Transcripts For CNN Erin Burnett OutFront 20240608 : vimarsa
CNN Erin Burnett OutFront June 8, 2024
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>> well done share luck. you found it wonderful craig here pays too much for verizon wireless. so he sublet half his real estate office... [ bird squawks loudly ] to a pet shop. meg's moving company uses t-mobile. so she scaled down her fleet to save money. and don's paying so much for at&t, he's been waiting to update his equipment! there's a smarter way to save. comcast business mobile. you could save up to 70% on your wireless bill. so you don't have to compromise. powering smarter savings. powering possibilities. science, better results even mckenzie in washington cnn welcome to all of, you watching in the united states, canada, and around the world, i'm in a car and lifelong kong hate on cnn newsroom, us president joe biden vowing to defend bend democracy during his visit to europe for the 80th anniversary of d-day how he's been pushing diplomatic efforts during this historic tree oh back home. the president faces mounting pressure from within his administration over his policies towards the war in gaza. you'll hear from just some the eu quit in frustration meanwhile, a deadline from within benjamin netanyahu's own war cabinet expires in the hours ahead the key member is demanding when it comes to the conflict. >> and what could happen if he carries through on his threat we begin our in paris where the close ties between the u.s. and france will be on full display as us president joe biden. continues his official state visit with a full day of events. >> french president emmanuel macron will welcome mr. biden and the first lady with a formal ceremony at the okta triomphe. there will be a parade precession to the least, say palace, followed by a working lunch in the evening. >> the macron's will host the bidens at the music duo say for a state dinner it's coming on the heels of the 80th anniversary of d-day will president biden on the allied troops of world war ii during a speech on the cliffs of normandy on friday, he evoked the legacy as he called on the world to defend democracies under threat. today but i'll ask us to give or risk our lives but they are asking us to care for others and our country more than ourselves they're not asking us to do their job. they're asking us to do our job to protect freedom in our time to defend democracy, to stand up aggression abroad. and at home read part of something bigger than ourselves. >> for more on this cnn international diplomatic editor nic robertson joins us now live from london, nyc obviously president biden spending a full day really with his host. it's testament, i guess to the bond between these two countries. >> yeah, i think it is and it's testament in a way to how comfortable president biden fills in france has been that it will be probably, by the time he leaves expanded to leave on sunday, it had been there for five days. i don't think a us president in recent history spent so much time in one single country outside of the united states for, for some time this is a relationship that's important to president biden he needs strong allies and partners in europe. >> it's a relationship that's important to president macron. you who courted donald trump when he was president hosted him to dinner. >> i think it was in the eiffel tower so macron has always been careful to try to have a strong working on solid relationship with us president's, particularly now, britain is outside of the european union. france's it is one of the strongest partners, if you will, that the united states can look to to have influence in brussels within the european union there are differences, of course, between the two countries, but today, we'll be full of sort of ceremony and the symbolic nature of that relationship attending a ceremony at the de triomphe for a parade, dan to the elysee palace are working lunch and then back for a state dinner at the lee say palace in the evening. so this really is the french de, the french president, laying on the best of what france has to offer to visiting world leaders president biden is really getting the treat at the french today nick, yeah, as we know, over these last few days, present, button really has been front and center on the world stage during this this trip to commemorate d-day what impact will this have on us foreign policy, particularly on the wars in ukraine and gaza well when you talk about gaza, there are obvious differences between president macrons position and president biden's position. a stark contrast can be seen when the international criminal court, the icc, called for the request for arrest warrants for prime minister netanyahu so and the hamas leaders united states, condemned that even there was talk from within the united states of the challenge to the icc but what we heard from france, which is a signature signatory to the rome statute, which supports the icc. what the icc is doing. and if there was an arrest warrant for prime minister netanyahu, if he was to go to france, then the french will be obliged to arrest him. if that was to happen so the french said that they supported the move by the icc. so clearly, president biden and macron the sea differently on israel france is much more forward leaning. i wanted to see a sea as far in gaza, but it supports the united states position that calling for an independent palestinian state are recognizing an independent palestinian stay right now is not the right