Skip to main content

tv   Cavuto Coast to Coast  FOX Business  March 24, 2016 12:00pm-2:01pm EDT

12:00 pm
stuart: alright, actually. free speech in britain, chad ripped from parents, president of the tango in buenos aires. which is the most interesting story today? >> the top two. the british man arrested. whatever happened to it. free speech, please. time is. it is yours. >> no problem. i'll see you again soon. this is his show. i am charles payne filling in for neil cavuto. two days after the death explosion ripped through the brussels airport in the mattress nation. the feature story joins us right now with the latest details on the suspects. kevin. >> charles, the foreign minister has offered the resignation in the wake of tuesday's terror attack. belgian prime minister is refusing resignation. now the city has had a few days to mourn a process would have
12:01 pm
been. questions are starting to be raised on how the belgian government was not able to prevent tuesday morning to attack because it was quite apparent that the belgian police forces were starting to close in on these terror cells. we do know that two main suspects here are both now dead. one detonated himself at the international airport. the younger brother killed himself by detonating himself just around the corner. elgin prosecutors say that they knew these two brothers had a criminal history. police were familiar with them. according to belgian prosecutors, it didn't appear they had any ties to terrorism. with so interesting as a few hours after prosecutors made the announcement, turkish government officials came forward as a news conference and said the oldest brother was spotted in turkey last year close to the syrian border and he was deported to europe that this man may be a
12:02 pm
militant. it is now being asked. it appears this is quite a black eye on the intelligence agency. charles: all right. thank you very much. a lot of blame to be passed around. it could be responsible for the parents and brussels attack. a hearing in paris with the latest details. >> we are talking about salah abdeslam said he did not know about the killing in brussels. salah abdeslam is a terror suspect was arrested friday for the role in the november paris attacks that killed 130 people. at an extradition hearing this morning elgin, the lawyer told the court his client will not fight extradition to france. the attorney says abdeslam wants
12:03 pm
to be extradited as soon as possible to stand trial. originally planned to fight extradition, but his lawyers say he changed his mind. this is a quote. explain himself. the 26 year old terror suspect include record with two other suspected accomplices. the extradition hearing was postponed and scheduled to resume at april 7th. investigators suggest the arrest last week may have triggered the attack this week in brussels. abraham left his statement that said he felt unsafe, did not know what to do and feared that if he dallied he raced in then up next to him in a cell. the state department says 12 americans were injured in the brussels attacks, four others are unaccounted. charles. charles: thank you very much, adam shapiro.
12:04 pm
investigators look for two men they suspect held targets airport and subway station in brussels. meanwhile, reported in this 400 as a site are sent to europe. the number could actually be on could actually been a conservative site. thanks for joining us now. >> it's a frightening number and they know they're coming. what are they going to bring to this? >> this is foreshadowing. the permissive visa system and the european union has contributed to this. the more concerning thing is there was information present. law enforcement information, intelligence information and the linkages were made. those are lessons we should have learned after 9/11, nato nations for sure. now you have another cataclysmic attack really targeting the social network of europe, the train travel in airport travel.
12:05 pm
>> you make a great point because here you have the european union designed to open up your up for commerce to move, people to move around freely. then you have a euro common currency. in that intelligence information is locked at the borders. i read with the mayor of most of the cassette that was in her responsibility to follow these guys. where does the buck followed and how many attacks until they get their act together. >> if you are an elected official of any capacity, state, local government whether united states or european union or european country, you are responsible and you have to be vigilant about these tanks. the information seemed to be present. it wasn't getting into the hands or their political decisions made not to do anything about it. abdeslam who's in custody right now didn't know about the attack. with the interrogated? how is interrogated? these are questions that will haunt elgin and in europe and we
12:06 pm
should be thinking about that here in the united states right now. charles: the two brothers, the one in the subway station in one of the guys at the airport, both criminals, both ex-cons took a shot at a policeman during a robbery arrests. it is absolutely amazing. it's not even about the argument in this country with the profiling. these are ex-criminals, ex-cons. one of them faded away. one was on parole. we had this on both sides of the atlantic, by the way. you are to have a profile. what can we do to go after these people? >> seems like the information was there and connections were made. salah abdeslam triggered an early detonation. "cavuto" we've got to do it now. >> it might've been a standard operating procedure that if somebody is rolled up then we execute the attack early. that's the problem is the information was there.
12:07 pm
we knew individuals who associated with past criminal activity that was come through. the information was there. no one took action and not the political decision. charles: in other words, the population two times more dense than brussels. ij can take ghetto if you will. how do you get someone -- how does a country like russells afford to follow the potential terrorists? can it be done? >> it can only did it after 9/11 and people like commissioner kelley and the n.y.p.d., a model adopted across the world for how to do the kind of intelligence collection you need to do in certain communities without jeopardizing constitutional liberties. we also have technical collection, collection that is very controversial in the
12:08 pm
country that nsa has been reported to have been doing. these are tools we must employ now otherwise not only will we see smaller attacks, the kind that affect our day-to-day life and put fear into people, the catastrophic attacks in new york. charles: after the fact there's the finger-pointing. who should be in charge in europe? or should be in charge in america? is that homeland security? it seems there should be one central figure who puts it all together and keeps it all together so there is constant communication with talk about all the time. someone goes to flight school and learns how to fly or in europe someone has a shot at a cop, a muslim immigrant who shown disrespect for the host country. who could set together? >> in our country is supposed to be the national security council process or everybody who has a piece about --
12:09 pm
charles: is in charge of that? >> the president of the united states the national security council in this country. federal government has asked state and local governments to help because in our country right now, domestic radicalization is making this more difficult. the internet in social media were difficult. now it is everybody's responsibility regardless of the level of government. if they don't take it seriously there'll be a reckoning for the elected officials in belgium. charles: talking about the local level, what is the role of the general public? see something, say something when you see a coworker asking differently starts to say things that are anti-american, things they haven't said before. i grew up in a neighborhood where they say call the police about someone. i'm not going to squeal on the sky. come out and beat me up. kindly mention that people can say something without being afraid they will pay a price.
