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this is cnn breaking news. hello and welcome to our viewers here in the united states and all around the world. i m michael holmes. well, from a pandemic to pandemonium, right now in cities across the u.s., the health crisis that has consumed almost every aspect of life for months now, is being upstaged by a social crisis. one that has been simmering for generations. protestors, nationwide, have been expressing pain and anger over the death of an unarmed, african-american man. his name was george floyd, who died in police custody earlier this week in minneapolis, minnesota. now, the violent protests there last night exploded across the country today. from washington to new york, atlanta, and detroit. and to dallas, denver, los angeles, san jose, and more. a few of those demonstrations turning very ugly, with people
setting fires, damaging property, and hurling objects at police. some of that destruction happened right here, at cnn s world headquarters. this day of rage, coming as prosecutors in minnesota announce the first charges related to floyd s death. fired minneapolis police officer derek chauvin is now charged with third-degree manslaughter. you might find the following documents disturbing. the charging document says he had his knee on floyd s neck for more than eight minutes. even though floyd repeatedly said i couldn t breathe. the document said floyd was unresponsive for almost three minutes before chauvin removed his knee from his neck. anticipates charges for the other officers as well and new video you see now shows the
video from a different angle. and might shed more light on the extent of their involvement. you see three officers leaning on his body there. now, friday night, there were some very tense moments in minneapolis between police and protestors. earlier, our chris cuomo asked cnn sara sidner if perhaps police were lining up on one minneapolis street to distract growing groups of people. have a listen. it is not a distraction. there are a couple hundred, i think, officers that have come this way. they have already told the crowd that this is an unlawful assembly. just like you heard kyung talking about. except for here, there was a curfew that was supposed to start at 8:00 that they haven t been enforcing. now, they ve been enforcing. here s what s happening. as they advance street by street, the protestors then back up and set up a barricade. they are using whatever they can. right now, it s trash cans. they set things on fire to try and put something between themselves and the officers. they pick up rocks. they throw them at the officers. the officers then return,
usually, with some sort of teargas or shooting rubber bullets. we have seen people get injured from the rubber bullets. and then, officers will start to advance again. the crowd backs up. and then, you see this scenario, literally, street by street, we are watching this. now, we are about three blocks from the fifth precinct. you see there? you see there? someone throwing a rock. now, if you wait a bit, you will start seeing you will start seeing the teargas and the rubber bullets and, you know, the rubber bullets have been flying by us. and the teargas has been coming in between us. but people will start coming up. and we have heard people here say, look, we are not going to stop fighting about this right now because they don t feel like they ve ever been heard enough. and now, they ve unleashed they ve just unleashed all emotions to try and deal with this. so the police, though, from their perspective, they don t want to see any more destruction. we are now in a regular
neighborhood, chris. let me look around just a tiny bit and go around the fires. we are in a neighborhood with people s homes. like, this isn t in the same area where you were seeing things go down in the third precinct. we are now backed up into a neighborhood, where folks live. we see we see some elderly folks looking out the window with their phones recording. but these are homes here. and what these guys have not done anything to the homes, they have stayed in the street. and their focus is directly on the police. who have made a move. they are now just stopped about three blocks from the fifth precinct. and every now and then, you see that bright light. they will shine a bright light. and then, you may see some teargas coming from there as well. every time someone comes up to throw a rock, that s where you are seeing this cat-and-mouse game here. and then police are returning fire with teargas and rubber bullets. sara sidner reporting there. as we said, this violence has been going on in many different
places, around the country, including los angeles. our kyung lah is there and we join her now. the latest from where you are, kyung, it is, what, 11:00 p.m. there? and things were heating up earlier. bring us up to date. i just want to give you a sense of where i am right now. you can hear all the sirens. you can see all the police. and i want you to take a look at what s happening over here. these these are officers who are staging. what we have a se ve seen throu evening are police officers staging and then moving into intersections, trying to break up crowds of protestors. the protests, initially, when they started, they were trying to block freeways. they were verbally confronting police officers. and then, as the hours went on, we saw more violence. you ve seen stores looted. a starbucks. a dining a restaurant. a liquor store. a clothing store.
and these are just what we saw. a subway. and so what police are trying to do, at this point, is that the lapd has to clear back up a little bit. okay. so what we re going to to follow police officer orders and back away. what they are trying to do is to clear this area, and to clear different parts of los angeles because the protestors have decided to not leave. and after sorry and after the violence and the vandalism, the this was declared an unlawful assembly. there have been at least two los angeles police officers who have been injured. they went to the hospital. there were rocks being thrown at police cars. we ve seen a number of police officer vehicles that have bchb
spr been spray painted and the windows smashed. so at this point, they re simply trying to clear the streets. and you can see how they ve made a formation here. when they come across a crowd, michael, they use flash bangs to try to disperse that crowd. we have not seen any protestors injured. and i, personally, have not seen any police officers injured. but the report that we are gating from the los angeles police department is that at least two police officers have, indeed, been injured this evening. michael. have you been able to get a sense of the size of the protests there in l.a.? and what have the protestors been telling you? it s it s very difficult. i i don t think i could give you an accurate number because what i ve seen is that there are larger gatherings of protestors from our affiliate aerial pictures. but i ve only been in crowds that appear to be smaller. and there have been a number of groups. it appears that part of the police tactic is to not allow a large congregation of them to
merge into one. and so, they have broken up into these smaller groups. and i ve been among the smaller groups. so it s very, very difficult to tell how big they are. as far as what they re telling us, you can hear it in their chants. they are talking about justice. that they are saying that there will not be peace, without justice. but, also, if you start to look at who s in the crowd, it s a diverse crowd. it appears that not everyone is motivated by, you know, civil rights or by expressing anger, just, at the news events. so it s very, very difficult to tell exactly what everyone is motivated by when they gather this evening. yeah. these protests not always monolithic. different groups, with different aims, and carrying out different actions. kyung lah, stay safe there. it is just after 11:00 p.m. on the west coast. we ll check in with you later. meanwhile, peaceful protests
turning violent literally just meters in here in atlanta outside the cnn center. and just a little while ago, the governor, declaring a state of emergency and deploying 500 members of the national guard. as i said, most much of the action happened just outside where i sit now, at the cnn center. a police car in front of this building was set on fire. windows were smashed. a lot of windows were smashed. and some buildings were looted, as well. the chaos continued well into the night. it continues as i speak now, just after 2:00 a.m., here on the east coast. police responded with teargas in some areas. our nick valencia was in the middle of the demonstrations. here is his report. reporter: what started as a peaceful demonstration didn t take long to turn violent. cnn center was one of the targets of the frustration of the demonstrators. they showed up here, in solidarity, with the demonstrations that have been
happening in minneapolis, hours after arriving here, though, at cnn center, they began breaking windows. throwing rocks. just look at some of the items that were being tossed towards the police line. in fact, our crew here, along with my photographer william walker and producer kevin conlin, were here as police had a standoff with demonstrators. that video you re witnessing, looking at now, it was intense, to say the least. this scene was chaotic. it was we saw officers at least two officers injured in clashes with demonstrators. look at these windows busted open by an individual who is using a skateboard to smash open the windows. and there was a point and a moment where it appeared as though the demonstrators might actually gain entrance into the cnn center. eventually, that crowd was dispersed by the police using teargas canisters. they were eventually able to pull the demonstration demonstrators back. but it did take hours before the unrest that we saw unfold in
downtown atlanta was finally clear from the streets. reporting at cnn center. i m nick valencia. let s get some perspective now from cedric alexander. he is a former police executive and past president of the national organization of black law executives. joins us from pensacola, florida. and appreciate you doing so. you were in law enforcement for 40 years. when when you talk to your former colleagues about what happened in minneapolis and what s happening around the country, what what do they tell you? well, we all are dismayed. we all are very hurt, if you will. very angry because, certainly, what we all observed happened on monday, may 24th, was we all consider a black eye to the profession. because those four men are not indicative of the men and women who are out there tonight that you see helping to control those streets and keep everyone safe and allow them to exercise their first-amendment right. but, we re going to get past this, too.
and we just hope that, as we continue in trying to deliver the type of service to the community that they so deserve, that what happened monday is certainly not in any kind of way indicative of the work that men and women do across this country. people are ashamed. and we certainly hope justice is explored, in a fair process for them. and it s no doubt in our mind that they re going the other three are going to be arrested. and due process will take place. but that type of behavior, the loss of life, the way that we observed it, it was cruel. it was mean. and it s not indicative of the profession. well, certainly. certainly, here in atlanta, there was remarkable restraint by police that, you know, i witnessed myself here at the cnn center. i mean, in in the broader
sense, you know, it s a problem bad actions by cops, some of course, just a very few. or is it a culture that s devolved in police forces? is there something engrained or systemic that needs to change? well, certainly, it can be systemic. look. you will always hear that there are a few bad apples in the bunch. and there is a lot of truth to that. the problem becomes, it s important having chief two cities myself in my career. it s important that we look inside our organizations, and from top to bottom. because if you can have four people, one that actually kill a man right in front of us. and the other three that stand there. that is suggestive for me of a larger systemic problem that may exist inside of minneapolis police department. so it becomes incumbent upon the leadership, that elected mayor, that chief, to look inside that organization because those types
of behaviors. if they could do what they did, on camera, in broad daylight, the question becomes is this indicative of past behavior, where there has been no cameras in dark? so we have to take a look inside of our organizations, and make sure that we don t allow those types of behaviors to exist and to sustain themselves. because it certainly does spoil the whole bunch. and and and people expect far more from their public-safety officials and they should. yeah. i think one other thing that is incredibly disturbing is the new detail that came out on friday about what this officer did and for how long he did it. it was nearly nine minutes with his knee on the neck of a handcuffed man, on the ground. more than two minutes with his knee on george floyd s neck, after he was apparently unconscious. all while bystanders are taping
with it and pleading with it. and the officer just didn t seem to care about that. i mean, what did you what did you make of that? i mean, it s a clear display, to anybody that s sitting out here and watching it, looking, that was an individual that was an individual, who we are glad to say got arrested earlier today, who was very callous. has no empathy. no concern. no moral compass, whatsoever, about himself. a man is begging you to let him breathe, and you continued to choke him and rock him with your knee with an appearance that your hand is in your pocket. that is unspeakable. and the american people, and people around the globe, watched it. and if you look at those folks that are out across our cities, across this country tonight, that s anger. they re mad. they feel that they have no other recourse. them doing what they re doing,
tearing up property is wrong. there is no excuse for that. but we got to do better than this. we re much far greater country than this. we re much far better than this. but, for those types of attitudes and that type of behavior to exist, in any police department in this country, anywhere, cannot be acceptable to anyone. and policemen and women who work with people like that and suspect and been around them. carry on that type of behavior. you better do it. yeah. yourself and your lifestyle and could possibly be criminally yourself. cedric alexander. really appreciate it. we re right out of time. appreciate you coming on. spending time with us at this late hour. thank you so much. thank you for having me. all right. quick break now. when we come back, we ll get you up to speed on the coronavirus pandemic. yeah. that s still going on. new york, which had more cases and deaths than many countries, is moving to reopen. we ll also have some big
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welcome back. a quick update on our top story right now. the fired minneapolis police officer seen on video with his knee on an unarmed black man s neck has been charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter. for the killing of george floyd. the other three officers who were there, as well, and were involved could also be charged. that hasn t happened just yet. the case, of course, inciting pain and a lot of anger across the u.s. georgia s governor activating the national guard after protests in atlanta turned violent. the twin cities of minneapolis and st. paul where the protests exploded last night, are under curfew now. several people there were arrested near a police precinct for ignoring dispersal orders. meanwhile, the number of coronavirus cases and deaths continue to climb. according to johns hopkins university, there are more than
360,000 deaths worldwide. the united states, leading the world, by far, with more than 102,000 deaths. most of those deaths, along the u.s. east coast. new york, of course, was the epicenter of the coronavirus pandemic in the u.s. and the death toll there, more than 29,000 people alone. but, now, the city, poised to reopen in a couple of weeks. well done, new york city. once the epicenter for the pandemic, new york city about to reach a major milestone. it s set to reopen in less than two weeks. june 8th, we have to be smart. again, this is not a happy days here again, it s over. we have to be smart. the city says it will monitor key data, daily, in phase one. and if the numbers reach a certain threshold, it could trigger restrictions again. on monday, five regions of the state are set to move into the next phase, where hairdressers, business offices, and retail can open with some limits.
