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tv   Greta Van Susteren  FOX News  September 4, 2013 10:00pm-11:01pm PDT

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the summer. >> do you care about this? >> you know what i love -- >> nobody cares if they're other hospitals who use the equipment are doing the same. i'm anita vogel. now let's go to "on the record" right now. harry reid putting the u.s. senate back in session friday. but itsz not what you think. only two u.s. senators must actually be present on friday. so what's the purpose? the simple filing of a syrian resolution. also tonight, former defense secretary ronald rumsfeld is going on the record. but first, today's very passionate house hearing on syria. >> there will be enormous consequences if we start seeing movement on the chemical weapons use. >> i didn't set a red line.
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the world set a red line. >> this is about the world's red line. it's about humanity's red line. >> this is an imperfect situation. >> bashar al assad put us in this position when he decided to gas his own people. >> secretary kerry, a lot of people have come up to me and said, why does america need to be the world's policeman? >> well, the united states of america is not being the world's policeman. our security interests are directly threatened with respect to assad's use of these chem balance cal weapons. >> my credibility is not on the line. the international community's credibility is on the line and america and congress' credibility is on the line because we give lip service to the notion that these international norms are important. >> what are the chances of escalation are different scenarios accounted for if our credibility is on the line now
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as is our what about if assad retaliates. >> my concern now is we want to do something specifically now to punish mr. bad guy assad. we're not going to shoot him. we're just going to shoot a shell over the bow. should we do that, assad fights back. do we escalate or not fight back? >> i can never drive the risk of escalation to zero but i think the limited purpose, the partnerships we have in the region, the contributions that we'll seek from others i think begins to limit that risk. >> you said yesterday that you cannot guarantee that u.s. troops would not be on the ground. >> i did guarantee that they wouldn't be and i guaranteed it again today. >> i've got the transcripts right here. >> i think if you read the whole transcript, i said clearly there will be no troops on the ground. >> all right. even if the weapons fell into the hands of the bad people? >> there's nothing in this resolution whatsoever.
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>> okay. all right. >> that would put troops on the grounds. >> who are the good guys? >> do you trust these people? >> well, that's not my business to trust. >> well, certainly it has to be the business because you're making decisions to go into war and put american lives at risk. so it's a simple concept. you either trust or do not trust. and if you do not trust, we don't call these people our allies or support. we do not know yet who the good guys are. >> secretary kerry -- >> congressman, let me respond to that. >> not on good guys, bad guys. the focus is on a narrowly drafted resolution asking authorization from the congress -- >> i don't think you guys would be using the gas. >> fox joins us from lebanon. he's been on the ground there. what is the latest there? >> reporter: greta, people in
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the region are getting more nervous as a threat of a real u.s. military strike against syria grows here. we're about 60 miles away from damascus. that is the nerve center the bashar al assad regime. we were told there last week when the first indications of a real u.s. strike could be possible there was a flood of cars coming across the border, as many as 10,000 people in one day. we found that that flood has slowed down a bit but with the threat remaining we also found that very few people are going back into syria. all it takes is words from somebody like the syrian deputy foreign minister, he was quoted as saying on wednesday that syria would definitely retail ate against israel, against turkey, jordan if they assisted at all in any u.s. military strike. we talked to one syrian who is now living in lebanon right there on the border and he is very clear about what he thinks
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the syria government did and what should be done to syria. take a listen. >> translator: there must be a military hit. he killed people with military weapons. it was on tv. women and children were killed. there must be a military response by the americans or european union. they have to make a move. >> reporter: all told, there's 700,000 syrians living in lebanon as reverend few yee gees. we went to one nearby town where they are doubled with the influx of those refugees. they are living in makeshift huts with no water, no power, schools are overwhelmed, children here are the real victims. finally, greta, we are getting more indications of a possible big blow against the assad regime. a contact at the free syrian army, the rebel force fighting the regime, has confirmed to us a report earlier on wednesday that says a former syrian
