Return to Transcripts main page

CNN NEWSROOM

Israel and Palestine Have Agreed to 72-Hour Truce; NASCAR Champion Tony Stewart Under Investigation; New Travel Warning to Iraq for Americans; Ross Harris Remains in Jail; Unarmed Missouri Teen Fatally Shot by Police; U.S. Air Strikes Appeared to have Slowed ISIS; College Athletes a Step Closer to Getting Paid

Aired August 10, 2014 - 15:00   ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


FREDRICKA WHITFIELD, CNN ANCHOR: Hello again, everyone. I'm Fredricka Whitfield. These stories are topping our news this hour. A horrific tragedy in the car racing world. A young driver killed on the track last night after being hit by the vehicle being driven by NASCAR star, Tony Stewart. Stewart's team director spoke today.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: It's just an unbelievable tragedy. Our hearts go out to obviously Kevin and his family, thoughts and prayers. This is a very tough, very emotional time for everybody.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

WHITFIELD: And we're expecting more details on the investigation from the sheriff at any moment there in Ontario county, New York. We'll bring that to you live as it happens.

And then overseas to Iraq, a new round of U.S. airstrikes targeting militants today. After three days in a row of bombing, where do things stand in northern Iraq? We'll go there live.

Plus a new cease-fire is hours away in Gaza. Both Israel and the Palestinians have agreed to it. What they hope to accomplish when the rockets stop flying. Coming up.

Any moment now, we expect to take you to a press conference in Ontario county, New York, from the sheriff's investigators there who will bring us up to date on the investigation now involving a tragic accident on a dirt track in New York involving NASCAR champion driver Tony Stewart behind the wheel as that vehicle crashed into a fellow driver, Kevin Ward, costing him his life. More on that tragic accident taking place last night.

A 20-year-old driver is dead. NASCAR champion Tony Stewart now under investigation. First, a warning. We have frozen this video just before impact, but it still might be too graphic for some audiences. This is how it happened. At a dirt track race in upstate New York last night, NASCAR champ Tony Stewart apparently clipping Kevin Ward Jr.'s car, knocking him out of the race. And then you see Ward getting out of the vehicle, still on an active track there when Stewart's car hit him.

The 20-year-old pronounced dead at a local hospital. Crystal Cranmore joins me from Watkins Glen, which is where that dirt track just 20 miles away from where that dirt track was. She's a reporter with Time Warner cable news in Syracuse.

So Crystal, give me an idea what the atmosphere is like there. I'm sure a dark cloud kind of hovering over the track there today in Watkins Glen.

CRYSTAL CRANMORE, REPORTER, TIME WARNER CABLE NEWS: Hi, Fredricka. Thank you.

You're right. You know, a lot of people are disappointed that Tony Stewart could not participate in the cheez-it 355 today. A lot of people are sad. A lot of people were at the garage saying when they were preparing the car for his replacement. And you know, again, very disappointed.

At the same time, though, a lot of the fans say that they feel for the victim's family. And you know, they understand. By the way, this is Tony Stewart's second time missing the cheez-it 355. So that only adds to the frustration -- Fredericka.

WHITFIELD: And Crystal, we understand that the Ontario sheriff's department will be holding a press conference momentarily. We don't know what's going to be said until it is said, but we know an investigation is under way. There have been no charges that have been filed as of yet as far as we know. We do know from the sheriff that Stewart has been fully cooperative. Is it also true that spectators from the event last night are being asked to provide photos or videos? Are you hearing an update on that?

CRANMORE: Yes, Fredricka. You know, the Ontario county sheriff's department is asking people to send in their video to help, to provide those video accounts. So you know, as you mentioned earlier today, there has been video circulating that is a little graphic. So any little bit helps is what the Ontario county sheriff's department is saying.

WHITFIELD: OK. Thank you so much, Crystal Cranmore, appreciate that. Keep us posted as you learn more information.

Of course, when that press conference takes place involving the Ontario county sheriff's office, we'll take you there live.

All right. We do understand that things have gotten under way with that press conference. Let's look at a picture. And here we go. Let's see if we can hear anything.

