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tv   Anderson Cooper 360  CNN  June 17, 2014 5:00pm-6:01pm PDT

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and tomorrow, it's one of america's biggest allies in the middle east, and what is the new haven for terror funding? it's a crucial question and we have an answer. an out front special investigation tomorrow. investigation tomorrow. "ac 360" starts right now. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com good evening. it is 3:00 a.m. here in baghdad and for many reasons, a lot of people in the city are likely not sleeping easy tonight, not with sunni extremist fighters less than 40 miles to the north of the city battling to add another city. secretary reprisals and terror attacks playing out there and right here in the capitol, not with bodies being discovered and road side bombs going off and the prime minister not holding it together. if it were possible, not many
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people, as i said, sleeping easy tonight. isis forces and sunni militants attacked the city less than 40 miles north of the capitol. the push is another troubling sign for prime minister maliki his mill tar unable to stop advances. hundreds of thousands are fleeing fighting leading from there, they took what they could, even livestock. they called on ordinary iraqis to take up arms against the militants and thousands have responded. this video uploaded to youtube claims to show hundreds signing up to fight. cnn cannot independently verify the video. on a baghdad street, we met one young man selling shoes. he says he has already signed up
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to fight. on god's will he says, iraq will be stabilized and we shall stay as a thorn in their eye. we will be victorious. we do not need any u.s. occupation or iran, us iraqis are heroes. concerned with fighting, the sec tar yin divide is deep ping. days after videos uploaded by isis claim to show mass killings of shia, four dozen prisoners were killed as militants went through the city. they were shot to death at close range. allegations they were killed by iraqi police were denied but blame the death on shelling by isis. in baghdad, another troubling sign, four bodies were found today in a largely shia neighborhood, shot at very close range. it's not clear if this is an isolated incident, or this is a sign of rising sec tar -- sec
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tar yin killings. there was dozens of bodies every day discovered often with signs of torture, hands bound, sometimes holes drilled into their heads. there was more bloodshed in baghdad today. a car bomb exploded, one of six bombs detonate in baghdad today. we got word there was a blast not too far from here, five or ten minute drive. we're not sure the division. we believe it was a road side device. several days ago, there was an actual person with a suicide vest that detonated themselves. this is early reports, three people are dead, a number of others wounded. we're trying to gather more information. normally we rush to the scene but in baghdad that's a dangerous thing to do. often there are secondary devices timed to explode ten, 20, 30 minutes after the first
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device so first responders that go to help those who are wounded or killed get killed in the secondary device. we'll hang back and try to gather more information. it's a sign how dangerous things are. 12 people were killed in the blast, dozens more injured. lots to talk about tonight. nick robertson is here with us and damon is where there is a flood of people arriving after isis took this city. interesting because it gives you a sense of difficulty, a, of reporting but both sides manipulating information. we got a report about 44 prisoners being killed in their cells in a police station that militants took over for a short time and stole the weapons. the government here reported that it was shelling, that it was isis shelling that killed these sunni prisoners but through our reporting, we found
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sources at the hospitals are saying in fact, they were shot at close range. >> it shows you the brutality, the closeup brutality because it appears as if iraqi police shot the prisoners because they were sunnis and the assumption was the isis fighters would release them. >> they didn't want the sunni prisoners to fall in the hands of isis. >> so think went according to health officials and shot them at close range. isis uploaded brutal videos, they are horrible war crimes. here you have the same thing happening inside the jail and the government is trying to manipulate the message to us and the people saying look, isis killed them, rocketed the jail there. so i mean, it's two things. it is blatant propaganda and it's also as you were out on the streets there, you couldn't go ten minutes away to see the blast. we can't get back to find out
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what is going on for ourselves. that's key this evening. we don't know how the fight is going. is isis on the verge of pushing through getting closer to baghdad? we can't find out. >> one of the things that you and nick emphasized in your reporting, this is not just isis fighters. there are groups involved here, sunni militant groups. talk about that a little bit what you're seeing on the ground. >> well, anderson, this is one of the main reasons why isis has been able to make this dramatic advance towards the capitol baghdad and that is that it is not fighting on its own. it has the support of the sunni tribes, and it does also for the time being at least have the support of those sunni insure get groups that were so prominent and so successful during the u.s. lead occupation of iraq. at this point, even though they do not share the same ideology
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in the sunni groups do not want to see it established, they are united when it comes to their decision to want to not only see the prime minister maliki removed from power but more significantly, a remove from shia dominance, anderson? >> so the reason that's so important for people at home to know that is it possible to somehow pry some of these groups or tribes away from isis and get them back to support the central government here? >> i think the answer to that is yes. i base that on an interview i did with a sunni triable leader four days ago in jordan. he was a triable leader who is now associated with isis and these other sunni rebel factions tighting to push maliki out of government. he was also one of the same triable leaders tightifighting the marines back in '06 and '07.
