tv Fox Files FOX News February 9, 2014 6:00pm-7:01pm PST
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huckabee. good night, god bless and stay tuned for judge jeanine. >> on fox files hundreds of thousands of refugees from syria are pouring into iraq to escape the civil war. >> see how franklin graham is bringing hem frlp from his chrin organization fr organization. did they watch them be killed and do nothing? >> on the 50th anniversary of a notorious new york murder new questions. >> a reporter got carried away with the story. >> north to alaska for woar games. >> iran could have icbm capabilities as soon as 2015. >> we are inside america's
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missile. >> i am brook jenkins. >> i am claudia cowens. >> i am greta van susteren and this is "fox files." flush >> god loves the people in the refugee camps as much as he loves me. for franklin graham it's another day of work in north carolina trying to figure out ways to help the world's most desperate people. >> what's latest on sudan? >> they help those far away and all across america. >> they are cher it is cutting tree or mudding a house or looking for personal belongings in the mountains of west virginia or san diego, california it's all the same. >> we work in 10 different countries we have contracts we can draw from. >> i can't help the people in the grave but i can help their families and loved ones.
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>> since 1970 the charity has stepped up to help deliver food, shelter, medicine and education to people who are victims of car and natural disasters. sometimes they are the first ones who arrive and the last ones to leave. >> we have permanent field offices in 17 different countries. >> ken isaacs has worked along side reverend graham for years and earned the nickname can do ken. >> they have helped survivors in places which include the philippines, south sudan and china. for full disclosure this reporter supports great taw hem academy in haiti. >> this is the room that manages our guards that we will send out when things happen such as the philippines. >> we will help you rebuild. >> what we are doing to help the refugees in syria we are working
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with local partners we know have support the for decades. >> i would like to be in syria. but it is too dangerous. >> it is a crazy violent war. >> the refugee problem is the largest in the world. >> the misery in numbers from syria's 3-year-old civil war is staggering. more than 40,000 have been killed 9 million people nearly 40 percent of syria's population are displaced. evidence of distemic torture on industrial scale bias sad's regime is compared to nazi death camps in world war ii. joint fellow of institute of peace is the author of eight books including the acclaimed rock the casbah. >> the biggest over spill from syria is on iraq. the border between the two countries is in some ways beginning to disappear.
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se syria has begun to dwarf afghanistan in ferms of the prepercussions of afghanistan. it is hard to figure out who are the good guys today. >> al qaeda affiliated terrorists are in syria and iraq. >> it is a civil war within a civil war within a civil war. >> they failed in recent peace talks. >> assad will not be part of that transition government. >> syrian television spewed hate. >> the u.n. and other organizations including samaritan's purse stepped forward. >> it doesn't matter the color of their skin their religion. we provide help to people because god made all of us. we give the help and the aid long before we tell them who we are. >> franklin the son of reverend billy graham invited fox files to travel with his team to
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witness a story of hope that most people don't know about. 250,000 syrian refugees have been welcomed into iraq. yes, iraq. in a recent about the size of texas is the providence of kurdistan. the capital is verbeal. this is the most stable region in iraq. >> the oil business is there. the people from all over the world are doing business. >> the president who used to be a refugee himself opened his borders and has his own deal with turkey with the pipeline. >> he is kind of a larger than life figure. he felt that he had no choice but to help the refugees because many of the refugees come into his area are kurdish people from syria. he's a shrewd fellow. >> it was an astonishing movement. the refugee camps were established in as many days. >> this photo from august 2013 says it all.
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a mass exodus 60,000 men, women and children walked across the tigris river over a newly built bridge. kurdistan offered a glimmer of survival quickly recognized by the u.n. peter kessler worked for the high commission for refugees for 22 years. >> the kurdistan authorities in iraq extremely supportive from the region's president bardoni on down. kurdish charities have been extremely supportive and we have smaller charities to arrive to offer assistance like samaritan's purse. >> they are dealing with 14,000 iraqis fleeing from the sectarian violence in al anbar providence. to see how the president is dealing with this massive syrian refugee problem fox files went to camp. >> it is hard for americans to understand being a refugee.