Since that time and continuing as we speak, an investigation is ongoing headed by this agency and reaching out to other organizations as appropriate to try and identify all the potential factors for this on-track crash and subsequent death.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Right now we're less than 16 hours into this investigation. And it continues to be ongoing. Of particular interest at this time is forensic examination of any videos that exist of this crash that occurred last evening. We're also finishing a law enforcement reconstruction of the crash, interviews.

WHITFIELD: Wow, sorry about that. OK. An interruption in that press conference coming from the sheriff's office there in Ontario county. What we were able to hear there, just 16 hours into the investigation as to what happened, what preceded of the hit between the vehicle that NASCAR champion Tony Stewart was driving and Kevin Ward who was on foot after getting out of his vehicle after their two vehicles made contact. And then Kevin Ward, that costing him his life. You heard from the sheriff who said they are looking for any video from any of the spectators about what took place last night. When we get more information, we'll bring it to you.

All right, now, moving on to Iraq where we're getting new developments about U.S. personnel working there. The U.S. state department has relocated some staff as violent militants threaten northern Iraq.

Erin McPike is live for us now at the White House. So Erin, what is the latest from the U.S. government on the situation there, and what potentially is the strategy next?

ERIN MCPIKE, CNN GENERAL ASSIGNMENT CORRESPONDENT: Fredericka, the state department has issued a new travel warning to Iraq for Americans. And as you mentioned, they are relocating staffers from the embassy in Baghdad as well as the consulate in Erbil and moving them to a consulate in Basra and another location in Amman.

And I want to read part of that travel warning to you that explains why they done this. They say the ability of the embassy to respond to situations in which U.S. citizens face difficulty including arrests is extremely limited. U.S. citizens in Iraq remain at high risk for kidnapping and terrorist violence -- terrorist violence.

Now, President Obama said just yesterday that his overall mission here is to protect Americans and American interests. So he'll do whatever it takes to do that. And this may be a long-term mission. But along those lines is where we're hearing some criticism in Washington start to form more today. We hear from a number of Republicans on some Sunday shows including CNN's "STATE OF THE UNION" where John McCain was a guest. And he said that Obama's actions don't really amount to a strategy at all, that what he is doing is ineffective and it is not going to effectively dismantle the so-called Islamic state.

We also heard today from house homeland security chairman Peter King, a Republican as well as Republican senator Lindsey Graham. And they both warned that we could see attacks on American soil at this point from ISIS -- Fred.

WHITFIELD: All right. Erin McPike at the White House, thanks so much.

All right. At first, the public felt sorry for the parents of a Georgia toddler who died in a hot car this summer. But reactions quickly changed to hate and scorn as investigators charge the father, Ross Harris, with murder. His wife, Leanna, has avoided the spotlight until now. We'll hear from her next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WHITFIELD: Ross Harris remains in jail facing murder and child cruelty charges for leaving his toddler in a hot car. But for the first time we're hearing his wife's side of the story. Her attorney spoke with CNN's Victor Blackwell.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

VICTOR BLACKWELL, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The death of my son is still unreal. I now live a tortured existence. The emotional first words from Leeanna Harris since a Georgia judge denied bond for her husband, Justin Ross Harris. He's pleaded not guilty to murder and child cruelty charges for the death of their 22-month-old son, Cooper.

Cooper died in June after being left in this sweltering SUV for seven hours. Both parents say it was an accident. However, in this victim impact questionnaire sent to Leanna Harris by the district attorney and released by her attorney, Harris listed herself as the victim.

LAWRENCE ZIMMERMAN, LEANNA HARRIS' ATTORNEY: She's a victim of -- she's lost a child. She's a victim of public perception, thinking that she had something to do with it.

BLACKWELL: In a network exclusive interview, Lawrence Zimmerman says accusations that she plotted to kill her son that are based on her perceived lack of emotion have left Harris with no confidence in society.

ZIMMERMAN: She's supposed to be publicly emotional? Is that how people are supposed to react to tragedy in their life? I don't think there's a right way to react to tragedy.

BLACKWELL: And what about the testimony from Cobb county detective Phillip Stoddard during his husband's probable cause hearing?

