tv Anderson Cooper 360 CNN February 17, 2012 8:00pm-9:00pm EST
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look back at the singer's talent and conclusions. cnn presents "death of a diva" hosted by sanjay gupta and randi kay, it includes don lemon in all of that. stay with us for all the news and events. anderson 360 starts right now. breaking news tonight, an alleged would be suicide bomber arrested today, facing life in prison if convicted. his target authorities say the united states capitol. what appears to be an exclusive look at the slaughter in syria through the eyes and the gun sights of the troops carrying it out. [ gun fire ]
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[ speaking in native language ] >> syrian troops, they're apparently taking aim on people's homes. remember, you're looking at this video one day after the syrian ambassador to the united nations says there is no armed conflict in syria. remember when he said no armed conflict. in that video you can actually hear one man saying over the radio, the situation is good. as with all of the other video coming out of syria, we cannot con fill that it shows what it show what is it appears to show. the charges against a 20-year-old morroccan man. his arrest the result of a sting operation. jeffrey toobin talks about that. the knew details of the criminal
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charges just emerging and brian todd's got new details tonight. what have you learned about this suspect and his alleged plot? >> reporter: well, john, the details that we're getting indicate that this man, this suspect, identified as am meean elkhalis si. when he thought he was working with al qaeda operators but were really fbi and other law enforcement undercover agents. one of the most extraordinary details we got when he seemed to change his plans from first wanting to allegedly bomb a restaurant in washington, d.c. to then potential wanting to hit a military installation, to by mid january, amending those plans to wanting to detonate a suicide bomb inside the united states capitol, or on the grounds of the capitol, possibly in the visitor's center. that was the details we read in these court documents.
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when he amended those plans to want to hit the capitol, he went to a quarry, and tested out a bomb. dialed a phone number that he thought would detonate the bomb and he set today, february 17 as the day that he wanted to hit the u.s. capitol. according to these documents, he wanted to go in and possibly hit the visitor's center and that he had arranged with one of his contacts to detonate the bomb remotely if he encountered problems with law enforcement officers. he also thought he was getting a gun to operate if he encountered problems if any of the security guards tried to stop him. but the gun had been rendered inoperable. >> the sting operation often raises questions of entrapment. let's bring in jeffrey toobin and tom fuentes.
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the complaint said a confidential tip led the fbi to the suspect. the fbi gets thousands of these tips every stay and every year, how do they know that this one warrants attention? >> that's right they get thousands and they look to see if there's any possibility of truth in it. and fortunately they weed out 99.99% of those reports as being unfounded or made up by somebody to get somebody else in trouble. but when they get into an area with a subject where it fatakesn credible, where they know that this guy really means it, he's looking for somebody to help him, either obtain the firearms, provides the assistance that he needs to carry it out. >> are they convinced that this is a loan wolf and there's
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nobody out there that's part of this operation? >> that's something that's a key factor for them to determine when to take the case down, when to allow the suspect to finally be arrested. assume that they have all the evidence they need to sentence him to live in prison and at the same time make sure that there's not an unidentified subject out in the world that may be part of this thing that didn't get arrested. >> jeffrey, any time you have an operation like this, fbi operatives give him the explosives and give him guns, entrapment will come up. >> entrapment is often tried, very successful. it is a very difficult defense to persuade a jury, jurors don't like it. they feel often it's just sort of the last refuge of someone caught red handed. most of the time it doesn't work. what's interesting about this case is that it appears that he
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was dealing only with people under government control. according to the complaint. there was usef and hussein who was part of the operation. this does seem to be set up by the government. but the key to entrapment is always predisposition, is the person predisposed to do the crime? this guy was really initiating here, he was asking for bigger explosives, he was considering different sites, but again this is only an accusation, but i think entrapment is going to be a very difficult defense to raise. >> this is one of several cases now post 911 where we have seen the fbi identify a suspect or suspects and essentially infiltrate and work with them. how is this all evolving in the law enforcement role? >> law enforcement has decided
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after 911 there is no such thing as taking a case not seriously. they're taking everything seriously and they're pushing every case. sometimes jurors were reluctant, in the miami case, there were convictions, upstate new york, some of these cases were not as they played out, they didn't turn into as big a case as they turned out to be. but none of these people walk ought the door. and this case, where you have an actual test explosion, i think that's going to be incredibly incriminating here, that is well beyond just talk. the defenses that have worked, oh, this is just a bunch of people talking. but if you have somebody going into a test explosion, that's very good evidence if it pans out. >> why the capitol and why today. >> it just seemed to indicate every step of the way that this was an escalation, he first came under their radar more than a year ago, in january of 2011
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when he apparently was espousing some extremist views and intelligence sources got wind this this and notified law enforcement agencies. and they just started to monitor him, according to what they're telling us throughout the year. this really escalated in december when they started working him under cover and then it progress from there, to wanting to bomb a restaurant, to then wanting to bomb a military installation and then to the united states capitol. why today? we don't know that from any of the officials we have talked to, but he was a ready and willing suicide bomber inside the united states. >> and tom fuentes, this is the third lone wolf plotting to hit targets in the d.c. area. what does that tell you. >> that says that these lone
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wolves have incapable of doing it by themselves. they reach out to try to get somebody that knows something more about explosives or fire m firearms or can get the equipment that they need or provide some type of logistical support. that's where the breakdown is, it's the old story of how many can keep a secret. one can, two can't. so as soon as they reach out, that creates the vulnerability for the law enforcement to try to infiltrate into the plan. >> the fbi's just a lot better at this than they used to be. they know how to do this and they have enormous sources and i think this kind of arrest should be a source of comfort to people, not alarm. >> that's an important point. tom fuentes, brian todd, thank you for your views on this. you can follow me on twitter@johnking/cnn.
