recovered from mar-a-lago last month, and it includes empty folders marked as classified. we re live in moscow as the nation bids farewell to the leading soviet who brought the cold war to a peaceful end. announcer: live from cnn center, this is cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. well, if at first you don t succeed, try again. it s 5:00 a.m. on florida s space coast and after last monday s scrubbed launch, nasa s artemis i rocket is ready for liftoff once more. have a look, this is the scene live right now from the kennedy space center. things go to plan, the unmanned mission will be able to launch this afternoon going beyond the moon and kicking off a new stage in space exploration. the artemis program could see humans return to the lunar surface and set their sights on mars and beyond. the vibe around the kennedy space center is electric right now. as nasa chief bill nelson explains, that could be one of the challenges. here he is. the launch team is very confiden
how he is viewed inside the west today. the current hisser toography in moscow promulgated by putin says that gorbachev is to blame for enormous number of ills, russia s loss of status. there are people in moscow who will be genuinely mourning him, who remember his reign as general secretary and then as president of the soviet union as a moment of great creativity and openness. it was the moment when russia really finally after many decades began to change. but the official line, the one that supports the current ruling elite and their argument for why they need an autocratic, clep toe cattic state is that he brought down the russian empire. the biden administration approved more than $1.1 billion in armed sales to taiwan. the white house formally