in pursuit of peace than to meeting. he seems to be the only one that risk peace in pursuit of has low expectations. politics. i expect to have glowing reports as president, i will always put what is best for america and from both sides when they come out of this meeting. >> i think a lot of that is what is besthe coming from the advisers in tamping down some of those expectations instead of arming him with details beforehand so people. esidenutin t issnur h it's not a disappointment. that said, i do think he is prepared to go in to just have tions. this was a message best this conversation and see how it goes. delivered in person.
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i think those conversations are spend a great deal of time meaningful to him, to actually spend time one on one with talking about it. and president putin may very well want to address it. folks. whether it ends up being and very strongly, because he productive or not, which is why feels very strongly about it, it's going to be so interesting, and he has an interesting idea. a, to see how long this meeting we also discussed one of the takes, b, to see who he talks most critical challenges facing to, staff after, what he says to humanity. them, what they say to him, and nuclear proliferation. i provided an update of my then c, what he says at this meeting last month with chairman press conference. >> margaret, how likely is it kim on the denuclearization of that policy is being made right now in this meeting? >> well, in the one on one, north korea. and after today, i am very sure we'll have to find out, right? this is what's amazing when you that president putin and russia talk to the national security team, particularly national security adviser john bolton. want very much to end that he can tell you what is on problem. going to work with us. paper, the trump and i appreciate that administration's policy. he can't tell you what the commitment. the president and i also president is agreeing to in that discussed the scourge of radical room because the president very often breaks from what the islamic terrorism. both russia and the united actual policy is and shows us what he describes as flexibility states have suffered horrific but others would say is the ability to be taken advantage of terrorist attacks, and we've when you have a skilled operator agreed to maintain open like vladimir putin who is so communication between our steeped in the nuance of the security agencies to protect our
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citizens from this global phraseology. this is why you have menace. last we told russia about professional diplomats who do this day in, day out who know a planned attack in st. where the little potholes can be petersburg and they were able to stop it cold. that a president can get tripped up on. they found them, they stopped >> coming into these summits, them, there was no doubt about there is always debate about what was said. that will be multiplied by 10 in it. i appreciated president putin's this case. phone call afterwards to thank >> they both have cover coming out of this meeting. if they're just in there solo, me. i also emphasized the importance they are both giving their of placing pressure on iran to assessments of what they believe happened. and that's going to be favorable halt its nuclear ambitions and to them and to their country, to stop its campaign of violence right? >> right. >> it's a he said-he said in throughout the area, throughout the middle east. that case, right? as we discussed at length, the the translators are there but they keep all that confidential, crisis in syria is a complex of course. but that's part of this, right, margaret? >> and look, american presidents one. have had joint press conferences cooperation between our two countries has the potential to with vladimir putin before. save hundreds of thousands of obama didid oast two occasions. lives. i also made clear that the united states will not allow iran to benefit from our but we learned better because successful campaign against you don't put the president in a position where he can be thrown
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off. he can have someone really throw isis. we have just about eradicated him a curveball and stumble here. isis. in the area. vladimir putin may be on his we also agreed that best behavior, though, because representatives from our he is getting so much. national security councils will for president trump that phrase "the medium is the message," for meet to follow up on all of the issues we addressed today and to him, "the meeting is the continue the progress we have started right here in helsinki. message." >> and they decide what kind of risks they're going to take all today's meeting is only the based on the body language they beginning of a longer process. but we have taken the first get. marg steps towards a brighter future margaret, what do you think the europeans wanted to know and one with a strong dialogue immediately? they were on the phone. and a lot of thought. >> are the military exercises our expectations are grounded in still on throughout the baltics? realism, but our hopes are did he talk about anything with grounded in america's desire for friendship, cooperation and troop interpretations? peace, and i think i can speak moving troops from germany and on behalf of russia when i say elsewhere? there is also hope on syria there may be some agreement to that also. keep talking. president putin, i want to thank basically the same premise that you again for joining me for the obama administration ran through to see if they can get these important discussions and russia to help stop the war for advancing open dialogue there. but on those two fronts, that's what they want to see, and they
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want to see some spankings but between russia and the united they don't actually think states. they'll happen when it comes to our meeting carried on a long tradition of diplomacy between his behavior. >> a lot of people want to see spankings. what's the definition of russia, the united states, for success, do you think, for both the greater good of all, and sides, jeff? >> i think the definition of this was a very constructive success for president trump is getting to know vladimir putin better and feeling like he can day. this was a very constructive few sit across from him and have hours that we spent together. that conversation. i think for putin there is it's in the interest of both of probably going to emerge what he our countries to continue our believes is more concrete, conversation and we have agreed whether it's talking about the nato exercise in the baltics or to do so. i'm sure we'll be meeting again in the future often and hopefully we will solve every one of the problems that we actions somewhere else, that he would like some sort of deliverable from this meeting he discussed today. can talk about. >> he wants sanctions lifted. so, again, president putin, thank you very much. >> yes. thank you, sir. >> as norah said, we may never know exactly what happened in the private meeting. that's what people want to know. >> translator: distinguished >> margaret, jeff, we'll get presidents, now the journalists will have a chance to ask two more from you later. president trump and questions, two sets o queions president putin is expected to each. talk to reporters this morning. first, the russian journalist we'll bring you a special report will ask a question. please give your affiliation. when that happens. >> and jeff, you'll be talking to the president later this good afternoon, my name is alex week. >> we'll have more of the
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interview you saw this last weekend tonight on the evening news, and we'll have more on wednesday at the white house. meshkof, interfox information >> he's going to find out what agency. for mr. trump, during your happened. >> i hope to. recent european tour, you i hope i can come back. mentioned the implementation of >> the beginning of a bromance? we will see. the -- makes europe a hostage of we will see. there is a lot of other news to tell you about today. chicago police are bracing for more potential unrest after a russia, and you suggested you deadly shooting. could free europe from this by ahead, the body cam video that seems to show the man shot by an officer was, in supplying american energy, but this cold winter showed the current model, current mechanism of supply of fuel to europe is good monday morning. quite viable. at the same time, as far as i it's a cloudy start but that know, u.s. had to buy even will start to clear up, especially away from the coast. russian gas for boston. i have a question. we have 93 in fairfield today, the implementation of your idea has a political tinge to it or 86 in san josi, and coolest along the coast of course with 62 in pacifica and 66 in san it's a practical one, because there will be a gap formed in francisco. the supply and demand mechanism the warming trend is getting very hot before we have the monsoonal moisture moving in by the end of the week. and the first is the consuming countries who will fall into
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this gap. and the second question, before the meeting with president putin, you called him an adversary, a rival, and yet you expressed hope that you would be able to bring this relationship to a new level. did you manage to do this? >> no, actually, i called him a competitor. and a good competitor he is. and i think the word competitor is a compliment. i think that we will be competing when you talk about the pipeline. i'm not sure necessarily that it's in the best interests of germany or not. but that was a decision they made. we'll be competing, as you know, the united states is now or soon will be, but i think it actually is right now the largest in the oil and gas world. so we're going to be selling lng and i we'll be competing with the pipeline. there is a little advantage locationally. i just wish them luck. i mean, i did.