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. and later, saying goodbye to whitney houston, we'll have a live report from the church where music royalty is gathering. . >> you were there for her wedding and you're there for her coming home, the celebration of her life this weekend, how do you even go about writing the words that you're going to say? i mean do you know what you're going to say? >> well, it's about praying and, you know, folk would talk about doing the eulogy, my job is not that of a eulogist. [ male announcer ] we know you don't wait until the end of the quarter to think about your money... ♪ that right now, you want to know where you are,
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man on tv: ...rbis and 36 homers. swings at the first pitch and fouls it deep back into the stands. [ding] [fans whirring] announcer: chill raw and prepared foods promptly. one in 6 americans will get sick from food poisoning this year. check your steps at foodsafety.gov. keeping them honest now. complaining about gotcha questions. in this case the news media instead of making the play. the latest member of the gotcha gang is rick santorum being asked about a billionaire's comments on birth control. >> i get such a chuckle when these things come out. we have millions of our fellow
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americans outof a job and people seem to be so preoccupied with sex, i think it says something about our culture, i think we need a massive therapy session so that we can focus on what the real issues are. back in my days, they used bayer aspirin for contraception, the gals put it between their knees and it wasn't that costly. >> excuse me, i'm just trying to catch my breath from that. he apologized today. you should know mr. freeds is a major backer. he's given hundreds of thousands of dollars to santorum's superpac. >> when you quote a supporter of mine who tells a bad, offcolor joke and somehow i'm responsible for that, that's gotcha.
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>> but nobody said you were responsible. they said how would you characterize it and what have you said to him. not that you're responsible. it's to understand how you differ from what this person said. so let me quote you. >> i don't have to respond to -- every reporter who says something, now i'm going to have to respond to it. this is what you guys do. you don't do this with president obama, in fact with mr. obama, you went out and defended him against somebody who he had in a church for, he can't possibly believe what he listened to for 20 years. this is a double standard and this is what you're pulling off and i'm going to call you on it. >> later santorum went a little bit further, he said, quote, reporters sit and go nothing while president obama sits in a church with a guy who's a racer. and somehow or another foster
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fries is speaking for me. the first claim just doesn't stand up to the facts. the gotcha claim, that's more subjective. you can decide for yourself what's fair game and what's not. one thing that is, the candidates spent plenty of time talking about it. >> this isn't just sitting around playing a game of gotcha. >> there are some who only play gotcha journalism. >> we can sit here and play i gotcha questions. >> gotcha kind of questions. >> i'm ready for the gotcha question. >> it's a gotcha question. >> i wish you would put aside the gotcha questions. >> we tried hard to find some examples of democrats making the gotcha complaint. barney frank telling savannah guthrie that it's got cha this, gotcha that, and gotcha politics and santorum's other quote about
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a double standard when -- >> we begin with a new controversy on the campaign trail. at issue, barack obama's pastor, this man and the fiery marks he's made. >> now barack obama is being questioned about racially charged remarks once made by his past pastor. >> tonight barack obama on the defense explaining his views on race and his former pastor. >> if you knew that he got rough in sermons, why did it take you more than a year to separate yourself from him? >> i haven't heard those comments. >> how many times did you go to church a month? >> most people would be saying, why not just leave the church of reverend wright. >> he said that black people shouldn't sing god bless of america but should sing god damn
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america. and i want to ask you why have you been listening to him for more than 20 years? >> according to the nonpartisan pugh resear pew research center said that the obama story made up 87%. let's bring in mary malin. and ron brown stein. ron, to you first. senator santorum turning this on the media, is that how a front runner handles tough questions. and i guess you know as well as anybody that there's a lot of juice in the republican primary at times for attacking the media. certainly the conservative base of the republican party, and it's not new in a long standing way is suspicious of the media. i think we have reached a point in the republican race, where this is secondary, not nearly as
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combustible as it was with newt gingrich. we are down with republican voters between rick santorum and newt gingrich. >> if a major supporter says something outrageous, it is out of the realm to ask a candidate what he thinks about this? >> no, and i think santorum's frustration is he's right on the precipice of consolidating the not romney vote. he's up in michigan, more significantly he's up in ohio and he's rightly frustrated by it. and ron's right that it leverages a preexisting condition of the conservatives that there's a double standard. he said that it was despicable. mr. friess is a lovely man who said a really stupid thing.