12:10 pm
not being politically correct, but afraid they'll pay some other prize. >> the government of the united states learned the lesson after september 11, 2001. the changes made post-9/11 and the blueprint we had to protect us was successful. i think we need to continue to ask our public officials that i'm an elected official state of new york are having worked in the white house had been a part of the process, i can tell you we can do about what we like to do well. we have to have the political will to win the war. charles: thank you very much. appreciate it. the defense department officials telling lawmakers americans have been killed by prisoners who were released from guantánamo bay. peter barnes has the details. >> this has triggered a sharp criticism from republicans opposed to closing gitmo after the isis attacks last year in paris. >> what i can tell you is unfortunately there have been americans that have died because
12:11 pm
of gitmo detainees. >> how many americans have to die? how many people in brussels or paris have to die, civilians? what is the threshold at that point maybe we will keep them under control and gitmo. >> sera, when anybody dies it's a tragedy and we don't want anybody to die because we transferred detainees. charles: the state department official paul lewis declined to answer any numbers or details. an obama administration official told "the associated press" that lewis was referring to one incident that involved an afghan prisoner released from guantánamo while george w. bush was president. the obama administration has released 144 detainees at gitmo in a multiagency screening process that requires unanimous decision. when u.s. spy agency has publicly confirmed seven of them have returned to fighting. the white house says the low rated for engagement shows in
12:12 pm
its view that together with this program is successful, charles. charles: that seven out of 144 sounds low. i've heard numbers higher than that. it is shocking at least they admit harm has comes to americans, death comes to americans. peter barnes, thank you very much. more coming up, but first the warning signs mr. were there that have a counterterror official worried about what were missing right here at home. a quick look at dogs. the dial dropping all the of the day. the message right now is docile. someone says keep your money right where it is. we will be right back. don't let dust and allergies get between you
12:13 pm
and life's beautiful moments. with flonase allergy relief, they wont. when we breathe in allergens, our bodies react by over producing six key inflammatory substances that cause our symptoms.
12:14 pm
most allergy pills only control one substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. flonase outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. so you can seize those moments, wherever you find them. flonase. six is greater than one changes everything. [engines revving] you can't have a hero, if you don't have a villain. the world needs villains [tires screeching] and villains need cars. ♪ we believe in the power of active management. anagement, we actively manage with expertise and conviction. so you can invest with more certainty. mfs. that's the power of active management. perfect driving record. >>perfect. no tickets. no accidents... >>that is until one of you clips a food truck, ruining your perfect record. >>yup...
12:15 pm
now, you would think your insurance company would cut you some slack, right? >>no. your insurance rates go through the roof. your perfect record doesn't get you anything. >>anything. perfect! for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. and if you do have an accident, our claim centers are available to assist you 24/7. for a free quote, call liberty mutual at switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509 call today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. charles: welcome back.
12:16 pm
new details about the brussels attacker is emerging. turkish officials say one of the suicide honors was deported twice in less than a month. this is a photo taken by the police in turkey. they suspected him of being a militant fighter and more in belgium about them. he said to have died in the attack. his brother also reportedly blew himself up in the attack in the subway in brussels. details continued to emerge. robert strang says belgium officials are missing way to match and they need our help. things are coming on the show. when you say they need our help, are they asking for help? >> we worked together now. offices in the embassy and as you know from the train station americans coming in a young the were very close to belgian intelligence and belgian police. as we do throughout europe. charles: has this to prevent attacks or after-the-fact sort of things?
12:17 pm
from what i've read, belgium doesn't work very closely with france even though they know the paris attackers had connections to brussels and within the own country we could see it all in disarray. to what degree are we working with them? >> we do work with them. go back and look at the cases we've made over the years with france and belgium. our u.s. agents work very well with police. they get along, share information, they help on her on her. it's more of a political issue than a working day today. operationally they do get along pretty well. charles: whenever politicians going to stop it from being effect? >> bill nader money and training. look what we do in mexico. we were embedded in the country and we spent hundreds of millions of dollars on surveillance equipment, guns, training. we need to do that in europe because this is getting closer and closer to us than with practice not that they forget you're in a big way. charles: you think they would go
12:18 pm
so far to let us run things and certain things over there? i know everyone is handicapped. you can have enough raids after 9:00 at night. it's amazing how this handicap themselves with respect to private terror. >> a whole judicial system is different. everything goes before a magistrate in minutes taken from police. i think we have the best system, but i'm a little biased. we have to work with other countries in the way they are set up. i was dea agent and we had over 100 countries around the world and we got along with everyone of those leased departments. maybe they did things differently than we did, but were together and worked closely. we can do the same thing today with the whole basis crisis. we did it in colombia appeared were doing it in mexico and other countries. we can do it in europe. charles: what are europeans afraid of, particularly the belgians of the world.
12:19 pm
they just don't have the shared values we have and they've gone in a more liberalized way of living? i don't understand why there isn't more information sharing and preventing attacks and getting together after the fact. >> we prevented the attacks. both give credit. what were we prevented in new york in the last 15 years. charles: i'm talking about places like the attacks in paris brussels who had the jewish museum and then you had best. they run a high state of alert. we can't prevent an attack on a high state of alert in brussels with our help, how much more should they let us do to be a part of this? >> we need to integrate ourselves with police and intelligence. we don't want them tothe world. we don't want to go when n. start coming out, putting our laws into place there, using our
12:20 pm
force. we want to work with them. >> is there something specific of the top you would have them implement? >> new york city as the model for the world. as a matter of fact he is 15 police officers assigned throughout europe in the middle east so he can get the phone call in the middle of the night and bypass all the state department bureaucracies. so we are third in new york. i'd make sure we have enforcement operation, intelligence and security working together not only in brussels, but the rest of europe and rest of the world. just like we do in new york. we need to use the model we have here and bring it into europe. but it will take training, u.s. agents, money. it will take surveillance equipment. it will take time and that is the key issue. we don't have a lot of time. we need to do this now. charles: all the experts say communication is at the top of the list for all these things. thank you. charles: neil has been saying for months faced danger in
12:21 pm
dismissing trump the next, wait until you hear this agreement nail. i somehow trumps comments unleash a debate on my show last night. twitter blew up, the panel blew up. everyone went crazy. wait until you see that.