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i discussed with angela america until pretty strong tones. president trump calls himself a deal maker, but president trump calls himself the deal maker but but i also know where they're russian president putin is no all coming from. they have a very close source. pushover. so we'll see how that all works >> what we can expect dealing out. we have lots of sources now. with the kgb agent who has been the united states is much different than it was a number in power for 20 years. of years ago when we weren't >> you're watching "cbs this able to extract what we can morning." extract today. today, we're number one in the world at that. i think we'll be out there competing very strongly. thank you very much. >> translator: if i may, throw ♪ get outta the way! ♪ in some two cents. they've gone wild! we talked to mr. president, ♪ including this subject as well. saddle up! we are aware of the stance of ♪ president trump and i think that toyota. let's go places. we, as major oil and gas power hnew litter?lled this no. nobody has! it's unscented! and the united states as a major oil and gas power as well, we (vo) new tidy cats free & clean unscented. can work together on regulation powerful odor control with activated charcoal. free of dyes. of international markets. free of fragrances. because neither of us is tidy cats free & clean.
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(announcer) you can quit. year. in case if the dispute between for free help, call 1-800-quit-now. the economic entities, dispute will be settled in the stockholm and they got it from theirs. arbitration court. >> the first question, jeff it's your skin, and it can protect you mason, reuters. from millions of things. so we're here to help you protect your skin. >> thank you. mr. president, you tweeted this walgreens pharmacists and beauty consultants morning that it's u.s. are specially trained to know what works for the foolishness, stupidity and the health of your unique skin. mueller probe that is walgreens. trusted since 1901. responsible for the decline in u.s. relations with russia. now all walgreens brand sun care products do you hold russia at all accountable for anything in are buy one get one half off. particular, and if so, what now all walgreens brand sun care products would you consider them that when did you see the sign? when i needed to create a better visitor experience. they are responsible for? >> yes, i do, i hold both improve our workflow. countries responsible. attract new customers. i think that the united states has been foolish. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics. i think we've all been foolish. yeah! now business is rolling in. we should have had this dialogue get started at fastsigns.com. a long time ago. a long time, frankly, before i got to office. crisp leaves of lettuce. and i think we're all to blame. freshly made dressing. i think that the united states clean food that looks this good. now has stepped forward, along with russia, and we're getting delivered to your desk. together, and we have a chance now delivering to home or office. to do some great things.
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panera. whether it's nuclear food as it should be. proliferation in terms of stopping, have to do it. ultimately, that's probably the most important thing that we can be working on. but i do feel that we have both made mistakes. i think the probe is a disaster for our country. i think it's kept us apart. ...to give you the protein you need with less of the sugar you don't. it's kept us separated. there was no collusion at all. i'll take that. [cheers] everybody knows it. 30 grams of protein and 1 gram of sugar. people are being brought out to new ensure max protein. the fore. in two great flavors. so far that i know, virtually none of it related to the new ensure max protein. the full value oft wyour new car? you'd be better off throwing your money campaign. and they're going to have to try really hard to find somebody right into the harbor. that did relate to the campaign. that was a clean campaign. i'm gonna regret that. i beat hillary clinton easily with liberty mutual new car replacement we'll replace the full value of your car. and, frankly, we beat her, and ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty ♪ i'm not even saying from the standpoint, we won t, and a shame there can even stit had a negative impacter
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upon the relationship of the two largest nuclear powers in the world. we have 90% of nuclear power between the two countries. it's ridiculous. it's ridiculous what's going on with the probe. >> for president putin, if i could follow up as well. why should americans and why should president trump believe your statement that russia did not intervene in the 2016 election, given the evidence that u.s. intelligence agencies have provided, and will you consider extraditing the 12 russian officials that were indicted last week by a u.s. grand jury? >> well, i will let the president answer the second part follow the wta stars of that question, but as you as they hit san jose the mubadala silicon valley classic know, the whole concept of that came up perhaps a little bit where visionaries become victors before but it came out as a july 30th to august 5th the us open series reason why the democrats lost an tickets on sale now election, which, frankly, they should have been able to win, because the electoral college is much more advantageous for
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democrats as you know than it is coming up, a chance to republicans. encounter with h coming right up, h we won the electoral college by a lot. 306 to 223 i believe. and that was a well-fought -- that was a well-fought battle. opening some bay area offices an hour early.. we did a great job. and, frankly, i'm going to let in an effort to shorten long the president speak to the good morning, everyone. it is 7:26. i'm michelle griego. happening today, the dmv is second part of your question. but just to say it one time again and i say it all the time, opening some bay area offices there was no collusion. i didn't know the president. an hour early. the agency is adding saturday there was nobody to collude with. there was no collusion with the hours to more locations as campaign. every time you hear all of well. a new report provides these, you know, 12 and 14, it's insight into the san francisco stuff that has nothing to do, and frankly they admit these are housing crunch. about two-thirds of the city not people involved in the are renters but apartments are campaign. less than 20% of the but to the average reader out residential land. there, they're saying, well, maybe that does -- it doesn't. the police commission will vote and an agreement wednesday that would restate its and even the people involved, authority, giving it the final say over reforms within the san some perhaps told misstories. francisco police department. stay with us. or in one case the fbi said a look at traffic and weather in a few minutes. there was no lie, there was no
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lie. somebody else said there was. we ran a brilliant campaign and that's why i'm president. thank you. >> translator: as to who is to be believed, as to who's not to be believed, you can trust no one if you take this. where did you get this idea that president trump trusts me or i trust him. he defend, the interest of the united states of america. and i do defend the interest of the russian federation. we do have interests that are common. we are looking for points of contact. the issues were our postures diverge and we are looking for ways to reconcile our differences. how to make that effort more meani meaningful. we should not proceed from the immediate political interest that guides certain political powers in our countries. we should be guided by facts. could you name a single fact