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and i know a lot of men who say really stupid things about women. this is not going to turn any volts and nobody is otherwise going to not vote for santorum because of his reaction to the reporter. >> mary mentioned michigan and ohio, and we know that rom my is doing better with blue collar workingers in the polling, does he have the blue collar appeal or is there a potential downside. >> the exit polls that we have seen in the five states where we have had them, clearly there is a class of mitt romney support. what i call the managerial republican party, better educated voters, nonevangelicals. santorum we repute a blue collar appeal to him. he grew up in a western pennsylvania town, he talks about rebuilding manufacturing, but so far he has not run better
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downscale than upscale. so the question really becomes, can he begin to console date those voters, not only in michigan, but all place where is the republican party is a dominant part of the electorate. and if he can win in michigan, i think it would give him a lot of momentum to really change the dynamic of this race in a very significant way. >> mary, what happens, senator santorum if you look at the polls, he's leading in michigan. that's where his dad was ceo of the american motors corporation. >> ron wrote a really good piece on this today, he's exactly right. there's to far no electoral evidence of his attracting these voters, these downscale voters if you will, or the latest voters.
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santorum's opportunity here is really rooted in the fundamental change in the republican voters. the kind of voters who are more drawn toward romney are less dominant than they weren't were. santorum can plant that flag there and fill that vacuum that that difference with the voters creates. there are a lot of states now where that is a big portion, if not a majority portion of the republican electorate. >> a lot of midwestern industrial states. still ahead here, saying goodbye to whitney houston. family and friends will gather tomorrow to remember her. and one of the premier journalists of his generation, died doing what he did so well
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whitney houston, a musical legend who died too young. there will be a private funeral at her church where she developed her enormous talent. outside the new hope baptist church in newark, houston's fans have been paying tribute to an artist who once seemed unstoppable. the glamorous singer with the golden voice. collected grammy after grammy and shattered records as she made them. but it's these pictures taken just two nights before houston's death that many are looking at to find clues. they show her leaving a grammy party where she also drank champagne according to price. less than 48 hours later, houston was dead. now almost a week later, with toxicology tests pending, investigators are focusing on prescription drugs found in
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whiher hotel room. but tonight, that is not the focus. jason caroll, we know a private viewing was held for the family today, what can you tell us about that? >> reporter: just incredibly sad, john, i was out there earlier this evening, just about ten minutes from where i am now. we saw sissy houston show up with bobby christina, clyde davis showing up for the private viewing, only for close family, only for close friends, as i was standing out there, they tried to keep this as dignified as possible, john, so they had the street blocked off in both directions, they were keeping the -- they had a white sheet set up so that people coming and going could have as much privacy as possible during this very emotional time. >> and jason, what's the latest that we can expect to see at
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tomorrow's funeral service? >> you keep hearing about this list that just keeps growing about people who are come ought to perform, people like aretha franklin. kevin costner will be coming out, he will be speaking here tomorrow when the funeral gets underway at noon. bobby brown will be here as well. when i spoke to the pastor here at the new hope baptist church, he said definitely there thereby a lot of tears tomorrow, but it will be what whitney houston did best, singing. just as we have been standing out here from front of the church, we have been hearing the choir practice, hearinging the echoes of the choir. this is the last moment that people are going to be able to get out, at least people from the public to come out and pay their respects. so they're still bringing cards and letters.
