tv Don Lemon Tonight CNN August 27, 2021 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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strike against isis-k and isis-k planner. central command spokesman captain bill urban says u.s. military forces conducted an over the horizon counterterrorism operation today against an isis-k planner. the unmanned air strike occurred in afghanistan initial indications are that we killed the target. we know of no civilian casualties and again, that is a quote. that as we have more breaking news tonight on a new threat in afghanistan. the u.s. embassy in kabul just now again warning u.s. sitcitiz at a number of gates at that airport to leave immediately siting security threats. the alert advising u.s. citizens to avoid traveling to the airport and avoid airport gates. that is hours after the president joe biden was warned by his national security team another attack in kabul is likely, not just possible, but
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likely. white house official telling cnn quote the next few days of this mission will be the most dangerous period to date. the president saying this. >> look, the mission there in the form is dangerous and it is now come with significant loss of american personnel and it's a worthy mission because they continue to evacuate folks out of that region. >> the white house echoing the grim warning about the danger of the next few days. >> if the threat is on going and active, it is our troops are still in danger. that continues to be the case every day that they are there. most -- this is the most dangerous part of the mission. >> the pentagon warning the threats are credible and
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specific. >> we still believe there are credible threats. in fact, i'd say specific credible threats and we want to make sure we're prepared for those. >> press secretary jen psaki says the president in the hours after the attack warned isis-k we will hunt you down and make you pay, doesn't want them on earth anymore. >> i think he made clear yesterday that he does not want them to live on the earth anymore. >> president biden planning to call the families of 13 u.s. service members killed in the attack once next of kin notifications i should say are complete and when the families are ready. the afghan death toll rising tonight to more than 170 men, women and children killed, 200 wounded. and we're learning more tonight about the isis-k terror attack. the personal gontagon confirmin was one explosion outside the airport, not two as reported.
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the bomber wore a suicide vest blowing it up in the va icinityf the gate. there were fewer people at the airport. look at this. [ gunshots ] [ gunshots ]. [ gunshots ]. >> afghan and foreign forces using flash bangs from inside the perimeter of the kabul airport. some 4200 people were evacuated from kabul on u.s. military and
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coalition flights down from 7500 yesterday and an afghan family among those arriving at dulles airport today. alex, breaking just hoemoments , the u.s. conducted an air strike against isis-k. what do you know? >> those tough wording vowing retaliation and appears to have happened at least the first wave of it. we're hearing from the area of command that covers afghanistan. they're saying they have carried out an over the horizon counterterrorism operation. that means it came from outside the country. they also say it was an unmanned strike meaning it was carried out by a drone and the target was an isis-k planner, not your low level grunt or any sort of facility they were targeting.
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they were targeting a specific individual that this specific individual was killed and that no other civilians were harmed. this is a major test for the biden administration, don. as the u.s. troops leave the country, as intelligence capabilities are drawn down, the biden administration needs to be able to show it can continue to carry out these counterterrorism operations against the likes of isis-k and terrorist groups. you have an operation carried out by the u.s. military and a drone strike coming from over the horizon against this isis-k planner. we have been talking about isis-k for days. the likelihood of an imminent attack which then came to fruition yesterday outside the gate and that came following the warning from the u.s. embassy and foreign embassies warning citizens and afghans to leave those gates immediately and don,
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tonight, we are seeing yet another warning like that from the u.s. embassy in kabul telling everyone to leave the vicinity of the airport to get away from not just that gate but scores of afghans, 13 american service members. one of the deadliest days during this 20-year war in afghanistan. the biden administration expecting more attacks by isis-k which we said tonight carried out the first strike against since that attack yesterday. >> we have a warning about possible terrorist attacks. the president vowed he would hunt these terrorists down. what are you hearing from your sources tonight, caitlyn? >> he's fulfilling that vow on
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this planner. they don't know the specific person involved but the white house is worried there would be more to come and that's the blunt warning president biden and vice president harris got. they said another terror attack is likely and president biden had hinted at the idea this strike could come yesterday in his remarks to us in the east room and talking about the fact that obviously he had those blunt words saying he wanted retribution but he said he thought he had a good idea where the isis-k planners were. he didn't know specifically where they were but thought they had good intelligence on that. clearly they did in statement we're getting tonight. that doesn't make the situation more precarious. it is going to be a situation where it is essentially at most dangerous point of this entire evacuation period is going to happen before this deadline on tuesday and that's because, don,