DETECTIVE PHIL STODDARD, COBB COUNTY, GEORGIA POLICE: In front of several witnesses, all of a sudden she states "Ross must have left him in the car." She had him sit down. And he starts going through this. And she looks at him and she says, did you say too much?

BLACKWELL: In a statement Harris writes Ross was a wonderful father and he loved Cooper with all his heart. Because I know how I treasured that little boy for 22 months, I know without a doubt, he would have never had knowingly allowed any harm to come to our son. I want to you know what a loving father he was to Cooper.

And then there are those accusations Ross Harris was sending sexually explicit messages as Cooper suffered in the heat.

STODDARD: He was having up to six different conversations with different women. The most common term would be sexting. There are photos of his exposed penis, erect penis, being sent.

BLACKWELL: Leeann Harris writes whatever issues that transpired in our marriage is between God and us for he will judge those moral sins.

ZIMMERMAN: Eventually there will be the right time and the right place for her to possibly speak publicly, if that's what she wants to do. But certainly not yet.

BLACKWELL: Is it something she wants to do? Does she want to speak out and say here's the truth?

ZIMMERMAN: I think anybody who is being cast in a false light or a negative light, maybe that's the better word, would always want to defend themselves. If someone called you out on something, you'd want to defend yourself. But because she is in the public eye this way, you know, it's hard for her to do that.

BLACKWELL: Why is it difficult? Why isn't now the time? If the truth is the truth today, it will be the truth during a trial or after trial, why not come out and tell the truth now?

ZIMMERMAN: Because she is not only dealing with the loss of her child, her husband and grieving and trying to get her life back in order, she's also concerned that the district attorney's office may try to level a charge against her.

BLACKWELL: Does your client expect charges?

ZIMMERMAN: I think we are hoping that the district attorney's office is looking at her as a victim of a crime since she lost her child, that that's a sign that they're not going to charge her.

BLACKWELL: But in a statement to CNN, a Cobb county spokeswoman writes, we are required by the crime victims bill of rights to send those forms to all victims or victim's next of kin, and it is standard procedure in the Cobb county district attorney's office to do so.

Regardless of charges, Zimmerman says Leeanna Harris is holding on to at least one long-term plan.

ZIMMERMAN: I know she wanted to have another child. I think anybody who loves children would want more children.

BLACKWELL: Victor Blackwell, CNN, Atlanta.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WHITFIELD: Soon college athletes might actually profit from playing. A federal judge's ruling could change college sports as we know it. We'll explain.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WHITFIELD: College athletes are a step closer to getting paid. On Friday, a federal judge ruled that they deserve to profit from their school's use of their names and images. But this morning on ABC's "This Week," the NCAA president said he plans to appeal.

Here's CNN's Sara Ganim. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

ED O'BANNON, FORMER UCLA BASKETBALL PLAYER: I love the fact that student athletes are standing up for themselves.

SARA GAMIN, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): The landmark case started with Ed O'Bannon, a former UCLA basketball player, who sued after he was surprised to see himself in a video game.

O'BANNON: I just said to myself, you know, something's got to -- how -- why -- why wasn't he asked, you know? They used my face. They used my likeness.

GANIM: They used his likeness, but they didn't pay him for it. Now the NCAA can no longer ban universities from paying players for the rights to their images. That could really help athletes like Tyrone Prothro who often struggle while universities make millions.

Prothro is the former wide receiver who caught this amazing hail Mary pass seconds before halftime in a game with his arms outstretched around the helmet of a defender. It became the play of the year in 2005, shown over and over again on TV.

Even, you know, eight, nine years later, it's still the catch. That's how famous it is.

TYRONE PROTHRO, FORMER UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA FOOTBALL PLAYER: You probably could go to several schools and ask a random person about the catch, and they'll probably give you a little story about it.

GANIM: Just three games later, this was Prothro. His leg was shattered and so were his chances of ever playing in the pros. He graduated, but he struggled financially.

PROTHRO: Just, you know, been working in the bank industry and did a little, you know, pest control sales and then ended up at my job that I'm at now, and that's Coca-Cola refreshments.

