world. i m fareed zakaria coming to you live from new york. today on the program, the justice department throws 37 charges at former president donald trump. saying he mishandled classified documents. the indictment say the papers laid out everything from america s military weaknesses to foreign nation s nuclear capacities. what does it mean for u.s. security? should he have been indicted? i m an innocent man. i did nothing wrong. then, artificial intelligence may be the most important development of our time. but is it the most dangerous as well? we know it will replace jobs and blur the lines of reality but it could be a larger existential threat? i ll talk to geoffrey hinton, known as the godfather of ai, who said, yes. the worry is can we keep them working for us when their much more intelligent than us. also, how do you end extreme poverty globally? it is a very tall order. but ajay banja wants to do just that. he s the brand-new head of the world bank. he s tas
laughter welcome everyone here in this cnn newsroom, i m omar jimenez in washington. we re going to begin this hour with fierce fighting in eastern ukraine as ukrainian troops say they ve successfully countered or they are successfully countering russian advances around the town near kharkiv, right along the russian border, which is turned the town itself into a front line in this war, you can see vovchansk highlighted on the map there. now the extent of the damage is pretty staggering, as you can see, there from ms drone footage over her head, much of the fighting in the last few weeks has reportedly centered around an aggregate plant, which usually produces materials for construction. now it s a combat zone we re ukrainian troops have tried to isolate russian units to cross the border as part of a recent offensive, one ukrainian commander referred to russian troops in the town as surrounded and one of the biggest this shifts on that eastern front is the us permitting ukrain
31 of the 37 counts in the federal indictment against donald trump accuse the former president of illegally retaining classified documents. federal prosecutors say that at plg his private club in florida, that doubled as his home, boxes of presidential papers containing classified information were stored everywhere. from a stage in a ballroom to a chandeliered and gilded bathroom. i asked tim naftali to join me to talk about the national security and political impacts of all of this. he s the former director of the nixon library, a cnn presidential historian and next month he begins a new role teaching at columbia s school of international and public affairs. tim, welcome. your training is actually as a intelligence historian. so looking at all of this, what do what could we glean from what what were these documents? did they reveal things?