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defense minister, a real insider in the bashar al assad regime, has defected to turkey. now, syria is denying this. we do not have independent confirmation but if true that would be the highest level yet from a government truly, truly under the spotlight right now. back to you, greta. >> greg, do you know if syria is making lots of preparations in anticipation of a u.s. military strike? are they moving their air force? are they moving things underground where we can't get them? >> in the last several days, there have been strong and verifiable reports, greta, that that's exactly what they are doing. they are moving their soldiers out of barracks, out of military installations. they are emptying government buildings of officials and more worryingly, they are moving civilians or civilians on their own steam in sort of a protest movement are going to these military installations, presenting themselves on their own as human shields so in fact
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you do have this movement and you have overt orders from the syrian government to many areas from the military installations for civilians to evacuate. so, yeah, they are using these days in a run-up to a possible u.s. strike to prepare themselves, greta. >> greg, thank you. earlier, secretary donald rumsfeld went on the record. >> senate foreign relations committee has now voted in favor of giving the president authority, it will be have to be further debated. but what's your thought on this? >> my thought is that secretary kerry has been dealt a very tough hand. what he has, as a new secretary of state dealing with, are decisions that were made over a period of time. red lines were drawn, comments were made by his predecessor
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that president assad was a reformer. the opposition to assad over a period of time has been evolving in a way that has been, i think, deteriorating in the sense that the chances of prevailing over us will not have gotten better, they have gotten worse n. a senin a sense. i suppose there is of what makes up the opposition today but the decisions in the oval office are the tough ones and president obama's got his hands full and goodness knows you wish him well if he make as decision to use force. and -- but the lead up to this has been most unfortunate. >> is he responsible for the lead up to this point? >> oh, yes, absolutely. yeah. you simply -- you don't get up in the morning and demystify things for your opponents.
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put yourself in the other fella's shoes. imagine yourself as a syrian and you want a better life, you don't favor assad and the fact that they have killed, i don't know, something in excess now of 100,000 in the conflict, the struggle for over two years, and you've got to decide where are you on this as a citizen of syria. and the president of the united states says, well, we're not going to have any regime change and tells the world that assad is going to be there in the future. well, you worry about your family, you worry about your life, and it keeps people from being supportive of those that are opposing assad and that decisi decision-making process, it seems to me, is unfortunate. the essence of leadership is clarity and that's the only way you can get unity of purpose. the fact that the congress is at 6s heand 7s about this whole thg
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about the lack of leadership, the fact that there isn't a national coalition despite the fact that there have been the use of apparently the use of chemical weapons which it increasingly appears that that's the case. the fact that there has been not been any coming together in the international community to speak of is, again, a reflection of the fact that the president has not provided a vision, a statement as to with clarity as to what was to be done. said, we're not going to do that, we're not going to do this, we're not going to do that. and that kind of -- i almost said that kind of leadership. the absence of leadership i think is what has led to this confusion in people's minds. will the outcome, if we do anything, be better or not? >> well, that's my question. as best we understand it, we're going to have a limited military strike, assuming that it's voted through congress, although the
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president seems to say that even if congress says no to him that he has the authority to do it anyway. >> which i believe he does. if you look at successor presidents -- >> that can be debated. that's -- a lot of people have a very different view of that, whether the president has authority. but in light of the fact that if our military service does limited strike, sends off 150 cruise missiles, 24 hours goes by, what do we have? >> well, that i think is the question. i think the president used the phrase before he went to play golf, something to the effect firing a shot across the bow or punishing. what have we achieved if that's what we do? it seems to me you either have to decide that there should be a regime change and make a conscious effort to help the -- those opposing the assad regime and killing the 100,000 people that have died or you don't do something. you just don't do it.