like new york, 24 other states in the country are seeing a downward trend in the seven-day average of new coronavirus cases. in washington, d.c., hair salons reopened today, by appointment. and residents could enjoy dining out, again. but outdoor only. today is the first day of phase one or what i like to call stay at home lite. georgia, which continues to hold steady, will take the major step of reopening bars and nightclubs, with social distancing. still, there is growing concern about the rising cases in 15 states. primarily, in the southeast, like arkansas, which saw its highest single-day increase of community spread coronavirus cases thursday. the situation is critical in alabama, where cases are doubling. two weeks after the state started to reopen. icu beds are filling fast, causing shortages in some cities. the least prepared to deal with this kind of surge, have the least capacity really to do this. and this is what we have been warning about for months now.
in washington and california, where the first cases in the country were reported, both states are seeing cases spike. california, just recently feeling its biggest jump since the pandemic started. when you are testing 20 to 30 fold more individuals, you are going to have more positive tests. that s an inevitability. and a grim prediction from the cdc as we move into another month of this pandemic. the agency, forecasting the death toll could surpass 123,000 deaths in the u.s., in the next three weeks. back here, in new york, if those numbers continue to drop. if that june 8th reopening date actually sticks, then we could see construction coming back. manufacturing. curbside retail pickup in new york city. the city says it s actually working with business owners to ease this transition. now, throughout this pandemic, president donald trump has threatened to end the
relationship between the world health organization and the u.s. well now, he says, it s happening. here are the reasons he s giving for the move. reasons that have drawn criticism, from both sides of the aisle. china has total control over the world health organization. despite only paying $40 million per year, compared to what the united states has been paying, which is approximately $450 million a year. we have detailed the reforms that it must make, and engage with them directly. but they have refused to act. joining me now is cnn s international diplomatic editor, nic robertson, live from london. i mean, this decision to withdrawal from the w.h.o. in the middle of a pandemic, i mean, from a health perspective, many saying ill-advised because the u.s. is doing so poorly with the virus. but also, if china s influence
on the w.h.o., didn t that increase just increase? yeah. i think when the united states look at president trump s actions here, this is a conclusion they are going to come to. this is enabling china, rather than disabling it because their voices at the w.h.o. will be lessened by the fact that the united states voice isn t being heard. the american medical association calls the action senseless. says there will be significant, harmful repercussions. the infectious diseases society says that, you know, the virus doesn t respect international borders. doesn t respect political positions. that everyone needs to work together. and, to that point, the w.h.o., yesterday, actually opened a new portal for sharing information about coronavirus, about therapeutics, about vaccines. about about data. and the the notion that the united states allies can get behind its position, overall, on
china and can get behind president trump s position medically here, it just doesn t hold water. so the united states becomes more isolated. china doesn t necessarily get a bigger say at the w.h.o. it s still being criticized by, you know, the united states allies for not providing enough information in the early days about what was happening with coronavirus in china. but, by default, china s voice gets stronger. absent the united states and and a united states that doesn t have its allies at its side. so it does seem counterproductive in diplomatic terms, michael. indeed. nic, thank you. nic robertson in london there for us. we are going to take a quick break here. when we come back, much more on our top story. a night of rage in cities across the u.s. set off by the death of an unarmed african-american man, at the hands of police in minneapolis. we ll be right back.


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we want to take you to minnesota, where the governor tim waltz is speaking live. let s have a listen. our local partners in minneapolis, st. paul, and our joint powers agreements are are assisting. the situation is incredibly dangerous. the situation is fluid. it is dynamic. i would, first of all, thank all minnesotans, who chose to protect our cities, who chose to protect our neighbors and stay home, thank you for that. to all of the first responders who are out there, from firefighters to national guard, to to line crews to utilities workers who are out there to keep us safe, i want to thank you for that. law enforcement is responding the best they can.
in this situation. we ll get you all of the numbers that are out there. i want to say, first of all, i, myself, can fully understand the rage. i spoke, this evening, to george floyd s siblings, quite extensively. i understand that rage. we ve talked about it. we we understand what has to happen. what s going on out there right now is not that. the wanton destruction and, specifically of businesses that took generations to build, are being torn down. all of those infrastructures of civil society and the things that make our city great, which which lends me to believe, as we look at this, the disenfranchisement that went with what we witnessed with with george s death is one thing. but the absolute chaos. this is not grieving and this is not this is not making a
statement that that we fully acknowledge needs to be fixed. this is life-threatening, dangerous to the most well-qualified forces that are out there facing this. so i want to acknowledge that. i m deeply concerned with the people who you you need to go home. you need to go home. the purpose of this and we re seeing it spread up across the country, is making it more difficult to get to the point where we can deal with these issues. our neighbors are afraid. people are watching this across here and they want to know what s happening. we promised you today, and i want to thank mayor frey for the leadership today. and i think the issue of coordination and and communicating together. this is the largest civilian deployment in minnesota history that we have out there today. and, quite candidly, right now, we do not have the numbers. we cannot arrest people when we re trying to hold ground because of the sheer size, the dynamics, and the wanton violence that s coming out there. colonel langer spoke about this
often. seasoned folks who have deployed overseas and seen this and now seeing this here in our neighborhoods. we will talk about this and ways and resources we have left. but, to put this into perspective, the force that we have out there now is about three times larger than the one in the 60s, which is the largest during the race riots and they are out there right now. and the capacity to be able to do offensive actions and they are out there doing that arresting the folks that we can. but, as you ve seen, there s already shots being fired back at our people. this arson that is taking place puts many people at risk. our firefighters are specifically and very open to target and minneapolis fire has been responding heroically. and i tell you all, the citizens, the response time is fast as we want to get it. and that responsibility, as i said, today for coordination, lies with us. i will take responsibility for the underestimating the wanton destruction and the size of this crowd. we have deployed a force that i think as we set down together and talked about, would have, in
any other civilian military or civilian police operation, worked. but the terrifying thing is you have aheard people who have seen this and myself looking at this, it resembles more of a military operation at times now, especially ringleaders moving place to place. so i would ask all of us to, again, go home to protect our assets. understanding that the priority of this mission today and the plan to do it was to deploy the assets that we had. to work in coordination, and beef up what we had to do, very, very quickly. in command and control of those, put a joint force together to, first and foremost, protect life, followed by protecting property. followed by restoring order. and the issue, as i ve said this time and time again, whether it was something that now seems so simple to do stay-at-home orders about covid, is to try and get the situation under control to protect all those things. but there is a compact that goes in civilized society that you
have to have social buy in. and so, with the elements that are out there now, they are stopping semis by blocking roads and then raiding what s in them. this is not about george s death. this is not about inequities that were real. this is about chaos being caused. and so, my responsibility on this and i do want to thank the mayor. executing a plan is very difficult. and i think the frustrations we all feel certainly isn t aimed at the mayor. he is performing dmadmirably. the same thing with mayor carter of executing together. this is an operation that has never been done in minnesota. the the scope of this has now reached globally or excuse me, across the nation. we were in contact today and had an extensive conversation. general jensen, commissioner harrington and i, and general millie, chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, to talk about assets and ways we can help to assess the situation as they are
seeing it on the ground. and to put those things into a plan to operate today. that plan has not changed and our folks are out there, as we speak, right now, doing this. our intention is still do those very same things. protect the lives of minnesotans, try and protect as much property as we can, and try and restore order on the streets. i have to do that in a way that protects those who are out there doing that. to ask them to go in a forward motion to try and get some of these people, they are well-coordinated. they will flank these groups. they will do everything possible to cause that destruction. so, with that being said, i m going to have mayor frey come up. a and we ll talk about what the next steps are because i want to be clear. we re about 72 hours into this. the mayor s quick action of activating the national guard, i believe protected as much as we could. i think, now, as we think about this and we re this far into this, it seems almost impossible, two days ago, from an accusation. we went today, planning tonight, for what tomorrow is going to look like because i think minnesotans need to recognize,
and we clearly recognize this, what you see tonight will r replicate tomorrow unless we change something that we are doing. the execution of the plan and the quality of the first responders who are out there. you have you have veterans of combat tours overseas. you have state patrol who are seasoned. you have local police and firefighters, who have been doing this for decades. and are the best at what they do. they re just not used to doing it. where you have wanton destruction. and the challenge that we face, and the challenge that the mayor faces. we have to do it with ensuring the safety of those people. ensuring there are legitimate people who want to try and express their grief. the folks who are out there right now want nothing more than entice into conflict. entice something that sets this off even further. entices our folks to get in a situation where we start to lose life. and so, that adds the complexity to it.