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i heard from one man who said i came down, i came up with south carolina, i wanted to be here, i know i can't come for the funeral, but i wanted to come out and pay my respects because whitney houston taught me to sing when i was in choir at the new hope baptist church. we know how whitney houston really never lost her connection with her roots. but so many people here in the community are not going to be able to attend tomorrow, it's a private ceremony here tomorrow. it's going to be by invitation only. that church seats about 1,500 people. everyone else not on the invite list is going to be held at least two blocks away. >> jason carol in newark tonight. as jason noted, quite a scene outside the funeral home. fans keep coming by, paying their respects, leaving flowers, candles, balloons, leaving messages in some cases. pastor marvin wynan will conduct
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the ceremony. . >> joining me ngospel singer. you and your family, obviously so close to the houston family. how is your family doing, how is whitney's family doing. >> well, my mother after we had heard it, she said she felt as if she had lost one of her children, and i said, mom, it's because you have. and talking with sissy, just, you know, when i called, i said mom is going to be all right. faith plays a great part in how we cope with uncertainties in life. it is not something that we run from in difficulty. it's something that we run to. so by the grace of god, every e
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everyone's holding up pretty well. >> you were there for her wedding and you're there for her coming home, and her celebration of her life this weekend. how do you go about writing the words that you're going to say? do you know what you're going to say? >> well, it's about praying and, you know, folk would talk about doing the eulogy, my job is nota of a eulogist, in technical terms my job is a homolist, my job is to speak on behalf of god and how we go further. we pray, we speak from our heart and we allow the holy spirit to lead us so we might begin to minister hope and healing to those that are there. >> and how do you givea? obviously you said faith is extremely important. at times like this, people question their faith and say, why would a young woman be taken from us with such talent and
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such potential and such a wonderful life ahead of her? >> the one thing about salvation is it's a choice. as i was talking to some people the other day a gospel song that said we are our heavenly father's family, but there are times when we will answer to another's beck and call. salvation is a constantly a choice, it is a constant vigil of doing the right thing. it is not a blame game on god, that somehow god just took whitney from us, it's the fact that we have choices and the choices we make may not be the best choices, but just as a son or a daughter may disappoint their father, doesn't mean that he doesn't love them. >> you were talking right before the show and i was asking what you wanted to get across and one of the things you said to me was
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really important, was the importance of praising people and telling them how much you care about them and love them in their life, not just after they have passed. >> it is amazing, and we take life and love for granted so often. as you play that video of bb and cc, whitney was actually supposed to sing with the wyanan first, but just as a family, we lost our brother ronald and whitney came and sat with us and rolled with us to the cemetery. and that's what families do, we rally around each other. when someone is hurting. we lay aside what we do, professionally, and we find the time to be there. the power of presence is so great. and so, people need to learn how to say i love you, and i miss
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you. last week, whitney was alive, i was here preaching, there were no cameras, no one was calling me, but since her death, you know, we're fighting off news agencies, simply because they don't understand that we lost a sister. this is not a break or an opportunity, we are really hurting and seriously grieving. and it amazes me the insensitivity of the media when it comes to things like this. >> i think, you know, often people see this as, you know, reporters see this as a news story and there's facts to get out. for family in the epicenter of that and a family and friends, it is not a story, it is life and death, it is heart break that never heals. >> it's someone that was there
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and now you can no longer speak to them and maybe you didn't tell them that you loved them. maybe you, if you had known, you would have did some things differently. and so there's a lot of questions, a lot of things that go through the minds, why wasn't i there? why didn't i help? what if i had picked up the phone, what if i had went and got her. and you have to reconcile all of that within yourself and you miss that person so greatly. >> i think a lot of her fans, you know, wanted some sort of public service that they could take part in, for you, the importance of it being private and of it being family is clear, no? >> i don't think knowing sissy and the houston family, i don't think it was a matter of public or private, as it was this is my daughter, this is my sister,
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this is my mother, this is my friend and we want to do this with dignity. we don't want to have a parade, we loved her when she was nippy in new jersey. the world loves her because of her voice. but if nippy could not sing, the houston family would love her. and i knew that mama houston would do it the way she wanted it done, with we're going to church and we're not going to be worried about if the world can get in. we're going to lay our daughter to rest in the confines and the tradition of what we do. >> there's so many people around the world listening to her music and sadly now who weren't listening to it last week. but i hope you know that there are -- and i hope the family knows that there are countless people around the world who are
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sending them their players arayi wish you the best and it's going to a difficult weekend for you. >> it will be difficult and god answer prayers, and prayer changes people and circumstances. >> i really appreciate you being on tonight. cnn will have complete coverage tomorrow of cnn and cnn.com. whitney houston, her life in music, starting at 11:00 a.m. eastern time. and coming up, anthony shadid was killed in iraq today. his memories of anthony a deed. and stunning new videos show armed gunmen, the assaad government insist don't exist. we have a live report from inside syria next. i'm a marathon runner, in absolute perfect physical condition and i had a heart attack right out of the clear blue...