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that would definitively prove the collusion? this is utter nonsense. good morning, 7:27. we have delays along the east just like the president recently shore freeway in the westbound direction. mentioned. yes, the republican at large in it's near georgia street and the united states had a certain the backup is well beyond perceived opinion of the candidates during the campaign, american canyon. it continues to be slow heading but there's nothing particularly toward the maze. extraordinary about it. we have reports of a grass fire that's the usual thing. cande,tioned the need he was near the venetian bridge with to restore the russia/u.s. relationship and it's clear that certain parts of american society felt sympathetic aboffe. traffic stacked up approaching 680. we have a cloudy start but but isn't that natural -- isn't things will warm up, highs in it natural to be sympathetic the 90s inland and 60s and 70s towards the person who is willing to restore the around the bay. the warming continues through relationship with our country, midweek. who wants to work with us? we heard accusations about t the -- as far as i know, this
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company hired american lawyers and the accusations don't have a bucket -- doesn't have a fighting chance in the american courts. so there's no evidence when it comes to the actual facts. so we have to be guided by facts and not by rumors. now, let's get back to the issue of this 12 alleged intelligence officers of russia. i don't know the full extent of the situation. but the president trump mentioned this issue and i will look into it. thin that -- off mthe following. head. we have an acting, an existing agreement between the united states of america and the russian federation, an existing treaty. that dates back to 1999. the mutual assistant on criminal cases. this treaty is in full effect. it works quite efficiently. on average, we -- about 50
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criminal cases upon request from united states. for instance, last year, there was one extradition case. upon the request sent by the united states. so this treaty has specific legal procedures. . you're looking at pictures from helsinki, finland where we can offer the appropriate presidents trump and putin are holding a historic summit. this is a working lunch. you see the president there next to the secretary of state, mike commission headed by special pompeo. and then you see there the u.s. attorney mueller, he can use ambassador john huntsman, u.s. this tweety as a solid ambassador to russia, and at the foundation and send a formal, an very end, john bolton, national official request for us, so that security adviser. we would interrogate, we would vladimir putin opposite the president. they have finished their private hold questioning of this meeting, just the two men and individuals who he believes are their translators. they are now in a working lunch privy to some crimes, and our in which they will try to fit everything they talked about in law enforcement are perfectly private within the confines of able to do this questioning and the two countries' policies. send the appropriate materials the president just said to to the united states. reporte reporters, i think it is a good start, a very good start.
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>> we figured it would be moreover, we can meet you something optimistic coming out halfway. we can make another step. in the very beginning, and a we can actually permit, to show very good start sounds like a veg. welcome back to "cbs this representatives of the united morning." here are three things you should states, including the members of this very commission, headed by know this morning. u.s. and korean officials are mr. mueller, we can let them meeting today to continue talks into the country and they will be present for this questioning. but in this case, there is -- there is another condition, and this kind of effort should be a mutual one. then we would expect that the about repate rariating the rema of u.s. soldiers. americans would reciprocate and they would question officials mike pompeo said they will continue the search of the 5,000 including the officers of law americans still missing. a deadly wildfire is enforcement and intelligence services of the united states threatening yosemite national park this morning. whom we believe are -- who have the ferguson fire has incinerated more than 3300 acres something to do with illegal actions on the territory of since friday and is only 2% russia and we have to request contained. the main highway to yosemite is shut down and nearby communities the presence of our law enforcement. for instance, we can bring up have been vevacuated. a firefighter died over the the -- mr. brodeur in this weekend. a tiny village in green land particular case.
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business associates of is at risk of destruction after a massive iceberg grounded itself nearby. mrmr. mr. broader have earned over researchers fear a large chunk $1.5 billion in russia. they never paid any taxes, of the iceberg could break off, neither in russia nor the united threatening a village. states, and yet the money people were evacuated living escaped the country. they were transferred to the closest to the shoreline. united states. they said a new moon will help they sent huge amount of money, the tides and hopefully the $400 million, as a contribution iceberg will dislodge and break to the campaign of hillary away. president trump is clinton. continuing his summit with well, that's their personal case. it might have been legal. vladimir putin. let's go back to norah who is the contribution itself. but the way the money was earned leading our coverage in was illegal. so we have a solid reason to helsinki, finland. norah, good morning. believe that some intelligence >> good morning to you, john. as it stands now, president officers accompanied andded trump and president putin were inside that private meeting for over two hours. it was scheduled for just about an hour and a ha questioning them. that can be a first step. waover. again, only their translators we can also extend it. inside, so it's not clear what options abound. will happen inside. and it's interesting because and they all can be found in an president trump brags all the time about his ability to make a appropriate legal framework. deal, and he's sitting down with >> did you direct any of your one of the world's most officials to help him do that?
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manipulative leaders in the world. during president putin's time in power, he has met with every >> translator: yes, i did. because he talked about bringing u.s. president since bill the u.s./russia relationship clinton. remember when president george back to normal. w. bush said he looked into putin's eyes to get a sense of his soul, and also president i think there can be three obama said he wanted a resit questions from the russian pool. with russia. elizabeth palmer is here to talk you have the floor. about what it means to negotiate thank you so much. with putin. good evening to everyone. can you negotiate with him? my name is ilia petrenko. good morning, liz. >> we're going to find out, aren't we? as you remember, he came out of apparently nowhere in 2000 to >> in english, mr. president, become one of the most famous and controversial leaders on the would you please go into the planet. he's a complex guy, and it has details of possibly any specific taken the west almost 20 years to figure out how he operates. arrangements for the u.s. to work together with russia and last night at the world cup celebration in pouring rain, syria, if any of these kind of guess who was the only one to arrangements were made today or stay dry? vladimir putin is often called a discussed? [ speaking foreign language ] modern day czar. he walks and talks like a man in absolute control. but what makes him tick?