12:22 pm
12:23 pm
12:24 pm
charles: be careful underestimating track. tony robbins telling anthony scaramucci rivals are making a huge mistake. take a listen. >> artist level of anger that we have not been in the electorate for a very long time. i know donald really well. he's an amazing businessman, a great salesman and i don't think his rebels took area soon enough. trying to catch the fall interview tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. right here in spm. into the cohosts, and in a scaramucci. democrats risking making the same mistake. do you think democrats are taking trump to lately?
12:25 pm
>> idea. just to argue about that just got published in "vanity fair" where we had a group of people at the hunt and fish club. we are talking about it and the that were there were going to mug them over. here are the new numbers speeches at the democratic race, et cetera, et cetera and that's what republicans. i am here on site telling you i'm over two. i was a scout walker early and then jeb bush on the sideline. i think donald trump has the chance to be the nominee. if he's the nominee, i'll do whatever paul ryan goes ahead and does. he's been underestimated. charles: yesterday harry reid made some comments i thought were interesting him as to the effect saying he would never underestimate donald trump. it feels like maybe i see more and more were hillary clinton is trying to convey to donald trump. so maybe some of the establishment democrats.
12:26 pm
bright, so she's learned a valuable lesson that by the same token, that's why i think she's still with bernie sanders neck and neck, maybe she's got the message even if the establishment democrats haven't gotten the message. the macworld which you do to prepare yourself for donald trump? it's a masterful guy, he's seeking missile and staying on the weakness in knocking you off your game. he did it to 14 of 17 presidential candidates. how is she going to prepare herself for that? how is she ready for that? charles: i'm saying she talked about trump a lot more than a few weeks ago. she's trying to pinpoint certain differences between her and donald trump. >> the establishment as in the republican side have the same rhetoric could >> it didn't stop them, but she's going to be gone for an entire electorate. i inherited cellulite think she is taking a more serious enough
12:27 pm
than a couple weeks ago. >> president bill clinton is taking away seriously. he's got very good political or things that recognizes donald trump can stretch into their voter base into the blue-collar democrat. >> we are talking about this. the bottom line is there are pieces now saint paul ryan is still working on pulling some republicans away from donald trump and preparing for this contested convention where he probably will go for someone other than trump himself. while we talk about democrats underestimating donald trump, even within the gop there's a lot of resistance and a plot to take this away. >> first and foremost i'm a republican. charles: you consider yourself an establishment republican. >> i don't know how that happened because i grew up in a middle-class family. charles: are rich. >> not yet. charles: that's one of the few
12:28 pm
things on the checklist at anyone associated with jeb could way back. >> here's what i say to you. i don't want to be an elitist because i think what happens if you are part of the establishment, you've lost some level of touch with the middle class. charles: that's a great point. i know you are not an elitist. >> i want to be an empathetic member of the establishment. charles: that an image problem. >> basically they're trying to ram down the throw something at general it doesn't want. it is very hard to say donald trump is not a republican when registered republicans are going and voting for him in the tens of millions of votes. i sort of think that is the wrong rhetoric. you have to say listen, we need somebody presidential. the stakes are very high. decisions are very costly. so what are you going to do? are you going to be presidential or not?
12:29 pm
his answer is yes. he'll get people to rally around them. he needs to do that. charles: if they go through the voting thing he will do it early. if he doesn't have at 1237, i think it's got to get on the first or second wave or it will be in full plate or the establishment will say there's no blood in the water. to your point, i wish the establishment would listen to the people. they've got to find a way of saying i don't like donald trump. that feels like the mistake they are making compounding all the top. >> there's one crazy scenario here. they go to the contested convention. he broke or something with ted cruz. ted cruz becomes the nominee. donald trump walks out of the convention as a hero where he helped unify the party. he goes back to his day job which is branding himself in creating this magnificent
12:30 pm
business. >> or he goes away with a corrupt bargain and comes back four years from now in crashes doubles in all over again. i want to remind you all. before you start easter concert tomorrow watching the brand of wall street week on tomorrow at 8:00 p.m. every friday on fox business. donald trump doubling down same muslims aren't doing enough. his rivals lasting remarks. what if i told you these comments are actually helping them? we will be right back. there's a lot of places you never want to see "$7.95." [ beep ] but you'll be glad to see it here. fidelity -- where smarter investors will always be. if only the signs were as obvious when you trade. fidelity's active trader pro can help you find smarter entry and exit points
12:31 pm
and can help protect your potential profits. fidelity -- where smarter investors will always be. you're an at&t small business expert? sure am. my staff could use your help staying in touch with customers. at&t can help you stay connected. am i seeing double? no ma'am. our at&t 'buy one get one free' makes it easier for your staff to send appointment reminders to your customers... ...and share promotions on social media? you know it! now i'm seeing dollar signs. you should probably get your eyes checked. good one babe. optometry humor. right now get up to $650 in credits to help you switch to at&t. ....
12:32 pm
12:33 pm
12:34 pm
>> cavuto coast-to-coast. i am connell mcshane. kind of an interesting story. it may have to put in its proxy that it gives out to shareholders eve year. a provision where they have to address the effect by med changes having on profitability. the stock down a little bit today. the justice department has announced charges against seven people with ties to the iranian government.
12:35 pm
committed against a water dam here in the area. hacking into the dam. listen to the attorney general. talking about one of the alleged hackers. >> charge with a legally obtaining access. though bowman dam in rye, new york. give this defendant to control water levels and outcomes. it can oppose a clear and present danger. >> and other story here. a businessman from china pleading guilty. both of the companies being targeted by this person. a 50-year-old is now facing up to five years in prison. the chinese government is denying any type of involvement.
12:36 pm
>> i was shocked that they were attacking. i was shocked that they did not just admitted. thanks a lot, on all. beefing up security in response to isis warnings. advising against travel against all of europe. gerri willis has the details. >> talk to a number of travel websites today. it is just beginning. the impact of these breaking news stories. analyst say the impact is likely to be short term to media term. just a few weeks. they say a 10-20% decline and booking to european capital is most likely. take a look at this. terror is not the hardest thing to recover from.