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>> they had used clothes and shoes they were selling. they have nothing. >> we look out anywhere from 12-20,000 people living in these refugee camps. >> they have 700,000 people here in four camps. it is like this in lebanon, in turkey, in georgia. this happens to be probably one of the better run camps than i have seen. >> by the end of 2014 we believe up to 4 million or more syrians with will have left their country. >> next up, joy and misery. samaritan's purs finds a way to get what some of these people need. why do people count on sunsweet prune juice to stay fit on the inside?
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>> there is hope, people are helping them. >> they pour -- it poured rain night. snow in the mountains. >> on this day it was near freezing. the people we met with franklin graham had little or nothing. >> they need the heat but clothes for children. you saw there were kids with those little sandals with no socks. >> barefoot. >> some kids were like a t-shirt. >> i sat down with a 90-year-old woman who was sharing a heater with multiple families. >> how long do they get to keep the heater? >> we were told a couple hours a day. >> we have 2,000 heaters we will get them in the next couple days. >> you take somebody who is cold and wet and now they are sick, if you are not able to provide that heater they can be dead a few weeks later. >> my father is 95 if i had to take care of him in an open tent i don't know how you do that. >> they smashed smiles as
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children do. national geographic handed them cameras to take pictures. and they were singing. older faces showed grave stress with the uncertainty of living day-to-day. >> you have to give the u.n. credit, too. >> the u.n., get trau, they will do a good job. but what happens with the u.n. it takes a while to do it. at that takes them forever. it is a bureaucracy. it takes time. once they get moving they can do is good job. >> back in north carolina, the highly oiled machine of samaritan's purse is always gearing up to deliver. >> go there with the thought of coming back and explaining why we couldn't do something when we got there. we are always looking for results. that's the most important thing in emergency response. we came to help the guy in the ditch and we are always focused on that. i think that sets us a little
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different than the bureaucracy than the challenges. >> the next day after our visit at the camp we left urbeal and travelled three hours to a wild ride to an area that was once the valley of death. >> this is the area where sadam hussein separated widows from orphans and from the mountains beyond he would shoot down and terrori terrorize them. >> her story is a familiar one. >> >> nevoo >> sadam hussein used almost every weapon he had to try to oppress the kurds to keep them
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in line politically. in the 1980s he even unleashed chemical weapons against the kurds and killed close to 5,000 of them. it was a very gruesome period. >> sadam's campaign of genocide, generations of families were up rooted and destroyed. nearly 180,000 kurds were systematically slaughtered thousands buried in mass graves which are still being discovered. >> the kurds are the largest minority in the world without a state. >> 30 million kurds are spread across iraq, turkey, syria and iran. flags stand in tribute to the dead at the monument. >> pray for this nation and all of its people. >> nearby there's a place supported by samaritan's purse. >> we run a medical clinic six days a week, we partnered with
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the minute tristry of health wh have doctors and dentists that provide free healthcare to our community. >> they have lived here for almost three years with their son ezra. >> in this culture it is important to build a relationship with these people. there's a lot of obstacles we are up against being westerners living in the heart of the middle east? kurdistan. >> in a bright shiny building english sewing skills and teaching is taught. >> there is a popular@thetic field and greenhouse. >> we keep the classes from the boys and girls separate. >> attendance has been good? >> it is very good. we have a waiting list. >> the women are learning how to sow and the idea is they would learn basic cutting patterns and they will be able to sell on the local market. >> generations of children and
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adults face years of living atz refugees. >> if you have children born at the refugee camp they are stateless. it is hard to image what these people endure. >> when sadam hussein was coming through right where we are standing right now killing and massacring the kurds and they fled for turkey with thefor the lives. if it wasn't for george bush with the no-fly zone they would have been exterminated. >> a 90-year-old woman in the camp were delivered along with 5,000 winter coats, 40,000 diapers and 23,000 pairs of shoes. and another 747 from north carolina filled with 65,000 shoe boxes of gifts from operation christmas child were delivered to children. this is only a part of the 10 million collected and distributed around the world by samaritan's purse. >> there are no two boxes alike.