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putin was trained as a kgb agent during the cold war, and it's in his dna to view the united states as an adversary. he's an old-fashioned e-man, the very opposite of politically correct whose negotiating tactics include mind games. >> translator: in russian court, he once took his dog to a is it true, and how would you meeting with the german leader use this fact, having the -- angela merkel who is afraid of them, and he kept president obama waiting for 40 minutes. putin is also a populist who can >> i guess i'll answer the first turn on the charm, especially part of the question. during his regular ethic ask the we've worked with it's really long and hard for many years, for being decades. president calling shows. he loves wealth and the title of never has anyone, any country been klosser than we are. president putin is also helping power at almost any cost. it's really. and we both spoke with bb netanyahu and they would like to he takes center stage at the do certain things with respect to syria, having to do with the olympics while russians were safety of it's really. doting on a big scale. so in that respect, we absolutely would like to work in he expects strength, both order to help it's really. and it's really will be working pealnd political. with us. the man also has a black belt in so both countries would work
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judo. jointly. and i think that when you look opponents say he is nimble and ruthless. john cipher is a former cia at all of the progress that's been made in certain sections officer stationed in moscow. with the eradication of isis, >> he is going to look at all the vulnerabilities he can take we're about 88% there. advantage in a meeting. a one-on-one meeting is the best other things that have taken place that we've done. opportunity to do something like that. and that frankly russia has >> reporter: vladimir putin once said the collapse of the soviet helped us with in certain union was the greatest respects. i think working with it's really catastrophe of the 20th century. is a great thing. everything he does and says now and creating safety for it's really is something that both is about reversing that president putin and i would like collapse, in short making russia to see very much. one little thing i might add to great again. sound familiar? that's going to resonate, i that is the did helpi ihelping think, with president trump. >> what does he want from trump? helping of people, because you >> he wants sanctions lifted, have such horrible -- if you ultimately, and normalization of see, and i've seen reports, and relations. but he's not going to ask for i've seen pictures. i've seen just about everything. that now. it's too big to ask and and if we can do something to president trump couldn't deliver help the people of syria get on it. he wants to be seen with trump, seen to be a player. back into some form of shelter in a sense this is already a win for him. >> liz palmer, it's always great and on a humanitarian basis, and to have you. that's what the word was, thank you so much. we'll hear from these two
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really, humanitarian basis. presidents later and we'll bring i think both of us would be very you that news conference in a cbs news special report. interested in doing that. and we are, we will do that. right now let's go back to gayle in new york. thank you very much. >> excuse me, but for now no gayle? >> norah, got it. specific agreements, for newly released body cam instance, between the militaries? >> well, our militaries do get video show some moments leading up to a deadly shooting of a along. in fact, our military's actually black man who appeared to be armed in chicago. gotten along probably better than our political leaders for 37-year-old harith augustus years. but our militaries do get along very well. and they do coordinate in syria and other places. reached for a weapon before the policeman shot him. okay. thank you. dean reynolds filed the report >> translator: yes, we mentioned from outside chicago police headquarters. >> reporter: good morning. the humanitarian track of this police said they stopped issue. yesterday, i discussed this with 37-year-old harith augustus when french president mr. macron and they noticed a holster and gun we reached an agreement that together with european protrude frg hing from his t-sh. countries, including france, we will step behalf, we provide they released the body cam video as quickly as they did to dispel military cargo aircraft to deliver the humanitarian cargo speculation that was stoking and today i brought up this issue with president trump. contention in the city. i think there's plenty of things
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policemen approached harith to look into. augustus on a chicago city the crucial thing here is that sidewalk. he pulled away and revealed what huge amount of refugees are in police say was a semiautomatic turkey, in lebanon, in jordan. weapon on his left hip. officers opened fire when he in the states that appeared to reach for a gun. >> a decision to use lethal force is made in a split second adjacent to syria. and it's based on the officer if we help them, the migratory and the officers in the surrounding community. pressure upon the european >> reporter: people who knew augustus said he worked as a barber and had a five-year-old states will drop, will be daughter. >> people here are angry because decreased manyfold. this was a member of the i believe it's crucial from any community. point of view, from humanitarian he wasn't a bad person. point of view, from the point of >> reporter: demonstrators converged near the shooting site view of helping ople, helping saturday, throwing bottles and trash, jumping on a squad car refugees. and clashing with officers who and in general, i agree, i concur with president trump, our responded with batons. there were four arrests and some military cooperates quite officers were hurt. >> how many shot? successfully. they do get along. >> 16 shot! i hope they will be able to do so in future. >> reporter: yesterday dozens gathered again for a march. we will keep working in the >> we have to make sure we come together as a people. former russia, turkey and iran, >> reporter: some protesters said saturday's incident was which i informed to president reminiscent of the deadly police trump about. but we do stand ready to link shooting of 17-year-old laquan
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mcdonald in 2014. this efforts to the so-called mcdonald was shot 16 times as he small group of states so that walked away from police and was armed only with a pocket knife. the process would be a broader police video of that incident one, would be a multidimensioned wasn't made public for more than an one, and so we would be able a year. police say video of saturday's to maximize our fighting chance shooting shows a key difference. to get the ultimate success in >> this was not an unarmed the issue of syria. individual. the individual was armed. and speaking about the -- having now, why he chose to do what he the bolinova court in syria. did, i don't know. >> reporter: police recovered a gun and ammunition from the president trump has just scene of the shooting. they say that the suspect did mentioned that we've not have a permit to carry a successfully concluded the world football cup. speaking of the football concealed weapon. and as for the officer involved in the shooting, he's been on actually, mr. president, i'll the police force for less than give this ball to you. two years and he's now been and now the ball is in your assigned to desk duty for the next 30 days pending an court. all the more that the united states will host the world cup investigation. gayle? >> all right, in 2026. >> that's right, thank you very at's this at it even much. we do host it. we hope we do as good a job. that's very nice. as a layperson, it clearly that will go to my son baron. looked like he had a gun and we have no question. that he was reaching for the gun in fact, melania, here you go.
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at the time of the shooting. every case is different. okay. >> final question from the plung an united states will go to oregon woman's terrifying jonath jonathan lumiere from the ap. ordeal. ahead, the remarkable rescue after being stranded for a week on a remote beach. and you can get this >> thank you. morning's podcast available on question for each president. president trump, you first. the podcast app or wherever you like to download a podcast. just now, president putin denied we'll be right back. having anything to do with the election interference in 2016. every u.s. intelligence agency has concluded that russia did. everything for his well-being. but meningitis b progresses quickly and can be fatal, what -- who -- my first question for you, sir, is who do you sometimes within 24 hours. believe? my second question is, would you while meningitis b is uncommon, now, with the whole world watching, tell president putin, about 1 in 10 infected will die. would you denounce what happened like millions of others, in 2016 and would you warn him to never do it again? your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b. >> sir, let me just say that we meningitis b strikes quickly. have two thoughts. you have groups that are be quick to talk to your teen's doctor wondering why the fbi never took about a meningitis b vaccine. the server. why haven't they taken the server. why was the fbi told to leave and now is the best time to buy. the office of the democratic and check out the all-new ecosport.