GANIM: To Prothro, it felt like everyone made money off the play except him. That's changing. Starting in 2016, universities will be allowed to pay players up to $5,000 a year for use of their image. The money will be held in a trust fund until they leave the school.

SONNY VACCARO, FORMER NIKE EXECUTIVE: Everybody, basically everybody made money except the kid who gave them the opportunity to make the money on what he did.

GANIM: Sonny Vaccaro is the former Nike executive who basically invented athlete endorsements. He's also the driving force behind the O'Bannon lawsuit.

VACCARO: There's no television sports. There's no marketing of t- shirts and Gatorades and everything else without the athlete.

GANIM: The NCAA has argued that this will ruin college sports, but the judge rejected that argument saying that fans come for tradition, not for amateurism.

O'BANNON: I wanted to stand up and say no, this isn't right. And so far, you know, mission accomplished.

GANIM: Sara Ganim, CNN, New York.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WHITFIELD: So what now for this case? Joining me via Skype is Keith Reed, sports business analyst and former ESPN senior editor. Keith, good to see you.

KEITH REED, SPORTS BUSINESS ANALYST: Great to see you. Thanks.

WHITFIELD: OK. So today the NCAA says they will appeal perhaps for barely 24 hours. There are a lot of college athletes who consider that federal court ruling a victory. But then now what? What will the NCAA's argument continue to be besides, as we saw in Sara's piece, that this would ruin college sports? What more will they say in this appeal?

REED: They're going to continue to argue that these student athletes are just that they're students first, athletes second. And that NCAA football, basketball, these large programs in division I represent amateurism.

The problem that they have is that this is now the second decision this year. Earlier in the year there was a national labor relations board decision in a case that allowed some student athletes, football players at northwestern university to unionize. The law has really not shown itself to be on the side of the NCAA in its arguments that college athletics is really, at least at the division I level, is about amateurism. That's a problem they're going to have. It seems like an uphill climb for the NCAA at this point.

WHITFIELD: So if the NCAA will be arguing that paying college students would be a distraction, are they also going to be arguing that colleges have the right to make money off these student athletes by using their images if they're current players or even if they're former college players?

REED: Well, yes, that's been the business model of the NCAA. I mean, the big problem for them with this decision is that it almost takes away the NCAA's -- I mean, their entire reason for being the NCAA is to regulate college athletics as a system of amateurism.

With these students that come and they're compensated via receiving a college education and they move on, but they're really not doing it for the money. They're doing it for the sport. At the same time, the NCAA and all of the institutions are making money to the tune of tens of millions per institution and billions as an industry per year. The only people who haven't been able to benefit to this point have been the student athletes. And so they're going to keep trying to argue this.

It's a little funny to me is to hear the NCAA say they're going to argue that paying the athletes becomes a distraction when we already know all the distractions that students have at this point. We know that about all of the student athletes who have been suspended, we know about the student athletes who have faced sanctions who have been investigated, et cetera, for receiving some kind of compensation, whether it came from the NCAA or somewhere else in these instances to say now we're going to pay them and we are going to cap it at $20,000, that's going to be a distraction? I don't think so.

WHITFIELD: So why is it that in the sports community there are some who argue that this federal court ruling is the demise -- you know, leads to the demise of the NCAA? I mean, this kind of regulation is just one of many things that the NCAA would regulate, or does this ruling mean that the NCAA, if this ruling were to hold, would be in trouble? As an institution -- as a governing body, I should say?

REED: Yes, it opens up a whole lot of questions for the NCAA. If you're no longer able to regulate whether or not students get paid and are no longer able to stipulate whether or not they're actually amateur athletes or not, then you have some conferences, the power of five, for example, do they come autonomous, they walk away from the NCAA and do their own thing where they don't have to be governed by the NCAA? Does it then gut their ability to regulate some of the other things?

If you change the business models, then you change the amount of money that the schools are able to bring in and hold on to for themselves. So can they even fight future lawsuits like this? I mean, this really, really puts them in a difficult position in that it has the potential, the potential, to change the business models for college sports and thus for the NCAA itself.