course of action. and on ukraine as well president macron is more forward leaning down the united states. he wants to form a coalition of countries that will send international military trainers. military trainers into ukraine praying nato try to train ukrainian soldiers. know nato nation has done this. at least publicly, yet, and this is much more than the united states wants to do when macron has taught about this in the policy united states has been very careful to say no. that's not where we are on this. >> so will it how will it change in shape that? >> will macrons going to do is back as the push the united states forward, but we know that president biden is constrained not just by his own worldview, but by domestic politics at home. he is unlikely to take a strong position that france wants on the war in gaza. and he's going to be very cautious about how he approaches involving us troops, potentially on the ground in ukraine, the domestic appetite for that this is perhaps not in the same place as domestic appetite and frances robinson that joining us from london, many thanks well, back in the us, mr. biden faces mounting pressure from within his own administration to change you as policy over the israel hamas war, cnn's kali atwood has more almost a dozen us officials who have resigned in protest of the biden administration's approach to the israel-hamas war. i want us to abide by our own laws. there's a real disconnect between what we and usaid are saying and every humanitarian agency is saying why should the rest of the world look to is as a leader, are banding together to explore how to use their voices effectively from the outside. it's kind of like an underground railroad. when i was having questions about when it seemed like i cannot work on this anymore but what do i do? >> stacy gilbert, who worked at the state department for more than 20 years. so she turned to members of the group when she was considering resigning. now she wants to help those who are fighting the system from within if we can be a resource to help others find their voice find a way to try to affect some policy change that would be useful. gilbert and the others who have left the us government in protest, like alec smith resigned from usaid last month, are also in public events and statements to shed light on all they've seen. >> know that i'm no longer at usa and i can speak publicly and loudly about what is actually happening on the ground in gaza and i can try to get attention pointed towards me, but people who are suffering there now gilbert's resignation came after her office at the state department, which focuses on global humanitarian crises, found that israel was impeding the delivery of humanitarian aid into gaza only for the final version of the report to say that israel was not to blame what are the implications of a report like this for the us government globally? >> to say it undermines our credibility is an understatement and for this report to say, conditions in gaza are dating dress, and these organizations don't have the capacity is just patently false. it is absolutely dangerous and it is difficult to do the work burke but these organizations can do it. they are not being allowed to do it the state department says it stands by its final report. we want to hear their opinions. we want to hear the expertise that they bring to bear, but ultimately it is the president, the secretary, other senior officials that make the decisions about what the policy of the united states out of beep. but gilbert says that many of her colleagues still working on the biden administration's policy and are seeing the death toll of innocent palestinians rise. >> harberger, same frustrations and continue urging policy changes from within. >> if i were the only one who thought this way, i would stay in the government. but you're confident they'll continue to have slowly absolutely i will i will be a voice for them on the outside, but i really am. i am determined to do all i can help from the outside because it's it's very, very hard doing this on inside. >> now, these warmer officials say they expect resignations and descend from within to continue. and one thing we'll be watching to see is if the pressure that president biden and his administration are putting on prime minister benjamin netanyahu to come to a ceasefire agreement, can do anything to quell this mounting descent, this mounting frustration, but from our conversations with these former officials, it would actually take the biden administration cutting off the flow of us weaponry to israel in order to do that kylie atwood, cnn, the state department will that frustration is being fueled by reports that are coming out of gaza. >> it seems daily. the director of rafah's kuwaiti hospitals is to workers there were killed and five others wounded by an idf strike last month kuwait hospital was forced to close after continuous israeli strikes, cnn has reached out to the idf for comment. well, the coming hours could be crucial for israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. he's facing pressure from the united states to accept a ceasefire and hostage release agreement. now it came member of his war cabinet could quit. benny gantz has threatened to leave the cabinet and the government. and he says, he'll take his party with him. >> well, meanwhile, the united nations is adding the israeli military, hamas, and palestinian islamic jihad to a list of groups that harm children the un secretary general's spokesman