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tv   The Situation Room With Wolf Blitzer  CNN  April 3, 2024 3:00pm-4:00pm PDT

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rejoyn, and it's a smartphone app intended to be used alongside antidepressant medications. the app is good geared for folks 22 years old and older who have been diagnosed with major depressive disorder, rejoyn does not require oh, i'm sorry. we join does require choir a prescription for download and it is expected to become available later this year. it does require a prescription and one of the biggest stars and women's college basketball ball is ready to go pro. lsu's angel reese announced today that she's going to skip her last year of eligibility, saying she has done everything she wanted in college, including winning a national champion chip last year, races predicted to be a top ten pick in the wnba draft on april 15 on monday 16.1 million viewers watch breeze competing in what we now know was her final collegiate game. lsu lost two iowa, the most-watched women's college basketball game in the history of the world. the news continues now on
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happening now, >> breaking news scheffler >> aid >> workers for his >> food charity >> in gaza, >> accusing >> israel of system somatically targeting them. the world central kitchen founder, sharing powerful warnings about the war and the humanitarian crisis. he's likening to a real life hunger games also breaking one of donald trump's newest attempts to delay his first criminal trial was just denied standby for details as we're also following new fireworks in the trump classified documents case, the presiding judge under fire right now by the special counsel, plus we're tracking the death and damage assessments after the strongest earthquake to hit taiwan in a
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quarter century cnn is on the scene as rescue crews raced to the rebel, holding out hope of finding survivors welcome to our viewers here in the united states and around the world i'm wolf blitzer, a urine the situation room the skis >> cnn breaking news >> we begin tonight with chef jose andres, the founder of the world central kitchen fervently speaking out about the israeli attack that killed seven aid workers from his organization, are brian todd has bore from the impassion interview tonight, the 54 year-old founder of world central kitchen slamming the israeli military for the attack that killed seven of the groups, aid workers >> in gaza, they were target systematically carbide car, celebrity chef jose andres in a
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jarring interview with reuters, describes how the vehicles in the team's convoy were fired they attacking the first car. we have a feeling they were able to escape safely because was an arm or bag. they were able to move in. the second one again, this one was hit. they were able to move in the third one, andrea says his team tried to communicate with the israel defense forces at that moment in the chaos of the moment, whatever happened to try to be telling idf why are they doing that? they were targeting as in the conflict zone in an area controlled by idea them knowing that was our teams moving on that regarding israeli claims that the attack was a mistake and unintentional, andres brushback fiercely, these was not use bad lag situation where we dropped the bomb in the wrong place or not. this was over 1.51, 0.8 kilometers with a very defined humanitarian convoy that had signs in the top in the roof a very colorful logo that we are obviously very proud of. that that's very clear who we are and what we do in teams that happening is he
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got like are true hunger games this has to end >> address went after the leadership of israel and the us, we are letting the people of palestine down us must do more. i need to understand that this was not by somebody that is above law and order that decided they used to kill us because i don't know maybe because i need a tweet that was very strong against president. they are >> andres >> repeatedly rejected is and us claims that the strikes on his team were not deliberate, even if we were not in coordination with the ivf not democratic country, and not military, can be >> targeting civilians and humanitarians especially when the technology today allows you to know things in ways not too long ago was not possible those drones have eyes and everything that moves in gaza i've been there this is drones, nonstop flying above you is nothing
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that moves that idea. doesn't know but said that even nobody should be targeting humanitarian organizations and civilians continuously asked if world central kitchen will start its operations again in gaza, chef andrawes said their work is quote halted, but that they're analyzing the situation hour by hour to figure out how to keep doing the work and in a pointed message to the israeli prime minister, i will tell two prime minister netanyahu to 200 humanitarians have died already tens of thousands of civilians have that i'm so sorry, but i think one humanitarian lives is one-to-many one children is one-to-many ag regarding this attack, israeli prime minister bjamin netanyahu said that israeli forces unintentionally struck innocent people. the idf chief of staff, lieutenant general herzi halevi, said the attack was a quote, grave mistake other