12:37 pm
diseases. places that have the virus. environmental disasters. tsunami. all of these things would be tougher for the destinations to recover from. it is bad news, though, for the three largest carriers. these airlines drives 12% of their total revenue from trans atlantic avenue. traveling south. the rio de janeiro will be hosting the 2016 olympic games. big changes coming. the government saying, do not go to europe. be aware of public places.
12:38 pm
european vacation. >> donald trump doubling down on muslim comments. >> when they see trouble, they have to report it. they absolutely are not reporting it and that is a problem. >> trump fans rallying up. mercedes, who is getting upset about these comments? >> i think that you have those in the muslim community that are getting upset. we know hillary clinton has talked about his comments as well. the muslims had to lead this fight. islam has been hijacked by these radical militants.
12:39 pm
it is very clear that muslims, it is their ability, you look at who was held that this. this is a problem. if you have within your community. not cooperating and being transparent with the police. >> what could you have done to help these muslims come out? some of this is because they sympathize, obviously. >> how do we make this?
12:40 pm
>> i guess if people liked like it, other people are too scared to say. this is not pushing back his political correct this. this is not urging people. this is dave coding. >> that guy from the paris at that. hiding in plain sight. i mean, i do not think you can say that. every american, by the way. keeping their communities safe. something purchase it -- people friends and family. i do not think what trump said should be illegal, you should be allowed to say that. there is a responsibility that comes from that.
12:41 pm
in belgium yesterday, they started asking questions. basically, they are talking. >> more likely to cooperate. i will tell you, he was captured because of eight tip. someone cooperated. that goes a long way. shutting down these isis accounts. why are some say they probably should have done more. more on the breaking news. they are killing americans. someone who says, they have gotten the answers and they are coming up. ♪
12:42 pm
12:43 pm
the e-class has 11 intelligent driver-assist systems. it recognizes pedestrians and alerts you. warns you about incoming cross-traffic. cameras and radar detect dangers you don't. and it can even stop by itself. so in this crash test, one thing's missing: a crash. the 2016 e-class. now receive up to a $3,000 spring bonus on the e350 sport sedan.
12:44 pm
12:45 pm
in shutting down a thousand accounts after the brothel attacks this week. whether these accounts should have been shut down before these attacks happened. >> twitter is actually not confirming. >> aided share a tweet from a reporter tweeting that. what we do know is twitter is working in concert with some law enforcement. according to a march hearing transcript with the diane feinstein, they think that twitter is cooperating. always an influx. pro- terror after attacks like these. a new pro- isis video. across social media.
12:46 pm
using images of donald trump. also celebrating this brutal attack. yielding any preventive message yet. >> apple, the center of controversy, twitter has been under a tremendous amount of pressure to be more cooperative. do you think that this is a step in the right direction? >> twitter shut out 125,000 accounts related to terror act entity. it is not that much. the question is, can twitter 04 to do this affectively? allocating some funds to twitter. maybe that is the solution.
12:47 pm
>> a pretty significant difference. twitter is often been the way for isis to share their message. they spoke certainly has a larger apparatus. despite the type of content and really get it earlier. >> thank you very much. making money. causing a firestorm on twitter. i want you to hear it for yourself. when we come back. ♪
12:48 pm
[engines revving] you can't have a hero, if you don't have a villain. the world needs villains [tires screeching] and villains need cars. ♪ don't let dust and allergies get and life's beautiful moments. with flonase allergy relief, they wont. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. flonase changes everything.
12:49 pm
you premium like clockwork. month after month. year after year. then one night, you hydroplane into a ditch. yeah... surprise... your insurance company tells you to pay up again. why pay for insurance if you have to pay even more for using it?
12:50 pm
if you have liberty mutual deductible fund™, you could pay no deductible at all. sign up to immediately lower your deductible by $100. and keep lowering it $100 annually, until it's gone. then continue to earn that $100 every year. there's no limit to how much you can earn and this savings applies to every vehicle on your policy. call to learn more. switch to liberty mutual and you could save up to $509. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. >> donald trump calling for significant cuts.
12:51 pm
renegotiating. focusing on terrorism. as well as some of the others. making money. the four navy seals. it got heated on this topic. >> should we be putting more pressure on them? we spend too much money on nato. >> they are being attacked. >> they are headed here. they have been here. >> i don't even know how to answer that question. >> the economy is over. the argument. it is a fine theoretical argument. >> getting americans killed.
12:52 pm
>> should we still be helping them out? >> how does it benefit the united states of america? >> you guys should be ashamed of yourselves for talking about this. >> former army special forces veteran. these discussions need to be happening right now. thank you so much for joining us. it got really heated last night. americans are frustrated with nato. with the united nations. we have very little voice. very little results. what should be happening right now? >> questioning nato's role today and our relationship. i did 32 words of duty under that coalition in afghanistan.
12:53 pm
there was not a lot of effort. frankly, there was not a lot of consistency. i think that trump is right. we should revoke how nato operates in western europe. what our relationship is both financially and strategically. charles: would you consider it a cold war relic at this point? >> how it was organized. it strikes me as interesting. so many people are screaming. we have a president that said isis represents no existential threat to the united states. no one is even worried about that. >> beyond this. in the headlines right now. the expansion and goals of
12:54 pm
vladimir putin. some of the other ambitions. do we need nato? or should there be some other alternative? >> i do believe that we need a disruptive attitude. i think that we have to look at fighting isis. differently and in the middle east. that should really be the basis of where nato goes from here. the new threat and just as the soviets were in the cold war is isis. we need to rally around that. everybody, you know, needs to pull their fair share on that. not just the u.s.
12:55 pm
charles: the u.s. pays 22%. the uk and france. these are the nations, a fair amount to respect of how much they are worth. we should be the one. where would we get the additional money from? >> i think that these other countries could kick in. emanating western europe. a lot of skin in the game as well. there was no unity of effort. no consistency across the nation. fighting isis affectively. we have to have unity of effort. we are stroking a bigger check. that is how it needs to go. 3 questioning nato and the un,
12:56 pm
particularly. we appreciate your time. up next, the manhunt for that terrorist. what are we learning about a fifth possible suspect in the brussels attack? ♪
12:57 pm
12:58 pm
(ee-e-e-oh-mum-oh-weh) (hush my darling...) (don't fear my darling...) (the lion sleeps tonight.) (hush my darling...) man snoring (don't fear my darling...) (the lion sleeps tonight.) woman snoring take the roar out of snore. yet another innovation only at a sleep number store.