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he said to me, you know, number one, we can keep feet isis if we need to. the tribes are stronger. but he also said i would like to talk to the americans. they don't want to be tarred with the same brush as isis. they don't want to be seen as radicals. they want political change. so there is that scope for diplomats or whomever to get in -- >> one of the things maliki did, he stopped the payment american forces were giving to the sunni groups as part of the awakening. >> because it would make them stronger over time and he was afraid to give additional power and they saw this and read this. the tribal leader i spoke to was incredibly frustrated. he said look, we saw this happening in recent years we tried protest. the government came out a year or so ago. arwa was there. she covered this. they were gunned down on the streets. protests, dozens of people killed in the peaceful protests by the government and that's why they have risen up and taken on.
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from their point of view, this is a final desperate about. they are desperate for international help again. they are not getting it. they are taking upwards. >> arwa, thank you, nick robertson, as well. set your dvr and watch 360 whenever you would like. american faces and europeaners, british, french people called to wage holy war in the region. this is recruiting video calling on people to join the caravan of jihad, the man in it believed to be an american man from florida who blew himself up. breaking news, details on the operation capture suspect in the benghazi killings and clinton reacting in a cnn town hall.
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welcome back. we're live in baghdad, more on the one man that might have it in his power to stop the war in iraq, could prevent further u.s. mill taritary involvement, nuri
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al-maliki. what he does not do by all accounts is spend much time on the political reconciliation with the sunni arabs and kurds. >> reporter: after the fall of iraqi president saddam hussein in 2003, nuri maliki saw an opening. he was in exile in syria and iran and finally able to return to iraq in 2003. unlike hussain who was sunni, maliki is sunni muslim. >> we face oppression under the form eer regime. we did not bow then and we will not bow now. >> reporter: back in 2006, the bush white house supported
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maliki, looking to him to alter the balance of power giving shiites more contreel and weakening the sunnis. maliki had once promised to unify iraq. even welcome sunnis into the government. colonial peter was general david petraeus' officer. >> he used his power to purr see political enemies rather than reaching out and ensuring he could embrace them and bring them into the tent. >> reporter: iraq sunni insurgency has been gaining momentum since 2006. his insurgency was to give maliki and the shiites more time to figure out how to share power with the sunnis. instead, maliki was accused of reneging on deals he had made cutting off funding to the sunni tribes after they helped defeat al qaeda in 2008, even targeting high ranking sunnis. last year, president obama praised maliki after meeting with him at the white house.
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>> we were encouraged by the work that the prime minister maliki has done in the past to ensure that all people inside of iraq sunni, shiite and kurd feel they have a voice in their government. >> reporter: last week, maliki was still preaching unity. >> translator: we must stand as one united front. our insistence and will must never waiver when it comes to expelling criminals. >> reporter: yet it was maliki who may have prevented the united states from keeping troops in iraq to help build a true do mac see. >> he made it difficult for the united states to retain troops in iraq but again, the ocho bod ma administration never tried. >> reporter: maliki is under pressure again with president obama insisting the united states will only step in if nura
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al-maliki takes another shot at a unified state where they live in peace. randi kaye, cnn new york. >> let's dig deeper in the political and challenges and complexities involved. he's a supporter of the war in iraq and u.s. ambassador to iraq. ken i recently read an article that i want to get to. one, you said this is a coalition of groups. it's not just one group. explain that. >> that's right. isis is the lead dog here. they are the ones that triggered this entire movement from their envags from syria. isis is also a big, rocky group and have a big iraqi component and since they moved back in force, what they have done is gathered to them a quite coalition of other sunni militant groups and now they are beginning to bring iraqi sunni
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tribes into the fold. it's a large group of people unified but one thing, they hate and fear prime minister maliki and believe he's a dictator. most of the tribes don't care for isis or what it stands for. they don't want to go in western iraq but they are more frightened and more happy with prime minister maliki and see it as the least of two bad options. >> and ambassador jeffrey, the reason i think that's such an important point to think about what we think who iraqi forces are fighting against, the political component is crucial here. this is something you and i have talked about over the last several nights for the government of nuri al-maliki to reach out to the sunni groups who might otherwise align themselves with isis not because of ideal affinity but they fear the shiite dominated government
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here. >> absolutely, anderson. at this point, however, maliki isn't doing a stabilization operation. he's been thrown on the defense sieve by an isis lead to the north and south of baghdad threatening shii areas. that's what the president has to face right now among other things it involves iranians coming in and our people on the ground in the middle of this. >> investor jeffrey went on paper, you see the iraqi military out numbers isis 100-1 or 50-1, how can they be defeated? talk about how that is possible. my understanding is it's a moral issue, leadership issue and also, a lot of shiia forces saw no reason to try to stand up and fight in a sunni dominated area.