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israeli officials have said the incident is being investigated at the highest levels wolff are bryan todd reporting for us, brian. thank you. meanwhile, israel is blaming, quote misidentification for the attack and insisting the idf had no intention of harming the relief workers. that's going to see jeremy diamond. he's joining us live from jerusalem right now. jeremy, several israeli officials have made public statements about the strike yeah, they certainly are wolf expressions of a regret coming not only from the israeli prime minister, but also from >> israel's top general, herzi halevi, the chief of staff of the israeli military, not only issuing a public apology, but also calling what happened here a grave mistake. >> i want to be very clear the strike was not carried out with the intention of harming wck aid workers it was a mistake that followed a misidentificati on at night during a war in
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very complex conditions it shouldn't have happened >> and i will, even as the israeli military's chief of staff says, this was a misidentification and that an investigation is going to be carried out. so many questions still remain about how this aid convoy could have possibly been miss identified when the world central kitchen says that they inform the israeli military of the convoy's route when there were logos clearly marking the world central kitchen on top of these vehicles, so many questions here, that's still remain. but what is very clear is that the work of aid workers in gaza remains increasingly important, but also increasingly dangerous. hundred and 90 humanitarian aid workers have been killed since the start of this conflict in gaza, more than in any other conflict annually over the last 20 years. >> jeremy diamond in jerusalem for us, jeremy, thank you very much, chef jose andres says he spoken with president biden
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about the aid convoy attack. chiffon dress, urging the united states to take a very different approach to israel's war in gaza. listen to this i you spoke to president biden yesterday, and by then made the statement. >> seems >> ready >> a >> harder stand, but it's very complicated to understand that we are going to be sending america is going to be sending his naibe on these military to do humanitarian work when at the same time, weapons provided by america not, not to defend israel itself from missile attacks but use weapons that are killing civilians in this moment >> let's get two more right down from cnn's kayla tausche, she's joining us for the white house. kayla, president biden says he is outraged about this israeli attack. how is that playing out? as far as his policies towards israel right now? >> well, well, if i'm told that sentiment has permeated conversations between the two governments at basically all levels since that strike was
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carried out, that the us has communicated to israel's government in no uncertain terms that specific changes must be made to the deconfliction processes. one official telling me either the information about the convoys location didn't reach the targeting team or it was disregarded by the idf, either way, it's a problem in response to some of those conversations, israel's defense minister has said that they will be setting up a situation room and encouraging open and transparent communication about the location of aid workers. as a result of this. but even so there are still a lot of very serious questions to be asked by the us government. and the format for those questions going on right now will be that conversation happening tomorrow between president biden and israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu were i'm told the themes will be anger and accountability. and on a leader to leader level conversation some of those very serious concerns are going to be presented to bibi netanyahu. now, as far as the policies
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that the administration is pursuing toward israel, the sharp rhetoric that we've seen coming out of the administration this week, both privately and publicly. now appears increasingly divorced from what the administration's stated policy on israel still is the white house was asked to repeatedly in recent days, whether there would be consequences for israel and conditions placed on military aid as a result of these strikes on civilians. and here's how nsc spokesman john kirby, answer that question again today. >> while we make no bones about the fact that we have certain issues about some of the way things are being done. we also make no bones about the fact that israel is going to continue to have american support for the fight that they're in to eliminate the threat from hamas and yet the chorus is growing for the us to place conditions on those aid from outside groups. we will see whether there is any change in tac after that phone call tomorrow, wolf, we will see kayla tausche at the white house. thank you. just to head
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the breaking news and donald trump's hush money, criminal case why the judge isn't buying trump's latest argument for delaying the trial. that will also go live to taiwan for an update on the historic earthquake. there as powerful aftershocks rattle the island this is the big game >> kane who that do >> they need the loan back fast and unit scott's turf grass, it goes grass two times faster and you see the loan given you a stronger laws, melas, freedom. >> it's got her field a rapid grass today. it's good he did not feeding >> stay ahead of your moderate to severe eczema and show off clear skin and less is with depicts it the number one prescribed biologic by