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why would you say you're not going to do this, you're not going to do that and do this and demystify it and leave the clear impression he's going to be there when it's over? so i can understand two things. one, the natural instinct you want to be supportive of the president of the united states and he is the commander in chief. i can also understand that people in the congress want to vote no and say that the goal that has been set out is so vague, so confused, so unspecific that i wonder if doing anything is going to accomplish anything. >> look at the worst case scenario and think whether or not i can live with it. what's the worst-case scenario in your mind, after 150 cruise missile strikes damascus or syria and assad is still head of that regime? what's the worst-case scenario? what do we have to worry about
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it? >> well, what you have to worry about is that the role of the united states is seen as ineffective, weak, and that our country is in decline and that that message goes out to the people in iran, for example, where the united states and other countries have said that they ought not to proceed with their nuclear program and they see the effect of the united states is nothing. why does one fire a shot across a bow of a ship? it's because you expect to get a certain outcome and if you don't, you then do something that changes that outcome. it's a warning shot. and what he has announced to the world is all he's going to do is fire a shot across the bow. my impression is he'd be better off not doing that?
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>> well, he says if we don't do something, and those who agree with him, it will hurt the redit built of the united >> the credibility of the united states has already been damaged and it would probably be further damaged if we did, quote, a shot across the bow and that's it. we're better off not doing that, it seems to me. the absence of leadership is a signal to the world that the united states is withdrawing, that the united states is not going to be a factor for contributing to peace and stability in the world and if someone said, well, what's the biggest thing you worry about? i would worry about that. i think that it's going to be a more dangerous world and the vacuum that has been created is going to be filled by countries and leaders who don't have our values and don't have our interests. >> the secretary of state says there will be no boots on the ground. is there any way we can be sure of that? >> sure.
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no. i -- >> we won't get dragged into something? >> i think if there's a determination not to, i think you can be sure of it. i think -- i think the -- i would have to say that secretary kerry has been dealt a tough hand but his presentation was forceful and i thought he did a good job and he's in a tough position because he's dealing with the deck as he found it after four years. >> president putin of russia is calling him a liar today because he says that secretary kerry said there's no al qaeda element in the rebels and he points to one group, one rebel faction that is associated with al qaeda, al za here ree. president obama is going to see putin in the next 24 hours. what's that going to be like? >> well, i think it would be awkward. we've -- the united states of america is faced with a
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situation where they talk about the international community but there isn't an international community. it's not a community. it's a group of countries and the mechanism, the united nations that is there to address questions like this is subject to a veto by president putin and by the people's republic of china, both of whom have sided with the assad regime and it appears that the assad regime has used chemical weapons and it appears, therefore, that putin and the people's republic of china are siding with the use of chemical weapons. now, i can't tell you the facts. i would guess there are islamists in the mix of opposition forces against assad. how strong they are, i simply do not know and i know i don't know. but we know what happened in egypt. the united states came away persuading a lot of the egyptian
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people that we favored the muslim brotherhood and they then took to the streets and tried to have -- and succeeded in having the muslim brotherhood leadership taken out and brought out of office. but the signal has gone out to the world that the united states is not uncomfortable supporting the muslim brotherhood, which i think is a terrible mistake. the islamists in the world are fundamentally against the nation state concept and the world order is based on the nation state concept. the american people prefer the nation state concept and the idea that some religious group would try to impose their views across nation states, which is what's taking place and use terrorism and the killing of innocent men, women, and children to achieve that is something that it seems to me we ought to be opposed to
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energetically and we didn't demonstrate that opposition in egypt, a terribly important country. and i don't doubt for a minute that the islamists will try to take and play an outsized role in syria if they are successful. and so in helping the opposition to assad, people have to be very careful that they don't end up with something else than the assad regime, which is hard to imagine but possible. >> so what's the best strategy? in light of the position that we're in, the president said we have a red line and he says he didn't draw it. >> he did draw it. >> he said he didn't. >> you're kidding. i didn't hear that. >> he said it's drawn by international standards. >> this president has tried to blame anybody or everybody for everything and leadership