says the list will be presented to the security council next week gaza's ministry of hills sysml than 15,000 palestinian children have been killed in israel. >> hamas war israel denies deliberately targeting civilians cnn senior international correspondent has been weighed him and joins us now live from beirut and ben, let's start with that ultimatum by benny gantz word is that the united states is trying to get gantz to stay. what more you learning? >> yes. well, he last month has said that on the 8th of june today, he would resign if benjamin netanyahu did not come out with some sort of post-war plan for gaza. well, that hasn't happened. it's 8 june and it is expected that it's evening and around the 8:00 p.m. a. local time, he will be giving a press conference and all indications from the israeli media is that he will indeed carry through with his threat. now, what does this mean? what his party is actually not a member of netanyahu's code collision, which has 64 out of the 120 seats in the knesset. so it's not like netanyahu's government is going to collapse but good gantz's considered to be sort of one of the adults in the room and experienced military figure who was chief of staff for the israeli army later at defense minister, he is someone who is perhaps according to these ready media, trying to keep the government on an even he'll pull him out and that means sort of that sort of level of control goes and netanyahu will be under the pressure more pressure from the extremist ministers in his cabinet but fundamentally for instance, guns does not support the creation of a palestinian state he does not support the idea of palestinian authority, going into gaza to administer it in the post-war phase. so basically, the difference between netanyahu and gun on tone, not necessarily the actual action on the ground node guns has been in favor of some sort of rapid end, to this war, we have now beginning the ninth month of this war. netanyahu doesn't seem to be quite as eager for that but the end of the day, i think the expectation is the war will continue. netanyahu's made it clear that despite the 31 may biden peace proposal, that his goal is the complete destruction of hamas difficult if not impossible, as that maybe anna and ben the un's designation of israel as a state that harms children the israelis are incense to tell us about the announcement and this reaction well every year the united nations puts out a report on entities and country he's harm children in war. >> and now israel joins saudi arabia, afghanistan, the democratic republic of congo, hamas islamic jihad, sudan, syria, yemen, and isis on that list. as you mentioned in the introduction israel has, according to the ministry of health in gaza, killed more than 15,000 children. it's a lot of children and certainly what we're seeing on our screens, what we're hearing from the ground is yes, many children have been killed as a result of this war in gaza, where the death toll is approaching 40,000. and therefore it's not necessary it's essentially a surprise. it was a surprise to the israelis, the chief of staff of the un secretary general, antonio guterres, called the israel kylian vasodilate to the un, to inform him before this announcement was made, the israeli investor recorded video recorded that conversation and described the israeli army as the most moral army in the world. now, this is something that the israelis have repeated for decades, but certainly this war, in particular brings that claim. in 2000 15,000 children certainly is a huge number and wait a min, joining us from beirut. thank you the secret service is preparing for massive pro-palestinian demonstrations in washington dc today, putting up extra fencing to protect the white house. >> they've also blocked off access to the white house gates service agent till cnn. they're expecting up to 12,000 protesters. us president joe biden will not be at the white house since he's attending that state visit in france? >> we are getting word of a new russian strikes on ukraine as the french president spills out, the timeframe, the starting to train ukrainian pilots on french fighter jets. that story, plus bouton is bragging about having many more nuclear bombs than the us and europe but that's not always he said at the st. >> petersburg economic forum hey, mom, how many should i decorated have ran have blue that's a. really tough call for you. >> that's john king from cnn. >> let's look at the data. >> your county leaned red eye 15 points in the last presidential election however, looking at the latest polling, you're going to need a lot of those purple sprinkles. how this guy really knows this stuff. >> $5 a cupcake you know, the average cost of a cupcake around here is $3. >> no comment dad is a legend and his legendary moves might be passed down to you dancing is just one of the many inherited traits you can discover with ancestry dna get it for dad, and together you can see which traits were inherited, the places where they started, and the people he shares them with best of all, it's on sale for fathers de but get moving 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which has made him, a bit... unruly. you called yourself the “un-carrier”. you sing about “price lock” on those commercials. “the price lock, the price lock...” so, if you could change the price, change the name! it's not a lock, i know a lock. so how can we undo the damage? we could all unsubscribe and switch to xfinity. their connection is unreal. and we could