me @wolfblitzer. be sure to join us right here on monday in the situation room. in the meantime, thanks very much for watching. i m wolf blitzer in the situation room. have a great weekend. erin burnett outfront starts right now. outfront next, boots back on the ground. the white house in an about-face announcing u.s. special forces are headed to syria to fight isis. is this the start of another ground war? plus, marco rubio leaving the campaign trail to cast his vote. and a deadly shootout at a strip mall. investigators pouring over that video tonight. what do they see? we ll show you. let s go outfront. good evening. i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, the breaking news, an about-face. the white house announcing today that american forces will be deployed to syria. it s a reversal from a president
here monitoring it. you can literally hear the ice cracking at times. and the fear is that there is going to be movement of this ice at some point, and when there is, if there s a buildup, it could move even farther into these homes. and then the second part of the equation is when this ice starts to melt. the ice will move, then the water will come up and a lot of these folks are worried that there could be flooding. but as dangerous as this is, wolf, it is an incredible sight to see. back to you. ted rowlands on the scene for us. let s hope for the best. this note, stay with cnn throughout the night, especially later tonight for much more on president obama s new initiative to help young minority men. don lemon will host a special report my brother s keeper. that will air at 11:00 p.m. eastern tonight only here on cnn. you can always follow us on twitter, tweet me @wolf blitzer, tweet the show @cnn sit room.
felt that if cameras were going to follow us around, why not, why not make something good out of that? celebrities the bring attention to an issue, especially in that issue is not the sexiest issue. to get ben affleck involved, all of a sudden it s a little more interesting. reporter: that s somethng most politicians have known for a while. jake tapper, cnn, washington. i want to thank these celebrities for doing what they re doing because almost all of these causes are extremely important. that s it for me. remember, you can always follow what s going on on twitter, tweet me @wolf blitzer, you can tweet the show @cnn sit room. crossfire starts now. tonight on crossfire what s more important? protecting freedom or preventing discrimination? it s not about gay rights or gay discrimination. arizona s governor has to
uncertainty of what s going on in ukraine continues. lots at stake for all of us right now. tomorrow a special interview i ll have with marco rubio, the senator from florida. he ll join me in the situation room. we ll talk about among other things what s going on in venezuela, and we ll talk about his future political aspirations, does he want to run for president in 2016. i know he s been asked that question many times. i ll ask him again tomorrow. the interview with marco rubio here in the situation room tomorrow. that s it for me. thanks for watching. you can always follow what s going on behind the scenes on twitter follow me @wolf blitzer. crossfire with missouri governor jay nixon and pat mccrory starts now. tonight on crossfire, president obama picks a fight with the republican governors. today they hit back. this is an administration
the lift is like hot air balloon. when you have warmth, the air goes up and you have bigger storms. chad myers, we ll monitor over the next couple hours and see what happens. thanks very much. you can follow us on twitter, tweet me @wolf blitzer. that s it for me. thanks for watching. crossfire with special guest ralph nader and stephen moore starts right now. tonight on crossfire is it time millions of americans got a raise? all the president s men say yes. it s the right thing to do for our economy. for companies, i think they should support this. but will your boss say, i can t afford it, you re fired. on the left, van jones. on the right, newt gingrich. in the crossfire ralph nader, a longtime consumer advocate, and stephen moore, a