12:59 pm
>> will go back to cavuto coast to coast. i am charles. two days after the terrorist attack in brussels the manhunt is on. adam shapiro has the latest. >> missing an opportunity to prevent tuesday's deadly terror attacks in brussels. you can see him in this photo. officials in turkey say basis back did he was a militant
1:00 pm
fighter trying to avoid isis in syria. july the 15th. he returned to turkey in august. departed the second time. officials did know about his brother. a criminal record. the subject of an international arrest warrant. killed at the brussels subway station. officials are still looking for the subject dressed in white. still looking for a second person they believe assisted in the bombing of the subway station. for more are unaccounted for.
1:01 pm
isis has trained at least 400, possibly as many as 600 fighters. charles: news that one of the bombers was supported twice. this is amazing. turkey, data port this guy twice. just infiltrating the nation. in brussels last week. letting them out again. we are totally unprepared. the civilized world.
1:02 pm
a cough that can use an analogy. we are a knowing the root cause. it may be the lung cancer. that lung cancer we keep dealing with the isis or the al qaeda. those are nearly the symptoms. >> i think that there are two kinds of negligence. >> in europe, they are sort of willing negligence. whether it is because they believe, that it is not politically correct, whatever it is. you would think it would be something that would add up to a major wake-up call. do you sense that coming? >> it may be too late.
1:03 pm
>> pushing back with the new governance. pulling out of the eu. they are already politically correct. they brought in these guest workers after world war ii. you have these peachtree dishes. you have a population that is literally right for radicalization. they have never really assimilated into the societies. charles: i find it amazing. someone can calm here and they do nothing. grow up in this great country that gets them everything. harbor that much resentment. they go out and kill people that
1:04 pm
are their friends, or supposedly their friends. >> the population is waning. no way they can do that. they are between a rock and a hard place. there were a bunch of independent societies. consolidating down the business units to the point where they say holland you can raise flowers. britain, this is your main product. >> taking down those borders. they have made this invasion all the more possible. all the less controllable.
1:05 pm
>> these no go zones. the resentment that grows every single day. what can you do about that? >> until you face up to what the real problem is, you will not take a real steps that are necessary. human history. now what is happening is they will be fighting these battles. it will be fighting it within. to do that, it is intelligence and communications. focusing on the real -- charles: to barger cancer analogy. it sounds terminal unless they get their act together. americans have died because of gitmo releases.
1:06 pm
the administration still pushing to close. the money watcher, the cost to our safety and our economy. the idea to continue to close them down. i do not understand the closing them down argument. the second alternative. the common argument is, well, it cost 3.3 million or whatever the total cost is. 3.3 million per prisoner versus 78,000 which we spend on security presence. getting all of this. costing them a fortune. having nearly 1000 military
1:07 pm
people. closing the military function. you are left with playing for some crappy soccer fields down there. the cost per prisoner excluding the personnel is what it is. >> we have none so far. montana raising their hands. it will be great. >> i just do not understand the closing arguments. charles: ian on steroids. nobody wants them in their backyard. i have argued we should make it larger. fighting over isis. they have a right to come back over this country. one of the top agenda items.
1:08 pm
he tries to make the argument. a recruiting tool of isis. to this world trade center before gitmo existed. i just think probably, gary, it looks like it would have to be serious resolve. president obama insist that this places the bad place when i think it has been anything but. the obama's. a recruiting tool. montana. utah. whatever. whatever state would want it. now, they are in the united states. it is not a bad thing. being held without any rights, etc. etc.
1:09 pm
you add them all up. i do not understand other than a political correctness stands why you would close it model at all. charles: coming up. more details on that i'll make her. his background could give us clues on who else is plotting an attack. john kasich does not have a chance to be president? how voters could be signaling otherwise. ♪
1:10 pm
1:11 pm
1:12 pm
charles: for republicans, it all comes down to who will beat the democrat in november. john kasich is the best candidate to beat hillary. gop elites are demanding kasich out of the race or handing the
1:13 pm
nomination to trump. charlie: he should drop out. a lot of conservative commentators. "wall street journal" editorial page and particular. should fight this convention. they think that there is a chance that donald trump will not get 1237. that is where the chances for the most electable were public and a merging. john kasich somehow in his second or third outlet. a lot of donors that i speak to are putting the pressure on. it will not go that far. if you do not drop out now, donald has a pretty clear path. 80% of the remaining delegates. he wins and it is hard to stop them. drop out now. cruz has got the best shot.
1:14 pm
that is better than losing. >> he is not in it to be the vp. >> i heard that too. >> just from a policy stand point. donald is so far to the right on immigration did you name it. >> and electoral college nomination. >> he would have to sell out every single one of his principles. we are not going to round people up.donald wants to do. >> i think that it will be kind of interesting. wisconsin is pretty big. if he does not do well -- >> i think the same is pennsylvania. >> it is right after wisconsin.
1:15 pm
>> a imagine if he one pennsylvania. charlie: here is the other theory. kasich somehow could take votes away. cruz wins a few states. they could deny him the 1237. why do republicans care so much. you have to ask yourself. they are looking at a candidate that consistently, averagely, pulls on average 38% of the republican voter. that is not somebody -- >> , trumpet being a flawed general election candidate. he has exposed them. he has taken over the party. >> i think that it is the first one. listen. well. two things.
1:16 pm
yes, we do worry about his records. i personally like donald. romney was not reckless. mccain was not reckless. my point is simply this. a lot of the people that know donald l will personally like him some of this stuff is irresponsible. it is horrible. >> before we go, real quick. the geraldo's of the world, there are a lot of very smart people. making a huge mistake.
1:17 pm
>> there are certain things that are true. policy things. charlie: ghetto it scares me about that immigration. i am worried about reckless and game but president. charles: of max. new details about the brothel bomb maker. ♪
1:18 pm
[engines revving] you can't have a hero, if you don't have a villain. the world needs villains [tires screeching] and villains need cars. ♪
1:19 pm
1:20 pm
>> rocking brussels. to students convicted of plotting an attack in london. connell mcshane has the details. connell: leading to a conviction. convicted of conspiring.