WHITFIELD: All right. Fascinating issue. And it's not over yet. It's still the beginning stages, it seems. All right, Keith Reed, thanks so much.

REED: Thank you.

WHITFIELD: All right. Next, an unarmed teen is shot by police while walking with his friend in the St. Louis area.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DORIAN JOHNSON, FRIEND WAS SHOT BY POLICE: We wasn't causing any harm to nobody. We had no weapons on us at all.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

WHITFIELD: And that's the eyewitness account. The sheriff's department sees it differently. Bottom line, the community is outraged. What officials are saying may have led to the shooting. We're live in Missouri next.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WHITFIELD: All right, bottom of the hour now. Welcome back. I'm Fredricka Whitfield. Ahead, more on Iraq and the Middle East. First, a look at other big

stories we're following. We begin with Ebola and this statement from Liberia's president.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

ELLEN JOHNSON SIRLEAF, LIBERIAN PRESIDENT: If we haven't done enough so far, I've come here to apologize to you for that.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

WHITFIELD: Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf apologizing for the toll the Ebola virus has taken on her country. She says the epidemic has overwhelmed her nation's health care system. A state of emergency is in effect, and military troops have set up checkpoints to try to contain the virus. Sirleaf says her country is building a crematorium and wants the U.S. to conduct clinical trials in Liberia. Of the drug used on two infected American aid workers now receiving treatment in the U.S.

And a wildfire in northern California grows and several communities are forced to evacuate. The 8500-acre fire is only 30 percent contained. At least 11 people have been injured including several firefighters.

And it's tough to play golf when it looks like this. The final round of the PGA championship was suspended this afternoon as heavy rain hit the course in Louisville, Kentucky. It's the final major tournament of the year. But guess what? Now play has resumed. And Rory McIlroy leads. You'll remember Tiger Woods didn't make the cut in this tournament.

Hey, so if you're up tonight, take a look toward the sky. Another supermoon is on tap this evening. A supermoon is when the moon is at its closest point to the earth. It is 12 percent bigger and 30 percent brighter than usual. And if that's not enough, you can catch the perseid meteor shower on Wednesday.

A community in the St. Louis area is outraged after police shot an unarmed teen yesterday afternoon. The victim is just 18-years-old, Michael Brown. His mother says he didn't deserve it.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

LESLEY MCSPADDEN, VICTIM'S MOTHER: My son just turned 18 and graduated from high school. He don't bother nobody. They told me how many times my son was shot. Eight.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

WHITFIELD: But police say shots were fired after there might have been a physical altercation with the police officer.

Grant Bissell with affiliate KSDK joins us now from St. Louis.

All right, so police held a press conference this morning. What was said about the sequence of events that led up to the shooting? Because it differs from what many eyewitnesses have said.

GRANT BISSELL, REPORTER, KSDK: It is very different, in fact. The police say that Michael Brown assaulted an officer. There was a struggle within the officer's vehicle for the police officer's weapon and that the officer fired one shot inside the vehicle and then got out of the vehicle and fired multiple other shots, shooting and killing Michael Brown.

Witnesses say the officer was the aggressor. He approached the two men that were walking down the street, Michael Brown being one of them, of course. And told them they need to be on the sidewalk. Told them that they were basically bothering people. There was a little bit of disagreement apparently between them. And they say the officer reached through the window, and grabbed Michael Brown and was struggling with him and then shot him.

They say they ran away and that Michael Brown was shot while he was running and then again while he was surrendering. Clearly two different stories in this case. And we have yet to learn exactly what led to this shooting.

WHITFIELD: So Grant, what more do we know about Michael brown? We heard from the mother there in that sound bite who says, you know, he wasn't bothering anybody. He just graduated from high school. And we also know that when was staying with his grandmother for the summer. And this is the neighborhood where his grandmother lives?

BISSELL: Yes, yes. That's what we've been told, that he was on his way back to his grandmother's home, walking back from a grocery store with a friend. As far as what we know about Michael Brown, again, you know, it sounds as though from witnesses as though he was a good, respectable kid, had just graduated this past spring from high school and was set to begin college tomorrow, actually. Obviously, that will not happen because his life was taken far too young. But from all accounts, he was not a troublemaking young man at all.

