night. randomly and like i don t think that we can relax right now. all the missiles are sent from the territory of belarus. and from the black sea. and as far as i understand, ukraine doesn t have the real means to stop it. the danger is still here. i don t feel safe and this is why at least at night i m here. i saw that she has a new stroller. which is a big deal. yes. she grows and very soon she ll be. she s sitting like big girl and she s looking around. i love i watched this video a number of times. it s so great a child gets a new stroller and they feel it and touch it. and she was doing all those things and just watching her looking around, also i didn t realize are you teaching her
[inaudible] united states and europe and a precarious and threatening position. we can t allow him to carry on. i don t think this was an accident, i don t think biden just brought it up on the stage and said it. i watched the video a number of times, it doesn t feel like an accident to me. it looks like an interesting way of playing psychological warfare on vladimir putin. the president of the united states says that putin doesn t deserve to be president, and just so that the russians can t latch on to that and say that america is at war, they have the secretary of state walking it back. i think this was very deliberate, i think it served this purpose and i think it put putin on notice. basically saying, we re not just going to sanction you, we re going to try to get you out of this job. yeah, that s the view i took, bill. you know about the story better than i do. my senses, wow, a no-fly zone would have been good but going
death. and it appears there s a citizen on top of the assailant and the police officers are trying to pull the citizen off. and as they do pull him off, his back is covered with blood. the assailant, who is on the bottom is all dressed in black and he apparently tries to rise up as if to maybe jump up and follow the person they just pulled off. and then the shot drops him. so it looks like there s possibly a citizen, a plain clothes citizen on top of an assailant all dressed in black. they re fighting. obviously from reporting, he has a knife. and the police actually physically pull the man off. he s bloody in the lower back. you can see his skin and the blood. and then the assailant rises up and he s instantly shot by the police. that s what i watched on the video a number of times. we appreciate that, because it is very small sort of toward the back of our screen as we watch it. we re going to take a quick break and be back with more coverage of this breaking news from london right
and what do you see as commissioner that the officer on the screen might be upset with the decision doesn t see? so as i said, i went through the testimony. i looked at the video a number of times. i know what the definition of a choke hold is. this is what led me to this decision. and again, a difficult decision. new york city police commissioner explaining there. he said it was a painful decision built decision ultimately to fire, to determine nature officer pantaleo. he was the officer held accountable for the death of eric garner in a choke hold five years ago. this case dragged on for years because of justice department and other grand jury investigations, the police commissioner saying it was a painful decision. he determined that a police trial judge was correct in saying that officer pantaleo, yes, pult eric garner in a choke hold but had every opportunity to move to what the commissioner called less lethal alternatives
and in this video a number of men in masks seize the crew, after the u.s. took down an iranian drone wednesday after it came within 1,000 yards of the u.s. warship. iran denying the attack saying all of its drones are accounted for, while the president offered this warning. a lot of bad things are happening to them. and it s very easy to straighten out or it s very easy for us to make it a lot worse. joining me now the president of the council on foreign relations richard haas. always great to have you on the program. thank you for being here. thanks, kasie. where do you evaluate where we stand right now in the escalating tensions with iran? how much close are we to