if it were as simple as just push them and move them back, that would be one thing. they cannot do that. so i want to just reiterate that minnesotans deserve a plan to try and get this. we need to assess that, with all of the tools that we have, with the experience that we ve seen in this. we are certainly in contact with our neighboring states and cooperations, as well as the federal government to think about the best way to do this. the situation tomorrow will be increasingly more difficult because this has spread to other cities in a serious way, which makes the challenge of civil order even that much more difficult. but i do want to and just clarify, to my friend and someone who s led in this and a mayor who should never be put in a position that he was put in. to try and respond. there are a limited number of resources that any city has. and this force that s out there right now bent on this is simply overwhelming what we have on the ground. and so, at this point, it becomes more of a hold what we have and do the best we can.
so i want to thank you, mayor frey, i want to thank you you for basically being up for 72 hours. and, every minute, picking up the phone and continuing to adapt to the situation. so, mayor. thank you, governor. and thank you for the command and control today and the partnership. minneapolis, i know you are reeling due to lack of sleep and heartbreak for seeing the events over the last couple of days. i m reeling, too. we, as a city, are so much more than this. we, as a city, can be so much better than this. there is no honor in burning down your city. there is no pride in looting
local businesses that have become institutions of a neighborhood. these are institutions that people are counting on. especially, during a time of pandemic. they are counting on grocery stores to get food. they re counting on pharmacies to get medicine. they are counting on their local bank to get cash. if you care about your community, ya got to put this to an end. it needs to stop. you re not getting back at the police officer that tragically killed george floyd. by looting a town. you re not getting back at anybody. if you have a friend or a family member that is out right now,
call them. tell them to come home. it is not safe. it is not right. if we care about our city, let s do the right thing now. we are doing absolutely everything we can. our firefighters are hauling around the city, putting out fires, as quickly as they possibly can. our police officers are doing everything to secure corridors, to make sure that the looting stops. and to try and prevent these necessary precincts, which are so essential to safety. right now, chief and chief frietel are in minneapolis, doing everything they possibly can. as i said in the beginning, i am reeling. and i know each and every one of you is, too.
let s do right by our city. let s do right by our communities. and let s put ourselves in a position, five and ten years from now, where we look back at this day. and we recognize that this was the point where we decided to make a change. i know, in my heart, that we can do it. because i know, in my heart, that minneapolis is everything that we believe it to be. thank you. thank you, mayor. john. commissioner john harrington. minister department of public safety. yesterday, we put together a unified command structure. a unified command. bringing together minneapolis
police department, st. paul police department, sheriffs departments, minnesota state patrol, dnr, and general jensen s men and women of the minnesota national guard. we created a plan that brought together one of the largest civil police forces that we have ever seen in the state of minnesota. larger, frankly, than we had for the republican national convention, even. with well in excess of 2,500 officers total committed to the effort of keeping the peace. we had a very clear mission. the governor was crystal clear and the mayors have been crystal clear that our mission was to keep the peace. to maintain order. and to stop lawless behavior. by 8:00 last night, we began to see that we were going to have to operate on multiple different
fronts of criminal behavior. with reports from st. paul that they were actively engaged. reports that we had individuals that were breaching the minnesota freeways around 35 w. that we had crowds of in excess of 2,000 in the lake street area, east of hiawatha. crowds of hundreds in the area of lake street. and crowds of a thousand or more in downtown. we reassessed the assets that we had. the personnel that we had. and redeployed to try and be as at as many of those as we could be at. but we recognize that we simply did not, even with the numbers that i m talking about, have enough officers and personnel to meet all of those missions safely and successfully.
we picked missions based on our capacity, and those missions focused on downtown off nicolete and also focused on the precinct area of nicolette and lake. we continue infrastructures around other places that we believed, through good intel, were being targeted and and would have been destroyed. and we have continued to hold those places of critical infrastructure, even as we speak. at the nicolette and lake area, forces were able to rally around that area. they were able to disperse a crowd and make, what i am told is, in the neighborhood of about 50 arrests. we have a mobile field force of in excess of 300.
larger than the mobile field force that we utilized last night, to clear the hiawatha and east lake street area. and they have they have been actively engaged. but the level of resistance that we have seen tonight has increased exponentially. we have had officers shot at. we have had what looks to be like improvised munitions that have been targeted toward the officers. we ve had officers injured. and we are in continuing to push that crowd on east of hiawatha with the attempt to try and do what we did last night, which was to move them off of the streets and to restore order there. but we recognize that, as we do that, continuing to hold the area the nicolette and lake and try and maintain order in
downtown. that we will need far more officers and far more national guard resources than we currently have. we have created a request for the national guard to substantially increase the number of national guard officers that would be available. and we have reassessed our strategy in terms of our ability to mobilize mobile field forces that have been effective in moving against what is now an armed and more entrenched group of protestors. and what i would really operate and say more that they are an entrenched group of rioters. we have had officers that have been injured. none seriously, at this point. but we have not given up our efforts to try and clear those streets. we will not give up our efforts to clear those streets. we are committed to restoring
order in minneapolis. helping st. paul maintain order. and we re getting ready for what will be one of the largest crowds that we have ever heard and that we recognize that we will be at the center of a, not just statewide event, not just a national event but, what is now looking to be like an international event tomorrow. in that same area that we re holding right now, in the area around nicolette and lake. this time, i ask general john jensen from minnesota national guard to provide his comments. good morning. major john jensen. just really quickly, i would like to cover some quick operations that we are involved in.
currently, in minneapolis. we are currently have escorted and are supporting three minnesota i m sorry minneapolis fire department teams on fires. chicago and lake. lake and park. and nicolette and 31st street. so we continued our support to the minneapolis fire department, that we began yesterday. we also have over 100 soldiers currently at nicolette mall between hyatt hotel and grand street, supporting traffic-control points, in support of our state highway patrol. this morning at approximately 12:30, i believe, in cooperation and consultation with colonel matt langer, the commander of the minnesota state patrol, the governor authorized the
minnesota national guard to increase our strength. the initial request was for 1,000 additional soldiers to support the department of public safety and our state highway patrol. governor waltz and i have looked at different ways that we re going to mobilize this force. and currently, what we re going to use are units that who would normally report to their normal training this weekend. my belief is that we will exceed the 1,000 mark. as the governor mentioned, this will be the largest deployment inside the state of minnesota in history. at the conclusion of tomorrow, i believe that we will have over 1,700 soldiers in support of the department of public safety, the city of minneapolis, and the city of st. paul. you may have you may have
seen or heard that, this evening, the president directed the pentagon to put units of united states army on alert to possible operation in minneapolis. while we were not consulted with, as it relates to that, i do believe it s a prudent move to provide other options available for the governor, if the governor elects to use those resources. so, at this time, governor, completes my comments. thank you. thank you, jensen. thank you, commissioner. the situation now is, is the the minnesotans who maybe don t understand this of the force structure we have. we some of this, of course, classified. but where minnesota soldiers are deployed overseas and in support of missions. and and that is a limited force because the national guard is what it is in states. and when we talk about calling up the national guard, it s not
like pulling something off a she shelf and it s there. this is a human being, citizen soldier who is working across the state and they get called in. they need to gather equipment and make their things, put their things in order. report to their armory. staff up. and start understanding where their mission is. so it is it is not as easy as it might seem. these deployment levels are reaching deployment levels when we deploy overseas in support of operation and during freedom and some of those types of operations. so the the mission remains the same. to restore order. to protect life and property to the best we can. we are in close coordination, other than this this move by the white house to do that. and i agree with general jensen. as i spoke with president trump the other night, i think it is prudent to have them ready for us to exhaust all resources that we need. and, again, general millie was was quite extensive and we spent quite some time thinking about where those
assets are. and they also have to now understand what our federal assets are, into an ever-widening situation when we re losing police precincts in brooklyn and and and some of this unrest spreading across the country. so what i would say, minnesotans, once again, an unprecedented threat to our state. a tragedy that was the catalyst for this. that has morphed into something much different. the challenges of protecting people who wanton destruction is their goal, no regard to life or property, and no sense of civic pride of who we are. that s what these folks are up against. in in a quite dangerous environment. so i would, once again, thank minnesotans who stayed home. thanks for looking out for one another. our goal is to do everything that we can to start to restore order. and and working with our partners on this. and as i said today, once this became a unified command starting last evening, that s the state of minnesota with me.