all un-experience this whole session. okay, that's uncalled for. okay. alone this is a secret war. secrets and spies tomorrow at ten on cnn for. >> a seconds write de ukraine is reporting a wave of russian strikes across the country. >> officials say one person was killed at least six others injured in overnight attacks. >> that included drones. and artillery. some of the strikes cause more damage to the power grid and critical infrastructure lecture, that's coming on the heels of a un report that says may was the deadliest month for ukrainians in almost a year. more than 170 civilians were killed last month. about 30% more than in april and close to 700 were injured the increase is blamed on the growing number of strikes in the kharkiv region where moscow launched a new offensive. last month, well, meanwhile, french president emmanuel macron says his country will start training ukrainian pilots and mechanics in the coming days. he met with president volodomyr zelenskyy on friday de after pledging to send french fighter jets to give or meanwhile, russian president vladimir putin repeated threats to our adversaries of western nations that are supporting ukraine. >> he also boasted about russia's economy and military strength during a speech at the st. petersburg economic forum on friday, cnn's fred pleitgen as more lavender putin speaking at the st. petersburg economic forum, which of course is extremely important for russia and extremely i
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>> well done share luck. you found it wonderful craig here pays too much for verizon wireless. so he sublet half his real estate office... [ bird squawks loudly ] to a pet shop. meg's moving company uses t-mobile. so she scaled down her fleet to save money. and don's paying so much for at&t, he's been waiting to update his equipment! there's a smarter way to save. comcast business mobile. you could save up to 70% on your wireless bill. so you don't have to compromise. powering smarter savings. powering possibilities. science, better results even mckenzie in washington cnn welcome to all of, you watching in the united states, canada, and around the world, i'm in a car and lifelong kong hate on cnn newsroom, us president joe biden vowing to defend bend democracy during his visit to europe for the 80th anniversary of d-day how he's been pushing diplomatic efforts during this historic tree oh back home. the president faces mounting pressure from within his administration over his policies towards the war in gaza. you'll hear from just some the eu quit in frustration meanwhile, a deadline from within benjamin netanyahu's own war cabinet expires in the hours ahead the key member is demanding when it comes to the conflict. >> and what could happen if he carries through on his threat we begin our in paris where the close ties between the u.s. and france will be on full display as us president joe biden. continues his official state visit with a full day of events. >> french president emmanuel macron will welcome mr. biden and the first lady with a formal ceremony at the okta triomphe. there will be a parade precession to the least, say palace, followed by a working lunch in the evening. >> the macron's will host the bidens at the music duo say for a state dinner it's coming on the heels of the 80th anniversary of d-day will president biden on the allied troops of world war ii during a speech on the cliffs of normandy on friday, he evoked the legacy as he called on the world to defend democracies under threat. today but i'll ask us to give or risk our lives but they are asking us to care for others and our country more than ourselves they're not asking us to do their job. they're asking us to do our job to protect freedom in our time to defend democracy, to stand up aggression abroad. and at home read part of something bigger than ourselves. >> for more on this cnn international diplomatic editor nic robertson joins us now live from london, nyc obviously president biden spending a full day really with his host. it's testament, i guess to the bond between these two countries. >> yeah, i think it is and it's testament in a way to how comfortable president biden fills in france has been that it will be probably, by the time he leaves expanded to leave on sunday, it had been there for five days. i don't think a us president in recent history spent so much time in one single country outside of the united states for, for some time this is a relationship that's important to president biden he needs strong allies and partners in europe. >> it's a relationship that's important to president macron. you who courted donald trump when he was president hosted him to dinner. >> i think it was in the eiffel tower so macron has always been careful to try to have a strong working on solid relationship with us president's, particularly now, britain is outside of the european union. france's it is one of the strongest partners, if you will, that the united states can look to to have influence in brussels within the european union there are differences, of course, between the two countries, but today, we'll be full of sort of ceremony and the symbolic nature of that relationship attending a ceremony at the de triomphe for a parade, dan to the elysee palace are working lunch and then back for a state dinner at the lee say palace in the evening. so this really is the french de, the french president, laying on the best of what france has to offer to visiting world leaders president biden is really