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take two aspirin binding so clearly you, so tick to your house solomon in new york and this is cnn >> close captioning brought to you by gilt visit gilt.com today for up to 70% off designer brands, house the designers that get your heart racing. >> i'd inside >> a prices new every day curry, they'll be gone in a flash design, a sales at up to 70% off shop gilt.com today, your ricky news and donald trump's criminal hush money case in new york. trump losing a new bid to delay the trial, now set to begin 12 days from now let's go to see you this chief legal affairs correspondent. >> paula reid. what do we know paula? >> well, the judge overseeing trump's criminal case in manhattan, he is rejected this last-minute bid to delay the case, but arguing that it should wait until after the supreme court rules on trump's presidential immunity claim in the federal january 6 case. now the new york case that's about allegations he falsified business records to cover up an fair with a porn star. so it's
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unlikely presidential immunity would apply. and the judge noted that the lawyers, they had months to file this motion. they only did so a few weeks before this case is scheduled to begin, but this is just one of a series of moves. the trump team has made to try to get the case delayed. but right now, the case is scheduled let's start on april 15th, and it could be the only case criminal case that trump faces before the november election. the january 6 case is on hold, waiting for the supreme court decision. the georgia case has been delayed by efforts to disqualify fani willis and then down in florida, the judge overseeing the classified documents case has drawn things out with a serious he's of unusual moves. at last night, the special counsel made it clear he's had it >> we very much look forward to presenting our case to a jury of citizens in the southern district of florida, a trial in the mar-a-lago classified documents case a pure is highly unlikely to happen before the 2024 election. and special counsel jack smith, expressing
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frustration with judge aileen cannon in a new filing late tuesday, smith's team said cannon had ordered briefings based on a fundamentally flawed legal premise that had no basis in law or fact by since theatre thanks to the president for honor nomination. prosecutors harshly criticizing the trump appointed judges request for hypothetical jury instructions. >> she >> asked both sides to take into account the former president's claim that he had broad authority to take classified documents under the presidential records act. >> whatever documents are present so the decides to take with him. he has the right to do so. it's an absolute right. >> the post-watergate law covers what documents belong to the government after an administration leaves the white house. but prosecutors have repeatedly said that law is not relevant because trump is accused of obstruction and storing highly classified
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material in a bathroom and other unsecure locations at his florida estate. prosecutors also point out that telling a jury that trump had the authority to take records he wanted from the white house would make it nearly impossible to secure a conviction prosecutors insist that legal premise is wrong and a jury instruction that reflects that premise would distort the trial, but trump's attorneys, who were also asked to weigh in here suggested that the judge tell jurors trump was authorized to possess a category of documents defined as personal records, both during and after his term in office. the idea yeah, that classified documents belonged to trump smith's team said is
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pure fiction. >> i was traveling for 37 years. i have never seen an order like this. >> former federal judge, jeremy fogler says the government will motions to decide. >> and those >> include nine motions to dismiss, three other major defense motions trying to attack the case. also, a decision about how much information should be kept under seal the biggest outstanding decision of all, when will this case go to trial? it's penciled in for late may and spent over a month since she had arguments are both sides of weighed in on how long they think the case should be delayed, that as of now will
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it doesn't appear that this case will go before the november election. >> very significant. paula reid. thank you very much. i want to bring in our legal analysts right now, elie honig and carry cordero, le, how rare is it to see this filing from the special counsel taking a very aggressive tone? >> well, if it's exceedingly rare to see a prosecutor express this type of frustration so unapologetically , and i have to say, i understand to an extent where jack smith's coming from when i was a prosecutor they slipping
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away. it is getting less and less likely every day to the point where it's almost an a possibility now that this case will be tried before the election vary >> significant carry legal experts, as you know, they have criticized judge cannons approach and called her inexperienced do you agree with those concerns that are boiling over right now by a judge cannon handling of this case >> well, i generally don't like from any quarters, sort of the personal criticisms of judges all judges are new to the bench at some point. it doesn't necessarily sara lee mean that they're incapable of handling the matters that come before them she has in this particular case ruled favorably for the former president, a number of times, even on issues that in these types of cases should have been a little more straightforward, although i would note that not every decision gen. that she has made has gone in the former president's favor on this particular set of requests for jury instructions she has gone outside of the bounds of what we normally would see in a case involving classified information and a prosecution on those issues belly, all that being said is this still is this filing still a very risky