with that, don. governor, for the second night in a row, hundreds of thousands, or maybe millions. all right. there we ve been listening to the governor, tim waltz there, speaking about the situation in minnesota. he says he can fully understand the rage on the streets. but laments the damage the wanton violence, he said, life-threatening, dangerous behaviors, he talked of shots being fired at law enforcement. and said that firefighters are vulnerable. and he said that what he is seeing on the streets resembles more of a military operation than a police operation, in terms of scale and the tactics required to deal with what he said were organized groups, with leadership who want to entice authorities into conflict. thanks for being with us this hour. i m michael holmes. don t go away. i ll be right back, with more news, after the break. the return of drifting


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with jake tapper, we days at for on cnn wildfires i have covered a lot of them. they are fast and deadly disasters. cnn s original series, violet earth with lives schreiber takes a look at if there is a way to protect homes and families. here s a look paradise, california burned from an ember attack, from a plume miles away from paradise this is like 9:00 in the morning and its pitch black given the smoke, it almost appeared as though it was the middle of the night and it was snowing ash and embers began to rain down we re in the middle the stapes, dan here like that i don t know to say if anywhere the fire was moving at a football field per second what in the way it did that, of course, was by jumping ahead and starting these fires they would immediately take hold and rapidly grow into its hundred acre, 200 acres spotfire that was happening all through town that resulted in the town starting to burn all at once, 30,000 people were trying to be evacuated while being overran by fire. go if i were to turn around to go north this is bad the cnn original series, violet earth with lives schreiber, heirs tonight at nine eastern right here on cnn hello? everyone, and welcome to cnn this morning it is sunday, june 9. i m amara walker. i m victor blackwell. thank you for joining us. here s what we re following this morning for israelis taken hostage by hamas, are back with their families after being rescued by the idf. but the operation of free them left more than 200 palestinians did the new details about the rescue effort and the impact it could have on ongoing ceasefire talks. president biden is wrapping up his visit to france after being honored with a state dinner yesterday, what he had to say about the state of the us relationship with this oldest ally balloons carrying trash loudspeakers the layering propaganda and thousands of flash drives full of k-pop music but for tat, between two neighboring countries, plus water safety experts say the color of your child s bathing suit it could be one of the most important decisions you make. this summer. the ones you might want to avoid as next we are learning new details about the rescue of four hostages from a refugee camp in gaza. but there are questions about the israeli operation to get the hostages back, as well as the number of palestinians reportedly killed. now, the four former hostages are set to be in good medical condition this morning after more than eight months in captivity, they were taken to hospitals for medical exams and to have reunions with their families israel carried out heavy airstrikes and shelling and central gaza during this hostage operation, one witness called it, held on earth saw lots of juno s increasing bombardment started hitting everywhere i must have missed something we never witnessed before maybe 150 rockets fell and less than ten minutes while we were running away no more fell on the market i m laying on her children torn apart and scattered in the streets they wiped out nuseirat. it is hell on earth hospital officials in gaza raised the number of palestinian casualties. now to at least 200 274 palestinians killed nearly 700 injured. the idf says the number killed was less than 100. cnn cannot verify the numbers from either side. we ve also learned new information about u.s. involvement in the operation. there were no as they re called, boots on the ground, but officials say us forces provided planning and intelligence support to israel well, let s be or to speak with elliott, god-given, who s been following the story from london. le, what do we know about the rescued hostages and how they are doing i m or as you said physically, according to the hospital authorities in israel, they re in pretty decent shape. the hostages and missing families forum says that they are in their words are relatively good psychological and physical state, but they are carrying out further further medical tests. and of course, after being captivity for eight months are also be more psychological tests and it will no doubt take time for them to ria climate ties back to their normal lives in terms of the hostages themselves i suppose first is noa argamani, 25-year-old young woman who became are almost the face of the october the seventh atrocities as she was filmed, being sped away on the back of a motorbike by militants pleading for her life as her boyfriend was being frog marched away by militants at the same time, she also subsequently appeared in propaganda videos put out by hamas during her captivity. obviously, a very emotional reunion for her with her father. was also her further father s birthday on saturday as well, on top of that, they ve been a number of calls from her mother other who is also a chinese citizen. her mother pleading even with president biden to do everything that he could to bring her daughter home because she s suffering from terminal brain cancer and her dying wish. she said was to see her daughter back safe and sound in israel. she s now had that wish granted in terms of the other hostages, the other three hostages, rural man, there was shlomi ziv, he s a security guard he was been living on a mosh have an agricultural settlement for 17 years with his wife, andrey kozlov at only just moved to israel a few months earlier. his family flew in from russia and then finally, there is our almog meir, jan 20 two-year-old. tragically, when the idf went to tell his father the news of his rescue, they found that his father had died on saturday itself. i m victor la. gucken. thank you. let s go now to cnn has been we d admin ben, tell us more about what we know about the operation well we. understand that the death toll at this point for that operation in the nuseirat camp in central gaza was 207 monday four with 898 wounded. that is the largest single death toll since the war began in gaza, or rather since the 10th of december. and that really underscores just how bloody this operation was. normally these operations take place under the cover of darkness it began at about 11:00 in the morning local time on a saturday where when many people were out and about shopping and whatnot. and as usual well, in gaza, there were children everywhere. the video we received from our cameramen inside the al-aqsa martyrs hospital shows there were dozens and dozens of people desperate for medical care. many of them women and children that the morgue was completely full and they would they were simply putting bodies on the ground outside the hospital, keep also keep in mind that because of the israeli operation in rafah in the southern part of the gaza strip, where according to the un, 1,100,000 people have left that area seeking safety elsewhere. many of them were in nuseirat, many of them were in central gaza when this operation went down. so there were many civilians and that explains perhaps partially why the death toll is so high amara, victor, then wiedemann in beirut. thank you, ben let s bring it now. aaron david miller, a former state department middle east negotiator and retired brigadier general mark kim. welcome to you both general, let me start with you. the latest numbers 200 274 killed multiples of that reportedly injured does that suggest to you that that s something did not go as planned or potentially there was a lack of a plan no not at all. for better or worse? i think it was intentional the way they conducted this operation probably the pandemonium that they created as part of the bombing within the nuseirat camp itself. they thought would actually make things to their advantage and it should say conducted this operation. so no, i think that they were very clear-eyed that israel is very clear-eyed about not only the tactics that they were going to be using, but also the consequence it would have as they conducted that, particularly brazen operation so when you say intentional use, am i understanding you right? that they knew that hundreds of people were going to die if the number from these medical officials in gaza is correct, and that hundreds would be injured. they knew that going in i think they took under consideration the amount of collateral damage and civilian deaths that would be caused by conducting a daylight operation in a occupied extremely busy city? yes. erin. so how does this then change the climate for the ceasefire potential? we know that the secretary of state is heading back this week into the region and the variables have changed. now with the rescue potentially emboldening netanyahu who benny gantz has not departed what now is the table set for blinken i mean, i think it validates the prime minister s narrative which i think it s unfortunate that the longer the work continues the more intelligence israelis gathering gaza, the greater the changes of the rescuing hostages. but keep in mind if you re carrying seven were now i m the eighth month of this war, nine month beginning next month. you have seven hostages were rescued hundred and 21 remain israelis believe maybe 46 were either killed on october 7. their bodies brought to gaza to trade or they died in captivity i think it does two things. number one, i think it is a certainly it was a day of hope for israelis who ve been living in sort of collective ptsd since october 7. but it puts a premium. it seems to me in a focus on hostages. and it also reminds the israelis, i think that the largest return of hostages november 105 can only come through negotiation and here s where i think there is a real problem because there are there s an irreconcilable set of objectives between israel and hamas. in this negotiation. if i were to make a prediction, i don t like doing it i think there is an opening perhaps but only for a phase one that is to say return of 2030 hostages to women, the elderly, the infirm in exchange for a six-week fire, they cease fire in return for palestinian prisoners and the surging because it ll be quiet of six weeks of quieting kazaa, which would be a win for the biden administration. i just don t see if victor right now the pathway out of this to end the war there is that increasing domestic pressure there were celebrations in the street and the afternoon at the report that these four hostages had been released and then protests in the evening calling for more and to prioritize bringing the rest of the hostages home. general to you. we know that the us offering the planning and intel support. can you be a little more specific based on like, what does that look like look, i think that there s a significant amount of intelligence that we can package in hand over to the israelis, whether it s the ince, the intelligence human, human intelligence satellite intelligence, image intelligence probably able to tap into the phone systems as well. all of those different types of intelligence sources provide more clarity to what s happening on the ground, more clarity on to the location of the hostages. and this was obviously one of those situations where probably primarily human intelligence provided by the israelis themselves located the site of the hostages. but i would suspect that the american intelligence added to engage in many cases. second, insert, third source validation of where their locations we re erin, does it matter that benny gantz has not left this war cabinet yet? he s not been effective in got the demands that he offered to netanyahu. those have not been fulfilled. how much does it matter whether he stays or goes? i mean, i think it matters, victor, but it s not determinative with respect to the knesset arithmetic. i mean, 120 seats in the israeli parliament, you need 60 plus one to govern. nothing. you have 64 and i think your strategy is very clear. the knesset goes into recess july 25th. he will not resume until a week to ten days. victor, before the us elections and i think that daniels was playing for time here. if he makes it through july 25th, we know he s coming to the united states to address congress besting churchill. there ll be the here what you ll address congress four times churchill, three on july 24. so i think benny gantz is an infix. you d like to remain in the government. he brings a sort of moderating hand, but he does not have the potential right now to bring down the government if he goes aaron david miller, general mark kim. it thank you both president joe biden as hailing the power of allies as he gets ready to wrap up his trip to france at the visit to the american in cemetery, honoring world war i troops lab report from paris. this next, plus north korea has sent more trash late and balloons to its southern neighbor how south korea plans to respond the increase in wildfires is exponential controllable with overwhelming consequences. the need to do something is urgent slightly with we have schreiber tonight denied on cnn what the biggest companies the liver is an exceptional customer experience. what makes it possible is 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president with an official state visit on saturday