getting the treat at the french today nick, yeah, as we know, over these last few days, present, button really has been front and center on the world stage during this this trip to commemorate d-day what impact will this have on us foreign policy, particularly on the wars in ukraine and gaza well when you talk about gaza, there are obvious differences between president macrons position and president biden's position. a stark contrast can be seen when the international criminal court, the icc, called for the request for arrest warrants for prime minister netanyahu so and the hamas leaders united states, condemned that even there was talk from within the united states of the challenge to the icc but what we heard from france, which is a signature signatory to the rome statute, which supports the icc. what the icc is doing. and if there was an arrest warrant for prime minister netanyahu, if he was to go to france, then the french will be obliged to arrest him. if that was to happen so the french said that they supported the move by the icc. so clearly, president biden and macron the sea differently on israel france is much more forward leaning. i wanted to see a sea as far in gaza, but it supports the united states position that calling for an independent palestinian state are recognizing an independent palestinian stay right now is not the right course of action. and on ukraine as well president macron is more forward leaning down the united states. he wants to form a coalition of countries that will send international military trainers. military trainers into ukraine praying nato try to train ukrainian soldiers. know nato nation has done this. at least publicly, yet, and this is much more than the united states wants to do when macron has taught about this in the policy united states has been very careful to say no. that's not where we are on this. >> so will it how will it change in shape that? >> will macrons going to do is back as the push the united states forward, but we know that president biden is constrained not just by his own worldview, but by domestic politics at home. he is unlikely to take a strong position that france wants on the war in gaza. and he's going to be very cautious about how he approaches involving us troops, potentially on the ground in ukraine, the domestic appetite for that this is perhaps not in the same place as domestic appetite and frances robinson that joining us from london, many thanks well, back in the us, mr. biden faces mounting pressure from within his own administration to change you as policy over the israel hamas war, cnn's kali atwood has more almost a dozen us officials who have resigned in protest of the biden administration's approach to the israel-hamas war. i want us to abide by our own laws. there's a real disconnect between what we and usaid are saying and every humanitarian agency is saying why should the rest of the world look to is as a leader, are banding together to explore how to use their voices effectively from the outside. it's kind of like an underground railroad. when i was having questions about when it seemed like i cannot work on this anymore but what do i do? >> stacy gilbert, who worked at the state department for more than 20 years. so she turned to members of the group when she was considering resigning. now she wants to help those who are fighting the system from within if we can be a resource to help others find their voice find a way to try to affect some policy change that would be useful. gilbert and the others who have left the us government in protest, like alec smith resigned from usaid last month, are also in public events and statements to shed light on all they've seen. >> know that i'm no longer at usa and i can speak publicly and loudly about what is actually happening on the ground in gaza and i can try to get attention pointed towards me, but people who are suffering there now gilbert's resignation came after her office at the state department, which focuses on global humanitarian crises, found that israel was impeding the delivery of humanitarian aid into gaza only for the final version of the report to say that israel was not to blame what are the implications of a report like this for the us government globally? >> to say it undermines our credibility is an understatement and for this report to say, conditions in gaza are dating dress, and these organizations don't have the capacity is just patently false. it is absolutely dangerous and it is difficult to do the work burke but these organizations can do it. they are not being allowed to do it the state department says it stands by its final report. we want to hear their opinions. we want to hear the expertise that they bring to bear, but ultimately it is the president, the secretary, other senior officials that make the decisions about what the policy of the united states out of beep. but gilbert says that many of her colleagues still working on the biden administration's policy and are seeing the death toll of innocent palestinians rise. >> harberger, same frustrations and continue urging policy changes from within. >> if i were the only one who thought this way, i would stay in the government. but you're confident they'll continue to have slowly absolutely i will i will be a voice for them on the outside, but i really am. i am determined to do all i can help from the outside because it's it's very, very hard doing this on inside. >> now, these warmer officials say they expect resignations and descend from within to