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requires that you stand up, take a position, provide clarity, and take responsibility. and i can't imagine him saying that he didn't draw the red line. but he did draw the red line. >> in light of -- >> if we have ears. >> in light of where we are. >> i've been out in montana and i must have missed that. >> in light of the -- where we stand right now, the fact that congress is voting on this, debating it, likely to give him authority, if they don't give authority, it seems like he's going to do it anyway, send those cruise missiles over to syria, is there any way that the united states can sort of regain stature, credibility, do anything at this point? because it almost seems like we're a little boxed in because our president has said we're going to do this. >> there's no question that the leadership or the lack of leadership, to be more precise, has driven our country into a
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cul-de-sac and that's not a good place to be. is it possible to come out of it? sure. we have a wonderful country and if the president would bring in good advisers and sit down and think through where he is and get down to bedrock, to concrete and know where he is, and then decide that he's willing to make a decision and either the decision is to not do something, if he's unwilling to do anything that is going to change the regime, i think he's probably better off doing nothing and accepting the burden that falls on us from all of his prior statements. if he decides he wants to change the regime because he thinks the killing of 100,000 people and the use of chemical weapons is something that is damaging and harmful to our country and to the world, i think the american people would follow.
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>> you can see more of our interview on gretawire.com and read about rumsfeld rules as well. has president obama's handling of syria hurt america's credibility or not? go to gretawire.com and answer our poll. straight ahead, what would ronald reagan have to say about the situation in syria? one congressman says that he knows and you're going to hear from him next. also, president obama says that he didn't set the red line. why is he saying that? why is he saying that? steven hadley and bret could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance. mmmhmmm...everybody knows that. well, did you know that old macdonald was a really bad speller? your word is...cow. cow. cow. c...o...w... ...e...i...e...i...o. [buzzer]
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guard, i also am war weary as many americans are war weary. if we want to avoid war, president reagan said the price of aggression is cheap. and i think that's a situation we find ourselves in in syria now. >> congressman adam kinzinger is joining us. >> nice to see you. >> you are a republican. >> i am. >> and you have decided to support military action and why? >> i've decided to support. we're in this position because the president over, frankly, the last five years has been terrible leadership in the middle east. he announces eight months too late that we're surging in afghanistan and when it comes to syria two years ago a number of us were saying, look, this is a serious situation. you have to begin to vet our moderate rebels to overthrow assad. you have to be very careful about what is happening over there. and he said nothing. now, he put down a red line. and this red line, by the way, has been america's red line for
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a very long time, for 30 years, three decades we've been saying, no chemical weapons. president george h.w. bush basically sent a veiled threat to suddam hussein in 1991 that said if you use chemical weapons against our troops, every option is on the table, basically implying nuclear option and we had a no-fly zone over iraq for the same reason. >> is it the credibility of the united states that you're worried about that the president said we're going to take military action and now we have to do it? is that the reason? >> that's part of it. he's a commander in chief. he made the decision that chemical use is not right and should be punished but the biggest issue is this. if we allow assad to use chemical weapons and violate what we've held as a country for decades, keep in mind since world war i american troops have never faced chemical weapons on the battlefield and there's a reason for that. >> into light of a military strike aren't we going to allow
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him that if the goal is not regime change and we're not going to go over his missile launchers, he's going to go underground in a bunker and we're not going to get him with cruise missiles with that either so we're just sort of poking a stick in his eye trying to scare him, shooting across the bow but what are we getting? we're not stopping him from doing it. we're hoping that we're teaching him a lesson? >> well, look. i would like to make this a much more intense strike than what it's seeming to me. but the point is this. in assad's calculations, he has to see that the cost of using chemical weapons far exceedsed it benefits he gains. >> what's the cost? >> the cost is going to be a destruction of a lot of his military equipment, kmanld and assets. >> he moved those on august 21st. >> we're going to find his command and control, headquarters where he lives. there's plenty of targets that's going to affect his ability to execute his civil war. so the point is, you make the costs far more excess than using
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chemical weapons. we have to use this as a civilized nation. we have held as the americans for a long time that chemical weapons have no place and i think if we don't do this, not only is america's -- this isn't about president obama. as i say, i have disagreed about how he's run the middle east. >> thank you for being here. >> thank you. coming up, who really did draw that red line on chemical weapons. according to president obama, he did not. our own stephen hadley and (announcer) scottrade knows our clients trade and invest their own way. with scottrade's smart text, i can quickly understand my charts, and spend more time trading. their quick trade bar lets my account follow me online so i can react in real-time. plus, my local scottrade office is there to help. because they know i don't trade like everybody. i trade like me. i'm with scottrade.