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move for the special counsel, jack smith was why >> think jack smith did the right thing in this filing? he said, hey, judge, you should not give this presidential records act instruction to the jury because it lacks basis. in fact or law, what would be he risky wealth and jack smith more than hints at this in the filing is that if he loses on this, he suggests he will appeal. now, if he wants to appeal, he has to do it before the trial because once the trial starts, once you get to a jury, it's going to be double jeopardy. prosecutors cannot appeal and not guilty verdict if there's a not guilty verdict, it's over. everyone goes home. so jack smith is trying to anticipate that. but if he does file an appeal on this, a. we don't know if he'd when i suspect he might well, win, but be that would completely wipe out any chance of getting this case tried in 2024. >> interesting carry even if the special counsel is frustrate, frustrated, judges have nearly carte blanche authority to manage their doctor so do you see this trial being said anytime soon
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>> i don't think so. i mean, i i take ellie's point that it's getting less and less likely that this trial actually happens before the election, you know, first just because it involves classified information that automatically involves an entire set that that generally slow things down in any national security k's, then layered on top of it, you have the fact that it's involving a former president who has made motions to dismiss on every possible conceivable opportunity that he has. and then now we also have this judge two is proceeding in an unusual way because if the jury instructions that she wants to see go forward on one angle of them, one of the requests that she had would effectively shut down the entire case and make the prosecution impossible to win on for the prosecutor. so there really isn't imperative that they, the prosecutors get
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clarity from her on her interpretation of the law and have the opportunity to appeal. and if there's an appeal than this, absolutely will slow down further carry. >> and ellie, thanks to both of you very much coming up new polling on biden versus trump in seventh critical presidential battleground states what the number reveal about voter discontent, and how that's weighing on president biden's reelection. bid houston check. >> we hear nothing. >> a space shuttle accidents usually not one thing. it's a series of events is that part is the wing coming apart? >> space shuttle columbia final flight, premieres sunday at nine on cnn at simply safe, we build advanced security sensors and cameras for your whole home, howard by 24/7 professional monitoring and fast protect technology exclusively from simply safe for faster police response there's no safe like simply save missing out on the things you love because of asthma get
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to 50% over real stone i'm more than liebermann at the pentagon. >> and this cnn >> a new poll, august night drive some the very close race between president biden and former president donald trump in seven swing states that could decide they're november rematch cnn, political director
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david chalian of breaking down the numbers david, tell us more about this wall street journal poll and what it reveals >> yeah. well, if it is a close race, there's no doubt about that. the wall street journal pulled these states that are going to decide this election. these are the battleground states and what you see here is that in two of them arizona, where trump has a five percentage point lead, 40 10% to 42%. and in north carolina where he's got a six percentage point lead 49 to 43. >> those two are >> trump leads. everything else is within the margin of error. in georgia, in pennsylvania, in michigan, wisconsin, and nevada but i just wanted to say when you look at it over all, it ease a slight trump lead. that's where we are today, about seven months out from election day, though, of course, remember americans will start voting in about 5.5 months. what's underneath those horse-race numbers? well, really dismal approval rating of president joe biden. he's at 38% approval, six 60%
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disapproved. that's across all seven of the battleground states. how does that compare with trump's approval rating in terms of asking people now how trump handled the presidency. and this, you see a much more evenly divided nation near 51% approve of the way donald trump handled job as president, 47% disapproved across these battleground states wolfe, what is so important for the biden campaign is to remind people from their perspective of what they think was a negative four years with donald trump in charge because with time and distance, americans are not feeling as sour on trump's handling is the job as they feel today about the current president. >> and >> the economy. always an important factor. well, this is a trouble sign for the biden campaign because across the seven states in this wall street journal poll, only 36% say that the strength of the economy as excellent or good 63%, nearly two-thirds of americans in these seven decisive states say not so good