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they are like snowflakes. when they get these gifts this will be the first gift they have ever had. we need to pay attention to the children. they are going to be the leaders. they are going to be our hope and we cannot give up on the children. >> coming up, the real story behind the notorious murder of katie genevieve. can you start tomorrow? tomorrow we're booked solid. we close on the house tomorrow. tomorrow we go live... it's a day full of promise. and often, that day arrives by train. big day today? even bigger one tomorrow. csx. how tomorrow moves. ♪ ♪
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>> it was a random senseless savage murder. a young woman named kitty genevieve was stalked and stabbed to death in the quiet garden section of queens new york. what ignited a firestorm on the front page of the new york times two weeks after the killing. a reporter claimed 38 of her neighbors watched her murder for
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more than half an hour and did nothing to help. >> they did not watch for 30 minutes as it unfolded before them. >> do you believe 38 people witnessed this murder? >> no. >> it has been 50 years since the article shocked the nation. they show you what really happened on the infamous night. >> there's a lot of inaccuracy and mythologies reported. >> it implies things that are exaggerated. >> mrs. genevieve in a way haunts some of us. >> every five-years since 1984 psychology professor has hosted a symposium on the life and death of kitty genevieve at new york ford ham university p. >> it was like they were watching a tv show. >> stewed dstudies done later with a group of individuals who
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turned a blind eye it was a phenomenon the bystander effect also known as the genevieve syndrome. >> people think something should be done but why should it be them? >> the oldest of five siblings katherine nicknamed kitty was raised in brooklyn, new york. >> what kind of a girl was kitty? >> she liked to tell funny little stories, jokes. >> one of her friends from her neighborhood. >> kitty loved life in new york. it became obvious that as teenagers she, kitty and would cut school some days. >> we would go into manhattan. she turns around and she throws out her arms and sings, new york, new york, what a wonderful town. how can you not remember somebody like that forever? >> when her family decided to
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move to suburban connecticut after she graduated high school kitty decided she wanted to stay in new york. >> in the 1950s she moved to queens. >> katherine says search years writing her book kitty a true account of a public murder. >> she was a single woman intent on a career. she wanted to own her own restaurant. she was learning the businessmanaging a place for the past three years. all of the customers liked her? >> they loved her. >> in the cold early morning of march 13th, 1964, 28-year-old kit tee genovese stopped the queens bar she managed after a night out with a friend. at around 2:00 a.m. while his family was sleeping a 29-year-old business machine operator named winston mosley who had no criminal record quietly lived out of his home in the ozark neighborhood in queens with one goal in mind. he wanted to kill a woman.
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>> he was married owned his own home. on the day of kitty's murder he put in a full day at the office he got the idea to go out and look for a girl to kill. a compulsion. >> at around 3:00 a.m. she left the bar. >> mosley happened to be driving by at the time she got into her car. >> he had been driving around for barometer an hour looking for a victim. >> he was hunting? >> yes. >> he hailed kitty as she drove home. he watched her park her car at the long island rail road station. as she walked to her apartment she spotted him following her on foot. >> he lived in an apartment on the second floor of this building. >> he has lived here since 1974. he's a local historian and spent years studying the genovese case. >> she ran first toward the right obviously trying to run home. she realized she wasn't going to make it in time.