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national committee. i've been wondering that. i've been asking that for months protect those who matter most, and months. i've been tweeting it out and calling it out on social media. and make the summer go right with ford, where is the server. america's best-selling brand. i want to know where is the now during the ford summer sales event, server. and what is the server saying. get 0% financing for 60 months on a huge selection of suv's. with that being said, all i can and for the first time ever do is ask the question. get 0% financing for 60 months my people came to me, dan coats plus $1,000 ford bonus cash came to me and some others. on the 2018 ecosport. they said, they think it's plus $1,000 ford bonus cash russia. i have president putin,esas not. oh! i have no idea what's in princess toast,! i will say this, i don't see any but thanks to this usp seal i know exactly what's in my nature made gummies. reason why it would be, but i really do want to see the nature made has the first gummies verified by usp, a non-profit organization server. but i have -- i have confidence that sets purity and potency standards. in both parties. olay regenerist i really believe this will wipes out the competition; probably go on for a while, but i don't think it can go on hydrating better than $100, $200 even $400 creams. without finding out what happened to the server. what happened to the servers of with our b3 complex, beautiful skin doesn't have to cost a fortune. the pakistani gentleman that olay. worked on the dnc. where are the servers? the new mccafé cold brew frappé and frozen coffee. they're missing. where are they? the strong, smooth taste of cold brew coffee, what happened to hillary clinton's e-mails.
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ice-blended into a rich, creamy drink. 33,000 e-mails gone. it's colder than cold brew. just gone. i think in russia they wouldn't and now, get any small mccafé for only $2. be gone so easily. i think it's a disgrace that we can't get hillary clinton's (vo) is ahhhmazing! simple goodness it's colder than cold brew. meaty morsels. a tender texture. with real meat and a blend of 33,000 e-mails. i have great c nce in peas and carrots i can see. intelligence people, but i will a totally new kind of awesome going on here! tell you president putin was (avo) beneful simple goodness. extremely strong and powerful in tender, meaty morsels with real ingredients you can see. his denial today. and what he did is an incredible man 1: this is my body of proof. offer. he offered to have the people woman 1: proof of less joint pain... working on the case come and woman 2: ...and clearer skin. work with their investigators woman 3: this is my body of proof. with respect to the 12 people. i think that's an incredible man 2: proof that i can fight psoriatic arthritis... offer, okay? woman 4: ...with humira. thank you. woman 5: humira targets and blocks yes, please. >> translator: i'd like to add a specific source of inflammation that contributes to both joint and skin symptoms. something to this. after all, i was a ielligenccer. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further irreversible joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the #1 prescribed biologic i do know how dossiers are made for psoriatic arthritis. up. just a second. avo: humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. that's the first thing. now the second thing. serious, sometimes fatal infections
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and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; i believe that russia is a as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, democratic state and i hope serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. you're not denying this right to before treatment, get tested for tb. your own country. you're not denying that united tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, states democracy. do you believe united states is and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, a democracy? and if so, if it is a democratic are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. state, then the final conclusion woman 6: need more proof? in this kind of dispute can only woman 7: ask your rheumatologist about humira. be delivered by trial. man 1: what's your body of proof? by the court. not by the executive, by the law enforcement. for instance, the concord company that was brought up is being accused, it's being accused of interference. but this company does not constitute the russian state. it does not represent the russian state. i bought several examples before. well, you have a lot of individuals in the united states take george saures for instance. with multibillion capitals. but it doesn't make him, his position, his posture the
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posture of the united states. something incredible is here no, it does not. at disney california adventure park. it must be epic! thrilling! the same case. there is the issue of trying a daring! case in the court. come ride the incredicoaster. and the final -- the final say it's going to be simply exhilarating, dahling. is for the court to deliver. we're now talking about the private -- the individuals. not about particular states. and as far as the most recent an oregon woman tells her allegation is concerned about the russian intelligence amazing story of an oregon woman is telling officers, we do have an her amazing story of surviving intergovernmental treaty. for seven days after plunging please do send us the request. over a cliff in central california. we will analyze it properly and 23-year-old angelabrn hemrhage we'll send a formal response. and as i said, we can extent ribs in a violent crash on july this cooperation, but we should 6th. do it on a reciprocal basis she says she owes her life to because we would await our two hikers who saw her car and found her a mile down the beach russian counterparts to provide in big sur. us access to the persons of interest for us who we believe mirey mireya villarreal shows what led can have something to do with intelligence services. to this amazing rescue.
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>> we saw a bumper. let us discuss specific issues oh, a bumper. that's weird. and not use russia and u.s. then came around the corner and saw the car. >> this is the car they stumbled relationship as a loose change for this internal political on when they were hiking on the struggle. >> question for president putin, beach in big sur friday. thank you, two questions for >> we had no idea someone was you, sir. can you tell me what president missing. trump may have indicated to you we had no idea a car drove off a cliff until then. about officially recognizing crimea as part of russia? >> reporter: angela hernandez and secondly, sir, do you -- said seven days earlier she swerved to avoid hitting an does the russian government have animal and plunged down a any compromising material on president trump or his family? 50-foot rocky cliff. all i remember after that is waking up. i could feel water rising over >> trump. my knees. eventually i was able to break out of my car and swim out of the ocean. i swam to shore and fell asleep. she said the next few days are a >> translator: president trump blur. she wandered around yelling for and posture of president trump on crimea is well known. help. e ou at h in the car's wreckage. and he stands firmly by it. >> she let water drip onto the rocks from the hose. he continues to maintain that it that's the only way she drank water. >> reporter: the hikers found her purely by chance about a was illegal to annex it. mile south of the crash site. >> we turned around and angela our viewpoint is different. we held a referendum in strict was in the rocks, just looked like hell.