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or poor, but there's a hopeful sign here, perhaps for the president or at least a place for them to go to start working on this economic issue. >> if you ask >> people over the past year, has your personal financial situation moved in the right direction or wrong direction? what's so interesting is people please battleground states feel much better about their personal situation. then they do when asked broadly about how the strength of the nation's economy is doing. so, there is opportunity here. if people in these battleground states are feeling better about their personal finances than they do broadly for the country. but across all the states on the economy, on immigration donald trump, beach, joe biden only on abortion rights as an issue. do we see joe biden besting donald trump in these new numbers will very interesting indeed, david chalian, thank you very much. let's get some more and all of this joining us, cnn, political commentators, karen finney and scott jennings. karen, let me start with you these are key
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battleground states that david was talking about and they will likely determine the winner of the november election. how alarmed should democrats be right now about the poor picture? it's presenting for president biden, at least right now. >> well, i think we have to take all of these public polls for what they are. they are a snapshot in time. one of the things i noticed in the cross tabs of these even are small sample size is about 600 people. so again, important information you always want to take it seriously. but when i found more interesting list, for example, in wisconsin, despite what the wall street journal poll showed, you also saw about 90 he 5,000 people in the republican primary on tuesday came out and voted either for nikki haley or for ron desantis, and that is well over the margin that joe biden wanted or that trump won in 2016. so again, i think we have to also compare that to what is actually happening on the ground when people have the
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opportunity to vote and pay attention to all of it. >> scott, what you're to take a look at this just after trump left office in 2021, he was viewed unfavorably by voters by nearly two-to-one but three years later, these numbers have dramatically improved. why do you think that is? and isn't likely these numbers? there's will change as the biden campaign tries to remind people about the trump presidency >> his numbers have improved because it's a direct reaction that voters are having to the biden presidency. it's a very unique election. voters can remember and compare two presidents to each other and obvious plate look, if we go into the election and trump's at 51 approval and biden, is it 38 approval? i mean, donald trump's gonna win the election if we go into the election and the numbers on the economy don't get better. trump, trump's likely to win the election. so that's what campaigns are four, it's very early, both of them have soft spots, obviously biden soft spots around the progressive left. and in the non college
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working class, people of america, trump's are in the suburbs. we see this in all the elections, but right now it's a close race. but looking under the hood here, there's no question that trump's driving this car. >> yeah, it's still many months away from november, but karen is david chalian outlined voters view the us overall negatively, but they're far rosier. they have a far rosier view when it comes to their own personal finances. why is that >> well, a couple of things actually we're also seeing among consumer data, people starting to say they're feeling better. so those two things track okay, i think again, we've had several months of continuous job growth. we're seeing a wages going up. we're seeing inflation coming down, hopefully stabilizing. and i also think we have to remember that we are as a country, we are still really hurting from covid. there have been a couple of really good pieces about the fact that there's a little bit
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of a sort of covid hangover and a depression that has followed a little bit of people forgotten, a little bit about what the trump years we're like. so i think people, but i think it's important to note that as people started to see it in their own lives, hopefully that will and the biden administration folks get out there and tell that contrast story. people will start to feel better, more broadly. >> let me get scott to weigh in if people see their personal, personal, financial situation as moving in the right direction, would you expect their view of the economy overall to improve as well? >> absolutely. if people believe that food prices are coming down, or if that interest rates are coming down and it makes it easier to buy a house or buy a car. yes. they're going to start to think generally things are getting better in the country. the problem is, people don't really feel that way right now. and those are the things that are driving people into anxiety about at their own personal economic situation. >> the grocery >> store is expensive and it
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has been expensive and it's expensive under biden. and it was not under trump. and for a lot of people right now, the american dream of owning a home and owning a car is out of reach until those things change. i don't think biden is going to see any improvement at all. >> yeah. go ahead. karen is very real quickly if one of the things that the president needs to do to scott's point is get out there and continue to hammer away on almost a populist message about the ways in which he's trying to lower costs because we know, for example, with grocery stores, the big chains are gouging people. that is good territory for him to be driving a message karen, funny scott jennings, guys, thank you very much. just ahead, we'll get a live update from taiwan, which was rocked by its strongest earthquake in 25 years. details other race to find survivors in the rubble. right after it quickly this is the big dam time to