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is that accurate? >> exactly. we've seen these armies collapse before. in 2003, in 1991. if these troops do not believe they are fighting for their own territory and their own people, their own families, they did and hold against iranians in the 1980s. they can fight if they think they are motivated. they will fight for the areas. the problem again, they are intertwined communities around baghdad. that's why baghdad is so critical right now. >> ken, i mean, baghdad is because of what went on in 2006, 2007, baghdad is overwhelmingly sunni -- excuse me, overwhelmingly shiia dominated. do you think it's unlikely baghdad could fall because it seems like iraqi security forces would be more motivated to protect this city. >> yeah, i think you've hit on a number of important points, anderson.
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it is the case as jim is suggesting that isis and iraqi sunni militants will have a toucher fight on their hands as they get closer and closer to baghdad. we're seeing that in some of the other out lying towns. where the shia soldiers are defending homes and families, all of a sudden their resistance stiffens. they have been joined by large number of militia men who are as vicious as the isis and alibi da and other militant fighters on the sunni side and of course, they are being backed up to some degree by the iranians. baghdad is eight, maybe 9 million people. it's a huge urban sprawl and urban terrain is some of the toughest terrain to take, especially a force like isis that is mostly capitalized on
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s surprise and speed. >> fascinating writing. thank you for joining us. thank you so much. >> thanks for having us. >> thank you. for more on this story and others, go to cnn.com. the big news, the capture of a key suspect on the attack of the american diplomatic compound in benghazi. we'll have hillary clinton's response, what she said about anytime a town hall moderated by christian amanpour next. so i can reach ally bank 24/7 but there are no branches?
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breaking news tonight, details about the operation to
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capture a suspect in benghazi libya that killed four americans. u.s. officials tell cnn that he went into hiding after a flurry of interviews last year, including one with arwa damon. he was lureed to a location south of benghazi, army delta force commanders, were watching and waiting for days before they captured him this past weekend and taken to a u.s. navy ship. he's questioned about his role in the 2012 attack. jim joins me from washington. >> this has been in planning for sometime. they knew where he was in general. they tell meist one thing to know generally where he is but a raid is a gunfight. the line today the pentagon speaks man was it's not like we
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can wait for a milk shake. this was a dangerous operation. they found their opportunity and went ahead. >> what will happen to him? he'll be tried in court? do we know the charges? >> he's coming to washington dc. we know the charges. this is a tough rap sheet. providing material support to terrorists, discharging a weapon during an attack, a crime of violence. the list may be longer. killing a person in the course of an attack on a federal facility could carry the death penalty. >> are there others they are looking for? >> they are still building their case and that they are even building their case against qatalla and they are mentioning he could face more charges but there are others, they are looking out there and say that
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they have others that they have intelligence on but not that they have been able to move in and pick up just yet. >> why did it take so long to find him? >> well, this is the case that they make. they say they knew the general area and of course knew arwa damon and other journalist were able to see him. again, going in to get him was going to be an armed operation. it's risky and they want to make sure there is no loss of life, you know, on either side because this is someone they wanted to bring in and prosecute in an american court. that took time to find the opportunity. again, as you noted, the intelligence was in the last several months he's been much more cautious appearing in public less often, you know, not like it was several months ago meeting open in journalism bragging how free he was. >> appreciate you joining us.