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she began to run up the street. at some point she started to scream, help me, help me. when he caught up to her in front of a book store he jumped on her back and stabbed her twice. she went down on the ground screaming bloody murder. they were awakened by the commotion. >> this man opened his window he said what's going on down there? another young man opened his window and shouted and somebody shouted leave her alone. >> then he ran away. >> he realized standing under a streetlight would make it easy to identify him. he ran back to his car backs off the street crosses 82nd road parked his car and sat for ten minutes. he expected he would hear people coming out of his houses. he thought he would hear a police siren. he heard none of that. >> we have kitty who is here and
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what happens to her? >> she struggled to her fees walked in this direction badly wounded. witnesses say she had to try to hold on to the wall for support. >> people who watched her thought she was drunk. some heard her say she was stabbed. she walked down the building and around the corner and to the back of the building. >> her apartment is probably 50 yards up the walkway. she realized she can't get there she doesn't have the strength. so she manages to get into a small vestibule in an entrance much closer to this far corner. >> she continued to yell to neighbors for help. but with no sign of police mosley soon returned to finish the job. >> he was looking for her can't find her almost ready to give up until he checks the door. he finds kitty there. >> stopped her in the throat to stop her from screaming and stabbed her in mull time times in the chest and abdomen and sexually assaulted her. while she was going on tworp there apartment doors at the top
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the doors opened estimate he estimated two to three times with someone speaking out to him. no one came down. no one helped her. >> no, no one helped her. >> eventually one of her neighbors came down and at least holds her and comfort her. >> yes, exactly. >> another neighbor finally called police. but when an ambulance arrived it was too late. kitty died on the way to the hospital. >> when you think about what happened to her, what do you think of? >> the pain and agony and fear of this person. it is something i really don't want to face. >> coming up, although the murder received little attention new york times published an article about it weeks later. [ male announcer ] this is karen and jeremiah.
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chances with yet another snow and ice storm expected to reach the area on tuesday. right now there's a winter storm watch in effect. two weeks ago a couple inches of snow paralyzed that city. some people were forced to stay the glooifrt night inside their cars. officials say they will begin treating roads and bridges tomorrow night and they will be monitoring the weather hour by hour. v investigations una 21-year-old woman went the wrong way facing felony drunk driving charges. in florida it was a fiery head on collision early this morning in tampa. no one survived. police are looking to see whether drugs or alcohol may be on that. >> the stabbing death of katie genovese got only a brief
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mention in the news pape perps a day after the crime. along with about 20,000 cops nypd detective scoured the neighborhood looking for witnesses. >> what was your impression of the people you spoke with? >> some of them didn't care. some of them heard screams and so forth but didn't go to the wif window. some saw a girl struggling and wabling down the street. i think the way this girl suffered through this ordeal was enough to make anybody really upset especially detective. >> what was the overall opinion from these detectives of the neighbors? >> when you see a perpetrator doing what they could if somebody called police at the first scream that girl would have been alive. >> winston mowisley was arreste when he was caught burglarizing
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a queens home five days after the murder. during questioning mosley shocked detectives when he calmly confess the to a series of bug larries and rapes. he also confessed to three murders all women the last being kitty genovese. >> he said yes, i killed her. no emotion. >> they paid attention when the new york times published an article with this headline. 37 who saw the murder didn't call police. while the headline says 37 saw the murder. for more than half an hour 38 law abiding citizens watched the killer stalk and stab a woman in three separate attacks. there were three attacks, not three. and who saw what from where in the neighborhood is still in discute. >> they watched from their
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windows half an hour as the murder played out on the street down below. >> 40 years after the crime an rosenthal was still defending the paper's controversial reporting. >> i never said nor did anybody at the new york times say there were 38 peering out of a window. it is a total of 38 and we took the intelligence of the reader to understand that. >> this crime had an impact on the community. >> what is wrong with kew gardens, what are the people like that would laet this happen. >> how did this play around the country? there was a lot of soul searching going on. >> i think there were some that were content to write it off as
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well they didn't. >> there were others that said more of a common human occurrence. right after this story hits there were a lot of what the papers called apathy stories. shined a light on something that had been there all along. >> his dritrial began here mond ju june 8th, 1964. >> it was our attentiintention insert a defense of insanity. >> who in his right mind would commit the multiplicity of kind in the horrific manner in which he did. he testified in a flat emotionless manner. they had gruesome acts in any
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display of any emotion or remorse. he was what he was. >> more mosley justice would quit within two weeks he was convicted with murder and sentenced to death. >> he was treated by tears in the courtroom. >> they decided mosley's death sentence made trying him for the other deaths he confessed to unnecessary. three years later his death sentence was overturned on appeal. >> there was psychiatric testing during the trial due not at the sentencing. they decided it was reversible error so they changed it to life in prison. >> while being transferred from a hospital back to attica he over powered a guard and went on a three-day crime spree. >> he held several people hostages and raped three more
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women before he was captured. he suddenly claimed kit knee genovese used a sexual slur to him. >> the idea of humiliating. the that's not even an excuse. (indiscernible) >> he chased her down stabbed her and sexually assaulted her. that's not what you do if somebody assaults you. >> she has written more than 100 letters from it behind bars. >> he writes a murder victim suffers seconds, minutes or hours then it is all over for him or her. the convicted murder on the other hand is condemned inside and outside of prison over and over and over again. >> he seems insulted with this. >> it would seem show.