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you're going to see them drawing down troops, drawing down resources and weaponry and whatever is in that region still before tuesday actually happens because they don't want it to fall into the hands of the taliban or hands of other organizations that are in afghanistan and one thing we should note, the pentagon also told us today they're not going to say how many troops are on the ground. they're not going to provide regular updates like they have been doing for the last several weeks because they wanted to be judicious about that and given the security concerns that come alongside it. >> it's a really tenuous position that we're in now and it could escalate if we get to that tuesday deadline. especially now. this could really escalate because you may have isis-k retaliate from retribution from the united states. it's a tough position that the administration is in and the military there. >> yeah, and there was a question of whether or not this strike, this retaliation would come while those troops were still on the ground because what
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the pentagon told us today is there were still about 5,000 there, of course, as i noted that could change and likely will over the next few days as they start doing fewer evacuations focussing on the draw down of this but that is something that likely, they had to weigh when they are making the decision for president biden who we are told did approve this strike when decide thing. there are still u.s. forces on the ground and also, as alex is saying this is an over the horizon strike. that's what they're saying since president biden announced in april that they would rely on as an effective measure for the united states to respond. there are people who raised questions how effective that response would be given of course you are operating hours away than what you typically would have before with troops still on the ground and so this could be a testament to that. of course, it remains to be seen if more follow this. what it will look like in the next few days and will watch closely as that deadline approaches. >> alex said in solum part of this news, cnn is learning the
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identity of three of the service members killed in the kabul attack yesterday. heartbreaking. what can you tell us about them? >> it really is, don. we're getting this information from the families themselves, not from the pentagon. the pentagon has not released the names. they of course, want to notify the next of kin before they do that. we will expect more names from the pentagon tomorrow. but we have gotten three names and don, as so often the case, what hits you when you see the information about those who have been killed is how young they are. these are in at least two of the cases, men who were young children when this war started 20 years ago. i want to go through the three names, the three individuals who we do know about tonight. the first one is raleigh mccollum. -- raleigh mccollum. he heard he was a son, a
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brother, husband and father with a baby due in three weeks. he was just 20 years old. he was a baby himself, as a toddler he carried around a toy rifle in his boots. and he planned to become a lineman once his marine time was finished and loved hunting and end anding time outdoors and finally, don, there is a navy coreman he said don't worry, my guys got me. they won't let anything happen
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to me. today his statement said his mother realized they had all just gone together. they had 12 brothers and sisters. we will expect to hear from the pentagon with a more full list of names tomorrow but again, among the 13 service members killed, 11 marines, one army soldier, one navy soldier and we know tonight we're told that the soldier was a member of special forces. don? >> wow. ryl rylee was 20. corporal dagen was 23 and maxim? >> we didn't get his age. he was a navy core man in charg of keeping safe and attending to them if they got wounded and he never got that opportunity. >> yeah. wow. i mean, really children. 20 years old. when we went to afghanistan, ryryl e ryle e was just being born.
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there are still specific credible threats. it's a race against time to get people out. about 500 americans still trying to get out. do you know the latest? what's the latest on these evacuations? >> the lingering question for the past few days is how many more american citizens are left in afghanistan because that's a p priority for the biden administration. we heard from the state department it is 500 americans who they are in contact with who have expressed a desire to leave and so administration has been in touch with them trying to facilitate that evacuation. there are also hundreds more the state department said who have not said that they are certain that they want to leave. you can imagine these are people who possibly and i'm just speculating who have family members there who might not want to leave their family behind and so according to the state department, it's under 1,000 americans who remain in afghanistan, 500 of whom who have expressed desires to get
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out of the country. the state department spokesman today also saying in the past 24 hours, that was from this afternoon, that 300 americans had been evacuated and so far, we know that around 10 9,000 people have been evacuated. the emphasis for the biden administration is to get americans out and also get those special interest visa holders out. those who have worked with american forces and american diplomats over the last several years. we can't forget there are so many more who are trying to get out. people who have worked with aid organizations for example. people who are being targeted by the taliban and who are desperately trying to get on those planes at the airport. i think all of us who have been covering this story over the past few days have been inundated with messages from people on the ground asking, pleading with us to try to help them to get out of the country.