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>> hello, florida. every step covered. >> i'm sunlen serfaty in washington and this is cnn in taiwan right now, the race is on to find victims buried in
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the rubble of a powerful 7.4 magnitude, magnitude earthquake, at least nine people are dead and more than 900 injured as rescue teams tried to reach survivors, including 71 workers trapped in two minds our senior international correspondent ivan watson has more just before 8:00 a.m. on wednesday, the ground and taiwan starts to shake the island, rocked by the most powerful earthquake to hit taiwan in a quarter century. >> okay, thank one. >> in the capital taipei, cnn photojournalist, john meese tries to protect his wife and children as the walls of their home lurch back and forth >> since i'm like, hey, earthquake is >> just hit, announces the anchor of this morning news show. as she struggles to stay on her feet but the worst damage is at the epicenter in
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the rugged mountains of hualien county on the islands east coast from the 7.4 magnitude earthquake triggers massive landslides authorities say several people were killed by falling rocks. in the town of hualien apartment buildings on the verge of collapse. emergency workers inaction. authority say they've rescued scores of people from toppled buildings and highway time but more than 900 people have been injured and rescue teams are still trying to reach others trapped high in the mountains the work has continued in hualien throughout the night. >> mao, no >> one's left inside this building says this firefighter. he adds, people are frightened on me the wave there are constant earthquakes here, says this woman i've lived here 50 years and never felt one so big. it's really scary people
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in taiwan are accustomed to feeling the earth shake but rarely with this much destructive force that will if right now, we're monitoring efforts to rescue more than 70 minors in two separate minds that are believed to be trapped as a result of this deadly and powerful earthquake and will update as we learn more about what is happening there. in the meantime, taiwan, he's still being hit by powerful aftershocks, at least 29 recorded in the first 12 hours after the initial earthquake. and the authorities here are predicting that there could be more very powerful aftershocks for the next three to four days. >> really, i'm really worried about those aftershocks. i haven't watched and stay safe over there. thank you very much coming up. i get reaction to some of the day's top stories from us, senator mark kelly by one-on-one interview with the arizona democrat. that's next
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another two decades. joint cnn for live coverage around the country of the spectrum in this guy's eclipse across america, live monday at one on cnn or streaming on macs >> it's now been two decades since nasa space shuttle program suffered its second horrific disaster. back on february 1, 2003, the columbia disintegrated as it re-entered the atmosphere, killing all seven astronauts on board a new cnn original series reveals how and why the disaster happened. and it features first-hand accounts from people who lived through it all, including former astronaut and now us senator mark kelly colombia's three main engines draining a half a ton of fuel per second, heading towards a space on the first shuttle mission of the year, >> how am it looks like you're going up really smoothly >> no >> not at all >> it's kinda it's kind of a wild ride and there's a lot of
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vibration. and i'll hit first it was so much i thought to myself, there's something wrong here cannot possibly feel like this solid rocket booster separation confirmed guidance now converging colombia's onboard computers, commanding the main engine nozzles to gently swivel, aiming the shuttle for a precise target and space for main engine cutoff >> and senator mark kelly is joining us now from his home state of arizona, senator, thanks so much for joining us. you are one of the first people to arrive on the ground following the columbia disaster. mr. what were those moments like immediately after this tragedy >> yeah. well, thank you for having me on. i was the first person from nasa to get on the scene in a helicopter and it was one of the worst days of my life. but to lose seven of my very good friends, three of my classmates, folks setter, were doing their job and serving our country and exploring and it
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was sad, it was shocking and it was hard. i mean, i had to recover the bodies of my colleagues and we learned a lot from that mission and from these accidents, challenger and then columbia and i think it's important for people to watch this documentary >> i think you're absolutely right. i know you knew many of the brave astronauts on board the columbia. how did this tragedy senator, impact you? and your fellow astronauts >> why new all of them. three of them, moore, my classmates and very close friends. we had a international astronaut ilan ramon from israel. so this is tragic for israel as well. and the way it affects us is it's hard to lose your france. now served in the navy for 25 years. and when we lose folks in an airplane or in combat, it's something you've never get over. and that's the same
