camera. she did agree to speak with my partner cnn producer nora. you were in with mia and her mother, i want to make clear her mother was there the whole time. what did she tell you? the 11-year-old mia was in that fourth grade classroom that we have heard so much about with ms. garcia and ms. morales. they were watching lilo and stitch, it was the end of the school year, and she said one of her teachers got the email that there was a shooter in the building and went to the door and he was right there. they made eye contact. the shooter made eye contact with the teacher. with the teacher and he shot out the window in the door. and then mia says it just happened all so fast, he backed the teacher into the classroom and he made eye contact with the teacher, again, looked her right in the eye and said goodnight and then shot her and killed her. he said goodnight before he shot her. he said goodnight. then it happened pretty fast after that as well. he started open fir
Long-range rocket systems that are now the top request from ukrainian officials. joining me now with her new reporting is cnn white house reporter natasha bertrand. what are they talking about her? this would actually really according to experts, according to lawmakers who have been pushing for it be a fame changer in the war that ukraine is fighting against russia. these systems can launch rockets extremely far, extremely long range, up to 186 miles. this is something that ukrainian officials have been pushing for for weeks because they are saying that they are outgunned and outmanned in eastern ukraine. that russia is really kind of going scorched earth in eastern ukraine and they are managing to take some territory back from the ukrainians. so the ukrainians have been saying that they need these systems, these heavy artillery systems that, again, have a very long range in order to turn the tide of the war there against the russians. what we re told is that the administration has b
Were launching them out of the caspian sea from the strategic bombers. we were able to intercept and shoot shut down shoot down like 8 out of 20 missiles, the rest they did hit the targets. as far as those targets were critical objects of the infrastructure. finally, are you getting the material you need at this point to fight this war? okay. so as far as i know our army units, they are receiving vast number of new armament, they are starting to receive artillery systems, like heavy artillery systems, tanks and a lot of anti-tank weapons and the rest, but for me like i m the air
Until after this sensitive turkish referendum for the president. so at this point in time this is not going to directly affect the attempt to retake raqqah. the u.s. military efforts remember there are marines based not far from raqqah with heavy artillery systems, but they are in a holding position. we also know that there are u.s. army rangers who have been positioned up to the northern border near turkey separating several tides sides, keeping the turks at bay. russians involved up there. from our understanding this will not task efforts to retake raqqah but you re talking about the principle of unintended consequences here, this is war after all and this is being described as to proportional strike by pentagon and by the national security advisor, it can have unintended consequences and it s not clear how the