at the point of the visit was to show the close partnership between the two countries on global security issues and easing of past trade tensions that later today, before today returned to the states president biden and the first lady are expected to lay a wreath at the end marne american cemetery that is a cemetery that donald trump notably skipped visiting when he was president back in 2018 a cnn senior white house correspondent, kayla tausche, as live in perez. hi there, kayla. what else did president biden have to say about his trip good morning amara and victor last night, president biden thanked france for helping secure u.s. freedom in 17, 76 and said the us was returning the favor 170 years later at the end of world war to president biden also reiterating a mess such that he has had all week here in france that we re at an inflection point in history and that the actions that countries like the u.s. and france undertake right now will have repercussions for decades to come. now, the white house is also hoping for the president s actions to communicate in and of themselves back to american voters, back home. that is why it is so symbolic that president biden is visiting the end. martin sarah cemetery just a few hours outside of paris later today before he departs. because of what you mentioned at the top, that president trump did not visit that cemetery at the time citing weather concerns back in 2018 and coming under wide criticism for not doing that. so president biden has been trying to distinguish himself on matters where the military is concerned his campaign, releasing two ads slamming trump s record on the military and on defense concurrent with the visit this week. so this is yet another opportunity for biden to seek out an opportunity to make a contrast between himself and his gop opponent. and he s going to be doing that before he goes home later today, victor and amara okay. let s how she in paris, kayla, thank you so much. millions of americans feeling that inflation frustration could get some good news this week. and of course there was that very strong jobs report that showed more people are getting jobs. and there are higher wages will talk with the acting secretary of labor next on cnn this morning we can i voted buttons that remote kid. it s like your generation has evolved past traditional political symbols. and there s room for everyone yeah puke rainbows when taken now, adt professionally installs google nest products they re all set on this system. we should go with the most trusted name and home security as the intelligence of google, you have a home with no worries brought to you by adt. if you have chronic kidney disease, you can reduce the risk of kidney failure with bars sega because there are places we d like to be for seeker can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infection 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a year. i gotta get this deal. i know. faster wifi and savings? .i don t want to miss that. that s amazing doc. mobile savings are calling. visit xfinitymobile.com to learn more. doc? sign and make official start your will at trust and we ll dot com and make it count. this is a secret. war, secrets and spies tonight at ten on cnn closed captioning brought to you by rule or law. i kind of brands up to 70% off retail at rue la la.com at rubella you never faithful these the deals on top before their current jobs we ll get a better read on inflation on wednesday when the latest consumer price index is released. and that same day, we could find out if the fed will lower interest rates or keep them the same. and there is good news when it comes to job and wage growth. friday s jobs report was record hot the economy added you ll 172,000 jobs blasting past economists expectations of 180,000 wage growth is also up for the first time in months, but so is the unemployment rate now at 4%, i asked acting secretary of labor, julie su about it. econ was one of my worst subjects in high schools, so i m so glad i m talking to you. you re obviously much smarter than i am. if you could help make sense of these numbers. so the headline is the us added 272,000 jobs, which is way above what the economists were predicting. but the unemployment rate rose just barely. but from three-point 9% to 4% what s going on here? so what s happening is if we take a look back to where we were just three years ago before the president came into office. covid was raging. there was no national strategy to get it under control. unemployment was extremely high. people didn t know if they went to the store, if they bill to find toilet paper if you fast forward to where we are now, the president has said, from the time he came into office, we can and must build an economy in which we see real job growth and where its good jobs, right? we re working people can get ahead. and that s exactly what we have done. and so this latest jobs report, we don t just look at one month as we look at an entire trend and we ve just seen month after month jobs getting created. you ll 15 million jobs since the president came into office is 15 million more individuals getting to use their, their talent, their skill, their drive, their hunger to contribute to their communities, and to make a decent living. and when i talk about real wages being up, right, that is demonstrating that we re not just creating jobs, we re creating jobs that really allow people to make a decent living to afford the basic things in life and that s not happening by accident. none of this was inevitable. it was because of strong leadership and strong economic policies and we re just seeing the benefits now in communities across the country and will continue to do that simple way to think about it is we re not looking at a shrinking pie that needs to be divided into smaller and smaller pieces, we re looking at a much bigger pie that s being created because the president is committed to real jobs, good job growth, and the well-being of working people. so you re going to have some good news to deliver when you embark on this nationwide tour to promote good jobs, you re gonna be hitting the road hitting battleground states, very important ones like georgia, florida, michigan, pennsylvania. tell me what is a good job and who will you be targeting the employers or employees with your message? everybody. so that s exactly what this tour is about. it s good job summer. i just announced this in phoenix, arizona, where cities and unions and community-based organizations signed onto these good jobs principles and a lot of what a good job is, is fairly funded the mental, it s making sure that you have a living wage for making sure you have good benefits. so you can go to the doctor when you need to. knowing at the beginning of the work-shift that you re going to come home healthy and safe at the end of it. the right and ability to have a voice on the job to organize, to form a union and sort of basic things the write-up, retire with dignity and to see growth and opportunity so we re really laser-focused on creating those kinds of jobs in communities all across the country. whether it s rural or urban, big stays small states. and going around the country to talk to working people and their families about what having a good job means for them, what the presence investments are meaning and communities, and what some of the ongoing challenges are. so we can continue to do our best to meet them i m curious what you will tell the people who see this really hot job market and understand that that may mean that the fed s, the fed may not i actually cut interest rates to help continually cool inflation because there is this disconnect between the economic indicators which shows that the economy is on the up and up when it comes to the unemployment rate and job and wage growth. but at the end of the day, people vote about how they feel, and how will you reconcile? it s especially those who are concerned about rising food and housing costs. how will you help them reconcile their reality with these numbers? yeah. i mean, i think that s why the battle gets inflation remains one of the top priorities of our president and of our entire administration. at the same time we i think working families know that the cost of things as one part of the equation, the other part is how much you make, how much you have to spend and that s why having a good job is so important. having a good job that doesn t just let you get by, but really lets you get ahead. that s what the good job summer is all about. it s also what the president s entire investing in america agenda is all about. we want safer roads and bridges and all communities. we want every family who turns on the faucet to get clean drinking water. we want high-speed, reliable internet everywhere across the country. and we also know that those are opportunities to create good jobs in the communities that need them the most and a big thank you to acting secretary of labor, julie su for taking time to talk with me well, in a tit-for-tat exchange, south korea says it will restart loudspeaker broadcasts in border areas after north korea center more trash-filled balloons will have a live report from the north-south border. next the most anticipated moment this election and mistakes couldn t be higher. the president and the former president, one stage moderated by jake tapper and dana bash, the cnn presidential debate thursday june 27th, nine live. i d cnn and streaming on max and less time making cocktails and more time making memories introducing cartesian premium cocktail the touch of a button and shop for dad and get $50 lot with cartesian.com slash dad oh, karni isolde, it s got an answer. that s what i said. god-man, saada gotten need gotten me, got jews fade. you wise old. take xyz on when she with chewy, save 20% on your first 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cause irregular or fast heartbeat or abnormal movements, seek help for fever, stiff muscles, problems, thinking or sweating. common side effects include inflammation kind of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness ask your doctor for us, said, oh, xr shingles, some described it as an intense burning sensation or an unbearable edge. this painful, blistering rash could also disrupt your work and time with family shingles could also lead to long-term debilitating nerve pain. they can last for months or even years. if you over fifth day, the virus that causes shingles is likely already inside of you and as you age, your risk of developing shingles increases don t wait. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingles today i m melies nonna in washington and this is cnn this morning. south korea s national security council held an emergency meeting to figure out how to respond to hundreds of trash-filled balloons sent from north korea. north korea s vice-defense minister claims they sent the balloons as a direct response to south korea sending balloons with anti-north korea flyers for so many years. cnn s microfilariae is in puzzle south korea, which is near the dmz as an area separates north and south korea. so you ve confirmed that the south korean response happened just a little while ago, talked to us about it well, victor, we ve been able to confirm through the south korean joints chief of staff that date for the first time in six years resumed. what s been called a propaganda broadcasts. and let me say propaganda broadcast as tamarind viktor, we re not talking about cold war old tiny stuff. we re talking about south korean soft power, loudspeakers. we have new video in early this morning of loudspeakers coming up from the roofs of about nine or ten military vehicles here in south korea. this video being shown in preparation for this exercise, what the south can do the south said that they sent a broadcast of k-pop music blared over the speakers again, south korean soft military power directed towards the north and also news reports from south korean media detailing human rights abuses from north korea perpetrated by north korean leader kim jong-un what exactly lead to this point? south korea is saying, we did this one broadcast and it s up to you. north korea, whether or not we do another one of these. again, we rewind 2:11 p.m. on saturday night. that s when we were all out. we get an alert on our phones similar to an amber alert and the united states with public safety officials saying that more trash balloons were coming from the north, 300 total, about 80 of them made their way to south korean territory. some of them landing in the heart of the megalopolis that is soul. and if we rewind a little further back to thursday of last week, that s when a north korean defector who run it s an advocacy human rights group in south korea decides to send ten balloons to their neighbors in the north, having slices of life tied to those balloons like k-pop, k-dramas and little flash drives leaflets denouncing the north korean regime. so before that balloon launch, before this, that for tat, we were for able to speak to the founder of that group. here s what he told us just before the balloon launch now me will one. we send money, medicine, facts, truth, and love but to send filth and trash in return. that s an inhumane and barbaric act. so we are standing right here on pod you on the unification bridge. this is the only bridge that leads from south korea to north korea. it s the site of a few high-profile reunification between north and south koreans that are fewer and fewer in this day and age, it s notable victor and amara, where we re standing lot of military personnel, a prominent military base. we were not able to hear that propaganda broadcasts. it could have happened. miles and miles away from here. but the question is how will the north respond? well, the south just have this one broadcast or will things quietly, quiet lately