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to roll next ths. fall. he plannens to hold a 50th anniversary of the kitty again receive veez case. the 911 system was not a glarl system. they thought it was the most single sighted injury. >> people did not respond to her screams that night. >> coming up... >> all thof them are equal. >> though theic pact of chicago. . the up all-nhts. and the ones who turn ideas into action. we've made our passions our life's work. we strive for the moments where we can s, "i did it!"
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good news. i got a new title. and a raise? management couldn't make that happen. [ male announcer ] introducing fedex one rate. simple, flat rate shipping with the reliability of fedex. >> during the remote part of the interior an army's battalion stands watch around the clock with an important mission keeping 300 million americans safe. the threat a critical national security priority growing every day. tonight we take you inside the sky. >> 100 miles southeast of fairbanks here the small town is next to top secret and highly secure army installation few ever visit. >> they control this site
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24-hours a day 7 days a week. it has been impenetrable. >> if somebody is thinking about sneaking on the base. >> fort frgreeley is some of th harshest terrain. >> the will 800 acre base helped highly sophisticated component of our nation's defense. the other in california that component ground base anti missile interceptors. >> we have over 200 soldiers. the commanding engineofficer. >> they have security mission and missile defenders who are doing strategic defense mission. >> it is a military program shielding the nation from
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hostile incoming war heads. >> it is a complex system of satellites and radars. at fort greeley 26 of the interceptors are in the ground and ready to fire. the lieutenant colonel. >> it is one of our missile fields. that's the silo over there. that is where the ground basin ter scepters are located. >> it launches right here out of this frozen ground. how deep are they in the ground? how far awapart? >> it is almost like a wal-mart parking lot where we have spaced safe distance from each other. you have roughly 100 plus foot of silo. >> if a threat came while you and i are having this conversation right now these are loaded. >> it is niece and warm under ground and it is ready to go.