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hillary clinton hopes his arrest will put together the pieces of what happened. here is what she said in a cnn town hole moderated by christiane amanpour. >> i'm very pleased this is another indication as president obama said in his statement today that the united states has an unwaivering commitment to bring to justice those who are responsible for attacks on americans no matter where they are, how long it takes. >> clinton emphasizes with the families of the four americans killed and says she understands why they are demanding answers. >> i'm still looking for answers because it was a confusing and difficult time but i would hope that every american would understand number one, why we were there because we need to be in dangerous places and number two, that we're doing the best we can to find out what happened and i hope that fair minded people will look at that seriously.
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>> christiane joins me with more on her conversation with hillary clinton. let's start with benghazi. you pressed secretary clinton on whether ambassador steven should have been there that day or not. what did you think of her answer? >> she gave the standard answer, we're america with our diplomatic presence, but when i kept pressing her about it on that day of all days she said of course, had we understood these protests that started in cairo that day, we would have probably told and perhaps should have told our staff, all of them to hunker down and don't go out. that is a thought she's processing right now. >> in terms of iraq, secretary clinton put squarely the blame for what is going on here the defeat of maliki, the prime minister, the forces of agreement that would allow u.s. troops to stay here and critics of the obama administration say the administration didn't work to extend that status of forces agreement. what did you make of her answer
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on that, because she says maliki has got to reach out to other forces to sunni forces within the country. >> well, look, i am coming to the dreadful realization that possibly this administration might just not do anything very much. they have really it appears given up on maliki. obama saying that stuff and tonight i thought hillary clinton went very forward leaning in just dismissing maliki and putting the blame on him and they have not come up with any military plan to stop the march of isis. i'm wondering whether they are going to give up and see the chips fall where they may, perhaps the partition of iraq. >> there was a question from the audience about gun control, gun violence, secretary clinton jumped on that. >> she did. in fact, she was the most forward leaning i've heard. i haven't heard her on many domestic issues. she did talk about a small
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terrorized the majority of the american people, sensible ones like background checks. in answer to the question to the question she said and the high caliber ammunition clups but she really was very forward leaning on that and explained again that nobody is talking about taking legitimate gun owners guns away making sure it happens in a safer environment. >> christiane amanpour, thank you for being with us. >> thanks, anderson. if you want to watch the town hall event, at 9:00 p.m. eastern here on cnn after this broadcast. up next, roughly 100 americans and thousands of europeans come to join isis and other militant groups, they are scared they
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will go back to england, and france with terror there and tony blare accused with rewriting history. critics blasting him for saying that the 2003 invasion of iraq did not cause the current crisis here. coming up, we'll have him explain what he means. tony blare jones me. ♪
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>> isis is primarily sunni iraqis but ranks are growing and include a number of foreign fighters including americans. the recruitment videos are urging westerners to join the fight. they want to weigh jihad in the middle east and at least one american carried out a suicide mommi bombing in florida. these american recruits and european recruits may have returned to the united states and to western europe to launch attacks. pamela brown has more. >> reporter: at first it almost looks like a hollywood movie
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trailer. islamist militants trying to lure in like-minded europeans to join the caravan of jihad and it's working. >> the number of americans that come to fight with groups like isis and others has grown over time. >> reporter: u.s. officials estimate about 100 americans and thousands of europeans have poured into syria since the war started. some joining jihad groups like isis, they are there to study terrorism at the camps in the region. >> where americans and europeans can get training how to build bombs, counter intelligence, propaganda. it has become a foreign jihad battle field, that includes europeans, some with access potentially to the united states. >> reporter: a u.s. intelligence official tells cnn the man in this isis video with the blurred face is an american. a 22-year-old jihad from florida
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who ended up dying for jihad, killing himself and three dozen others with a truck bomb in syria last month. the growing concern is that isis a group too big for al qaeda will send for the ultimate mission, back to the u.s. to launch an attack. >> it's something i wake up every morning worrying about. >> reporter: today an fbi direct tomorrow said it's not a matter if those jihads will return to the u.s. to reek havoc but what. >> there are thousands of people from all over the world, including from all parts of the united states traveling to syria, learning the worst kinds of techniques and tactics and making the worst kinds of relationships. at some point, there will be a problem out of syria back to eastern europe, back to north america, bringing with it those skills, those relationships and we have to be very, very careful to make sure we anticipate what the future might be if we're not