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also i like to remember, that when we see them bracing themselves for the worst, they also enter the 14th day strait of intense shelling. the intensity, the level of thinking place today, quite thinking some of the heavies that we have seen inside the city. you can go numbers of casualties of being rushed to the field hospital and most of the residents are trying to keep themselves safe, as they keep struggling to try to do that. inside bunkers, you have women, children, men, all of them that grab at you wanting to tell you some sort of story about a loved one who died. we met with the head of the humanitarian office there, this again set up in the last few months to deal with this ongoing
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crisis. they have not received food supplies for three weeks in this neighborhood and another neighborhood is going to begin to starve to dpeeath. and that imminent military operation. i have seen 14 days of constant shelling and now they are dreading the moment that syrian security forces are going to come through in full force through this entire neighborhood and effectively massacre everybody. >> you mentioned food is in short supply, medical supplies are virtually nonexistent. if the syrian military comes through, how deep will be the humanitarian crisis? and is there any organized force to fight back? >> john, the humanitarian crisis, it is on the verge of being a complete and total disaster. food supplies are running down, medical supplies are incredibly
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hard to come by and getting those types of things in and getting a fairly -- to try to by pass government checkpoints and they do try to bring in those things via those routes, they don't bring in the quality that they need. people at this makeshift medical clinics. when it comes to the capabilities of the three syrian army, this is very much a one-sided war. what they have at their disposal, ak-47s, rocket propelled grenades. we have been hearing this consistent call. and people are unable to fathom
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that the international community refuses to take concrete action. as one female put it as we were speaking to her at the hospital as she was standing at the foot of a colleague who later on died. she said, look, these are human beings, we're not talking about stone here, this is flesh and blood, how many syrians have to die. what is that magic number that's going to get people to do something without any bloodshed? >> anthony shadid died of and apparent asthma attack. shadid covered the middle east for two decades. last year here and three other journalists were held captive in libya for more than a week.
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i spo stephen ferrell, you knew and worked with anthony for nearly a decade, and went through some deadly situations back in 2011. what go you want people watching to know about him? >> i think with anthony shadid, you have to say he had a very rare combination of gifts. but with anthony, he had not only the courage to go to places that needed to be gone to, but when he was is there he had the lack skills, the arab skills, he could gather, he could collect a he's extra rare talent was to condense that to crystallize it and to write nit a way that magnified the import of what he was reporting on.
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so to bring to people in a very poetic way, what was happening in these areas, so really, the full range, the ability to get there, the ability to understand what was going on, the ability to express that in words that could be matched by few and almost unique ability to put it in context, to see the microchasm and the regional macrochasm. >> you know this firsthand, kidnapped, beaten by gadhafi's forces. he was shot in ramallah. what drove him to keep going back into danger. he was driven by desire, we
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talked about it in libya. he was driven by a desire to report people's stories, to be there, to tell people what was happening on the front line. or in places that you can't just report sitting in your two, three, four, miles away, i was actually looking at a. he said he wanted to be there because he didn't want to be part of some paida managed, embedded operation. he wanted to be where the bombs were falling. where the human cost was being felt. and he wanted to report that, and tell people the cost of war. that's what drove him. you talked to friends and colleagues and a word they use
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over and over again to describe him is gentle. >> he did have a passion, but there was no sense of competition or meanness designed to squeeze people out, very generous with his time, very generous with his knowledge, very generous, yes, he was not a person who was flustered in a crisis. i think that is a fair description of him. >> and what made them such a good team, good partners in the field? >> i was with them in libya, and a colleague a year ago, and tyler is utterly unflappable. my heart goes out to him. he had to bring anthony's and his body out of syria. and if there's anybody -- he had
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? the cause of that explosion is under investigation. and check this out, nasa has released some critical satellite images of the surface of the sun. take a look. at what looks like solar tornadoes, they actually competing magnetic forces that create hot flashes and swirls, each of them big enough to
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