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extremely desperate situation not just for the hundreds of americans getting out but tens of thousands more. don. >> thank you for your reporting and katdcaitlyn, thank you. we don't know the age of one of them but 20 and 23 years old. boy, oh, boy, appreciate your reporting this is our breaking news tonight. the u.s. conducted an air strike against an isis-k planner and initial indications are the target was killed as a u.s. embassy in kabul warning u.s. citizens at a number of gates at the airport are saying to leave immediately. we've got more on all of this. we'll take a very quick break and be right back with breaking news. introducing fidelity income planning. we look at what you've saved, what you'll need, and help you build a flexible plan for cash flow that lasts, even when you're not working,
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in the afghanistan tonight. the embassy in kabul warning u.s. citizens at a number of gates at the airport to leave immediately siting security threats. i want to bring in cnn military analyst retired general mark hurtling. thank you very much. here we go. you know, we've got retaliation from the u.s. military approved by the president of the united states are calling it an over the horizon counterterrorism unmanned air strike. initial indications here according to central command is the target was killed, no civilian casualties. this was incredibly quick. what does it say about our capability? >> certainly as we talked about the threats the other day that preluded the suicide bomber at the airport, whenever you have that kind of distinct
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possibility of an attack, it's because you have information and i'm sure that the department of defense had some information garnered by all sorts of intelligence that said there would be some type of attack but didn't know what kind but it was leading to someone who was planning that attack. so when you have something like that, you put together a target package waiting to see what happens, you monitor the situation perhaps with overhead imagery either satellites or air breathers above the target and then watch what happens. and then watch the people scurry afterwards. so i think whereas the suicide bombing was horrific and terrible, it probably was the last bit of information that was needed to strike this target. truthfully, don, i'm not surprised that this happened this fast. in fact, i was talking to someone at cnn off the air this afternoon and they said when do you think there might be a
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strike that the president said? i said next couple days. and they were shocked when i said that. because whenever you have intelligence that said there is about to be a strike, it usually means you have a lot more information than your giving out who is conducting it and where they are. >> so no surprise to you. but just before we learned about the strike against isis-k, general, the u.s. embassy in kabul put out this warning to u.s. citizens to leave the airport gates immediately. they did that warning yesterday or the day before and we had, you know, the explosion at the airport. do you think that's connected in any way? >> absolutely. i'm going to guess, yes. i don't know for sure, don. i'm not privy to secret intelligence anymore but that's the way it has always happened in my experience when i was in combat. you have one piece of intelligence. you track it down and start getting more and whether that was coming from signals intelligence, reading their mail, human intelligence on the
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ground with them, overhead intelligence, the very different kinds of intelligence, i'm sure the warning of the embassy tonight and that's what peaked my interest when i saw another warning, it told me they've got the cross hairs on someone who is planning an attack and whereas they want to get people out of the embassy or out of the airport quickly. they're still drawing a beat on the individual that's planning or executing the target. i'm glad they got one of the planners. >> well, i want to ask you because i posed a similar question to kaitlan collins earlier. you have to weigh things when you're planning to retaliate, how much more harm might it put people in who are there? how much might it take off isis-k and upset them and strike out again? so should the u.s. be worried at this point? i'm sure the answer is yes but i want to talk about it, reprisal.