WHITFIELD: All right. Grant Bissell, thank you so much from our affiliate KSDK.

All right. Coming up, the latest on the crash that killed race car driver Kevin Ward Jr. What are investigators saying?

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WHITFIELD: The world of auto racing is mourning the loss of a driver, Kevin Ward Jr. He was killed after being hit on a racetrack. He was the pedestrian hit by another vehicle.

Let's get an update now from CNN sports Rashan Ali.

RASHAN ALI, BLEACHER REPORT: NASCAR driver Tony Stewart is under investigation for hitting and killing another driver during a dirt track race. The incident happened last night at a sprint car race in upstate New York. We've edited this footage, but it is still maybe too graphic for some. Witnesses say Stewart spun out fellow driver Kevin Ward Jr. Kevin

Ward then got out of his car and then was hit by Stewart's car. We see him walking on the track there. Then the impact happens shortly thereafter, sending him sliding down the track. Ontario county New York sheriff, Phil Povero, says an ambulance took ward to the hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Kevin ward Jr. Was 20 years old. Stewart was questioned and released after the incident. The sheriff says Stewart is, quote, "very upset and has been fully cooperative with the investigation."

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

PHILIP POVERO, SHERIFF, ONTARIO COUNTY, NEW YORK: This is right now being investigated as an on-track crash. And I don't want to infer that there are criminal charges pending. I would only say that the investigation, once completed, we will sit down with the district attorney and review it. But I want to make it very clear there are no criminal charges pending at this time. This is an ongoing investigation.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

ALI: Tony Stewart's spokesman released a statement to CNN early this morning. It reads "a tragic accident took place last night during a sprint car race in which Tony Stewart was participating. Tony was unhurt, but a fellow competitor lost his life. Our thoughts and prayers go out to his family and friends. We're still attempting to sort through all of the details, and we appreciate your understanding during this difficult time."

Tony Stewart only returned to dirt track racing last month almost a year after breaking his leg in a crash in Iowa. He didn't return to racing in any form until February, and that was to get ready for the Daytona 500.

Stewart is a three-time NASCAR champion and is co-owner of the Stewart-Haas racing team. The sheriff is asking for people with video to contact their office so copies can be entered into the investigation.

WHITFIELD: Rashan Ali, thanks so much. A big story we'll continue to follow.

Also still ahead, as the crisis in Iraq intensifies, why are ISIS militants trying to recruit women?

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WHITFIELD: All right. Let's get a sense now just how bad the situation is for thousands of religious minorities on the run in Iraq. And in order to do so, you have to go there.

CNN's Ivan Watson has. He shows us the desperation of the people who are literally running for their lives to escape the brutality of is militants. (BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

IVAN WATSON, CNN SENIOR INTERNATIONAL CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): Desperation on a mountaintop. Kurdish civilians, some clearly wounded, baking in the August sun. This little girl crying "i lost my sister and brother. Where is my mother?"

With every passing day, Kurdish officials say more people die here of dehydration and exposure to the extreme August heat. Kurdish officials say tens of thousands of people from the Yazidi religious minority fled to this mountain ridge to escape ISIS militants who recently captured the nearby town of Sinjar. ISIS have the Yazidis surrounded. The trapped people relying on air drops of vital water and food delivered by the U.S. and Iraqi air forces.

Kurdish TV released this footage of a helicopter delivering assistance to the same area. A lucky few make it on board the flight to safety. Their faces pretty much say it all. Not far away, ISIS militants have been celebrating their latest advances, showing off their control of the Mosul dam, a strategic piece of Iraqi infrastructure. If it breaks, it could flood all the way down to the capital, Baghdad.

Further east, U.S. airstrikes appear to have slowed the ISIS advance. Bombing suspected ISIS positions just west of the Saab river, just 20 minutes' drive away from Erbil. Kurdish officials relieved and thankful for the U.S. intervention.