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compliance with the u.n. charter and the international >> reporter: angela writes, when legislation. i sat up, i saw a woman walk for us, this issue, we put -- to across the shore. i thought she was a dream. photos catch rescuers hoisting this issue. now the compromising material. her to safety. she said doctors told her she i did hear these rumors that we had a brain hemorrhage. the crash also caused me to allegedly collected compromising material on mr. trump when he fracture four ribs, break and fracture both collarbones and was visiting moscow. have a lung collapse. distinguished colleague, let me over the weekend angela tell you this. reconnected with chelsea on when president trump was at instagram. i'll be thankful for you and moscow back then, i didn't even know he was in moscow. your husband every single day for the rest of my life. i treated president trump with >> no one could survive that. utmost respect. look down that cliff at the car. but back then, when he was a there's no way anyone survived private individual, a that. but angela did. businessman, nobody told me he >> reporter: for "cbs this was in moscow. let's take st. petersburg morning," los angeles. >> you can't tell me miracles economic forum for instance. there were over 500 american don't happen. >> someone was watching out for businessmen, highs ranking, high her for sure. >> more things to do in angela's level ones. i don't even remember the last life, that's for sure. name of each and every one of another look at headlines this morning, including a them. well, do you think we collpromising material on dramatic plunge sents each and every single one of them? of people to t well, it's difficult to imagine
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utter nonsense on a bigger scale than this. well, please, just disregard this issue and don't think about good monday morning to you. this anymore again. >> i have to say, if they had the clouds are going to start it, it would have been out long to clear out everywhere except the coast, making for nice warm ago, and if anybody watched temperatures today. peter strzok testify over the last couple of days, and i was we are at 93 in fairfield, 84 in redwood city, 66 in san in brussels watching it, it was a disgrace to the fbi. francisco and 86 in santa rosa. it was a disgrace to our the seven-day forecast, it's going to be very hot inland by country. and you would say that was a total witch hunt. midweek before temperatures cool down a little bit. thank you very much, everybody, thank you. >> mr. president -- >> mr. president -- this morning of "cbs this morning" sponsored by panera bread, food as it should be. h. xtdi a historicinetwe presint th crisp leaves of lettuce. freshly made dressing. clean food that looks this good. ited staeay to denounce delivered to your desk. now delivering to home or office. rs cur the 2016russianction panera. food as it should be. carrying out according to our own u.s. intelligence agencies. instead, the president of the united states chose not to denounce russia and instead attack his own federal bureau of
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investigation and continue to raise claims that he's made over and over again. major garrett is our chief white house correspondent. is also here in helsinki. major, where should we start? >> well, when the president says he has confidence in his intelligence agencies and then this is a cbs news special says russia denies meddling in report. the 2016 election, i wonder why i'm john dickerson with bianna it would be meddling in the 2016 election. i mean, those answers in no way goal drink gra, margaret brennan in new york. line up with one another. president trump and russian you cannot have confidence in president vladimir putin are about to speak to reporters. american intelligence agencies who have come to this conclusion the two leaders spoke one on one for more than two hours with no uniformly and then say well, one else but translators in the russia denied it, why would they room. >> and when it was over, even think about doing it? president trump called it a good start. they're incompatible. he actually said a very good utterly incompatible. start. they continued their meeting, this was, and president trump bringing in other officials from knew it going in, his best opportunity to say to russian both sides. >> norah o'donnell is leading our summit coverage from president vladimir putin and to helsinki. norah, good morning. the world i denounce you and don't do it again. >> good morning. given that golden opportunity, it has been an extraordinary day he let itpa. in helsinki, starting with president putin arriving an hour late to this meeting. >> that's exactly right.
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i mean, one of the ways i looked and then that private meeting lasting two hours. at this coming into it is wonder weijia jiang is inside the weathering there would be a palace here in helsinki. conversation. you've been talking to advisers. wondering whether there would be what have they told you about a confrontation. it seems like there's been what substance was discussed? >> norah, they're not mentioning that ahead of the president reconciliation between these two certainly. leaders. almost allies the way they that has been such a chaotic day. we're getting very little talked about the way they wanted details about what they spoke to move forward in the future. about during that one on one. >> one thing worth pointing out but we expect to hear from both this was a press conference outside of the issue of russian meddling in the 2016 election leaders. and what has already been any moment now. we don't expect them to just read off of a joint statement, alleged about 2018. a press conference about right, because this room is filled with journalists and the platitu platitudes. and nothing meaningful about any hot-button foreign policy issue for either country. suspense is anticipating because no concessions from the american president on the baltic states their one-on-one meeting lasted or crimea. no concessions on syria. longer than anticipated. heading into the meeting, they and vague offers from the seemed to have distance between russians to assist in some areas them, not only physically but in terms of the tone set. of conflict. but for those european allies president trump was very warm. he opened by congratulating who were afraid president putin president putin for the world might drive a hard bargain and cup. but president putin wore a poker extract some concussions from
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face the entire time. president trump, there is no and he did not indicate what he evidence of that. planned to bring up. the president did. this is a conversation that may he said he wanted to talk about have gone in several different trade, nuclear weapons, military directions but reached no and china, of course, leading up to this. discernible resolution. he said he would bring up crimea leaving essentially where they and the election meddling. it's interesting, norah, that he entered, no new movement in either direction. did not mention that when he was >> all right, major garrett here standing side by side with president putin, but, of course, in helsinki. the pressure is on from back want to send it back now to gayle and john in new york. home to see whether he did, in john. >> all right, norah, thank you. fact, confront president putin that was an extraordinary press about the latest special counsel conference. margaret brennan, i want to get indictment, which is filled with your reaction. it struck me yesterday the u.s. facts and a detailed account of ambassador to russia said the point of this meeting would be what happened. to hold the russian s accountabe now, president trump says he'll bring it up. whether he'll just do his due diligence and ask the president about it is one thing, but for what they're doing. president trump was asked whether he will be tough, as he said he would, and tell him that whether they've done anything wrong and he said"w done something wrong." the u.s. will not stand for >> he's put this moral this, is quite another. that's just one of many equivalence here between the questions we'll be watching as u.s. and russia in terms of past this press conference gets under way any momeow bad behavior by here between the u.s. and russia in terms of past bad behavior by
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the united states, saying that's equivalent somehow to this norah. >> all right, weijia, thank you. ongoing interference that we're seeing with this elections. that is stunning. also with us is liz palmer, who it is stunning as major garrett has covered russia for years, just pointed out there, that including vladimir putin's there was not one issue of sure nearly two decade long reign in assistants that the president of the united states laid out. russia. what have the russians been he just spoke about himself, a saying so far about this defense of his own election, and meeting? >> very little, except they keep seemed to be characterizing all emphasizing that they want good of this, the mueller probe, all relations with the united states. of it, as an investigation as to what's notable is they've kind of lined up with president trump whether or not he should be president, when we know as a against what they would call the matter of fact that the investigation began before he deep state, the justice department, the indictments, and actually was elected and is they've implied that without that, president trump would have based in intelligence. i mean, he used this platform to come here, ready to normalize attack his own f.b.i., to relations. so they're portraying trump as their ally against the rest of dismiss or undercut his own the u.s. or at least u.s. institutions. director of national intelligence, dan coates, who he >> right. named there, who gave him the when the president said and consensus view of the tweeted earlier today they've intelligence agencies that had the worst relationships, in part, because of u.s. toughness, we saw the rough government retweet that and say "i agree." >> all over it. they completely bolstered their case it was u.s. foolishness,