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assad regime but also to other players on the ground that a red line for us is we start seeing a whole bunch of chemical weapons moving around or being utilized. that would change my calculus. >> did he or didn't he? and does it matter who did as we sort of fuss about this red line? joining us is stephen hadley, former national security adviser to the bush administration. did he set the line and does it matter? >> he did set the line and it probably doesn't matter because the line is set and the very built of the country is on the line. and in some sense, the congress needs to act in such a way so as not to undermine the credibility of president obama. we only have one president at a time and he does not embody the united states and so the president's credibility is undermined and that's an argument that people are
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beginning to believe. >> is credibility, though, the reason to go to war? i mean, it seems to me that that's not a really good reason. it seems to me you go to war because you have a specific -- something you want to achieve on the ground, maybe get rid of assad or whatever it is, he doesn't want to do a regime change and think that you have the means to do it? the idea of doing it because your president said something and now said, we don't want anybody to know about it, it doesn't seem like that's a strong reason. >> i agree with that. i do think, though, the president having said it for the congress of the united states to vote down a resolution author e authorizing him to take action would undermine our credibility and iran will be watching and i think the notion that somehow we would not follow through on wha was said in syria and that we would follow through and use military force against iran if they were to continue to pursue a nuclear weapon, i think that becomes less and less credible.
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but i think the point ought to be, we ought to make the president credible, give him the authority but then he ought to do something that is going to affect the situation on the ground in syria. yes, we want end the killing and the threat that syria and what is happening in syria will destabilize lebanon, iraq, and turkey and we also need to end the possibility that it's going to empower al qaeda and in order to do that you need something on the ground that is going to challenge the balance of force between the regime and between the opposition and you need to follow it up by arming the opposition so that they have a chance to show assad that his days are numbered and set up for a negotiated outcome in which democratic regime elements and elements of the assad regime without assad who want to be part of a new syria can come together, can form a government and then can take on al qaeda so
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that syria does not become a safe haven for al qaeda. >> i don't pretend to have a crystal ball based on our military actions but here's the thing that i worry about, is that if we don't act and we're worried about credibility is that it makes our president look sort of freckless or weak. if we do act and don't achieve a particular goal, we have everyone running around with pictures of dead babies and look at those horrible americans and what they have done and the iranians are watching that and they become emboldeneded that we are horrible people and now let's get israel because they are the big pals of the united states. they are going to be watching either way. either way sounds lousy. >> either way sounds lousy but i think actually don rumsfeld had the point right. if all you're going to do is a demonstration over chemical weapons and not deal with these other issues which really threaten our core interests even more, then i think it is
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probably a mistake. i think it's better than the congress preventing the president from acting but if they are going to authorize action, they ought to authorize a kind of action and the president ought to take a kind of action that i described that is actually going to change the correlation of force -- >> he's not seeking to do that. >> he's not seeking to do that and i think it's a mistake and i would hope that the debate under way in the congress would convince the congress and administration they need to do more. >> stephen, always nice to see you. thank you, sir. >> thank you. the president is coming back early from their five-week vacation. sort of. bret hume is joining us. how is the president handling this both capitol hill and internationally? >> poorly, in a word. the decision to go to congress was legally unnecessary, taking it the time that he took it after going so far out on the limb of preparing us to act and