simmer here on the peninsula? victor and amara back to you will see microfilariae force there. thanks so much tonight s episode of the cnn original series secrets and spies and nuclear game looks at how one russian agent put everything on the line as tensions between the u.s. and soviet union ramped up. here s a preview read or i always i think the early person, at least from the agency who really had a pretty good understanding of how the kgb worked there are no other seen the profile of a mobile phone every day it was good luck he d write these studies. everybody would read them and say, oh, that s really great work, rick and then that would be the end of it. you know, they didn t really send it anywhere the cnn original series secrets and spies, a nuclear game airs tonight. attend pm eastern right here on cnn dangerous heat is bringing sizzling temperatures to the west coast will look at how high temperatures are expected to get after the break qizan life with dr. sanjay gupta. listen wherever you get your podcasts, the idp disrupts cid p derails. let s be honest socks but living to see idp doesn t have to. when you sign up at shining through cid p.com, you ll find inspiration and real patients stories helpful tips, reliable information, and more. z idp can be tough. but finding hope just got a little easier. sign up and shining through cip.com be heard. be hopeful bu my name is braden i was 5-years-old when i came to send you how trains, short-run down the story shell. i ve been having these headaches that when i go away, my mom, she was just crying what they said their son had brain cancer it was your worst fear coming to life watching your child grow up every parent. you can join the battle to save the lives of kids like braden by supporting st. jude children s research hospital family anneliese never receive a bill from st. jude for treatment, travel, housing, or food. so they can focus on helping their child who live what they ve done for me, my son, my family sorry life is a gift especially for child battling cancer call or go online and helps save the lives of children like braden now, i know 11-years-old. we were actually doing the checkup for my brain and they they saw something in my throat which thyroid cancer it was heartbreaking to find out. he has cancer again we knew who we had behind us. it gives me hope you can make a difference joined with your credit or debit card for only $19 a month? and we ll send you this st. jude t-shirt without st. jude or it s donors. we would have been in a bad place these kids, they ve done nothing wrong in the world finding a cure for childhood cancer remains everything helps st. jude give kids with cancer a chance row sparks engineered for the spontaneous a dual action formula with the active ingredients of viagra and sialic faster acting and good, you feel good. china, the number one was nap well, it s hard right beside you if you have enjoyed this break of the heat over the last few days that s over it starting today, the high temperatures are coming back. they are coming back in a big way meteorologist allison chinchar is with me now. so which parts of the country are going to be sizzling? yeah, so i mean, if that s really kinda z because it s several different areas. take for example, where we have the heat alerts you ve got sundown in portions of florida, others in axis, then the southwestern states you ve got several different areas here that are going to be feeling the heat, the real focus, however, is going to be in the southwest. so areas of arizona, nevada, portions of california, although it does stretch into portions of northern california. but look at some of the records that we had on saturday, three of these were actually in florida. then we also had one in utah and one in texas. here s a look though at the next couple of days, you ll really start to see these numbers begin to shoot uptake. for example, las vegas going from 103 today to 108 on tuesday sacramental also getting back into triple-digits by tuesday, phoenix starting to see their temperatures get back into the one tens by the time we get to tuesday. here s the thing about las vegas weekend it s a hot place, especially this time of year. but even for them, this is extreme. their normal high still is not yet in the triple digits. they d be about 98 degrees, but every single one of these next seven days is expected to be in those triple digit temperatures, one area we re not really seeing the heat that s going to be where we re seeing a lot of this heavy rain. here s a look. you can see a lot of these showers across portions of southern missouri and a lot of rain has already fallen in these areas. you re talking at least three to five inches. that s why we have the potential for excessive rainfall and flooding risk, not just for missouri, but a lot of this area, even stretching back into colorado, texas, as well as new mexico oh. of course, speaking of hot summer days, a lot of us are going to want to be near a body of water, a pool here as an important warning for parents, as summer gets underway, the color of your child s swimsuit may help save them from drowning. that is according to water safety experts who say there are certain colors that are easier to spot in the pool or open water than others. cnn health reporter jacqueline howard is here with us to talk about this. i mean, this is so important and i m so glad that we re doing this so basic question, what are the safest? let s colors for your children to wear, right? well, a lot of safety experts say it s the bright neon colors like something in this color scheme, they say is the safest, most visible under the water. you want to avoid swimsuits that are light blue or white like this is a children s serp suit, something like this. this is not as visible because it blends in with them a lot are some yeah, exactly. and i did speak with a company called alive solutions. they tested different swimsuit colors to see how visible they were under the water. and they found these differences. if you look on this chart, the white suit, which is on the far right, almost disappears under the water. yeah. and those bright colors stand out the most the american lifeguard association, they said that they re happy people are now talking about this. a spokesperson for the american lifeguard association why it werneth. i spoke with them while he was patrolling beaches in florida and he said that swimsuit colors definitely mentally play a role in safety. have a listen shubi, very important to make sure that you brush your child in a bright-colored, something that stands out to me environment. the dominant colors that blend in with the ocean. more mature in or even even black. kids lie on the black line. you can t see him we want to be able to see them especially like just a crowd yeah. of course, swimsuit colors are one tool and the safety toolbox, but amerant drowning is the leading cause of death for children ages one to four. so this is so important to talk about very aware of that because my child when he was one fell in the pool, but obviously he s doing okay. yeah. so scary. that is very scary and i m listening to what your advice here. so white and black and blue probably not the best colors, but bright colors like oranges and reds and yellows and neon exactly most visible. is there anything else we can do to make sure their kids are safe? oh, absolutely. because swimsuit color, just one tool in the toolbox. it definitely enroll your child in swim lessons. of course, supervise them while they re in the water, make sure they re wearing a life jacket, and make sure that you yourself know cpr and you know what? doing case they do need help that s a good reminder. i do need to have gotten a little rusty on cpr skills and it s important because like you said, i mean, drowning is a huge cause of death for little children. yeah. and that rate has increased. it has the cdc just put out a report saying that more than 4,500 people a year die due to drowning here in the united states. and that number is higher than what we ve seen in previous years. and this involves children and adults to amara. so again, it s something that s a public health issue really, really important things to keep in mind. thank you so much for bringing that to us. jacqueline howard. absolutely victor reach for the gold or reach for the viewers. that s a decision in the us women s basketball team will have to make reportedly they re deciding whether caitlin clark s should be at the paris olympics next month? tonight on the whole story, how to drag becomes such a target for the political right? do you think drag queen story hours can? in the family-friendly? know, if they don t want to world of tolerance state should be afraid the whole story with anderson cooper tonight at eight on cnn, you re calling some people find it there s at an early age, others later in life are calling was to 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stanley old-school hard work meets bold new thinking to help you see untapped possible the abilities and relentlessly work with you to make them real greatness hertz but with care you can keep chasing it that s 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. imprint for certain inside politics sunday with manu raju next on cnn new york officials are ramping up security for today s india versus pakistan cricket match. and nassau county after threats from an isis linked group targeting the game yeah, the group issued the threat earlier this year after specific mornings and even references to a viral video who calling for a lone wolf attack. cnn s gloria pazmino joins us live from nassau county international cricket stadium. i talk to us about the security plan well victor amara, we learned just a short while ago from the police commissioner that that threat remains credible. it was updated as of this morning still an encouragement for lone wolves to carry out an attack but the police here, nasa county has every possible everything at their disposal in terms of security, this is a multi-layered purity event. the biggest a security operation in the county s history, and they are prepared to make sure that this event happens is safely. they are expecting about 30,000 people to show up to watch this game between india and pakistan today. so they have been checking every single person that walks through the gates of this park, the cars, the packages, the bags, everything that s coming in as being checked by cani in units, metal detectors. there s elements that we can see as well as those that we cannot see. the police commissioner also telling us earlier this morning that this is the safest place to be in nasa county right now, they have deployed an additional 100 police officers two other areas of the county to make sure that they are also watching for those soft targets. other areas where people are expected to be gathering as a result felt of this big game that s taking place today. this is india, pakistan. it s like yankees or red sox. it s, it s a big rivalry and sports it s a big day for the community, a big day for the sport, but also a big day for law enforcement. the eyes of the world, watching, making sure that everything goes as planned victor, amara, gloria pazmino force, and nassau county the florida panthers are one when closer to their first stanley cup title in team history. and florida, i can give a big thank you to their goalie who had a great game in. carolyn maddow joining us now with more carolyn has as a winter s ford can thrive in south florida now, hockey fans, that s for sure. good morning to you both and after coming up just short in last year s final, the panthers seemingly back with a vengeance, they got tested right away and gave one last night, less than 30 seconds into this game, edmondson zach time and the leading scorer in these playoffs, giving a golden chance here. but stopped by sergey bob ross, cki to keep it nil, nil well, it would not be that way for long couple of minutes later, florida captain alexander barkat helping break the ice, feeding sam for haiti for the goal, giving the panthers the lead. oh, there s captain costs don t think david has been incredible on these playoffs trying to respond, but he too is denied and that was the story of the night big bob, as he s called, making 32 stops and becoming just the fifth goaltender this century to just shut out in the opener of the stanley cup is the panthers go on to win it three nothing elsewhere this morning. i know you guys have been talking about this. victor and amara, the us women s basketball olympic roster because leaked and a very notable absence, wnba rookie caitlin clark, the official announcement has not been made that news coming by way of reporting from cnn contributor christine brennan, who you spoke with and others over the week? again, but the former college phenom has been off to a little bit of a bumpy start and the pros so far, she s put up 30 points on a couple of occasions. she s also had games where she s been held the single-digits, she struggled a turnovers. she struggled with the leeks physicality, and every player on team usa does have senior level international experience. eight have played in the olympics still, only 22. clark has created an absolute frenzy of interest in women s basketball, which has already led to this tangible boost in the wnba s developed litman. her entry to the pros has come with an extremely divisive undercurrent. and this is just the latest thing that she s going to have to navigate now, as everybody figures out what the official roster will look like. yeah. i m sure we ll continue here about that and that controversy carolyn manner. good to have you. thanks so much. and thank you for spending a part of your morning with us inside politics sunday with manu raju was nice. we ll see you back here next weekend. have a good day.