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>> things are spinning up. this was to the southeast of kabul, the capital of the province. we've heard about that. this is an area that borders pakistan and the federally administered triable area. this is a cross roads for isis-k and they get a lot of other terrorists part of this group from bangladesh, russia, india. this is truly a star wars bar scene of bad dudes as part of is isis-k. this is the location or the province where in 2017, president trump made the big deal about dropping the large non-nuclear bomb, the so-called mother of all bombs. so this is not -- and by the way, this is where osama bin laden hid out. this is the bad lands. this is really bad. what we're seeing, though, is, you know, when you talk about
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kabul, isis-k has mostly operated for the last several years in the rural areas. they're going into the urban areas and they're using kabul as one of their bases. we'll probably learn more tomorrow where this strike hit but i would suspect, i'm guessing now, that it was probably in one of the rural areas. >> you think we'll see more strikes, u.s. strikes? >> yeah, i think it's a possibility because wherever you strike one target like c cockroaches, they scatter and send out more intelligence. when i was in combat, we always like to strike and see what happened immediately afterwards. if the lines lit up and cell phones lit up, if the curriers start floedwing, we could tracko other locations. that's not a secret technique or procedure, that's just what counterterrorism forces do. so yeah, i think we may see
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several more targets hit within the next couple days because i think the president wants to show he's serious about, you know, the over the horizon capability but also countering any kind of threats to the air field. >> let me ask you something, another quick question here, which is we talked about reprisal. you said the phones lighting up and probably they're getting more intelligence and more information but what -- isis-k, what are they -- a strike like t this, does it concern them? does it, you know, inflame them? like what happens if the u.s. does what they do now, they hit their targets, do they at some point maybe say okay, we need to stop this or let's go get them? >> they'll continue to try to attack. there is no doubt about that. but it does hinder their capability of planning because you have to realize, don, it isn't just like in the military you have a commander that tells
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a unite do this, take this hill. you have the leaders of the ogden organization, the planners, the people who bless the attack and several authorities before you can conduct a awesuicide attack like at the air field, this are layers of people that bless off on it. it takes money and we heard today 25 pounds of dynamite allegedly on the suicide bomber that hit the gate. that's a big suicide vest and it hard to get sometimes hard to get that kind of explosives to do these kind of things, plus getting the willing martyr to go up to the gate and blow him or herself up. these are factors of consideration. trust me, a strike isn't going to stop isis from continuing to attack. i will say one other thing. this strike against isis-k will make the taliban happy. because they're not big fans of
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isis. they are mortal enemies. this will be another interesting dynamic as the sunrises in kabul tomo tomorrow. >> we are fortunate to have you to give us that information. retired lieutenant general mark hurtling, thank you very -- >> do you mind if i say one more thing? >> go ahead, general. >> he mentioned the three -- two marines and one navy corpsman. the medic, right before the last time i went to combat, i was meeting with a grown up of medics and one of the medics asked me, sir, you're going to bring us home, aren't you? that's the kind of weight that commanders and leaders carry. and when oren commented that he told his mom don't worry, my guys will take care of me, that really struck me as the great young people we have serving. so god bless all of them and may they all rest in peace. >> agree with you 100%.
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i'm glad you're here to really pay honor to them. you know, these young men paying the ultimate price and we'll learn the names of the other ten members of our military who did, as well. i've got to go back and ask you something and you bear with me for -- sorry about that. when you said that the taliban, it's going to make the taliban happy that the u.s. carried off this successful strike against isis-k. what happens? does it cause them to fight or just -- it just makes the taliban happy? is there any sort of interaction or something that could happen there on the ground? >> when i say that, what i'm talking about is they are going to attempt to govern now. they are shifting from a counter insurgency force to a governing force in kabul. they have been fighting isis-k for three years and we got to harken back for those not watching afghanistan for awhile. every time isis-k conducted a
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suicide attack in kabul, which they have done many over the last few years or any other province, the people of the provinces blamed the afghan government for not providing security. so when the taliban knows that big planner of suicide attacks has been killed by the americans, even though they still consider us the great satan, they are going to be very enthused about having another one of their enemy wiped off the battle field. it's the so-called enemy of my enemy is my friend for awhile. i don't know what that will generate -- yeah, i don't know what will that generate in terms of diplomatic relations with the taliban over the next few days as we continue to get out, but it could generate some goodwill potentially. i don't know. that's a guess. >> yeah. well, again, as i said, we're very fortunate to have you here and i'm glad you paid tribute to the service members. thank you so much, general. stay close. we may need you. >> thanks, don.
