flying over the black sea. this is video of the type of reaper drone that went down. white house officials say that the russian move over international waters is the kind of thing that could spark a dangerous escalation between super powers. it could lead to m miscalculations between, you know, two militaries that are operating not obviously in ukraine together but certainly in proximity in the region. and we don t want to see the war escalate beyond what it has already done to the ukrainian people and so this is clearly this was inappropriate, unsafe, unprofessional conduct by the russian pilots. and salma abdelaziz is live in london for us. salma, russia and the u.s. have very different stories here about what happened. reporter: two very different narratives about what took place in the early hours of yesterday morning on the black sea. the united states says that russian fighter jets essentially reading between the lines harassed the united states drone. they say
Those of the headlines. Those are the headlines. Hello and a warm welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me are the broadcaster and journalist james lewer, and kate maltby, columnist for the i. Welcome back to both of you. Weve got a few more front pages. The guardian leads with a stark warning from Health Experts who say that children may die if families turn off heat because of soaring energy bills this winter. The i also leads on energy and the conservative leadership race, saying that the front runner liz truss is under pressure to deliver immediate help for households and small businesses. Truss hints she may axe motorway speed limits, is the daily telegraphs headline referring to comments made by the Foreign Secretary at the final Tory Hustings held in london a few hours ago. The times top story is a rise in lone parenting, as a Study Reveals nearly half of british children grow up outside the traditional two parent household. The ft leads
the wo woods just yet. ten storm-related deaths after facing an overnight hammering across the peninsula. residents describing what it was like to ride out one of the worst storms to ever hit the u.s. i feared for my life. i went across the street, i got sticks and it didn t last enough for the big bad wolf that puffed away. i was just scared for my children. trace: rescue and recovery efforts underway in numerous cities that have seen historic flooding, fallen trees, downed power lines, and large gaps where a bridge once connected the mainland to the barrier islands. we ve got team coverage for you tonight, kevin corke with a look at how this biden administration is responding to the storm. will nunley still on the ground and we begin with steve harrigan live in florida just 9 miles away from where ian came a short period good evening, you heard from people who rode out the storm the fear as the storm was coming through and then later we are seeing people talking tod
those of the headlines. those are the headlines. hello and a warm welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the broadcaster and journalist james lewer, and kate maltby, columnist for the i. welcome back to both of you. we ve got a few more front pages. the guardian leads with a stark warning from health experts who say that children may die if families turn off heat because of soaring energy bills this winter. the i also leads on energy and the conservative leadership race, saying that the front runner liz truss is under pressure to deliver immediate help for households and small businesses. truss hints she may axe motorway speed limits, is the daily telegraph s headline referring to comments made by the foreign secretary at the final tory hustings held in london a few hours ago. the times top story is a rise in lone parenting, as a study reveals nearly half of british children grow up outside the traditional two parent hous