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careful. >> reporter: pamela brown, cnn, washington. >> that's a very scary thought. a unique perspective on what it takes to recruit militants. he used to be one. now he's author of the book "radical, my journey out of islamist extremism." he and fran town son joins me, a she's a member of the department of homeland security and advisory boards. fran, ken said you shouldn't over estimate the impact of foreign fighters. this is an iraqi operation. there is a foreign component here. it is important. how concerned are u.s. intelligence officials about that sort of foreign legion as part of the isis contingent and about the possibility of them returning to the united states and europe and sewing the seeds of terror? >> having spoken to folks in the intelligence committee at senior
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levels, they emphasize, look, the numbers vary in terms of estimates of foreign fighters from about 11,000 to over 20,000 foreign fighters, that there is a real concern that this is the single greatest threat outside of sort of the core terrorism. we often hear about al qaeda, yemen group. the focus is this is a very real threat. we recently saw an american suicide bomber killed inside syria. the worry is that these guys are difficult to track. they will get experience, some of them will not be killed. they will travel. they put those numbers traveling to places like western europe in the thousands, and those traveling all the way back to the united states in the dozens to over 100. so there is a direct correlation to the threat to the u.s. homeland that's really captivated the attention of law enforcement and intelligence officials here in the united states. >> you know all about the
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radicalization of westerners firsthand, you yourself traveled down that road. how concerned are you about what you're seeing here on the ground and the potential for foreign fighters to go back to europe and the united states? >> well, anderson, i agree with fran, i am very concerned. i think everyone here in europe in terms of security services are very concerned. we have everything up to 400 british born and raised citizens fighting abroad in syria and the surrounding area at this moment in time. we have official estimates about 700 from france, you know and those numbers reach into the thousands across europe. there is a serious issue with the numbers that have gone c compared to the proportion of muslims. the second issue is we're talking about a group that joined isis. we're talking about a group too extreme for al qaeda. >> it's interesting, fran, you talked about the american from florida that took part in a
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suicide attack in syria, the first american to die in an attack is a somalia american that blew himself up. how well does intelligence track or able to track these americans, these westerners as they go to fight, fran? >> very difficult, anderson. this is really the greatest challenge. you know, there have been at least two recent meetings of the intelligence community and its allies around the world to seek their help and assistance. john brennan hosted a meeting, eight to ten intelligence service heads here in the united states and last month, mohammed hosted a meeting of the service heads in saudi arabia to talk about the difficulty and corporation in tracking them. what happens is these guys use false documents, war names, not true names and so it's very difficult, u.s. intelligence alone can't do it, and so they
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sought the help of their intelligence allies, especially in the arab world closer to the problem and can provide assistance in doing the tracking but very, very difficult. >> it's also difficult in many cases for europe traveling to turkey and jordan and other places and then crossing over. it's not like they are taking direct flights to isis controlled areas. the question becomes, what does the west do about this? >> we're in an unprecedented situation, and i believe that we are willingfully unprepared because more foreign fighters have gone to syria than ever went to -- from europe that is that ever went to afghanistan and we heard of the afghan blow back and not prepared for the syria blow back and not enough is being done on a civilian level for government policy to tackle the problem. there needs to be a strategy, european wide and speaking from london, uk wide that doesn't go far enough at the moment. i don't advocate arresting war
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returning fighters but there needs to be a serious look at counter narratives and programs and stemming the flow in or gin by getting to the youngsters before they decide to leave this country and discussing with them that they are about to join a civil war there is no glorious jihad awaiting them. >> fran townsend, appreciate you both being on. >> thank you. up next, the mayor of london says former british prime minister tony blare has gone mad with the claims the 2003 invasion of iraq is not the reason for chaos in the country right now. is mr. blare requiting history? i'll ask tony blare ahead. narrator: these are the skater kid: whoa narrator: that got torture tested by teenagers and cried out for help. from the surprised designers. who came to the rescue with a brilliant fix male designer: i love it narrator: which created thousands of new customers for the tennis shoes that got torture tested
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♪ norfolk southern how's that function? ♪ just much more accessible. they don't have armored humvees like americans. units driving around in pickup trucks, totally exposed. that was from 2005 when we were there, that's the city that saw heavy fighting today between iraqi security forces and isis forces. former british prime minister
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tony blair is taking heat for his comments about the is theuation in iraq. he's trying to rewrite history. over the weekend blare said the invasion of iraq in 2003 was in no way responsible for what is happening now, there would be a hay jur major problem in iraq and it's a mix of religion and politics. in a column in the daily telegraph, the mayor calls that quote bonkers and writes that blair should quote put a sock in it or accept the reality about the disaster he helped to render. i talked with tony blair earlier today. mr. prime minister, you've come under enormous criticism in the past day for a comment laying blame for the current crisis here in iraq for the war on syria or failure to respond and the failure of the maliki government to overcome sec tar yin impulses.