continue. and one thing we'll be watching to see is if the pressure that president biden and his administration are putting on prime minister benjamin netanyahu to come to a ceasefire agreement, can do anything to quell this mounting descent, this mounting frustration, but from our conversations with these former officials, it would actually take the biden administration cutting off the flow of us weaponry to israel in order to do that kylie atwood, cnn, the state department will that frustration is being fueled by reports that are coming out of gaza. >> it seems daily. the director of rafah's kuwaiti hospitals is to workers there were killed and five others wounded by an idf strike last month kuwait hospital was forced to close after continuous israeli strikes, cnn has reached out to the idf for comment. well, the coming hours could be crucial for israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu. he's facing pressure from the united states to accept a ceasefire and hostage release agreement. now it came member of his war cabinet could quit. benny gantz has threatened to leave the cabinet and the government. and he says, he'll take his party with him. >> well, meanwhile, the united nations is adding the israeli military, hamas, and palestinian islamic jihad to a list of groups that harm children the un secretary general's spokesman says the list will be presented to the security council next week gaza's ministry of hills sysml than 15,000 palestinian children have been killed in israel. >> hamas war israel denies deliberately targeting civilians cnn senior international correspondent has been weighed him and joins us now live from beirut and ben, let's start with that ultimatum by benny gantz word is that the united states is trying to get gantz to stay. what more you learning? >> yes. well, he last month has said that on the 8th of june today, he would resign if benjamin netanyahu did not come out with some sort of post-war plan for gaza. well, that hasn't happened. it's 8 june and it is expected that it's evening and around the 8:00 p.m. a. local time, he will be giving a press conference and all indications from the israeli media is that he will indeed carry through with his threat. now, what does this mean? what his party is actually not a member of netanyahu's code collision, which has 64 out of the 120 seats in the knesset. so it's not like netanyahu's government is going to collapse but good gantz's considered to be sort of one of the adults in the room and experienced military figure who was chief of staff for the israeli army later at defense minister, he is someone who is perhaps according to these ready media, trying to keep the government on an even he'll pull him out and that means sort of that sort of level of control goes and netanyahu will be under the pressure more pressure from the extremist ministers in his cabinet but fundamentally for instance, guns does not support the creation of a palestinian state he does not support the idea of palestinian authority, going into gaza to administer it in the post-war phase. so basically, the difference between netanyahu and gun on tone, not necessarily the actual action on the ground node guns has been in favor of some sort of rapid end, to this war, we have now beginning the ninth month of this war. netanyahu doesn't seem to be quite as eager for that but the end of the day, i think the expectation is the war will continue. netanyahu's made it clear that despite the 31 may biden peace proposal, that his goal is the complete destruction of hamas difficult if not impossible, as that maybe anna and ben the un's designation of israel as a state that harms children the israelis are incense to tell us about the announcement and this reaction well every year the united nations puts out a report on entities and country he's harm children in war. >> and now israel joins saudi arabia, afghanistan, the democratic republic of congo, hamas islamic jihad, sudan, syria, yemen, and isis on that list. as you mentioned in the introduction israel has, according to the ministry of health in gaza, killed more than 15,000 children. it's a lot of children and certainly what we're seeing on our screens, what we're hearing from the ground is yes, many children have been killed as a result of this war in gaza, where the death toll is approaching 40,000. and therefore it's not necessary it's essentially a surprise. it was a surprise to the israelis, the chief of staff of the un secretary general, antonio guterres, called the israel kylian vasodilate to the un, to inform him before this announcement was made, the israeli investor recorded video recorded that conversation and described the israeli army as the most moral army in the world. now, this is something that the israelis have repeated for decades, but certainly this war, in particular brings that claim. in 2000 15,000 children certainly is a huge number and wait a min, joining us from beirut. thank you the secret service is preparing for massive pro-palestinian demonstrations in washington dc today, putting up extra fencing to protect the white house. >> they've also blocked off access to the white house gates service agent till cnn. they're expecting up to 12,000 protesters. us president joe biden will not be at the white house since he's attending that state visit in france? >> we are getting word of a new russian strikes on ukraine as the french president spills out, the timeframe, the starting to train 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