correspondentjonathan blake. clu bs clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes as clubs don t pay the bills! stop on the strikes as the - on the strikes as the government does not hope that afterjunior doctors walked out yesterday, they said the 6% rise offered yesterday was not enough. appointments and cancellations again, amounting to the ministers urging unions to the ministers urging unions to say yes to the increases offered, they warned they could be more common. i offered, they warned they could be more common. be more common. i think there will be a be more common. ! think there will be a new be more common. i think there will be a new wave be more common. i think there will be a new wave of be more common. i think there will be a new wave of strikes i will be a new wave of strikes in the nhs and what really needs to happen as the government needs to come to the table, pay a proper pay rise to these workers.
all those stories to come on the context tonight. we begin tonight as us officials say plans have been approved for a series of strikes against iranian personnel and facilities in iraq and syria but not in iran itself. they told cbs news that the action would be carried out over a number of days and that weather will be a factor in when the strikes begin. washington has been preparing to hit back at iran backed militias after three us troops were killed in a drone strike injordan. the american secretary of defence, lloyd austin, said the us had the right to retaliate after the recent attacks. this is a dangerous moment in the middle east. we will continue to work to avoid a wider conflict in the region. but we will take all necessary actions to defend the united states, our interests and our people. and we will respond when we choose, where we choose and how we choose. the latest there from lloyd austin. with me is our chief international correspondent lyse doucet. macklin,
given an update. would make the iraqi government upset of you? i given an update. would make the i iraqi government upset of you? it s difficult to answer that question without difficult to answer that question without commenting on the location that s without commenting on the location that s it without commenting on the location that s it on without commenting on the location that s it on the timing of future attacks that s it on the timing of future attacks which i am, or future responses, which united states might take, which responses, which united states might take, which i will not do as we have not from take, which i will not do as we have not from the take, which i will not do as we have not from the stadium, as a general matter. not from the stadium, as a general matter. we not from the stadium, as a general matter, we have made clear to the iranian matter, we have made clear to the iranian government, as i said before, iranian government, as i sa
man who threatened his grip on power, yevgeny prigozhin. but why? and did that meeting actually happen? plus tonight, major movement in the trump investigations. the doj going after trump s longtime aide in the classified documents case, while another grand jury is about to be selected. will it bring a third indictment against trump? and a massive manhunt tonight in pennsylvania. a suspected murderer with survivalist skills escapes from prison using a bed sheet. is someone tonight helping him stay alive and away and armed from police? let s go outfront. and good evening. i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, putin, the not-so-strong man. the kremlin revealing tonight that putin met with yevgeny prigozhin, the leader of that armed rebellion just five days after the attempted coup. the kremlin is giving some details. they re saying it was a nearly three-hour meeting. they re saying it happened on june 29th. so a lot of details there, including putin s spokesperson dmitr
officers have now searched five properties in london and newcastle in the hunt for abdul shokoor ezedi. the injured woman, who was known to the suspect, remains in hospital in a critical but stable condition. now on bbc news, talking business. hello, everybody. a very warm welcome to talking business weekly with me, aaron heslehurst. let s go and take a look at what s on the show. getting germany growing again. europe s biggest economy continues to shrink. so, what s it going to take to get it firing on all cylinders? when we go to the supermarket, but also in the restaurant, that used to be a cheap city. it s not the case anymore. there s growing discontent on the streets as germany continues to grapple with the switch away from cheap russian energy, and it struggles with the investment it needs for long term success. i m going to be discussing all of that with these two there they are. one of germany s leading business groups tells me it s important that consumers start s