i m christiane amanpour in london. welcome to the a history anpour hour. in the next 60 minutes we will take you around the world to ask the tough questions and tackle the big problems and let history be our guide. here is where we re headed this week. who is banking on the united states failing to deliver. ukraine watches the clock run out as military aid stalls in congress. former national security official and russia expert, fiona hill calls it the winning point for putin. this is the ticking point where the united states and ukraine and europe and everybody loses. former cop president who cried tears of regret when he tried to ween the cold off coal and reacts to the new climate deal off of dubai. i certainly think this does spell the beginning of the end of the fossil fuel era. also ahead, an afghan family fights for their teenaged daughter s life, after taliban rule drove her, like so many other girls to total despair. and finally, from the archive, as vo
a man whose father and grandfather that were killed in a bombing in gaza can t communicate from ckhan yunis because of a blackout. we have new details in the hunt for the hamas leader. putin speaking out for the first time about reports he has a body double, taking it on, as a series of questions flashes across a screen during putin s annual press conference. why are so many people in russia poor? who is behind the scathing questions? she may be the only republican woman in the presidential race, but are women voters buying what nikki haley is selling? that s our special story. so let s go outfront. good evening. i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, the breaking news, a blackout. gaza s communications network nonexistent. as of tonight, there is a near total blackout in gaza. no way to get a message in or out. just before the show, we tried to speak with a palestinian man who was in gaza. now, when we first heard from him this morning, he was able to share with us so
they ve named him ricardo, and we wish him all the best. the source with kaitlan collins starts now. collins starts now. see you tomorrow. captions by vitac www.vitac.com tonight, straight from the source, it s the $48 million question that s about to be answered for rudy giuliani, as a jury now deliberates the cost of his election lies. plus cnn getting rare access inside of gaza tonight, as clarissa ward will take us to the front lines of the humanitarian catastrophe. the horrors that she saw on the ground. also, vladimir putin taking questions in his first extended news conference since invading ukraine and evidently trying to put any rumors about his body double to bed using a deep fake to do so. i m kaitlan collins, and this is the source. a verdict is expected very soon in the defamation trial against rudy giuliani, and his own lawyer says that it could be, quote, the civil equivalent of the death penalty. the jury, made up of eight people of his p
check out this wild delay for late morning commuters in new jersey. a bull, that s right, a bull on the tracks at painstaking. trains to and from new york city or delayed for 45 minutes until it right off the track. police eventually corroded and offense. no word we are the bull came from, there are reports it escaped from a new york slaughterhouse. at any rate, that breakup worked e bull has been moved to an animal century to lift out the rest of its days. that s it for us the news continues. the source with kaitlan collins starts now. . i ll see you tomorrow. what tonight, stream from the, source the 48 million dollar question that is about to be answered for rudy giuliani as a jury now deliberates the cost of his election lies. plus, cnn getting rare access inside of gaza tonight as clarissa ward will take us to the front lines of the humanitarian catastrophe. the horrors that she saw on the ground. also, vladimir putin taking questions in his first extended news confe
[ speaking punjabi ] [ speaking punjabi ] [ horn ] i took a walk through this beautiful world felt the cool rain on my shoulder found something good in this beautiful world i felt the rain getting colder sha, la, la, la, la, la sha, la, la, la, la, la sha, la, la, la, la, la sha, la, la, la, la [ train whistle ] reggie: this house came to be built by dr. blick, who was in the east india company service. my grandfather came to be nominated to the body called the consulate state, which used to be a part of british india. anthony: it was another time. one that few still remember. [ train whistle ] the india before partition. when these rooms, this house, was part of the seat of power. reggie: i had the privilege of being born in this house, upstairs. anthony: this was the maharaja s bed. i m in his chambers at present. reggie: and it was the routine that we d all parade up into my grandfather s room to wish him good morning, and th