1:21 pm
they, they wanted to target a police station and also a military base in west london. getting some guns and mopeds. trying to shoo police officers. shooting members of the military. the officials were onto them. checking out the area. the intelligence officials and police officials moved in and they made the arrests. two other men, meantime, were cleared. pleading down to a weapons charge and said. it all comes on the same time. we had the man related to the paris attacks. the attorney today for khalid el-bakraoui, not fighting
1:22 pm
extradition charges. this is a change of course for him. allowing his case to move to france. to be tried there. >> thank you very, very much. we are learning about this bell jump bomb maker. a degree in mechanical engineering. of course, you remember murray harp suggesting that. clinical psychologist. welcome to the show. we have these two guys in london. everyone associated with this bombing. what is driving them? >> a lot of people are using words like psychotic describing
1:23 pm
terrorists. examining people that were planning on doing a suicide bombing but were in intercepted. half of them wanted to die by suicide. a perfect sense of community. >> that drives a lot of people that think they will make it to the nba. these guys, their plan a is to destroy. how does that happen? the guys shot shut up their recruiting station antenna see. how do they go up as americans. enjoy all the benefits and hospitality of this country. treated relatively well. this is how i make my mark on the world. some people drop were feeding. >> people that have been the victims of hundreds. they are creating victims that
1:24 pm
spent hundreds of hours brainwashing these people. this is accessible to them. hundreds and hundreds of hours. changing their minds. >> don't they have to be receptive to those initially? i could plant certain seeds. what is this? >> some sort of personal link. feeling sort of marginalized. as this is evolving, self radicalization is wrong. i think a lot of them, the mothers, the fathers, the all goals, they were respected. something happens where it
1:25 pm
accelerates. the radicalization process accelerates. some intervention could be done. >> we need to do whatever we can for our politico safety. principles that isis is using. we will need people to move them to promote a lot of kindness for the rest of the world and to teach people that this is not okay. neil: it is so sad, though. those people that love their coworkers. they do parties for them. they were still victimized. thank you very much. appreciate it. the former reagan official who says that is what has him worried after this. ♪ the pursuit of healthier.
1:26 pm
it begins from the second we're born. because, healthier doesn't happen all by itself. it needs to be earned every day. using wellness to keep away illness. and believing a single life can be made better by millions of others. as a health services and innovation company optum powers modern healthcare by connecting every part of it. so while the world keeps searching for healthier we're here to make healthier happen.
1:27 pm
. .
1:28 pm
1:29 pm
>> today we have unsealed an indictment against seven alleged experienced hackers employed by computer security companies working on behalf of the iranian government including the islamic revolutionary guard corporation. charles: united states charging iran in cyber attacks against banks and a new york dam. judge andrew napolitano on those charges. you know, it is such a busy news
1:30 pm
day, "newsweek" i think that this news otherwise would be like the kind of headline stuff we would be wow. >> absolutely. president's back would be against the wall. how could you make a deal with the people, how could i trust them? the allege crimes, if they took place as alleged precede the iranian nuclear deal obviously and it's funny, the clip you played from attorney general lynch tying this directly to the iranian revolutionary guard, no endings of that in the indictment. no mention of iranian government in the indictment whatsoever. the indictment is whistle clean and free from politics all together. if you read the indictment you would have no idea these characters worked for the government. charles: is that because such charges might violate or go towards violating this agreement? because from what i understand, they're testing these missiles there is all sort of loopholes already woven into this deal? >> yes. i don't know why but i will tell you i am certain that this
1:31 pm
indictment passed the smell test in the west wing which ordinarily is not the case for our criminal indictments, for computer hacking. before it was made public today. now whether they suggested any language or not i don't know, it is relatively bulletproof. now these guys are not here. they're in iran. we don't have extradition treaty with them. we don't try people in absentia in this country. i don't know where it will go. i don't know why it is coming out now. there was real harm done but there are no defendants they can get their hands on. they're outside the jurisdiction of court. charles: these cases, these cyber cases what makes them so much harder? is it because they can be done from a dance? >> yes. if it was done the way the justice department claims, and grand jury alleged in the indictment, was done from tehran. so, you know, 10,000 miles away they're practically blowing up a dam of a reservoir.
1:32 pm
they also allegedly hacked major banks, which are household names. the indictment doesn't mention the banks because it doesn't want a run on the banks. again this was years ago. presumably they recovered from it. the way they did it was to flood these banks with three times their digital capacity, which basically shut them down. the question is, did they steal anything from the bank? did they do any irreparable harm? that elevates the potential penalty. charles: we keep hearing about dry runs. what we've seen over last few years even something to effect overloading a bank system, these are all part of a master plan, the ultimate attack if will, dry runs. is there any kind of protection that, within our constitutional framework, where we could retaliate in a harder way against these dry runs to prevent the ultimate attack? >> if, this president wouldn't do it but if a successor to this president wanted to consider this an act of war and the congress declared war, then of
1:33 pm
course we could retaliate but we need some sort of a technical protection. think about it, a guy in a basement room 10,000 miles from here can cause a flood in upstate new york, a flood that could wipe out a town if they had actually caused waters to flow? it is almost science fiction and absolutely terrifying. charles: we're sitting ducks to china. >> yes. charles: so amazing when china's prime minister said okay, we'll lay off on the cyber attacks for a little while, almost acknowledging we have you guys over a barrel. >> i think that the government, our government has great offensive weaponrythis happens but that is not going to save is if the attack comes. it will disable the people that wage the attacks. we need some sort of technical protection here. that is probably going to become an issue in the presidential campaign. charles: we've got to go. you mentioned waging war, declaring war. should we declare war on isis just to change the topic for a moment?