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here. but they were very heroic americans that were working hard trying to do the right thing, trying to move our country ahead and aerospace and exploration, it's something that we do really, really well in this country. and at times we have accidents and it's important to learn from those accidents. >> so what changed at nasa after this horrific tragedy? >> well, i think one big takeaway from this accident was that a very complicated spacecraft like the space shuttle with a lot of parts, moving parts, moving at their extremes of temperature and pressure. that at times this spacecraft tries to talk to you and it tries to tell you it has a problem. and we should have seen this problem coming and we had foam coming off the tank years prior to this small pieces of foam. not thinking that it was going to be a major problem and on lift off a big chunk of foam came off and flew right through the leading edge the left wing. and then that caused the disaster on re-entry, we should have seen a
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common we put more processes into into place after this and i think we realized that sometimes a team of people can make bad decisions. you often feel like if you pull the right people together, you're going to get the right answer. that's not always the case. and i tried to take that into my job here now is a united states senator. >> and as a us senator, you've injured produced the bill aimed at strengthening the united states is competitiveness in space tell us a little bit about that >> well, i mean, there's a lot we can do here. you know space in technology, semiconductors is something i've been focused a lot on. but we want to maintain our leading position. we compete with china and russia and getting things into space. there are adversaries now, i'm really worried about a future conflict that we could have, especially with china and how you know, say he says, now the high ground. and in that
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conflict could lead to direct action in space. none of us, none of us want that but it's important to me and it's important to my fellow senators that if we ever wind up going down this road that we have the, have the advantage before i let you go, senator, i quickly want to ask you a couple of questions about some of the important news of the day. as you know, many lawmakers in your democratic party have called on president biden to stop providing offensive weapons to israel as long as it continues to block humanitarian aid into gaza. first of all, do you agree with that especially after this strike that. killed seven aid workers from the world central kitchen >> yeah. well, if i was on the phone with jose andres yesterday about this, it's tragic. i was on the phone with the ambassador, the israeli ambassador, michael herzog, today about this and talk to. him about how this was reckless i used to fly airplanes off of an aircraft carrier are flown in combat. i've dropped bombs
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in dense urban areas. they need to do a better job at this. they have to i mean, this is a tragic loss of life i was talking to cindy mccain about this yesterday and today about how hard her job is. and this is just going to make it harder this is a humanitarian crisis. israel's got to step up and do a better job here. >> important points said before i let you go in this new wall street journal poll, your home state of arizona is featured in this poll trump leads biden there by five points in this poll. you see it their 47 to 42% this is a state that president biden won back in 2024 years after projecting trump. why do you think arizona voters now prefer him to president biden, at least according to this new wall street journal poll >> yeah, well, i'm not so concerned with public polls. i saw him wrong in my race. there's a lot of polling out there. joe biden is going to win arizona i'm gonna be out
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there on the campaign trail and others. he's got a good story to tell here on semiconductors, on renewable energy on bringing down the price of prescription drugs, especially for seniors. he's got a record to run on. he's working to move this country forward. donald trump wants to take us back. he wants to take away rights. i mean, he has said himself that he is responsible for the dobbs decision for roe v. wade going away and i'm confident that joe biden is going to win. arizona is going to be reelected to a second term. >> there isn't a key battleground state right now, senator mark kelly. thanks so much f joining us and to our viewers, you can see the debut of the cnn original series space shuttle columbia, the final flight this coming sunday night, 9:00 p.m. eastern. and we'll be right back what does mean be out front? >> it's going the. we are gaza bder. its context and the periodicity so you can be outside >> let's go out front.
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>> flonase. all good. >> also try are allergy headache, and nighttime pills >> this is cnn. >> the world's news finally, tonight, a closer look at the seven world central kitchen workers who were killed. safe. a dean, abutaha was a 25-year-old palestinian who had been volunteering as a driver with world central kitchen. he was the youngest victim of the strike a close friend and former colleague remember is 43 year-old australian aid worker zomi frankcom, as full of life with a smile that would light up a room 35-year-old worker, damian sobol had been working nonstop since the russian invasion of ukraine, according to his friend and former colleague, he is remembered as one of those guys, you just want to hold onto jacob flickinger was a dual us-canadian citizen who had a military background. he leaves behind a partner and a one-year-old son, john chapman, james

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