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the u.s. carrying out an attack against an isis-k planner. indications are that the target was killed and officials said president biden approved the strike on the isis-k planner, news of a strike coming moments after the u.s. embassy in kabul warned citizen to the leave the gates at the airport immediately. joining me is a former defense secretary william cohen. thank you. we're happy to have you here as well to talk about this breaking news, this air strike. that's what i want to start with it believes the target is dead and they don't know if any civilian casualties. what do you make of this response to yesterday's attack? >> i think it's a case of president biden saying basically the long arm of justice will reach out and touch you wherever you are. it's not quite justice, frankly. we lost 13 and many wounded, and 170 or more afghans killed, as
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well. so taking out one or two people was certainly important but certainly not justice, either. i want to say just a word you had general mark hurtling on just a moment ago and he said how personal it was to him. it personal to me and my wife, as well. we remember the "u.s.s. cole" and it was a navy ship hit by a terrorist boat blowing a hole below the water line killing 17 soldiers and wounding others seriously. i remember being at the ceremony a year later paying tribute to them and the father of a sailor stood up and put his hand up and said remember "the cole." we've never forgotten "the cole" and the parents we had to speak with and bring comfort to. this is personal to us that have anything to do with the pentagon and those serving us. many of whom weren't born when i was there. it tells you how young they
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were, brave they are, willing they are to put their lives on the line to save other people, to save their freedom. we have to remain grateful every day of the year, every day of the week that we see them telling them how thankful we are. >> yeah. 20-year ryell mccollum who died 20 years old. very young men.l mccollum who died 20 years old. very young men.e mccollum who died 20 years old. very young men.e mccollum who died 20 years old. very young men. , is there is a threat to the airport. how dangerous is this situation now? can you put it into context for us? >> highly dangerous. we had the same warning a day or two ago now and saw the result of that. part of the challenge is going to be those americans and other afghans who have helped us who want to get out. president biden has made it clear he's not changing the date and if you don't change the date, that means the great
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possibility a number of americans will be stuck in afghanistan and then we'll have to have contin get plans on how do we get them out and when can we get them out? we'll come into a real crisis mode shortly unless we can either open up the gates or have a way to have americans on the ground who are able to get those americans and afghans to the airport to get them on those planes otherwise they will be going into hiding and trying to exit afghanistan and other means. it's a real challenge for this administration for all of us. when you set a deadline and that's one of the problems, whenever you set the deadline, you hand your bargaining power to the enemy and once that deadline is set, the enemy is calculating we can be here a long time and you can't because the american public is tired of this war. so we're in a rather difficult and dangerous position right now and as the thing is winding down and we're looking at how many
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troops are we going to put on our own aircraft, how much equipment on our aircraft as well as remaining americans who are at the airport, the remaining afghan whose helped us around the airport, how do we retro grade this? how do we spin this down in a way more and more troops are leaving that makes us more and more vulnerable. so i suspect we'll have a lot of overhead capability not only with drones and aircraft and other overhead capability to make sure that we do the best we can to make sure that we don't have to take fire on the way out. so that's a dangerous spot right now. >> yeah. secretary cohen, thank you, sir. i wish we were speaking under better circumstances but very fortunate to have you here and your voice and expertise. thank you very much. this is our breaking news tonight. the u.s. air strike against an isis-k planner early indications are the target was killed. the president of the united states joe biden approving the
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we are following breaking news tonight the u.s. carrying out an air strike against an isis-k planner. the target was killed a day after president biden vowed to hunt down the terrorist responsible for the kabul airport bombing that killed 13 u.s. service members and more than 170 afghans. joining me is a former chief strategists for president george w. bush and the author of "revelations on the river" coming out september 7th but can be presrdordered on amazon now. thank you for joining. air strikes tonight.