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Transcripts for CNN The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer 20240608 06:17:04

Transcripts for CNN The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer 20240608 06:17:04
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Transcripts For CNN CNN This Morning Weekend 20240608

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div class= gutr > 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. activity and less pain and more it s still go.com. i hanako montgomery and tokyo and this hi everyone. good morning to you. welcome to cnn this morning, it is saturday, june 8th. i m amara walker i m victor blackwell. thank you for joining us this morning. president biden begins the state visit portion of his trip to france. it starts with the welcome ceremony, which president biden is expected to depart for soon and then the ceremony will begin at the octave try-on. then there will be a parade, precession to the lose, a palace where biden, french president emmanuel macron will attend a working lunch and both leaders are expected to give statements to the press before macron welcomes the president. and the first lady to the famous musee d orsay for a statement dinner. the close ties between the u.s. and france will be on full display today as biden continues to push his message of saving democracy and freedom following his d-day anniversary speech friday cnn senior white house correspondent kayla tausche is live and paris this morning. hello, kayla. we are expecting to see the president at the moment for this welcome ceremony. a walk us through what we will see today well, hello, or should we say bones zhou are from paris, amara today after a point in few days in normandy, the red carpet is now being rolled out in paris where president biden and president macron will now engage in a series of events to deepen the collapse variation between the two countries on a number of fronts, you will see them momentarily arriving at the arctic triomphe with local school children standing by them, they will travel to the elysee palace where they will have a working lunch. the two liters there are expected to discuss two issues. in particular in great detail, the ongoing wars in gaza, where president macron crown has broken with president biden and the ongoing war in ukraine where president macron here in europe has taken something of a leadership position, trying to galvanize the rest of europe to spend more on their collective defenses to produce more, of manufacture, more domestic weapons. in their own countries rather then outsource them and potentially have depleted supplies if there is a potential that war moves past ukraine into europe that is going to be one of the discussions that the two liters have today. and how does support the war in ukraine for the long haul, they re going to be preparing essentially joint positions to go into the g77 but next week and the natives summit that will happen next month. we re also expecting them to discuss climate change, artificial intelligence, and other matters of commercial importance at that state dinner tonight, which has been moved to the elysee palace from the musee d orsay. we expect to luminaries from the business and diplomatic role to be on hand for president macron to fed president biden and a relationship that has deepened over the course of president biden s terms. the two leaders had a very high-profile falling out early in biden s term when he chose to essentially sign up with australia and the united kingdom to partner on the production of nuclear submarines for the indo-pacific where eight french contractor had previously been partnered to build some of those submarines. they were essentially excluded from that partnership and it took several months to bridge that rift now, after sharing a bond over several common goals, common themes, common ideals, the need to defend europe, the need to secure for europe, and the need to essentially protect the west and western ideology. they have grown much closer, but certainly president macron is keen to hear about president biden s prospects for reelection and whether as president biden has said, america is still back, amara i ll take, it kayla tausche, force there in paris. thank you very much, president biden commemorated the 80th anniversary of d-day with a speech in normandy. biden drew on the heroism of the us army rangers who scaled the cliffs of pointe-du-hoc on d-day in 1944 to urge americans to think for this either of the fight for democracy as a cause greater than themselves. and cautioned against isolationism not just to honor those who showed such a remarkable bravery on that day, june 6, 1944. it s listen to the echoes of their voices to hear them because they are summing us. and are summing us now. they ask us what will we do? they re not asking us to scale these cliffs, but they re asking us to stay true to what america stands for they re not asking 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 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 be part of something bigger than ourselves. joining us now is daniel littmann, white house correspondent for politico. good morning to you, daniel. thanks. good morning for being with us. so let s talk about that speech that we heard from biden up on that famed clifftop obviously, there was some echoes of reagan s address at that same location in 1984 we heard biden there make his case for america s leadership in the world, but he also had a political pitch for those of us here at home. what did you make of what he had to say though he did not mention trump specifically? yeah, he was never going to mention donald trump by name. that would be a big headline because that would be a qbi accused of politicizing this historic memorial to these fall heroes and the people who actually were successful in storming the beaches. and so he has to walk a fine line between reminding americans and the world of democracies challenges today it s one of the top issues on the ballot in terms of what people of both sides think without making it too political and he can t make his entire election pitch all about democracy, given that a lot of americans face more common concerns about pain for bills paying for food and gas. and so they re not going about their lives thinking about democracy all day long. what do you think the white house is hoping will come up today s state visit with the french president well i think, the white house wants to send a message that the u.s. and france are aligned totally on ukraine. tried to see if they can move the ball forward in getting piece in gaza and israel. and i think they want also remind americans of the problem progress that they ve accomplished in terms of pushing back russia from ukraine. they ve had they have rare. this is one of their top foreign policy victories. but it s still uncertain and trump has said he is kind of less in zelensky s corner and people on the right are very skeptical of having a very drawn-out war and it s taken a long time to get weapons back to ukraine. and so they ve had to they ve had some tough spots in terms of zelenskyy is aides were saying, hey, one speech in normandy is not going to to help us out too much. we need weapons, we need training for pilots. if you look, just over the past several months, of course, macron and biden have been aligned when it comes to foreign policy, when it comes to the big picture with ukraine and obviously trying to prevent putin from expanding his empire. and of course the war in israel. but macron has taken a different approach and the way he thinks the western world should defend ukraine and also the way that he has condemned israel more publicly. what will you be looking for when it comes to their joint statement? well, they usually work these things out, weighing advance and there s not gonna be that much daylight between the two liters on major themes, the u.s. france or are huge allies. but i m going to what s interesting is that macron s team wanted a press conference joint press conference with biden. they turned that down. there is issues about an logistical issues they ve also had disagreements about china, france, macron has been more warm towards president xi and france has wants to maintain their commercial relationship with china more than the u.s. and i expect that to be talked about a little bit in their joint statement and in their private meeting what about their political calculations as both leaders meet today, i mean, they re both suffering low approval ratings, right? so if you could just give us context on both their perspectives as they have this meeting well, most people don t vote based on foreign policy or a meeting with a foreign leader, not as many french americans who are looking at this relationship, but i think that macron and many european leaders are afraid about biden s political standing they don t want to deal with donald trump one more this, is someone who has said to vladimir putin, you can do whatever the hell you want. if those, if countries are not paying their nato dues and so that is something that is macron can t endorse biden, but he s giving him a bear hug during an election year and this is biden s only state visit abroad during the seizure. and so of course it has good timing. but europe is afraid that it s going to get abandoned by trump, who is going to be more isolationist if he wins reelection, what is significant that you have president biden on this state visit during a very busy election year, daniel let me get to see you as always. thank you. will continue to monitor events in paris and take you back there, live in just a moment. we re waiting president biden and first lady dr. jill biden, to depart. there in route to the aac to try on for that. welcome ceremony. we are also following division and disagreements within the israeli cabinet by one of the key members of prime minister benjamin netanyahu s war cabinet could exit today tomorrow on the whole story. how did drag becomes such a target for the political right? do you think drag queen story hours can be family-friendly? know, if they don t want a world of tolerance, they should be afraid. the whole story with anderson cooper tomorrow it hey, on cnn. when you re the leader disaster cleanup and restoration, how do you make like it never even happened serve for like ever even have getting your drink kitchen is easier than you think cabinets to go can design a beautiful high-quality, and affordable kitchen make over that is shore to wow, choose from thousands of the latest designer styles and color combinations i couldn t believe how quickly the turnaround was. you can t beat the price from the free 3d designed to install cabinets to go can do it all visited cabinets to go showroom 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find inspiration and real patients stories helpful tips, reliable information, and more. cid peak can be tough. but finding hope just got a little easier sign up and shining through cit p.com heard, be helpful with jake tapper. we days at four and cnn in paris today of pomp and policy, french president emmanuel macron hosts president biden for an official state visit. live pictures here you see president macron there with first lady brigitte macron waiting for the arrival of the us president and first lady. yeah, they are they just arrived a moments ago and they are there the us president first lady will be there to participate in a welcome ceremony there the arctic triomphe there will be affordable welcome ceremony moments from now, and that will be followed by a parade to the elysee palace, where a working lunch will take place before tonight s state dinner. did they could mark a critical moment in israel s war with hamas today, benny gantz, a key member of the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu s war cabinet is expected to announce whether he will go through with his vow to leave the israeli government at a popular former defense minister said last month that he and his national unity the party would resign unless netanyahu came up with a plan for gaza s postwar future as well as bringing home the hostages. cnn has been wiedemann is an beirut for us and ben today was gantz s deadline for a naval plan do we have any idea if he may have changed his mind about resigning amara before we get to the question of benny gantz s political future, we re receiving reports from gaza that there s a major israeli military operation in the central part of the gaza strip focused on the nuseirat refugee camp and bidded bella were told that the main hospital they re the an aqsa martyrs hospital has already received 16 bodies and there are reports of hundreds of people injured, including many women and children. now, regarding benny gantz, last month, he said on the 8th of june he would withdraw from the war cabinet if prime minister benjamin netanyahu did not come up with some sort of plan for a post-war arrangement in gaza so to speak, today is 8 june and all indications are that he s going ahead with this it s resignation we understand that this evening at 8:00 p.m. local time, he will be holding a press conference and the expectation is that he will announce his withdrawal. now, he his party is not part of the the ruling coalition led by netanyahu. he joined the israeli war cabinet after 7 october, really, is part, a, part of a unity government. however, he has had differences his with prime minister netanyahu for many months. now he has been pressing for some sort of end to the war in gaza. but netanyahu doesn t seem to be in a great hurry to do that. now, we understand, however, that both of them basically agreed that they don t want the creation of a palestinian state something that president biden has pushed for eventually. and neither of them is in favor of the palestinian 40 running gaza after the war. nonetheless guns has had better relations with the biden administration. then the prime minister netanyahu gantz has actually gone to washington in defiance of the wishes of the prime minister but the fact that his party is not part of the ruling coalition means that his departure isn t necessarily going to result in the fall of the netanyahu government. it may however mean that the extremists in his cabinet will have even more influence on the prime minister timur emmer up, victor been wiedemann thank you so much. within our scene and military analysts, kernel cedric latent and cnn political and national security analyst david sanger is also a new york times white house national security correspondent and the author of a new cold war s, china s rise, russia s invasion and america struggled to defend the west, gentlemen, welcome, good to see you, colonel, let me start with you and kind of put together the news that we got from the top with ben wiedemann. and this expected departure of benny gantz does his departure dramatically change the execution of the war by the idf? said that there could be more extremist who have louder voices within this coalition of netanyahu s. what does the war cabinet without gantz look like on the ground? well, good morning, victor. i think it looks less moderate and if you can use the term moderate in quotation marks because the way the idf has conducted this effort, it, this war effort in gaza, it s really doesn t look like it s a an operation if they re handling with kid gloves, they re using brute force tactics in many instances and ben described at the top of his port there are still very major operations going on. so in the short term, the departure of the potential departure of defense minister against will not change those operations. and in fact, it could basically exacerbate debate the tensions that are already very high between the civilian population in gaza and the idf. so i think these are the kinds of things that we have to look for. i think that against this departure may result in even less moderate approach. when it comes to the conduct of the war david, betty guys gave netanyahu and ultimatum. he wanted to hear the plan to get the hostages back to israel. and what is the plan for a post-war gaza if he didn t get that, he was out on june 8th. he s not getting that and we ll get to that a little later. but what s the white? get house view of this likely departure well, on one hand, they are completely in gantz s camp. here it s the white house that has been pressing for a plan not only a short-term plan on the military sayyed, but an end game plan here for how gaza would be administered, for how long israeli troops would remain, four, how do you define the defeat of hamas? because as we learned after 911, you never completely defeat a terror group. obviously new members joined and so forth. but you want to get to a zero point, which president biden thinks he israelis arad right now, where the terror group cannot launch another major attack which