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once again, these institutions that are justh erybody getting along. one thing i wanted to mention was president putin, ex-spy, he would not have revealed he feels rattled by these indictments but ease got to have looked at them and realize his intelligence is far more compromised than perhaps even the russians realized. he may be feeling very unsettled going into this press conference. >> that's a critical point, liz, because just days before this summit, we see the president's top intelligence chief, the director of national intelligence, dan coats, warning about current russian actions, not even what they did in the 2016 election, but they're a threat because of cyberattacks. the justice department issuing these indictments against 12 individuals, which, as we've delved into it, realized this is the way of the american law enforcement, the justice department, saying -- and the special prosecutor saying, we know, we know who your people are. we know who your agents are. and here, by the way, is the indictment, which shows just
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exactly how they did this. are there people now inside the saying we've been exposed? >> oh, yes, and the russians may even be having a little witch hunt of their own. they will be now looking deep into the intelligence establishment, trying to figure out who the moles are, who may have been flipped by the u.s. justice department. it's worth remembering that cyber experts feel the russians probably hired hacking groups to work for them. and they may have limited control over them. it may be those cyber anarchists, if you like, who are feeding information now to the justice department and that's got to have president putin very worried. >> all right, liz palmer, thank you. margaret brennan joins us. she is in new york. margaret, talk about who was at this expanded lunch-time meeting. specifically fiona hill. >> yes, fiona hill, you highlighted her. she is so remarkable, because she's a member of the national security staff who has been not
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very prominent but very well known and it was remarkable when she joined the trump administration, because she literally wrote the book on vladimir putin. she is one of his biographers, a former intelligence officer, a dual u.s./uk national. she's extremely clear-eyed on this, and she has written, leading up to president trump's election, about why vladimir putin would want to and seek out meddling in the u.s. elections. for her, that is an established fact, and it was part of a strategy. she was seated at that table, along with john bolton, the national security adviser to the president, someone who is deeply steeped, whatever your political beliefs, but he is very experienced on arms control negotiations. he's also very experienced in negotiating with putin. he knows, as does hill who they are sitting across from. for all the criticism of how the president is a neophyte when it comes to diplomacy, he has with him some very established national security names. the secretary of state is new,
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yes, but across from him, you're looking at the shot now, on the russian side of the room, at the far end of the table, is a man called anatoly anatov. a very deliberate choice when putin stationed him in washington. the expectation, many thought, he was being put into d.c. to be a hard-liner against a hillary clinton presidency. he is someone who had negotiated. he's there, next to sergey lavrov, a little bit obscured there, as someone who had negotiated the new start deal. that's something we're talking president trump today perhaps extending. that was a reduction in ballistic missiles and nuclear warheads. and that was a big win under the obama administration. the question now is will the trump administration do so. last i spoke with ambassador antanov, he complained he couldn't get a meeting in washington, d.c. these days because it is such a politically
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toxic topic. and it's interesting because we are putting a domestic political filter on this because foreign policy has become so much of how we are hearing this fnarrative. >> question on that point, first of all, sergey lavrov, the russian foreign minister, to president putin's right, on the domestic point, you talked to trey gowdy this weekend on "face the nation," and when we talk about the pressure on the president to either, a, say something to vladimir putin about interfering in the ongoing interference by the russians or to actually do something. trey gowdy was pretty stark as a member of the president's party about what he thinks the president should do. >> yes, the congressman, from south carolina, who held that fiery, you know, hearing earlier in the week with peter strzok, that fbi agent, who's been accused of having political bias, which is why he was taken off the mueller investigation. it was interesting to hear trey gowdy as a congressman, as a republican, draw the line. we often hear the president sort of muddy here.
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which is to say you can recognize the meddling. call this an assault on american democracy and recognize it for what it is. and at the same time, acknowledge presidents trump and the validity of his election. you don't have to conflate the two. as senator cornyn, who is part of the senate intelligence probe here into russian meddling, says the president conflates these things, in part, because he takes it so personally. for this, it isn't necessarily a fact pattern established by u.s. intelligence, by the fbi, by our allies around the world. it is a question of whether he is legitimate in this job. and he can't separate those two ideas. so that's why when we bring up this idea, will he confront him on meddling, can he take himself outha happened before i took this office and it matters that you attacked the united states of america. >> also, margaret, can you to the distinction that the trump administration seems to be making? jon huntsman said yesterday stop calling this a summit, this is
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just a meeting. what is the distinction between the two? it makes me think of dating. if i'm meeting you for coffee, no big deal. for dinner, maybe potential. this is a big deal, isn it? >> right, depending on how it goes. >> yes, exactly. >> yes, some of that is a reflection of the fact that many on the president's team have been cautioning him against taking this summit meeting in counter, in the extended way he has. because while the president's saying he has low expectations, he has drawn every camera in the world into this moment and we're all following it as if it's a sporting event, play by play. that's not how diplomacy normally happens because it doesn't actually help achieve things, to heighten those own expectations for yourself. the ambassador was trying to help the president there. >> the reason they call them summits is because they happen at the highest levels. where you can't get any higher the two countries. isn't it true, margaret, when you have these expectations, people, leaders, tend to respond
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to those and not to what actually happens -- >> exactly. >> and that creates something they, then, have to retspond to which is of somebody else's making. they want to control as much as possible. expectations are targets they have to meet that other people are creating. >> it's its own constraints. we're going to be, you know, parsing every word said here at this press conference but from the president's perspective, because of the domestic political filter here, people have already decided what the outcome of this is, right? people are walking in, if you are a trump supporter, you decided that he is doing something great. there's nothing wrong with getting along with russia. that's not really the point of diplomacy, right? it's supposed to be furthering the interest of your country. and can he actually achieve anything? if you're a detractor of the president, then you just think he sold us down the river, right, that there was some sort of quid pro quo here, something that has not been established by any means in these investigations being led by the special counsel. it's why you hear often the
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point being made, no americans have been indicted or charged in this indictment we saw of russian military intelligence officers. >> can i just make a point on that, something that liz touched on as well, as to how vulnerable, if at all, vladimir putin must feel now, knowing the detail that prosecutors here were able to nail down as far as the involvement of the gru. because if you go back to the president's last meeting with vladimir putin, where he said "he told me he didn't do it and i believed that he believed it." he went on to say that putin told him "i didn't do it." because no one would ever be able to find out or trace it back to me. how important is that right now? did he think this day was inevitable? because this seemed to come from not only u.s. intelligence but british as well. >> yes, a number of our allies have been helping. it's a fair point, because it's also did this release in some way box in the president with the mueller indictmingen it did issue? did it actually help him?