1:34 pm
>> yes. it changes the government's authority. it changes the president's authority radically. why the reluctance -- charles: i'm so confused. >> who knows. why the tango. who knows. another story for another time. charles: thanks a lot. details continue to emerge from belgium. we have greg palkot in belgium with the latest on the manhunt. greg? reporter: hey, charles. i'm actually in the molenbeek area of brussels which has been described as hotbed of islamic radicalism. we'll show you a bit of what we saw in a moment. we'll show you a manhunt for growing list of suspects related to these attacks this week. a new suspect coming out of the metro bombing. that was terrible bombing of subway station, 20 dead, well over 100 injured in that blast. apparently a second man seen on surveilance video carrying a big large bag, believed to hold possibly ex-most systems. the main bomber involved in that
1:35 pm
attack is a guy named khalid bakraoui. it is now revealed authorities were already searching for him on paris charges. apparently helping the paris attackers from last november's attacks. pretty much certain the airport attackers, one of the suicide bombers there was najim laachraoui. he built bombs for these attacks and the paris attacks last year. you can see the interrelationships there. that leaves yet another fugitive, unidentified from the airport attacks. basically they're looking for two suspects right now and a lot of backup support, accomplices, charles. let's switch now to the courthouse here, the main court building in brussels. big security presence for a hearing for salah abdeslam. remember he was the guyers arrested last week for his role in the paris attacks. a lot of names, a lot of numbers here. what he is saying hey, he wants to be extradited to france, face
1:36 pm
the music there. i'm sure everybody will oblige but his lawyer is saying he knew nothing, nothing about the attacks here in brussels this week. which brings us back to molenbeek. we went to the building where he was arrested in that pretty dramatic raid last friday by police. again this area is a high poverty level. big population of muslims. it is fertile ground for recruitments of jihad is it but i also must add, to be fair and balanced it is also a solid working class area. we talked to people there. we got kind of a mixed reaction this terrorist being in their midst. one guy said had no idea he was here. if he had an idea he would turn him into the authorities. however another guy confided to us, hey, this is the only place this guy could be. knows everybody. he grew up here. kind of had a safe but dangerous haven in this area of brussels. back to you, charles. charles: greg palkot, thank you very much. really appreciate it.
1:37 pm
john kerry making his way to brussels but should president obama be the one going? there's no one road out there. no one surface... no one speed... no one way of driving on each and every road. but there is one car that can conquer them all. the mercedes-benz c-class. five driving modes let you customize the steering, shift points, and suspension to fit the mood you're in... and the road you're on. the 2016 c-class. lease the c300 for $399 a month at your local mercedes-benz dealer.
1:38 pm
>> it is time for the fox business brief. and stocks are down here, third day in a row. we've seen the dow moving lower which its longest losing streak in about six weeks. the market has been doing well. oil is one of the reasons. yet energy commodity related stocks moving down with the
1:39 pm
price of oil. over at nasdaq they're down for the second day in a row. not as oil-related there. tech-heavy nasdaq down 15 points. momentum of market building up. a little bit of a halt today. dollar up against other currencies. we already showed you oil moving down. the oil price was below 39. it is coming back if anything. down 30 cents today. more of a supply a theme in last couple of sessions. big drop in the oil price last couple days. okay, charles coming back with more coverage as "cavuto: coast to coast" continues here in a moment.
1:40 pm
1:41 pm
charles: we're just now getting news out of the belgium media that abdeslam was planning to copy paris attacks. he was planning a multiple shooting and suicide bombing attacks in brussels. no sources were given bit broadcaster. we of course will be following updates closely. isis plotting an attack in europe. secretary john kerry is in russia calling for global unity against isis. >> yesterday's events in brussels underscored to all of us the urgency of every country
1:42 pm
that has the ability to make a difference to end this evil scourge that comes from daesh and violent extremism. charles: kerry traveling to brussels tomorrow but now to former deputy secretary of defense paul wolfowitz on if the white house could be doing more. sir, welcome to the show. of course there has been a lot of criticism over the last 24 hours of at least the visible, president obama doing the wave in cuba, doing the tango in argentina while our allies are suffering yet an amazing terror attack. are they handling this the right way? >> charles, look i think there is a challenge of getting the balance right because it's true that you don't want to have the terrorists take over the way you live. that's a victory for them. and it is ironic actually, i think president obama when he was a candidate was criticizing former president bush for saying
1:43 pm
after 9/11 we need to go back to our normal lives. we need to go shopping. i think president obama is now saying americans need to go shopping. look i think there is a balance. i didn't like those scenes of going to a baseball game and having, making merry with a cuban dictator in the wake of what happened but i also don't think you can call off important visits just, i don't just say because of what the terrorists have done. charles: with all due respect, let's say he didn't call it off, but did we have to watch him do the tango? >> no, we don't. i think the point is, one gets a feeling with this president that he believes if we just didn't take it too seriously it would all go away. i think that is really very dangerous approach. if you delay taking it seriously you greatly raise the risk it will come at you in some massive way either like 9/11 or perhaps even worse. the reaction then will be
1:44 pm
something really quite horrendous. charles: again i think one of the things to your point, not only not taking him seriously, feels like a certain kind of indifference if you will. it is riling up a lot of people. a lot of people in this country are very angry about this. you don't have to panic per se but i remember when george bush was reading a childrens book to a bunch of kids, and he didn't bolt out of that room. instead he finished, walked off calmly. took a lot of heat for that. now we have the president who seems almost indifferent towards these kind of things. >> that is the message seems to me is projecting. what we've just had here was an act of war against a nato ally. it would not be inappropriate to go to brussels for a nato meeting and summon the alliance to do something in defense not only for belgium and we're targeted by same people also of course. charles: it is interesting, john kerry, with russia, more or less claimed victory in syria.
1:45 pm
i think we all know, wink, wink, they weren't killing mostly isis. it was fighter rebels who we put money into and we trained. >> russians and syria are recruiting for isis. russians in syria are giving reasonable syrians not much of a choice. they can go with assad to kills sunnis, or isis which at least is a sunni organization. what the russians are doing in syria are poll rising the situation. that helps isis i'm afraid -- polarizing the situation. charles: before i let you go, abdeslam they were planning multiple shooting and suicide attacks in brussels, assault rifles, riot guns, this will happen at any moment. what can be done now, particularly in europe where it is already, danger is already embedded and in place. are they in a position where they can even fight this effectively? >> look, i have heard a lot of questions about whether they're overstretched, whether they
1:46 pm
don't have the capacity to deal with it. i heard some suggestions of some of what they did in predominantly muslim neighborhoods alienated population. this is a tricky problem. the people you need most on your side are in fact muslims in your own country. in fact muslims around the world. we're only going to take on this problem i think if muslims recognize it as their problem also. charles: right. >> and work to help. so i, but on the same, on the other hand i also think somebody will have to answer questions about what did this fellow they captured know and when did know it and what did they do to get information from him. charles: ambassador wolfowitz, thank you very much. really appreciate your thoughtful comments. >> nice to be with you, charles. charles: remember star becomes when they were urging customers to race together. many said starbucks was getting too political then. wait until you hear what they're doing right now. don't let dust and allergies get between you
1:47 pm
and life's beautiful moments. with flonase allergy relief, they wont. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance. flonase controls six. and six is greater than one. flonase changes everything.