of course is just what the president said the other day. so gantz s had much more of a direct channel back-and-forth with the pentagon, with secretary, lloyd austin, the defense secretary certainly with jake sullivan, and national security adviser and his departure is actually going to make it a little bit harder for the administration to talk to the war cabinet there are accustomed to ganz. he used to run the military. they consider him to be somebody who thinks and military terms and it s going to leave them more dependent on talking to netanyahu. kernel weight and cnn has learned that the cia is circulating a report that concludes a netanyahu is likely to defy the u.s. demand for the plan. the plan that benny gantz once as well about what happens after the war his belief is that he can avoid an exodus of military leaders, of members of the coalition if he speaks in vague terms here about what he wants to do next for in gaza how does that, if at all influence what the us does as it relates to military support, financial support for israel well, this is going to be very interesting question, victor, because it may not be the administration who wants to do this. the biden administration, but this could very well play into our hands of those elements in the us who do not want to support israel. there have been calls even from the nwa cp to stop arming israel, to stop weapons supply for israel. and if those kinds of efforts bear fruit, they could very well and create a big rift between israel and the united states. it was really be the first time in a long time that we ve actually seen a cutoff of arms from the us to israel. and i think it s a very distinct possibility, if netanyahu gets his way. and in essence kicks the can down the road forever and ever. and it does not come up with a plan and in essence says stalls everything so that he can not only maintain power, but keep the military operation alive for a very long time, a quickly david, how big of a threat politically is betty gods to netanyahu now outside of the war cabinet, if he does, it leaves a few months ago, we would ve said a significant one. israelis hold pretty highly for his opposition party but that has decreased some in the past couple of months. it ll be interesting to see if it comes back back now as he s operating from the outside, instead of the inside in some ways, he may be a bigger threat to netanyahu as an outsider. and thus more free to be a critic david sanger, kernel, cedric leighton. thank you thank and we continue to follow developments out of france this morning. where president biden and french president emmanuel macron will participate in a welcome ceremony at the orca triomphe as part of president biden state visit. these are live pictures the us president s motorcade as they re headed to this welcome ceremony and they will be greeted by the french 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then a great possession possession to the elysee palace. we will continue to monitor these live events. this is the president now getting out of the limo. you see the embrace between first lady jill biden, and brigitte macron. these two countries obviously have a very long history together. france, the u.s. is oldest ally, these men, a warm relationship is described by the white house, although there have certainly been moments of tension over the last several years, this so this is a moment of grandeur the pomp and celebration of the relationship of the two countries. they will get to that working lunch later today to talk about some serious topics. the president, they re waving to crowds that had gathered to see the two liters the first lady s we will see them. eventually later this morning, deliver or join statements as well. it will not be a press conference, so no questions from reporters and then from there they will participate in a state dinner at elysee palace. we re joined now again by cnn military analysts, kernel cedric leighton and cnn political and national security analyst david sanger. new york times, white house and national security correspondent, david, let me start with you. there will be a lot of pretty pictures today some fantastic champagne tonight in the meantime, in-between time, what s the work that is to be done well, i m the pomp and ceremony sayyed. no one does this like the french, the dinners, the whole look in the elite zai palace the parades you ll remember that it s when president trump, when he was still in office went to a military parade in france. that he came back insistent that the united states too big military parades in washington and his military had to talk him down from this. so you ll see a lot of great scenery on the substance, it has been as you suggested earlier, vector a bit of a testy relationship. it s started off badly when the united states went and behind francis back did a deal with australia for new nuclear submarines. and basically cut out in existing french relationship that didn t get it off to the start and they ve had different strategies on ukraine consistently with president macron only recently raising less suggestion that the west should be putting troops into ukraine, something the president opposes so you ll see a little bit of jiaqing on that. but i m sure they ll do their best to make her that doesn t come out. it s one reason there s no joint press conference and speaking of the pomp and circumstance, if you gentlemen will hold on for a bit as we take a listen to these live moments right now in paris and as we bring it back to the conversation with david saying or and curl, cedric late. and we also have nic robertson are international diplomatic editor are standing buy on the issue of substance. and i want to get to you, colonel leighton let s talk about ukraine, because obviously ukraine is top of mind for both president s as zelenskyy was there for the d-day commemorations. we saw that he had the meeting with president biden on friday where he thanked him for america s reversal on policy allowing us weapons to be used inside russia for counter attacks but of course, biden also apologizing for the delay in funding colonel, how important is it for president biden and macron to be in lockstep in strategy when it comes to crime because we ve seen some differences, right? i mean, macron has been, i guess bolder in his approach to ukraine wanting more direct military involvement by nato allies. what are your thoughts on his approach versus the us one of the great things about this is that as we watched the two presidents lay the wreath to add the tomb of the unknown soldier s in france, in paris let s be honest the way in which they re doing this together is kind of the way the country s really want to act in terms of ukraine now, when it comes to the actual fact of the matter, there on slightly different timetables. so it s not anything that can t be bridged but one of the things that the french have announced is that they are going to provide training in mirage 2000 jet fighters for the ukrainian armed forces and that is going to make a really big difference. in the war effort in terms of beefing up ukraine s air force that will be in conjunction with the team training that is already happening. i not only in the united states, but in denmark and there s also supposed to be a trading center in romania that is being set up with french health so these are the kinds of things that will be a part of the effort. now, in terms of artillery and air defenses, the french have provided and in the process of providing even more weaponry in that, in that area to the ukrainians the united states, of course, as also do this in the preponderance of military aid is still coming from the united states, but basically france is leading the european collision to support the ukrainian war effort and i think president mecole seize this as being really a very important bulwark that he s setting up an essence of buffer zone with ukraine at the center of this buffer between an expansionist, russia desire by russia to move forward to consolidate its power and in essence to challenge nato, france recognizes that any challenges to nato are really challenges to its sovereignty and instability to note, maintain its independence as a european power. but it also means that the french are willing to to some extent to shoulder more of a burden, at least in the political sense. now in the 5-methyl, since that s a different, a different issue nic robertson to you now, both of these men are watching the calendar and they know that the us is about five months out from that s not funnel election and the former president donald trump could possibly be in the oval office again, how much does that calendar and the potential for a change in leadership here in the us influence what is happening today, what will be decided and discuss today, and the urgency of any plans as it relates to the two major wars were watching and the rest. let me pause and we ll listen here to this moment i don t april a belt all right. the singing their of the us and french national anthems after the plague of those national anthems before that, ruth was laid at the tomb of the unknown i m shoulder soldier. this, of course, the welcome ceremony at the oc to triumph. we re watching a flyover as well as this welcome ceremony continues. nick, let me get back to you and the question of how the u.s. election influences what will be discussed in decided today it doesn t really just picking up from the conversation you are having prior to that, the differences between the united states and france today, president biden s position, emmanuel macron s position today is a concern and it s a concern because of the recognition that president putin in russia will just exploit any tiny difference that he spots in the nato alliance in terms of positions, whether it s macrons forward leaning desire to put military trainers on the ground inside ukraine, united states reticence to do that compared to an even more potentially isolationist situation in the united states under donald trump, if he becomes president and carries out some of the things is indicated that he would do yeah. as the clock counts down on that because they re putin would not be looking at exploiting small differences. there would be, in essence, if that was to happen a major rupture in the nato-like alliance and the belief in countries like france and germany and the baltic states and the new members like finland and sweden is that putin would massively try to exploit what he would perceive as a weakened nato because it wouldn t have the united states support that the money going into ukraine and the weapons going into ukraine could be faltering. so the clock ticks. there is nothing i drew. these leaders are perhaps less that president macron can do and maybe more that president biden can do in terms of finding ways to win the narrative and win the election in november. but the calendar is against both man and there are no assurances today that president biden can really give him emmanuel macron or any other european leader that are going to assuage their fears that an isolationist, the united states could be a reality they re dealing with by this time next year, of course, emmanuel macron tried to have a strong and positive i m robust relationship with then-president trump. but even that, despite his best efforts, faltered along the way. so there s a real realization macron has dealt with a president trump and knows the realities of the difficulty of how that relationship could be. so it s hard to it s hard to know what precisely the nature of the conversation, but undoubtedly it s going to be a topic and undoubtedly macron would look to biden any assurance and reaffirmation. biden s come confidence that he is going to win the election but at the same time, we ve also saved macron aggressively push for a self-reliance self-determined europe, and less dependence on washington. i want to thank all you, gentlemen. nic robertson, david sanger, and kernel because you re leighton for the conversation as you look at these live pictures of this welcome ceremony underway at the arc to atrium. we will take a quick break back after this this election season, stay with cnn with more reporters on the ground. and the best political team in the business follow though voters follow the results, follow the facts follow. cnn psoriatic arthritis is tough. symptoms can be unpredictable. one day, judge, joyce hurt next, it s on your skin is painful i couldn t move like are used to i got because santos feels good to move, because syntax helps real people move and feel better. it treats multiple symptoms of psoriatic arthritis for less joint pain, swelling, and tenderness, back pain, and clearer scan and go syntax can even help stop further joint 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welcome ceremony, where they are now informally going around to meet some of the service members they gathered for this occasion, likely these are more of the d-day veterans who ve been honored over the last several days. this the 80th anniversary of that invasion in 1944, we heard from the president in normandy on friday. and of course that well, that sentiment will flow throughout the next several days of event here in pairs, the president, i believe five days overall in france, as this both combined d-day commemoration and the state visit, again, will bring these lab pictures as events continued throughout the day it s good to see you in an international diplomatic editor, nic robertson, who is back with us now from london. let s talk about that speech neck that we heard on friday from biden, a really impassioned speech against isolationism, but also, he had a message to americans about fighting democracy, continuing to carry that torch of fighting democracy and obviously a veiled reference to donald trump there was that veiled reference running all the way through it. and but also a message to the young people, not just the united states, but in all democracies, remembering that president biden came to office talking about a moment and inflection point in history where people can choose between democracies and autocracies and through his presidency with putin s invasion in ukraine, that s become very apparent. and the 80th anniversary was the d-day was perhaps the best way to kendall that idea in a younger population that here before you in these near hundred year-old veterans we re was once upon a time, young men who stood up to the tester them moment in time and president biden saying very clearly that you may need to stand up not necessarily fight for your democracy, but he said freedom doesn t come for free. so there s a price to pay. we heard at the ceremonies on thursday a navy lieutenant commanders saying relieving, if you will, the veterans of their duty saying we ve got the watch but with that, watch comes a price and this is really what president biden was talking about but it is in essence his message to his european partners as well that under my watch, as us president, we ve got your back, we support you. the alliance s strong, the alliance s important being united as the way to stand up to putin, who president zelenskyy compared to nazi time, adolf hitler. and for that reason, i think there was a broad resonance, but really you could tell certainly there was perhaps more in this for domestic u.s audience so there was for an international audience who d heard the speeches the prior day, but really the need not just in the united states, but in europe as well to awaken that idea in younger generations here in the uk, for example, elections coming up, the prime minister s talking about ray bring it, bring it back in again, national service, britain s army as a post-world war ii low point more than just around about 60,000 troops, not enough to feel that big fighting force should nato call for it. so leaders are looking around for ways to invigorates younger generations to recognize that there could be a test like this coming and that was, that was that was perhaps a strongest thrust of what president biden was speaking about you re president macron are spending a few minutes now i m talking with secretary of state antony blinken there in the center of your screen. of course, we learned from the state department that secretary blinken will be heading to the mideast for the eighth visit since the start of the war between israel and hamas two again, try to get those two sides to a ceasefire deal, something that will likely be part of the conversation between presidents. biden and macron. nic robertson. thank you for the reporting and analysis there. we will stay with you throughout the morning. and continue to stay with these live pictures of this state visit. we re back after a quick break the increase in 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All In With Chris Hayes

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