HOSYAR ZEBARI, IRAQ FOREIGN MINISTER: We are most grateful and express our gratitude and deep, deep appreciation for President Obama and the U.S. administration and for the courageous U.S. army and airmen who are now patrolling the skies of Iraq and Iraqi Kurdistan.

WATSON: U.S. air power has given the Kurdish administration in Erbil the opportunity to bolster its defenses around this fragile sanctuary in the north where hundreds of thousands of Iraqis fled to escape the is advance.

Ivan Watson, CNN, Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WHITFIELD: Erbil is just about an hour's drive east of the Iraqi city of Mosul. And Mosul is another key city in northern Iraq that ISIS militants have overrun and seized. And one group of family members right here in Atlanta is very worried because they have relatives in the middle of all of this chaos.

Nick Valencia spoke with them today. So Nick, their greatest fears are what?

NICK VALENCIA, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Well, not being able to see their family again. They haven't been able to get in touch with them. And they're really scared for their safety. They have more than 30 family members. These are cousins, aunts, uncles, all unaccounted for. They live either in Mosul or in the surrounding area. And in fact, the fear is so real that it's paralyzed them here, so

much so that they don't want to use their real names. I spoke to one of the sisters earlier who talked to me about her reaction in seeing the images of those caught up in the conflict.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

MS. SULAIMAN, HAS FAMILY IN IRQA: Help, please. All the humanitarian agencies ignore. Please take them to a safe haven.

VALENCIA: Your family's there as well.

SULAIMAN: We have because when we left the country, it was war. I was born in a war. Left, it was a war. And we came here. And look at the situation.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

VALENCIA: Ms. Sulaiman went on to say that there is a generation now living in Iraq that will nothing else but war. She said she had a message for the leaders in Iraq saying that it needs to come -- change needs to come from within. It's going to take more than international intervention to change this. She's just very worried about her family members. They haven't been able to get in touch with them, Fred.

WHITFIELD: So before this moment where, you know, they're unable to have contact, in the earlier discussions, was there ever an expression of fear or worry that something was imminent, that these militants were on the way to Mosul? That it posed a threat?

VALENCIA: I asked them specifically about that if they were caught off guard. We heard President Obama say that there was, you know, intelligence, the intelligence estimate on the ground there and here as well just didn't see this or how quickly they would advance. Well, neither according to Ms Sulaiman, neither did her family. They were caught off guard by this. And now the fear is that they will end up losing their lives in this, Fred.

WHITFIELD: It's terribly sad. All right, thank you so much.

VALENCIA: You bet.

WHITFIELD: And of course, we're hoping the best for that family and the thousands of other Iraqis who are facing this.

All right, now to the Middle East. In a little more than an hour, a cease-fire between Israel and Hamas is expected to start. Both sides have agreed to a 72-hour truce. It begins at 5:00 p.m. eastern time which is midnight Gaza time. We're back in a minute.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WHITFIELD: The U.S. has relocated some state department staffers working in two Iraq cities. In a travel warping, the U.S. state department says some workers in the embassy in Baghdad and the consulate in Erbil have been relocated. Both locations are, however, still open.

This comes on the third day of U.S. air strikes against ISIS. The Islamic state in Iraq and Syria and the heaviest bombings so far. The U.S. said it hit armed trucks and more positions in five strikes today.

Also today 20,000 Yazidi Iraqis who had been stranded in the Sinjar mountains have been rescued. They had fled to the mountains to escape ISIS and they had been stuck there with no food or water in blistering heat. Iraqi officials said today Kurdish forces fought back ISIS enough to bring to refugees some safety. But there are still thousands left.

It's not an independent state but the Kurdish region of Iraq has played an important role in stabilized Iraq and its neighboring areas. And as the Kurds try to fight ISIS, there's a great deal hanging in the balance.

Here's CNN's Richard Roth.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

RICHARD ROTH, CNN SENIOR UNITED NATIONS CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): America's air strikes in Iraq highlights the report of Washington's relationship with the Kurds.

JOE REEDER, FORMER U.S. ARMY SECRETARY: The Kurds are the very best friends we have in the Middle East. They've always been there second only to Israel. We have no better friends there.