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does it not also bear responsibility? al qaeda wasn't here in iraq until that occupation. >> sure, just so that i'm absolutely clear about this. my purpose is not to lay blame on anybody. my purpose is to draw attention to the nature of the challenge we face in this region, and the need to do something about it. of course, having removed the saddam government in 2003, that's got implications of consequences for iraq today, but it's also important to realize two very important things, the first is that this group isis basically rebuilt themselves, rearmed, they launched their attack on iraq from syria. so what our intervention in iraq shows is how difficult intervention is and none intervention. that's my first point, my second point is when you take account of the arab spring, revolutions that began in 2011 and swept
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governments from power, what you see is whatever happened in 2003 we were going to face this major challenge today, and my point is very, very clear therefore, we've got to understand one, that this challenge is complex. it's long-term. this is a generational struggle and even if we want to, we can't disengage. we have to try and deal with it. >> do we now how to properly engage, however? given how wrong the u.s. and uk were, the wrong about saddam working with al qaeda and the failure to predict and plan for an insurgency. what makes you sure you have the right prescription for what needs to be done here about the current crisis? >> look, it's important we do learn the lessons, but the actual lessons of what happened. what happened was saddam was
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removed reasonably quickly within a few months but then what happened is you've got this s secretarian fight where they try and overwhelm the majority of people. >> doesn't history show that unless a regime, though, is willing to make changes itself, no outside power can intervene and really do it for them? you look at south vietnam, unless that regime had actually been willing to stop being corrupt or meet the needs of its people, no amount of western involvement would have helped. you write about maliki, i mean, t his government, he snuffed out the opportunity to build a cohesive iraq. we had more than 150,000 troops and we couldn't get him to reach out to sunnis and kurds. do you believe he's capable and willing to do that now? >> i hope so. that's essential for iraq. you make a good point here.
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it's important to stay for a moment on it. we should never forget that in afghanistan and iraq, even today a majority of people want the freedom to bring up their family in piece, want stability, are happy to get on with neighbors. this is an extremism that is a significant minority. it's not a tiny minority. it's often financed and armed from abroad. these foreign fighters in this organization, i mean, they come from everywhere including by the way, the uk. so when we say is it impossible for outsiders to come and help and stabilize the country, when i intervened, yes, it was. so what's the difference between that and iraq or afghanistan or syria or libya. the difference is in this base kpd treem mism.
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>> i go back to the question, is nuri al-maliki capable of doing the political work. they are seen intervening against sunnis, even if it is extremists, many will see it as u.s. intervening against sunnis in syria and here in iraq because there are sunni groups, which are now aligned with isis and other actors, without real movement by nuri al-maliki, is he capable of doing that without 150,000 u.s. troops on the ground? >> i don't know. what i do know if he's not capable of doing that, that it's essential that a government is construct that is capable of doing that. >> prime minister blair, appreciate your time. >> thanks very much, aanderson. coming up, the deadly destruction the tornados left in their path.
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susan hendrick joins us with the 360 bulletin, susan? >> that rare double tornado that slammed nebraska wiped out this town's business district, reduced dozens of homes to rubble. an army spokesman said sergeant bowe bergdahl is gradually being provided media coverage about his ordeal.
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his situation sparked controversy. he's had no visitors at the army hospital in san antonio where he's recovering. art experts have suspected there is a painting hidden behind one of picasso's first masterpieces, the blue room. technology revealed what it is. it's a portrait of a man with a beard resting his face on his hand. found behind that and took that long, anderson? >> cool. all right. susan, thanks very much. that does it for us from baghdad for this hour. see you again at 11:00 eastern for another edition of 360. the cnn town hill, hillary clinton's hard choices starts clinton's hard choices starts now. -- captions by vitac -- www.vitac.com a town hall event, hillary clinton opens up about the hard choices she's made and the big one around the corner. >> making the decision to run for president, which i've made once is a hard choice. >> as secretary of state, s