1:48 pm
1:49 pm
1:50 pm
charles: hey remember this? starbucks, that race together campaign urging customers to talk more about diversity? many saying it didn't need starbucks to tell them how to act. well now, starbucks is getting in on the election. advertisements in "wall street journal," "new york times," urging americans to quote, go beyond the hatred and vitriol of the 2016 campaign. liz macdonald, hadley heath manning. liz, you say this could be starbucks retaliating against trump. how so. >> maybe retaliation, i'm not sure. just interesting donald trump last christmas season called for boycott of starbucks because starbucks basically removed symbols of the season from its cups. some people say that it wasn't that at all t was very controversial. take a listen to what donald
1:51 pm
trump said. >> did you read about starbucks? no more merry christmas on starbucks, no more. [booing] i wouldn't buy, hey, look, i'm speaking against myself. i have one of the most successful starbucks in trump tower. maybe we should boycott starbucks, i don't know. seriously. [cheering] >> i'm not sure the two events are linked but it is interesting that we have a very long advertisement as you pointed out, charles. you know, starbucks again using their company as a billboard, a platform for political views. very long advertisement showing up in the papers now. charles: we should let the audience know. howard schultz is major progressive. he is very successful. a lot of people think eventually he wants to run for presidents. he is the one of the authors behind conscious capitalism. not a concept i agree with, hadley. when you look at ad in "wall street journal" talking about headlines and social media
1:52 pm
and it is pretty clear to me talking at least about the gop in general if not donald trump in particular. do you have any problems with this. >> i don't have any problem with it. i think it is pretty clear, especially if you are familiar with the platform of starbucks ceo howard schultz. he didn't name donald trump or any other candidate. i allow businesses to do business in accordance with vary al use. non-profit organizations coming before the supreme court to not comply with contraception mandate. whether closely held corporation like hobby lobby or starbucks with this ad and businesses ought to work, advertise, do business in what they believe, even if i disagree. >> the question is, if it irritates customers. i don't know if they want to hear 6:30 in the morning when getting their lattes and muffins
1:53 pm
want to hear about politics. liberace and "rolling stone," the group, said never mix politics. there are billboards for ads. we have political placement being done by starbucks. charles: certainly, hadley, when howard schultz put his employees in the awkward position of writing on cups it was unmitigated disaster. to your point maybe he does have a right to do this but is there anywhere we draw the line? a lot of people would like to bo to starbucks and have their coffee and not necessarily have them preached to them at the same time. >> that's right. we see a lot of virtue signaling in various advertising campaigns from a lot of different products and brands. not so much selling coffee in this case but selling so-called virtues listed on one side of the column in this latest starbucks ad. at the want to associate their brand with those things and bring in a subset of customers whom that is appealing. they risk turning off another subset of consumers who don't want any business with the progressive democrat issues that howard schultz and his company
1:54 pm
may be supporting. >> right. also shareholders. no small irony at recent shareholder meeting in seattle, while starbucks's howard schultz in ad talking about man's inhumanity to man, calling for civilized order, didn't have enough seats in the convention hall. some were left out in the cold and the rain. so there is no small irony there. you have to wonder if investor say, you know what? lighten up. charles: thanks a lot. stocks are down today. the five-week winning vehicle in serious risk. we'll break it all down for you and what you should be doing with your money next. ♪
1:55 pm
1:56 pm
1:57 pm
charles: we were on easy street. the dow was up every single week. looks like we're in danger of that. this could be the third straight day we close lower. new york stock exchange trader
1:58 pm
tim anderson on what is going on. tim, we were due for some sort of a pullback but when this happens we all get nervous, is that right. >> that is certainly the case. this week had all the earmarks of a low volume consolidation week. it is a little bit of a short week with the market being closed tomorrow. and there are some resistance levels that we hit pretty good couple days ago, now the market might struggle even into next week. and as we start the second quarter. charles: tim, one the things i think folk ares are worried about, looks like janet yellen lot control of the federal reserve. a lot of fed officials out not voting members of the testimony omc but seem to to against what we said last week, hey we'll not do four hikes. only do two. bullard two days in a row, rates will be hiked sooner rather than later perhaps even in april. next week she speaks on tuesday.
1:59 pm
is she going to be the spark this market needs to get rally going again? >> when it went from when they low otherred he can economics that from four hikes to two hikes bottom in with market expectation. the. i think the big news out of fed meeting week 1/2 ago was that they basically said they were going to let inflation run a little bit. and don't pay a whole lot of attention to the benchmark we've been talking about for a few years. charles: i guarranty people who haven't seen them raise in years would not like to see the fed panic in first line of rate increases. hey, we have just about 10 seconds left. where do you get worried on the downside. we talked about resistance. what about support? >> i'm watching transportation index very closely. that is by far the best leading barometer for the market last 16 months.
2:00 pm
it bottomed out in january at 6625. you would certainly like to see it hold 6500 level. charles: always about the transtos. thank you very much. won't miss me tonight. i'm back on the air at 6:00 p.m. right now "the intelligence report" with trish regan. trish: thank you, charles. a new report indicating that the brussels terrorists were attempting to create a radioactive nuclear bomb. this news comes amid european intelligence reports that isis unleashed 400 trained fighters in europe. i'm trish regan. welcome, everyone to "the intelligence report." the two brothers involved in the brussels a create a nuclear dirty bomb, according to intelligence officials that spoke to nbc news. they plotted to kidnap a senior belgium nuclear official in order to gain access to nuclear plant in order to steal material for a dirty bomb. they plant ad hid ren camera outside of the guy's house. they recorded 10ou

106 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on