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portrayed him as weak and i think it's a sign that he indeed is weak so i think it's regrettable and even more regrettable, as steve would say, to deny him the authority that he needs i fear he wouldn't do anything which in my view would be the worst possible outcome. listen, i heard you say that credibility is not enough to go to war. credibility on the use of -- the united states has long practiced a brand of dip employee ma see backed pi the use of force. if it's not credit bld, it's weakened. if it's one of the great deterrents to war and it's that sort of thing that can prevent war. >> i would agree with you if our war were to get rid of the culprit, assad. but that's not our goal. >> so far it's not our goal. >> that's what the president said, regime change is not a goal. we're going to slap him around and then leave. >> it is not inconceivable that
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he would weigh as the congressman so well put it, the cost benefit between using chemical weapons and taking the kind of bloody nose that he'll get, whether it deposes him or not from the united states if he goes forward with that or not. i think it's not inconceivable that what we're prepared to do would be enough to convince him not to use those weapons again and that would not be enough, it's not the best outcome but it's better than nothing. nothing is a terrible outcome. >> see how great i am and what the united states has done, they are horrible rotten people. >> he may say that and get propaganda points but he'll lose an element of his military. >> if a limited strike provokes his military to defect more, that would be good. >> they might not defect. they might be killed. >> or killed. >> so you can do -- we live if an age where you can do a lot more from the air than you used to be able to and you look at the example of kosovo where we
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didn't put any soldiers in there and it took 78 days of bombing to do it, it was a larger ambition than this president apparently has here but when i think he needs to be supported on this, although i think he's handled it extremely poorly. >> well, i hope you're right. i hope i'm wrong. if you're going to go in, you need to get assad. the guy who is pulling the trigger and killing people. bret, always nice to see you. coming up, dr. henry kissinger goes on record. [ male announcer ] what's important to you? at humana, our medicare agents sit down wh you and ask. being active. and being with this guy. [ male announcer ] getting to know you is how we help you choose the humana medicare plan that works best for you. mi familia. ♪ [ male announcer ] we want to help you achieve your best health, so you can keep doing the things that are important to you. taking care of our customers. taking care of her. and the next thing on our list is bungee jumping. [ male announcer ] helping you --
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around in public. >> are you my judge? what if i call you that? how do you have the moral authority to tell me that? >> i'm not judging you. i'm telling you what you did -- >> that's not judging me? >> go home. >> that's not judging me? >> go home and get a job. >> i'm delivered more than you ever will in your entire life. >> you've never delivered anything. >> you know nothing. your ignorance is being shown to the entire world. you think you can judge me? >> you delivered for yourself. >> you delivered for yourself. >> i don't get this one. any last requests mr. baldwin? do you mind grabbing my phone and opening the capital one purchase eraser? i need to redeem some venture miles before my demise. okay. it's easy to erase any recent travel expense i want. just pick that flight right there. mmm hmmm. give it a few taps, and...it's taken care of. this is pretty easy, and i see it works on hotels too. you bet. now if you like that, press the red button on top. ♪ how did he not see that coming?