ROTH: Now, the friends are facing their toughest enemies in two decades in the form of is, also known as the Islamic state, the extremists who are terrorizing their way through Iraq.

BARACK OBAMA, PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: We can and should support moderate force who can bring stability to Iraq.

ROTH: Over the years, the United States has been a strong ally to the Kurds and the president, Masoud Barzani.

JOHN KERRY, SECRETARY OF STATE: I'm very grateful to President Barzani for the generous welcome. It is very good to see him again.

ROTH: The Kurds don't have their own country but do have autonomy for Baghdad in a region called Kurdistan, the most stable part of Iraq as the rest of the country has deteriorated along sectarian lines. The Kurdish fighters have a good reputation but ammunition is running low. If the Kurds fall it could lead to a domino effect.

ZALWAY KHALILIZAD, FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR TO IRAQ: This is a terrorist organization that has ambition not only with Iraq, Syria, and the region, but also regionally and therefore it could pose a threat ultimately to the United States.

ROTH: America's support for the Kurds soared after hundreds of thousands of people were brutalized under the rule of Saddam Hussein. In such a conflict filled region, the Kurds have long made overtures even to Iran forging alliances on all sides but especially with the United States.

JON ALTERMAN, CENTER FOR STRATEGIC AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES: I think that has created a -- not so much a dependent but a certain mutual loyalty which helps explain why the United States is getting involved right now and why the U.S. wasn't involved a week ago.

ROTH: Now two decades later the Kurds are an ally the U.S. can't afford to lose and may be critical in the effort to stop is.

Richard Roth, CNN, New York.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

WHITFIELD: Iraqi officials tell CNN ISIS is ramping up its recruiting efforts. While their primary target is young Sunni men, ISIS is also trying to get western women to join the fight and not just for martyrdom but for marriage.

CNN's Stephanie Elam has more.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

STEPHANIE ELAM, CNN CORRESPONDENT (voice-over): There's leaning in and then there's arming up.

MIA BLOOM, AUTHOR, BOMBSHELL: WOMEN AND TERRORISM: The idea that women can be involved in jihad is something that people still don't take as seriously as they should.

ELAM: Women around the world are now taking part in jihad. In Nigeria, Syria, and now in America. The number of women willing to give their lives to terrorists and extremists experts say have increased over the last 15 years.

BLOOM: We see western women going to jihad and Syria for about a year and half now.

ELAM: Why now? Experts believe terror group organizers count on women from Europe, Canada, and the U.S. to get past terrorism intelligence agencies.

BLOOM: That's western women, they come with their western passports. They're going to fall under the radar screen. The majority of the women are going to go there to be traditional wives.

ELAM: But that's not always the case. Take American Shannon Conley. The 19-year-old is charged with conspiracy to provide material support to terrorists. She reportedly fell in love with his ISIS fighter online and allegedly was on her way to join him in Syria before officials picked her up in April.

BLOOM; She was interviewed no fewer than nine times before her arrest by the FBI because she was scoping out a local church.

ELAM: Her attorney had no comment. Many of these women are radicalized at home, seduced on the internet.

How are they appealing to the western women?

JEFFREY SIMON, AUTHOR, LONE WOLF TERRORISM: You don't have to convince that many. If somebody spams millions of people. You only need a certain number that are going to respond to that.

ELAM: The scariest of prospects are the lone wolves, people acting on their own like (INAUDIBLE) in England. The King's college student dropped out of school just before graduation and tried to assassinate a member of the British parliament for supporting the Iraq war.

SIMON: She was not radical, she can talk about jihad, she just secretly by herself downloaded a hundred sermons.

ELAM: Women some very well-known are also using twitter to recruit new members from the Midwest.

BLOOM: Like (INAUDIBLE) who is one of the premiere Jihadi. She's British and she's the one that keeps calling to women around the world, especially women in the western countries to come and join the global jihad. They think that they're doing something good for their community or their people.

ELAM: A darker side of the fairer sex now wanted around the world.

Stephanie Elam, CNN, Los Angeles.

(END VIDEOTAPE)