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it will be out of here in a second. >> the threat of neek layer annihilation they look for ways to not only retaliate but to stop the missile attacks. >> the nis missile defense theye interested in it was hard to image. >> dr. jeffery lewis is an expert on nuclear institute and arms control at the monterey institute of study. >> the most memorable moment of the effort to destroy incoming missiles came on march 23rd, 1983, when president ronald reagan gave what became known as his star wars speech. >> reagan had an idealistic reason. >> they could live secure in the knowledge we could intercept and destroy strategic ballistic missiles before they reached our
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own soil or that of our allies. >> you have time to admire particularly for the nuclear weapons behind it. >> today this is how missile systems work. the network of radar and satellites protect the missile against the united states. the defensive missile had a threat in space the vehicles that were from the rocket to hone in on enemy war heads and knocks it out of flight. he is one of missile defense's biggest supporters. we spoke with her in new hampshire. >> you have led the effort of missile defense. why is it so important? >> if we are attacked and someone shoots a missile at our country don't we want to be able to defend our country and shoot it down? >> with one of the big problems is do you launch it early enough and do you have the interceptors in the right spot so they can
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provide defense against korea, iran. >> let's talk about the threats. do you how assess a country like iran or north korea? >> first of all north korea some of the behaviors are very troubling. obviously we know to have a luke wear pweapons capability they have tested in 2012 the long range missile and so it is a real concern for our country given particularly the erratic behavior of the north korean leadership and new younger leaders. >> the iranians have much better technological base. >> testified before the arms services committee iran could have icbm capability as soon as 2015. that's 2015, rick. where are we now? not too long off. >> the north korean threat is
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more immediate but less technologically a threat but iranian is longer term. >> we need to be prepared to defend against such a threat. >> i would say the threats are a concern. we maintain our readiness, our soldiers are sitting there in front of the computer screens constantly vigilant constantly monitoring and always ready. >> mds reports an alert. >> a war game has america under attack. legs up! verizon has free tablets and ee phones. get here anyway you can. good job! free tablets. free phones. on the best network. only at verizon. get tablets like the verizon ellipsis 7 free. and when you trade in your old smartphone, you can get the samsung galaxy s4 free. or the droid maxx by motorola free. plus get a data plan with unlimited talk and text for as low as $45.
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greeley are the most inhospitable in the world. they stand ready to defend america in a moment's notice. >> we have multiple military police platoons . >> how much of an impact does it take on them physically? >> physical impact not only from the darkness of the winter but also the cold weather as well. >> we will take you to the soldiers here. just the environment they live it every day. no one better to tell you what it is like living out here. >> what is it like for you guys? >> big thing is safety. we check each other constantly to make sure we are okay. >> it can take a potoll on you park most of the winter.
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being out here it is easy to get complacent out here. that's why our leadership make sure they stress that we are taking safety classes and cold weather classes. >> you feel a sense of law when you are patrolling and keeping these sites safe? >> of course. we know we have the backup of a nation. >> the most secure location is the operational fire direction center. they monitor the world for potential threats. major mike rogers is a ishth d tore of the time. >> a variety of people getting launched all of the time within the entire space community. >> there are missile taps space launches and missile launches that you contact. >> for instance china frequently test their missiles to give us a window in when they are going to put it up so we see that den rated on to our system it doesn't show us the threat.
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>> if it was a threat his team is ready. >> can we go through the exercise? >> we do. we have a scenario set up for you guys to give you an idea. >> in this training drill they come under attack by war heads. >> system is in alert status. we have one threatened system. >> mts reports a second alert. >> second quick alert. >> we have two threats in the system at this time. >> >> we are engaging at this time.
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>> this went on for seven minutes. >> copy. >> recovery operational. >> the commitment of these soldiers are clear. >> i say your nation is grateful, we are so grateful for your service. >> then technology of ground based missile defense is more controversial. in test of the system the success rate is only about 50 percent. >> engineering problems just foreground base mid course system. >> a report released on january 27th of this year by the pentagon's director of operational tests and evaluation raised serious questions about the kill vehicle's ability to hit the target. >> tlr two questions do you want to invest in missile defenses? do you want to invest in the
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architecture or something different? >> it is like iran and other countries around the world they invest in new technology and we doesn't do that and we fall behind. >> getting the technology right is all that because of the east coast of the united states. that state cost an estimated 3 and a half million dollars for greeley and vandburg specifically with an eye towards iraq. >> it is about 4 to 5 years until we get it up and running. the longer we delay on this decision iran's capabilities may be far ahead of when we make a decision to build the missile defense site. this is in terms of de tigcisio making in terms of what should be done now. >> what do the american people
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>> we need smart regulations. >> we have to dee pend on the publics government. >> politicians always say that and they always pass more rules and create entire regulation producing agencies. >> but who needs government when reputation works better. >> i don't make any decisions about who to hire. angie goes firs. >> you can be refused by real patients who have seen the doctor. >> reputation. it's what allows people to enjoy this delicious food. >> coming to a stranger's home and
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