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because, as you're suggesting there, lays out a deterrent, saying maybe i can't take this case to prosecute these guys, you know, i'm not going to get the 12 russians extradited for legal reasons, but i can tell you, i know everything from the unit they're in, how they're paying for the information. if you call it a witch hunt, you're dismissing the fact there's the national security value in laying o the deterrent. not just russia but other countries doing something similar. >> it's still puzzling to many he called it a witch hunt, knowing these indictments were coming down. >> that's the personal, he feels hunted. >> before the summit started, the president said, listen, i have very low expectation here. you've been talking to u.s. officials. what are they telling you that there was hope that would come out of this?
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what was their agenda? did they have one? >> that's what was incredibly remarkable, gayle, in speaking with many white house officials, diplomatic officials, when asked what the agenda was. they essentially had to shrug their shoulder because their weren't sure, saying it was up to the president of the united states. that in itself is extraordinary. someone who's covered white houses and summits before, there's usually a laundry list that people want to go through. just on the point margaret made, too, you know, one of the phrases that the director of national intelligence, dan coats, used earlier this week is that he said he had a message for putin, that if he were meeting with putin, and that message would be we know what you're doing and we know you know what you're doing and what we're doing. you make the choice. but if you want to stay in this tit-for-tat, we're going to beat you. there's a message being sent from the u.s. intelligence committee, community. there's a message being sent from the u.s. law enforcement community. and it was the timing i think is
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incredibly relevant, that it was done just days before this particular summit. when the normal interagency process did not take place that normally happens before one of these meetings where most of the government officials know what is going to be discussed. major garrett is also with us here in helsinki, and has had similar conversations with officials. and, major, just out of just what happened, are you getting any read about whether they agreed to anything? >> no, no read at all. and the white house officials are sort of stymied, not only about what happened, but what's going to happen. we're in an extended two-minute warning. this might be one of the longest two-minute warnings i've ever been a part of in presidential coverage. to your point you just made, norah, because it's vital. when i was in brussels covering the nato subtlmmit, so many of diplomats and nato ministers were vitally interacting, as energetically as they could, with u.s. officials, to try to find out if there was a fixed, a
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semifixed, an emerging agenda for this meeting with putin. and the answer they kept consistently getting back is the same one you just reported, no, there isn't. and that left them in a, i would say, sense of mild panic. because their fear was if america's agenda isn't set and europe's agenda isn't set, they knew going in the russian agenda would be set, and they were somewhat fearful vladimir putin might be able to take advantage, drive his agenda harder when there was no fixed american agenda going in. and to the point you and margaret described about the special counsel indictments. they are very forensically detailed. and that is a signal to russia and it's a signal putin thae institutions in america, whatever president trump says about the meddling or the investigation, the institutions in america, the justice department is pursuing a
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forensic examination of what happened and revealing important details. and, as you mentioned, dan coats, director of national intelligence, institutionally, is speaking on behalf of the american government, recognizing and calling out in public what russia has done and what he believes russia is doing. so you have this kind of interesting backdrop for president trump. whatever he's saying on twitter, however he comports himself face-to-face with the russian president, the institutions in america are sending distinction, distinct signals right now, on their own, about what has happened, and what may be going on, and the threats that still exist. and that, whatever president trump does or doesn't do, is its own way a signal to putin and his government that institutions in america know what's happening and are prepared to call them out. >> it's a really good point, major. i spoke with a senior diplomatic
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official and asked if he thought they would bring up the interference in the 2016 election and the diplomat said to me, i'm not looking back, i'm looking at november and what's happening now. if they don't change what they're doing in november, all bets are off. and then i asked, does the president agree with that? is that the message the president's going to deliver to putin? and this diplomat said he did not have the answer that question. but i think you see already this idea of about what is happening now, that russia's desire to continue to thwart american democratic ideals and our system are ongoing and that's a very real threat and that's why there's hope in many of these communities, meaning law enforcement, intelligence communities, that the president will confront or did confront president putin. let's just go back to weijia jiang who is absolutely inside the room and something appears to be happening there. weijia, what can you tell us? >> yes, norah, you can see right now, there is a journalist with
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the media organization, the nations, is actually -- looks like it's becoming quite violent as he is resisting. it started when he started heckling those of us who were in the middle of reporting, and two members of the security detail confronted him about it. he came out and showed a sign that he had apparently made. it looked like a hand-made sign. that said "nuclear weapon treaty." and that's when this -- that's when this all unfolded and intensified. as you can see, now, he's been escorted by an entire team of about ten security officials. so it really escalated in the past two minutes i would say he was taken inside after the initial heckling, brought back out here because he says himself that he was accused of having a malicious item and he retrieved this hand-made sign. again, something about a nuclear weapons treaty, and then
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officials asked him to leave, he resisted, and then as you saw, they physically grabbed him and he continued to resist. but he has now been escorted out of the room and we're not quite sure how this could impact the joint press conference here, which, as you mentioned, we've been waiting for now for quite some time. and so it is very testy in here. you can hear the sound has now -- the volume has turned up because everybody's now talking about it, and i think they're trying to identify exactly who he is. but we believe he is a journalist with the nations. now, his personal items are being collected. his laptop and his backpack. so you saw it all unfold. it was a pretty dramatic scene here because the gentleman refused to leave, even after more and more security detail members tried to remove him from
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the room so we'll have to get more clarification about exactly what led up to it and what he was saying and what that sign said. but for now, he has been moved from this room. >> okay. weijia, thank you. clearly some type of disturbance inside that press room but we shouldn't let it distract us from really what are some real questions about what happened between trump and putin. john, gayle, margaret, back to you. >> one of the interesting things about this question of an agenda. there are two possible explanations for this. one, it gives the president maximum flexibility to move the pieces on the board as he wishes and also to have a big reveal after it's over. there's no expectations going in. suddenly he's a bell ble to get pieces talked about, maybe it's a new arms control treaty. the second option is when listening to a number of u.s. officials describe what they thought u.s. poll sicy should b and then asked, will the
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president say that, said "we hope so." it's a question of how he will behave and whether he will stay with u.s. policy as has been articulated. they just don't know about the man at the top of the organizational chart. >> let's not forget, in "the new york times" noted, the u.s. officials have acknowledged that those aides say they've given up trying to control what the president says to vladimir putin and what he says about him. it's great to see people like fiona hill, people who are very hawkish traditionally, and want to let you know that sarah sanders, it looks like the communication teams are coming in. >> melania has entered the room as well. >> on the flip side of having his advisers there and some that have traditionally been very hawkish on russia, at the end of the day, especially with this president, it all comes down to what he wants to say and what he decides to do. >> yes. and that's what's so incredibly frustrating for people who have spent their lives and are staffing the president, trying to best prepare him with facts. you hear quite often we're going
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to inundate him with data and facts in the hope merits of sticking to these thinhat the
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