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biden vowed revenge. this is fast. >> i think the president has shown he's capable of saying what he means and then following through on it and doing multiple things simultaneously that i think some of us aren't used to in leadership. so he said he would get out the people out of afghanistan and it's gone better thatn expected. he said he would go after the terrorists that committed this act against our troops and he's doing it. bravo to president biden. he says what he's going to do and does it. >> this war has been going on for 20 years. i want to play what the president said yesterday and then what the former president bush said after 9/11. watch this. >> we will respond with force and precision at our time at the place we choose and the moment of our choosing. >> this conflict was begun on the timing and terms of others. it will end in a way and at an
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hour of our choosing. >> that's pretty similar, right? on terrorism, matthew? >> what it says about the war on terrorism, at times we conducted it well and at times we didn't conduct it well at all. afghanistan is a perfect example of both. we obviously pursued the taliban and removed them because they were harboring al qaeda and then we got bid laden but then we stayed and tried to nation build, which was a drastic mistake which joe biden said and other presidents said and including donald trump has said. so i think when we stay out of the idea that we're going to take over countries in pursuit of something bigger and go to the specific thing of taking out terrorists, we do it well. when we do it in a laser like focus and take out terrorists thanks benefits the american public. when we go with something broader, we use up the resources
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and the blood of men and women in our country and only makes a mess. >> yeah. you know, matthew, there are republicans calling for the president to resign. i mean, there used to be a time when we didn't talk about politics in the same day when american lives were lost, when we lose american service members. same thing with not talking about the gun control issue on a day of a mass shooting, republicans always say now is not the time to talk about gun control. clearly, that's not the case today because they're talking about the president resigning on the day, very same day we lost service members. >> well, the republican party and most of the republicans in washington have shown themselves have to no shame on everything they do. for one thing, they didn't ever want to pursue impeachment on donald trump who did force worse acts against our democracy and far worse things related to other foreign eadversaries like
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russia and other countries than this president has ever come close to doing. i know hypocrisy everyone smiles and grimes but republican haves taken it to another level. and i think they should have actually spent their time asking the former president who they seem to want to be close to why he made the decisions on releasing the 5,000 taliban prisoners, on leaving the afghan government out of the negotiations, on all of those things that led us up to where we are today, granted, i think, president trump made the right decision that we're going to pull out of afghanistan. but republicans ought to spend their time instead of making political points in a ridiculous fashion because there is nothing president biden has done that would justify impeachment, and worry about their guy they're trying to be buddies with sitting down in mar-a-lago. >> thank you very much, sir. always a pleasure. appreciate having you. >> we have more breaking news. >> my pleasure.
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more breaking news with u.s. air strikes on an isis-k planner and more warnings for the u.s. citizens to leave kabul airport and do it immediately. there is more, okay? a category 4 storm barrelling down on louisiana almost exactly 16 years after hurricane katrina. the latest forecast right after this. (man) eye contact. elbow pump. very nice, andrew. very nice. good job. next, apparently carvana doesn't have any "bogus" fees. bogus?! now we work hard for those fees. no hundred-dollar fuel fee? pumping gas makes me woozy. thank you. no $600 doc fee? ugh, the printing, the organizing. no $200 cleaning fees. microfiber, that chaps my hands. you know, we should go over there right now and show 'em how fees are done.
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pay attention, everyone. especially you folks in the south. hurricane ida bearing down on the gulf coast, expected to make land fall as a category 4 tomorrow. louisiana and mississippi facing hurricane and storm surge warnings. here with the latest is meteorologist karen mcginn is. i understand you just got the latest from the hurricane center. what can we expect? >> our latest information says this is still a category 1 hurricane. there is one huge difference, don. now it's out over the open waters of the gulf of mexico. so right now, it's rapid intensification. as it moves in the gulf of mexico, it's going to intensify. and for the folks who live in coastal louisiana, not just there, but either side of
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louisiana, we are looking at the potential for devastation. what form? power outages, storm surge. that will be the big one. we're looking at localized flooding. it would be devastating for weeks in fact, if not months. category three is when it's on shore. the water temperature here is very warm. some of the warmest we have seen all summer. with temperatures in the 80s and upper 80s. it will cause us to intensify, and grow to a category 4 before land fall on sunday. >> we will be watching. karen, thank you. our breaks ing news tonight, ne warnings for u.s. citizens to leave the kabul airport immediately. 105,000 people evacuated so far. days away from the deadline to withdraw from afghanistan.
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okay, it's an app that compares hundreds of travel sites for hotels and cars and vacation rentals like kayak does for flights. so it's kayak. yeah, like kayak. why don't you just call it kayak. i'm calling it... canoe. compare hundreds of travel sites for thousands of trips. kayak. search one and done.
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