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[ male announcer ] over the last 100 years, tennis has gotten a lot less dainty, rackets less splintery, courts more surfacey. technology made the game a whole lot faster and awesomer. it's kind olike how esurance used technology to build a car insurance company for the modern world. advantage, you. let's give it up for the modern world. [ crowd cheering ] [ male announcer ] or...that works. esurance. proud sponsor of the u.s. open. check out esurance on facebook. what does former secretary of state henry kissinger think about the ongoing crisis in syria? we went on the record? >> should we be concerned that president putin seems on the
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rocks in the past few months? >> it's very cool and there's no reason to be alarmed because we are in a stronger position than russia and most problems around the world. i think we need a strategic dialogue with russia and i -- we need to stand up for our own convictions in those places where our views differ. >> are you in favor of a limited military strike in syria? >> i have warned against military intervention arming the rebels in some other way. i believe in the present situation it is important for the countries to support the
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president when he has declared something that's in the national interests and under present conditions i favor a limited military strike. >> if you don't agree with the president that this was -- this is our national interests, should you still go along with the president because he has proclaimed it is? >> you have to weigh two things. one, is it in the national interest, the situation of your count country. the second is, what is the impact on the national situation if the president of the united states for the first time in american history is refuse authority by the congress to do what he has declared in the national interests, the impact of that on allies and on people that we will have to be in
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confrontation with could be enormous. the fundamental strategic in the middle east is not in syria. it is in iran and we should not get involved in a diversion of a magnitude that then makes a discussion domestically about the issue of iran. >> are you saying, sir, that congress should always go along with the president's request for authorization of force because it makes the president look bad if he thinks this is in our national interest and this is the right thing to do? >> no. i hope that when the president asks for the authorization of force that congress will start from the premise that once the
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request has been made the president should be taken with extreme seriousness. of course one has to decide from case to case and i don't think this issue should ever have been brought to the congress as a single issue of does one strike or does one not strike. but there is a presumption on the president's side and i say that as somebody who has not favored military intervention. >> you can see much more of our interview with dr. henry interview with dr. henry kissinger on gear up with great deals at bass pro shops. like this endura skin stalker combo for under $20. redhead black out arrows for under $35.
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>> greta: okay, everyone it's time to hash it out. george zimmerman is in trouble with the law again. tmz tweeting george zimmerman need for speed gets him busted again. cops popping zimmerman for speeding in florida slapping him with a ticket this, is not the first problem on the road
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recently. texas police pulling him over in july for speeding just weeks after being acquitted in the shooting death of trayvon martin. is shaquille o'neal teeming up with michelle obama is in the hill reporting shaq's participation in let's move program draws protest. the former nba star set to participate in the first laido's antiobesity campaign but a group says shaq makes a poor health spokesman because of his new line of cream soda drinks launching in june, each can clocking in 270 calories and 17 teaspoons of sugar, maybe shaq should sell bottled water instead? possibly? and this time, it's jay leno caught in the cross hairs asking marr about his bad blood on the tonight show. trump tweeting i defend jay
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leno but he never defends me. now, i understand why everybody dumped him, jay sucks. and i heard bill maher said nasty things about me on the terminated jay leno show. stupid guy, bad ratings. don'ting for twrot follow me on twitter @ gretawire. and coming up, p vo: two years of grad school. 20 years with the company. thousands of presentations. and one hard earned partnership. it took a loof work to get this far. so now i'm supposed to take a back seat when it come to my investments? there's zero chance of that happening. avo: when you work with a hwab financial consultant, yoll get the guidance you need with the control you want. talk to us today.
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♪ and i'll never desert you ♪ ♪ i'll stand by you yeaaaah! yeah. so that's our loyalty program. you're automatically enrolled, and the longer you stay, the more rewards you get. great! oh! ♪ i'll stand by you ♪ won't let nobody hurt you ♪ isn't there a simpler way to explain the loyalty program? yes. standing by you from day one. now, that's progressive. >> greta: conan o'brien having fun with how the president handled syria. >> syrians leader assad refered to president obama as weak. yeah. obama so angry he plans to ask congress for permission to think up a good come back. yes. it's trou.
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-- true. >> greta: that is your last call. thank you for being with us tonight. we'll see you tomorrow, we've got videos up there, open thread for debate, everything is there. gretawire.com, good night from washington. ever exhibit something approaching a fact finder. i am kimberly guilfoyle along with bob beckel, eric bolling, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." this afternoon the senate foreign relations committee voted 10-7 to advance the resolution on syrian intervention to the full senate. that debate starts monday. part of the rationale for action comes back to president obama's red line comments last august. today, the president is in sweden, tried to distance himself from his own remarks. >> i didn't set a red line, the world set a red line. co

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